MrBallen’s Medical Mysteries - Ep. 61 | The Speckled Monster
Episode Date: December 3, 2024In the late 1700s, a doctor in the English countryside battles to save his village from the devastation of smallpox. Then, almost by accident, he stumbles upon a perplexing mystery that helps... him revolutionize medicine forever.Follow MrBallen's Medical Mysteries on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes publish for free every Tuesday. Prime members can binge episodes 57-64 early and ad-free on Amazon Music. Wondery+ subscribers can listen ad-free--join Wondery+ in the Wondery App or on Apple Podcasts.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey Prime members, you can binge episodes 57 through 64 right now and ad-free on Amazon Music.
Download the app today!
On a spring morning in 1796, a young milkmaid in southwest England was taking a quick break from her duties.
She left the barn where she worked to take a stroll around the farm,
and she noticed a bush covered in beautiful pink roses.
The milkmaid thought how nice the flowers
would look inside of her room,
so she tore a blossom off its stem,
and as she did, a thorn scratched the side of her hand.
She gasped.
The cut wasn't deep, but it stung,
and it was starting to bleed.
It felt like an instant punishment for ignoring
her job. She shoved the flowers into the pocket of her dress, wiped the blood on her apron,
and quickly went back to work. She spent the day milking the cows and cleaning up the barn,
and she didn't think about the scratch again until the next morning when she woke up and
felt her hand throbbing. Right where the scratch had been, there was now a big, pus-filled sore.
throbbing. Right where the scratch had been, there was now a big, pus-filled sore.
The milkmaid's face went pale. She'd never had a sore like this, but she knew people who had, and many of them had gotten so sick that they died.
The milkmaid jumped out of bed, ran to the farmer's house, and begged him to send for a doctor.
Get ready for Las Vegas-style action at Bet MGM, the king of online casinos.
Enjoy casino games at your fingertips with the same Vegas strip excitement MGM is famous
for when you play classics like MGM Grand Millions or popular
games like Blackjack, Baccarat, and Roulette. With their ever-growing library of digital
slot games, a large selection of online table games, and signature Bet MGM service, there is
no better way to bring the excitement and ambiance of Las Vegas home to you than with Bet MGM Casino.
Download the Bet MGM Casino app today. Bet MGM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly.
BetMGM.com for Ts and Cs, 19 plus and older to wager, Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact
Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge.
VET MGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
Each morning, it's a new opportunity, a chance to start fresh.
Up First from NPR makes each morning an opportunity to learn and to understand.
Choose to join the world every morning with Up First,
a podcast that hands you everything going on across the globe and down the street,
all in 15 minutes or less. Start your day informed and anew with Up First by subscribing
wherever you get your podcasts.
From Ballin Studios and Wondry, I'm Mr. Ballin, and this is Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries,
where every week we will explore a new baffling mystery originating from the one place we
all can't escape, our own bodies.
So if you like today's story, when the follow button is waiting in line to see a brand new
movie they're very excited about, walk up to them and spoil the ending.
This episode is called The Speckled Monster.
This episode is called The Speckled Monster.
On a bright afternoon in April of 1795, 37-year-old James Phipps Sr. squinted in the sun as he carefully trimmed a hedge, a physician named Dr. Edward Jenner, who was a leading crusader against what was then the world's most feared disease, smallpox.
James did not always like his job. The days were long, the weather was often bad, and his hands were always covered in cuts and sores. But working on Dr. Jenner's estate was
never dull. His boss treated an unending parade of people suffering from hundreds of small painful sores from their tongues to their toes. These sores were
how smallpox got its nickname, the speckled monster. But no matter what Dr. Jenner did
to help, nearly a third of the smallpox patients died while most of the survivors ended up
with scars all over their faces. And today, Dr. Jenner was doing something particularly strange.
He was deliberately exposing healthy people to the deadly disease.
As James trimmed the hedge, he could look through the window into Dr. Jenner's office.
The dark, wood-paneled walls were lined with cabinets full of medical supplies, and the
silver-haired physician stood in the center of the room, using a mortar and pestle to grind up scabs he'd collected from other patients' smallpox
sores. One by one, people went into the office and allowed Dr. Jenner to blow these scabs
into their noses, sending the virus deep inside of their bodies. The doctor called this process
variolation. Dr. Jenner had told James that it was better to make
patients sick with a mild case of smallpox like this, rather than for them to get a much
worse case naturally. After all, once a patient got smallpox, they could never get it again.
James had nodded like he understood, but inside, he thought it was pretty odd for healthy people
to come to the doctor to get sick. Sometimes people died from the smallpox
infection that Dr. Jenner gave them. So James winced every time he saw the doctor blow through
his straw, knowing that the patient would soon return covered in the ugly smallpox rash.
Most alarming though, James knew that one day, his eight-year-old son James Jr. would have to
go through the same ordeal. Dr. Jenner would insist.
But James hoped that day was still years away.
Until then, he decided to just put the frightening thought out of his mind.
He stepped back again to check the shape of the hedge.
It still looked a bit like an egg, so he leaned back in and kept on trimming.
A few days later, James squatted beside the flower beds that lined the front of Dr. Jenner's
vast ornate home.
He dug a small hole, placed a tulip bulb inside, and buried it.
He moved six inches down and began to dig a second hole.
But then, he heard footsteps coming up the walkway.
James turned to see a local cattle farmer named Joseph
Merritt heading towards the porch. James was surprised to see him because Joseph had come by
for Dr. Jenner's clinic just a few days ago. Joseph should have been stuck at home with
smallpox right now, but instead he looked perfectly healthy. The smallpox virus that Dr. Jenner blew
into his nose must not have made him sick. James lifted up a dirty hand to
wave and Joseph nodded at him before knocking on the front door and heading inside. James went back
to planting tulip bulbs, but he kept thinking about Joseph. He'd never seen a person get
variolated and not get sick afterwards. James tried to mind his business and focus on his work,
but he just couldn't shake his curiosity. So as he moved further down the flower bed, he peeked through a window into Dr. Jenner's
clinic.
Joseph sat on a wooden exam table, and to James' horror, the doctor was blowing a straw
into Joseph's nose.
He was exposing Joseph to smallpox again.
James kept looking through the glass, wondering how Joseph had managed to avoid catching smallpox
the first time.
And also James thought, you know, how sick was Joseph going to get now that he had received
a double dose?
About a year later, in May 1796, Dr. Edward Jenner was enjoying a quiet morning in a sunroom,
sipping an after-breakfast cup of tea when he heard a knock at his door.
A few moments later, one of his servants came into the sunroom and told him that a messenger
had come from a nearby village.
There was a pox outbreak at one of the villagers' farms, and they needed Dr. Jenner's help.
Dr. Jenner thanked the servant and immediately went to get dressed.
He put on a blue coat with gold buttons and pulled his shoulder-length silver hair into a low ponytail. Then he packed his traveling medical kit with
supplies, walked outside to his stable, and got on one of his horses. Dr. Jenner was the only
practicing physician within 400 square miles, so he was used to traveling long distances for his
patients. Luckily, this particular village was
not too far away. He rode through the countryside for about half an hour, and when he spotted the
farm he was looking for, he pulled on his horse's reins and slowed to a stop. Dr. Jenner got off his
horse, tied the animal to a fence post, and walked towards a small house on the farm.
But before he made it to the front door, it swung open, revealing a scruffy
looking man in work clothes. The farmer beckoned Dr. Jenner inside into a small sitting room.
There, Dr. Jenner saw a young woman sitting on the couch, cradling her right hand. She was very
pretty, with long brown hair and light eyes, but she looked like she was on the verge of tears.
Dr. Jenner sat next to her and asked for her name.
With a shaky voice, she said her name was Sarah Nelms. Then she held out her right hand and showed
Dr. Jenner the big pus-filled sore between her thumb and pointed finger. She explained that the
previous morning, she'd been out picking roses when a thorn scratched her hand. Then this morning,
Sarah had woken up with this huge sore right
where the scratch had been. Now, she felt exhausted and feverish, and her hand was throbbing.
Tears began to roll down her cheeks, and through sobs, she told the doctor that she was certain
she had smallpox. Dr. Jenner nodded sympathetically and then gently took Sarah's hand. Her sore
did look like a smallpox spot, but Dr. Jenner knew
that Sarah did not have smallpox because the disease didn't start on people's hands. It started
in their mouths, then spread across their faces and down their limbs. So he reassured the girl
that she didn't have smallpox, but he did have a hunch about what was making her sick. Dr.
Jenner turned to the farmer and asked him to point out the barn where Sarah worked. He needed to see it for himself.
Moments later, the farmer led Dr. Jenner into a wooden barn where about 30 dairy cows were
eating and resting. A few of the animals turned to look at the men, and Dr. Jenner approached one of
them and leaned down to look at its udder. And he saw exactly what he was expecting. The cow's udder was covered in a bumpy,
scabby rash. It had dozens of sores just like the one on Sarah's hand. Dr. Jenner walked around
the barn and found that every single cow had a similar rash. Dr. Jenner was not a veterinarian,
but he knew that this disease was a relative of smallpox called cowpox, and it could be spread from livestock to humans.
Dr. Jenner and the farmer went back into the house where Sarah was waiting,
and the doctor told her that he had good and bad news.
The bad news was that she had cowpox. This meant she was going to have to quarantine herself so
she wouldn't spread it to anyone else, and the sore in her hand was likely going to get worse before it got better.
But the good news was that Cowpox was far less deadly than Smallpox, so even though
it would take a few weeks for her hand to heal, Sarah was very likely going to be okay.
Sarah let out a small laugh of relief and let Dr. Jenner clean and dress her wound.
When he was finished, the doctor shook the farmer's hand, went back out to his horse,
and began his journey home.
But as he rode through the countryside, an idea began to form inside of Dr. Jenner's
mind, a really exciting idea.
He thought about Sarah's case of cowpox that she undoubtedly got from working with
those poor sick animals.
It occurred to him that he had treated many, many milkmaids on many different farms for
cowpox, however, he couldn't actually think of a single milkmaid who ever got sick with
smallpox.
And that reminded him of Joseph, the cattle farmer from a year ago, the one who did not
get sick after his smallpox variolation.
Just like Sarah, Joseph worked with cows every day, and Dr.
Jenner just could not make Joseph sick with smallpox no matter how hard he tried. This
raised a question for Dr. Jenner, one that he needed to answer right away. He pressed
his right leg into his horse's side, and the animal sped up from a trot to a gallop
to an all-out run. Dr. Jenner held on tight, anxious to get back home.
Sitting in his office chair that same afternoon, the doctor rifled through a cabinet full of local medical records. He found the file for Joseph Merritt, the cattle farmer he tried to
variolate last year, and in Joseph's medical history, Dr. Jenner found the answer to his burning question. Way back in 1770, so 26 years earlier, Joseph had been treated for cowpox.
Then two and a half decades later, Dr. Jenner tried to variolate him against smallpox twice
and it didn't work.
It was like Joseph was already immune to smallpox even though he'd never had it before.
So Dr. Jenner wondered what if Joseph's previous
cowpox infection was what had made him immune to smallpox, and what if the doctor could use
this information to help other people? Dr. Jenner might be able to deliberately expose people to
cowpox, a painful but ultimately non-fatal disease, to make them immune to smallpox,
a far more dangerous illness.
The doctor's mind spun a mile a minute. If this idea worked, physicians could save patients from smallpox without accidentally killing them. They could stop the world's deadliest disease in its
tracks. But Dr. Jenner knew he was getting ahead of himself. First, he had to prove that his cowpox
theory was right. And the only way to do that
would be to experiment on a patient who had never had cowpox or smallpox. And because
pretty much every adult that Dr. Jenner treated had suffered from one pox or the other already,
he was going to have set out on a very personal quest
to find the woman who saved my mum's life.
You can listen to Finding Natasha right now exclusively on Wondery+.
In season 2, I found myself caught up in a new journey to help someone I've never even
met.
But a couple of years ago, I came across a social media post by a person named Loti.
It read in part,
Three years ago today that I attempted to jump off this bridge, but this wasn't my
time to go.
A gentleman named Andy saved my life.
I still haven't found him.
This is a story that I came across purely by chance, but it instantly moved me and it's
taken me to a place where I've had to consider some deeper issues around mental health.
This is season 2 of Finding and this time, if all goes to plan, we'll be finding Andy.
You can listen to Finding Andy and Finding Natasha exclusively and ad free on Wondery
Plus.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
Do you like solving the mysteries of the true crime world?
Dive into the depths of captivating true crime stories on the high seas
on Wondery's Exhibit C true crime cruise.
Come aboard the luxurious Norwegian Joy setting sail from Miami to Nassau,
Bahamas. Sharpen your investigative skills with your favorite True Crime podcast hosts.
Engage in thoughtful discussions during expert panels that examine case studies, investigative
techniques, and the pursuit of justice.
Then put your skills and intuition to work with hands-on activities that challenge your
analytical skills.
Meet fellow armchair detectives, share your theories, and flex your detective skills.
Merge your passion for solving cases with the luxurious Caribbean getaway, complete
with breathtaking ocean views and world-class amenities.
It's the true crime escapes the Caribbean you don't want to miss.
Come for the intrigue.
Stay for the sunshine.
Go to exhibitseacruise.com to learn more and sign up for the presale.
On May 14, 1796, James Phipps Sr. held his son's hand as they walked towards Dr. Jenner's
estate.
They passed the hedges James had trimmed and the tulips he'd planted, but James was not
thinking about his work.
He was thinking about the fact that his son was about to become a human science experiment.
A few days earlier, Dr. Jenner had asked James if he'd be willing to let him test his theory
on Junior.
The doctor believed cowpox made people immune to smallpox, so he wanted to infect Junior
with cowpox, then try to infect him with smallpox.
If Junior didn't get sick, it would prove the doctor's
theory was correct. But if Junior did contract smallpox, it would prove Dr. Jenner wrong,
and the little boy would face a 30% chance of death. At first, James said no way. Dr.
Jenner's theory was mostly based on the fact that one cattle farmer, Joseph Merritt, couldn't catch smallpox. That wasn't exactly foolproof
evidence. Plus, Joseph was an adult, Junior was a child, and children were almost always more
susceptible to disease. James knew if he agreed, he was going to be putting his son in mortal
danger. But still, James also knew that Dr. Jenner was one of the best physicians in the country,
and he did trust him.
But also there was just the harsh reality that at this time, a lot of people were getting
smallpox and when they got it, a lot of them died.
And so maybe putting his son in danger now was ultimately saving his life.
So James ultimately agreed to the plan.
He led his son up to the front door, knocked, and a moment later a servant showed them to
the doctor's office.
Inside, James saw Dr. Jenner sitting next to a young brunette woman with a bandaged
right hand.
Dr. Jenner stood up to say hello, then leaned down and told Junior that the woman's name
was Sarah and she was going to be helping with the procedure.
She had actually come out of her quarantine just for this. Junior glanced at his father nervously,
and James gave him an encouraging nod. While Junior sat on the exam table,
Dr. Jenner unwrapped Sarah's bandage, revealing the cowpox sore underneath.
Then, the doctor grabbed a scalpel from one of the cabinets and asked Junior to hold out his arm
and stay still. Dr. Jenner held Junior's wrist while he brought a scalpel from one of the cabinets and asked Junior to hold out his arm and stay still.
Dr. Jenner held Junior's wrist while he brought the scalpel towards the outside of the boy's
upper arm. James put a reassuring hand on his son's shoulder and Junior drew in a sharp
breath as the doctor pressed the scalpel down and dragged it about an inch across his skin.
Dr. Jenner made one more cut beneath the first one, then did the same thing on
Junior's other arm. Then, Dr. Jenner turned to Sarah and used the same scalpel to poke
a hole in the top of her cowpox sore. Yellow pus began to leak out the top, and right away
Dr. Jenner got a small spatula to gather some of it up.
Junior squirmed, but James tightened his grip on his son's shoulders to keep him still
as the doctor wiped the pus directly into the cuts on both of Junior's arms.
Junior looked completely grossed out, and James did too, but James was also glad that at least this part of the experiment was over.
He let go of his son's shoulders, and they headed back home.
Nine days later, James felt like he'd made the worst decision of his life. His son had been stuck in bed for over a week with chills, body aches, and nausea, and James knew the
worst was yet to come. Even if his son recovered from cowpox, which was feeling like a big
if, he still had to be exposed to small pox.
Late that evening, James brought a spoonful of stew to Junior's lips, but his son refused
to eat. He was too nauseous. A voice in the back of James' mind told him that he had
put his son through all the suffering for nothing.
But he shook off that nagging thought, then grabbed an extra blanket to keep his boy warm.
Then he told his son to call for him if he needed anything at all.
Then James blew out the candle on Junior's bedside table, went to his own room,
and got into bed. And he laid there awake worrying about his son until eventually he drifted off to
sleep. When he woke up the next morning, James jumped out of bed and immediately went to check on his son.
And to his surprise, his son was awake and smiling.
Junior said he was finally starting to feel better.
In fact, he was even hungry for breakfast.
James was so relieved, but he did know the biggest danger was still to come. A little over a month later, on July 1, 1796, James brought his son back to Dr. Jenner's
office for the second part of the experiment.
Junior sat on the exam table, looking like he wanted to sprint out the door, while Dr.
Jenner took a jar of reddish powder out of one of his cupboards.
It was a container of ground-up scabs from smallpox patients. James looked
on uneasily as Dr. Jenner sprinkled some of the scabs into the straw and told Junior
to hold the straw inside one of his nostrils. Then, once it was in place, Dr. Jenner blew
the contaminated red dust into Junior's nose. Over the next several days, James kept
a very close eye on his son. He was terrified that he would start developing a fever or the awful smallpox sores.
One morning, four or five days after their visit to Dr. Jenner, Junior woke up with a
scratchy throat, and James feared that his worst nightmare had come true.
He imagined all these smallpox sores popping up inside of his son's throat, spreading
across his face and down his arms and legs. He felt so stupid and guilty, he couldn't believe he'd put his child in this
kind of danger.
But then Junior drank some water, and suddenly his voice went back to normal, and with a
smile on his face, he asked his dad, when can I go play outside again? James let out
a long sigh of relief and said, Soon, but not yet.
Over the next week or so,
Junior continued to just sail along without ever getting sick.
And finally, James was satisfied that his son was perfectly fine,
and he did let Junior back outside to play.
Dr. Jenner's experiment had worked,
and though James and his son had no way of knowing it,
they had just helped revolutionize medicine forever.
It turned out that Dr. Jenner's theory was correct.
Cowpox and smallpox were so closely related that contracting one disease made people immune
to the other.
Dr. Jenner wrote a report about Junior's remarkable immunity to smallpox, and he named
his new technique
vaccination, after the Latin word for cow. And the name stuck because Dr. Jenner had invented
the world's first vaccine. But as incredible as this discovery was,
Dr. Jenner's report was met with mixed reactions. It took years for other doctors to endorse small
pox vaccination and even longer for
the public to embrace it. But Dr. Jenner believed in his new methods so much that he devoted the
rest of his life to vaccinating patients and teaching other doctors how to do the same.
Over the next century, Dr. Jenner's smallpox vaccine saved millions of lives every year.
Then in 1967, almost two centuries after James Phipps Jr. took part in Dr. Jenner's experiment,
the World Health Organization began a campaign to permanently eliminate smallpox, and by
1980, they did it.
A disease that caused countless deaths and immeasurable suffering was literally wiped
off the face of the earth. And it all began with
a sick milkmaid, a gardener's son, and a very creative doctor.
Hey Prime members!
You can listen to new episodes of Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries early and ad-free on Amazon
Music.
Download the app today.
And also, Wondry Plus subscribers can listen to Mr. Bolland's Medical Mysteries ad and ad free on Amazon Music. Download the app today. And also, Wondry Plus
subscribers can listen to Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries ad free. Join Wondry Plus today.
Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at listenersurvey.com.
From Ballin Studios and Wondry, this is Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries, hosted by me,
Mr. Ballin.
A quick note about our stories, we do sometimes use aliases because we don't know the names
of the real people involved, and also in most cases we can't know exactly what was said
in these stories, but everything is based on research.
And also a reminder, the content in this episode is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
This episode was written by Caris Allen Pash-Cooper.
Our editor is Heather Dundas. Sound design is by Andre Pleus.
Our senior managing producer is Nick Ryan.
And our coordinating producer is Taylor Sniffin.
Our senior producer is Alex Benedon.
Our associate producers and researchers are Sarah Vytak and Tasia Palaconda.
Fact-checking was done by Sheila Patterson.
For Ballen Studios, our head of production is Zach Levitt. Script editing by Scott Allen and Evan Allen. Our coordinating producer is Samantha Collins.
Production support by Avery Siegel.
Executive producers are myself, Mr. Ballen, and also Nick Witters. For Wondry, our head of sound is Marcelino Villapondo.
Senior producers are Laura Donna Palabota and Dave Schilling.
Senior managing producer is Ryan Lohr.
Our executive producers are Erin O'Flaherty
and Marshall Louis for Wondry.
Wondry.
From the award-winning masters of audio horror. Oh, I see a face right up against the window.
Bleach white, no hair, black eyes, a round hole for a mouth.
It's flat, Taylor.
It's completely flat.
I don't know what that is.
I don't know what kind of a head is flat.
Comes the return of Dark Sanctum.
What is that coming under the door?
It's blood.
Oh my...
Seven original chilling tales inspired by The Twilight Zone and Tales from the Crypt.
Get back in your car.
Lizzie, it's okay. I'm here now.
Josh, get in your car!
Josh, get in your car! Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Starring Bethany Joy Lenz,
Clive Standen, and Michael O'Neil.
Welcome to the Dark Sanctum.
Listen to Dark Sanctum Season 2
exclusively on Wondry+.
Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app,
Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.