For about 3,000 years, smallpox killed people. It was one of the worst diseases in human history. It killed kings and farmers, soldiers and babies. It blinded those who survived and left their faces deeply scarred. In the 20th century alone, smallpox killed about 300 million people — more than all the wars of the same century combined. Then, on 8 May 1980, the World Health Organization announced something almost beyond belief. Smallpox no longer existed anywhere in the world. The last natural case had been in 1977. The disease was gone. It is the only human disease ever fully eradicated. The story of how this happened is a story of careful science, of small two-pronged needles, of teams walking from village to village in dozens of countries, and of the United States and the Soviet Union working together at the height of the Cold War. This lesson asks how it was done, who did it, and what it tells us about what humans can do when we choose to.
Students who have grown up without smallpox cannot easily imagine what it was like. The disease killed about 30 percent of people who caught it — three out of every ten. It killed Queen Mary II of England, the emperor of Russia, the king of France, the Aztec emperor Cuitláhuac, and many others famous and unknown. It was a leading cause of blindness. It killed millions of children every year. Whole villages would be wiped out when an outbreak arrived. People who survived had pitted scars, called pockmarks, on their faces for the rest of their lives. By 1900, smallpox had probably killed more people than any other disease in history. By 1967, it was still killing about two million people every year. The world before smallpox eradication was a world where every parent knew the disease might take their child. Students should see this not to scare them, but to understand what was at stake when humans finally beat it.
This is one of the most important corrections in the lesson. Older textbooks often said Edward Jenner 'invented' vaccination, as if the idea came out of nowhere. He did not. Variolation was practised in China by the 10th century, in India probably even earlier, in the Ottoman Empire by the 1700s, and in parts of Africa. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, an Englishwoman who had lived in Istanbul, wrote home about the practice in 1717 and had her own children variolated. By the 1720s, variolation was being used in Britain. Jenner's actual contribution was different and important. In 1796, he tested a milder approach — using cowpox virus instead of smallpox. Cowpox is a related disease that causes only mild illness in humans, but it gives protection against smallpox. This was much safer than variolation. Jenner called it 'vaccination', from the Latin word for cow. The term has stuck. Students should see that Jenner was a careful experimenter who built on a global tradition. Calling it 'his discovery' alone tells the wrong story. The right story is more interesting: medical knowledge moved across continents for centuries before the breakthrough.
This is one of the most surprising and hopeful parts of the story. The Cold War was a time of deep distrust between the US and the Soviet Union. They were stockpiling nuclear weapons, fighting proxy wars, spying on each other, and competing for influence around the world. And yet, on smallpox, they worked together. The Soviet Union supplied 1.4 billion doses of vaccine. The United States provided most of the field staff and scientific leadership. Soviet, American, Chinese, Indian, African, and many other scientists shared their work freely. The reason it worked was that both sides saw smallpox as a problem bigger than their rivalry. A Soviet child and an American child were both at risk. Killing the disease helped everyone. This is a useful lesson for today: even when countries disagree on most things, they can sometimes cooperate on problems that threaten everyone. The same model is now used for some other global health problems. Students should see that international cooperation is not naive — it can work, if the threat is shared and the goal is clear.
Because it solved one of the hardest problems in eradication: how do you deliver a vaccine to two billion people, in countries with hot climates, poor roads, and limited medical staff? The bifurcated needle made it possible. Health workers walked from village to village, often on foot, carrying boxes of needles and freeze-dried vaccine. They found people with smallpox, then vaccinated everyone in the surrounding area. This was called 'ring vaccination' — surrounding each case with a ring of vaccinated people, so the disease had nowhere to go. Most of the workers were not famous scientists. They were nurses, teachers, students, and volunteers from many countries. They are the heroes of the story. The last natural case of smallpox in the world was a man in Somalia called Ali Maow Maalin, in October 1977. He survived. After him, no one ever caught smallpox naturally again. Students should see that the end of one of the worst diseases in human history was achieved by ordinary people walking through villages with a small steel needle. That is what global health work mostly looks like. End the lesson here. Smallpox is gone. We did this together. We could do it again.
Smallpox was one of the worst diseases in human history, killing about 30 percent of the people it infected. In the 20th century alone, it killed about 300 million people. Edward Jenner developed the first smallpox vaccine in 1796, building on older practices called variolation that had been used for centuries in China, India, and the Ottoman Empire. From 1959 to 1980, the World Health Organization led a global campaign to wipe smallpox from the Earth. Both the United States and the Soviet Union worked together on the campaign at the height of the Cold War. The work was done with a small two-pronged needle called a bifurcated needle, used by health workers walking from village to village across dozens of countries. The last natural case was in Somalia in 1977. In 1980, the WHO announced that smallpox had been eradicated. It is the only human disease ever fully wiped out. The story is one of the clearest examples we have of what humans can do when we choose to work together.
| Date | Event | What changed |
|---|---|---|
| About 1500 BCE | First evidence of smallpox in Egypt | The disease begins its long history of killing |
| From about 1000 CE | Variolation used in China, India, Ottoman Empire | First effective protection against smallpox |
| 1796 | Edward Jenner develops the first vaccine using cowpox | A safer method than variolation begins to spread |
| 1959 | Soviet Union proposes global eradication | World Health Organization adopts the goal |
| 1966 | Intensified Smallpox Eradication Programme launches | Major international effort begins, led by the WHO |
| 1977 | Last natural case in Somalia | Ali Maow Maalin recovers; no more natural cases ever |
| 8 May 1980 | WHO declares smallpox eradicated | The first and only human disease fully wiped out |
Edward Jenner invented vaccination from nothing.
Jenner built on the older practice of variolation, which had been used in China, India, the Ottoman Empire, and parts of Africa for hundreds of years before him. His specific contribution was using cowpox, which was much safer than direct smallpox material.
Older textbooks often gave one European man all the credit. The truth is more interesting: medical knowledge moved across continents for centuries.
The eradication of smallpox was a Western achievement.
It was a global achievement. The Soviet Union proposed it. The US led the day-to-day work. India, Ethiopia, Brazil, and many other countries did most of the field work in their own territories. Health workers from over 70 countries took part.
Saying one country did it tells the wrong story. The real lesson — that countries can cooperate even when they disagree — is more important.
Smallpox died out on its own as countries got richer.
It was wiped out on purpose, by a deliberate global campaign that took over 10 years and required vaccinating billions of people. Without that work, smallpox would still be killing about 1.5 million people every year.
This matters because it shows that public health is something humans actively do, not something that just happens.
Vaccines today are like the old smallpox vaccine.
Smallpox vaccine used a live, related virus and gave a small visible scar. Most modern vaccines do not. They use safer methods — small parts of a virus, or just instructions for the body to make those parts. The principle is the same, but the technology is different.
Confusing old and new vaccines can lead to confusion about modern vaccination. The smallpox story is the proof that the basic idea works.
This lesson covers a serious infectious disease and the science of vaccination. Treat both with care. Do not give graphic detail about smallpox symptoms; the focus is on what was at stake and how it was solved. Do not present Edward Jenner alone as the hero of vaccination; honour the older traditions of variolation in China, India, the Ottoman Empire, and Africa. Do not assume your students all support modern vaccination. Some families have concerns about specific vaccines today, and that is a separate conversation from the historical achievement of ending smallpox. Stick to the smallpox story and let the evidence speak. Be honest about the role of the Soviet Union — they proposed eradication and supplied huge amounts of vaccine — without making the lesson into a Cold War narrative. Be honest about the campaign's challenges, including some places where vaccination was forced and not always voluntary; this is a real ethical question and worth a brief mention. Avoid using the words 'primitive' or 'backward' for any society or any older practice; variolation was clever, careful, and worked. Finally, end the lesson on the achievement, not on disagreements. The eradication of smallpox is one of the clearest victories of human cooperation. Let the students feel that.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about smallpox and the vaccine.
What was smallpox, and why did it matter so much in human history?
What is variolation, and where was it used before Edward Jenner?
What was Jenner's specific contribution in 1796?
How did the United States and the Soviet Union work together to eradicate smallpox?
When was smallpox eradicated, and what was the most important tool used in the campaign?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
The US and the Soviet Union worked together on smallpox during the Cold War. Today, are there problems where countries that disagree about most things could still work together?
Two countries still hold samples of smallpox virus in laboratories. Should those samples be destroyed?
The eradication of smallpox was achieved by ordinary health workers walking from village to village, not by famous scientists in laboratories. What does this tell us about who saves lives?
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