[963] Currie to Haygarth, 28 Nov. 1791, in the latter’s Sketch of a Plan, &c. p. 453.

[964] A Conscious View of Circumstances and Proceedings respecting Vaccine Inoculation. Bath, 1800. The author was probably James Nooth, senior surgeon to the Bath Hospital, who removed to London and practised in Queen Anne Street, holding the appointment of surgeon to the Duke of Kent. He wrote on cancer of the breast.

[965] Tracts on Inoculation. London, 1781.

[966] R. Pulteney, M.D., in a letter of 21 June, 1766, to Dr G. Baker, given in his Inquiry into the Merits of a Method of Inoculating the Smallpox. Lond. 1766.

[967] Pulteney, “Births, Deaths and Marriages of Blandford Forum, 1733-1772.” Phil. Trans. LXVIII. 615.

[968] Pulteney to Baker, App. to Inquiry into the method of Inoculating. 1766; Hutchins, Dorsetshire, I. 217.

[969] On 23 July, 1785, the apothecary makes a note in his book: “Some inspectors are not sufficiently careful to send information to the Hospital when children have had the smallpox.” MS. Records.

[970] Experiments, &c. 1768.

[971] Sir W. Watson, M.D., F.R.S., “On the Putrid Measles of London, 1763 and 1768.” Med. Obs. and Inquiries, IV. 153.

[972] Charles Kite, surgeon, Gravesend, “An Account of some anomalous Appearances consequent to Inoculation of Smallpox.” Memoirs Med. Soc. Lond. IV. (1794), p. 114.