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There is No Cure for Polio
An excerpt from an 1867 publication by Dr. Charles Fayette Taylor called Infantile Paralysis, and Its Attendant Deformities.

An excerpt from an 1867 publication by Dr. Charles Fayette Taylor called Infantile Paralysis, and Its Attendant Deformities.

Dr. Taylor discusses treatment options using various apparatus designed to stretch the specified muscles in patients.

Citation Information
Taylor, Charles Fayette, excerpt from “Infantile paralysis, and its attendant deformities,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/52ba61d41ab9a8ba6aa9065cd0c187d6.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of Yale University, Cushing/Whitney Medical Library and Medical Heritage Library via Internet Archive.

Tips for Students

For this source, consider:

  • the author's point of view
  • the author's purpose
  • historical context
  • audience

Item 6 of 11 in the Primary Source Set There is No Cure for Polio

Previous ItemNext Item
A 1934 photograph of patients at the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation holding a giant card for President Roosevelt as part of a fundraiser.
A photograph of polio patients watching President Franklin D. Roosevelt's funeral procession, April 1945.
A photograph of Fredrick Goodall, aged six, doing leg exercises with his nurse. Goodall contracted polio during a 1930s epidemic.
The syringe and vial used to test the Salk polio vaccine on children who already had polio, 1952.
A news film of an unidentified man interviewed about the distribution of an oral polio vaccine, 1961.
An excerpt from an 1867 publication by Dr. Charles Fayette Taylor called Infantile Paralysis, and Its Attendant Deformities.
A news film of Dr. Albert Sabin, who developed the oral polio vaccine, commenting on the vaccine in 1961.
A photograph of a 1939 World’s Fair exhibit on infantile paralysis.
A 1940s photograph of a child in an iron lung, used to treat polio patients that could not breathe on their own due to paralysis.
A photograph of a man with a sign to raise money for the March of Dimes Foundation to help prevent “birth defects, arthritis, and polio.”
An excerpt from a 1916 pamphlet on infantile paralysis delivered before the New York Academy of Medicine by Dr. Simon Flexner.

These sets were created and reviewed by teachers. Explore resources and ideas for Using DPLA's Primary Source Sets in your classroom.

To give feedback, contact us at info@dp.la. You can also view resources for National History Day.

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