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John Walker (vaccinator) : ウィキペディア英語版 | John Walker (vaccinator) John Walker (1759–1830) was an English educational writer, physician, and advocate of vaccination. ==Early life== Born at Cockermouth in Cumberland on 31 July 1759, Walker was the son of a smith and ironmonger there. He was educated at Cockermouth grammar school, and then followed his father's occupation of blacksmith. In 1779 he went to Dublin, and worked for an artist named Esdale. Between 1780 and 1783 he contributed engraved plates to Joseph Walker's ''Hibernian Magazine''. Influenced by Quaker ideas, though never admitted to the Society of Friends, Walker set up a school in Usher's Island, Dublin, in 1784, based on treating his pupils kindly. He journeyed through much of England and Ireland in 1793, returning to Dublin in the following year. Leaving Dublin for London, he made over his school to his friend John Foster.〔 Walker became a medical student at Guy's Hospital. In 1797 he visited Paris, where he was on good terms with James Napper Tandy, Thomas Paine, and Thomas Muir. From Paris he went to the University of Leyden, and graduated M.D. in 1799. He passed the winter in Edinburgh, and in 1800 was at Stonehouse in Gloucestershire, staying with a Dr. Marshall.〔
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