Industrial Age · Europe · Science
1885
Pasteur's Rabies Vaccine
July 6, 1885
A nine-year-old Alsatian boy bitten fourteen times by a rabid dog was brought to Pasteur's Paris laboratory. Over ten days Pasteur injected progressively stronger extracts of dried rabbit spinal cord. The boy lived. It was the first successful human vaccination against a viral disease, and the beginning of the Pasteur Institutes.