12 2 Proceedings of the Newport Natural History Society. 
Presented to Jenner by the surgeons of the British Navy. 
Its locality is now unknown. It is not, as Pfeiffer has sup¬ 
posed, a portrait medal of Jenner. 
2. Obverse. Bust, clothed, to left. Upon truncation: 
[T. R.] POOLE, 1809. No inscription. 
Reverse blank. 
Of pink wax upon colorless, transparent glass: 82 mm. 
(length of bust). Storer, loc. cit ., April, 1895, p. 128, No. 
880. [Not given by Pfeiffer, 1896.] 
In the library of Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society 
of London. I know of it through Dr. F. P. Weber of that 
city. 
A gold medal was presented to Jenner by the Medical 
Society of London at its anniversary dinner, March 4, 1804. 
It bore, either upon its rim or the casket that contained it: 
E. JENNER, M. D. SOCIO SUO EXIMIO OB VAC- 
CINATIONEM EXPLORATAM. 
Biographie Medicale, V, p. 574; Rudolphi, p. 81, No. 
'339; Kluyskens, II, p. 68, No. 2; Ibid., Num. Jenn., No. 
2; Duisburg, p. 230, DCIX, 2; P. and R., p. 139, No. 
386; Storer, Sanitarian , March, 1889, No. 927 \ Ibid., Amer. 
Jour, of Num., July, 1894, p. 14, No. 748; Baron, loc. cit. 
Though mentioned by all these writers, its true char¬ 
acter remained undecided until it was lately ascertained 
by Dr. F. P. Weber of London that it was the John Foth- 
ergill Medal of the Society. (Storer, Am. Jour, of Num., 
Oct., 1893, p. 35, and July, 1895, p. 6, No. 645.) Its present 
locality is unknown. If the inscription were upon its casket it 
is possible that it is the specimen now in the British Museum, 
as but one or two of these medals were struck in gold. 
[Pfeiffer, 1896, p. 3, No. 386, describes its bust as that of 
Jenner. It was not so, however, but of Dr. John Fothergill.] 
There exists a medallion engraving, with bust in profile 
to right, by J. B. Drayton, from life, and Anker Smith. 
