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Smith took up the study of bacteriology at the suggestion of his friend James
Frederick Elliott, and did a large amount of research endeavouring to find a vaccine against the effects of snake bite. He collected a large number of venomous snakes which he handled himself when extracting their venom.
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had discovered a vaccine, which, however, would not keep, and Smith after long experimenting found an effective vaccine which would keep for an indefinite period. This he treated as a business secret for many years, but a few months before his death he handed the formula to representatives of the
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Smith eventually came to the conclusion that it was bacteriologically impossible to inoculate against snake-bite, but while carrying out his investigations he collected a large amount of information about the relative virulence of the venom of
Australian snakes.
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148:; by 1867 he opened a business for himself at Sydney which he continued for about 20 years. Smith took up photography, which led to his studying chemistry at the
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government. Smith also gave £10,000 to endow a 'McGarvie Smith
Institute'. While making his investigations Smith travelled extensively in
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All his life he had a passion for work, but he spared time in his youth to become a good rifle shot. Smith married
Adelaide Elizabeth
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156:. Smith began work an assayer and metallurgist in the mid-1880s. He developed improvements in the treatment of
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140:, Smith added 'McGarvie' to his name. At 13 years of age Smith was apprenticed and learned the trade of
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and visited many laboratories. He was a man of great determination and remarkable personality.
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and his advice was of great value in dealing with problems of this kind at the
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379:. No. 25, 171. New South Wales, Australia. 7 September 1918. p. 14
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215:, who died in 1908. Smith died at his home in the Sydney suburb of
351:. New South Wales, Australia. 14 September 1918. p. 7
112:(8 February 1844 – 6 September 1918) was an Australian
183:His most important research was in connection with
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435:Deaths from the Spanish flu pandemic in Australia
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387:– via National Library of Australia.
359:– via National Library of Australia.
263:. Canberra: National Centre of Biography,
136:Young. Baptised as John Smith by the Rev.
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19:For other people named John Smith, see
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211:Hoalls on 7 July 1877, the widow of
445:19th-century Australian biologists
440:Deaths from pneumonia in Australia
415:19th-century Australian geologists
317:Dictionary of Australian Biography
260:Australian Dictionary of Biography
255:"Smith, John McGarvie (1844–1918)"
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420:Colony of New South Wales people
265:Australian National University
1:
371:"Death of Mr. M'Garvie SMITH"
343:"Death of a noted scientist"
69:, New South Wales, Australia
21:John Smith (disambiguation)
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430:Woollahra, New South Wales
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376:The Sydney Morning Herald
253:Peterson, Kamoya (1988).
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49:Colony of New South Wales
223:. He was buried at the
312:"Smith, John McGarvie"
152:from 1867, and later,
425:Australian scientists
322:Angus & Robertson
348:The Daily Advertiser
164:mining-field and at
150:University of Sydney
16:Australian scientist
110:John McGarvie Smith
32:John McGarvie Smith
128:Smith was born in
274:978-0-522-84459-7
225:Waverley Cemetery
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84:Scientific career
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158:refractory ores
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381:. Retrieved
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353:. Retrieved
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325:. Retrieved
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170:Mount Morgan
162:Sunny Corner
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114:metallurgist
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98:bacteriology
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61:(1918-12-06)
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410:1918 deaths
405:1844 births
166:Broken Hill
75:Nationality
399:Categories
327:28 January
320:. Sydney:
231:References
174:Queensland
154:metallurgy
142:watchmaker
94:metallurgy
78:Australian
383:5 October
355:5 October
283:1833-7538
221:influenza
217:Woollahra
124:Biography
310:(1949).
291:70677943
200:and the
146:jeweller
185:anthrax
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198:Europe
130:Sydney
90:Fields
67:Sydney
45:Sydney
168:. At
385:2021
357:2021
329:2010
287:OCLC
279:ISSN
269:ISBN
144:and
56:Died
38:Born
219:of
209:née
134:née
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