10 Forgotten Historical Figures You Didn't Know Changed Your Life

10. Henrietta Lacks: Immortal Cells

The people featured in these entries have one common element, they are all willing participants to their innovative change. Whether they were the first step to a greater innovation or one of many who worked to change the world they all knew -more or less- what they were doing.

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Henrietta Lacks died never knowing how very important she was.

Lacks was a poor tobacco farmer from Southern Virginia she would later in life marry and move to Maryland. In January 1951, she was admitted to Johns Hopkins, still considered one of the best hospitals on Earth and coincidently the only hospital at that time that would admit black patients.

She was quickly diagnosed with cervical cancer and would die nine months later during treatment.

Unbeknownst to Lacks during her initial treatment a section of her tumour was biopsied and given researcher Dr. George Otto Gey. Upon study Gey noticed an unusual quality to Lack's cells, unlike other cells that perished in a few days hers wouldn't.

The cell line (later known as HeLa Cells) were invaluable for their supposed 'immortal' capability. Jonas Salk would use the cells during his research into a Polio vaccine, they've been used tens of thousands of patents have been registered using the HeLa cells as a base.

Without trying, without knowing Henrietta Lacks changed the course of science and would lead to innovations that would later save millions of live.

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