After demonstrating that one county could be infiltrated with disease-carrying mosquitoes bred in another, professor J.B. Smith, above, the “father of mosquito control,” convinced the legislature that mosquitoes should be dealt with at a state level. In 1912, New Jersey enacted the “Smith Laws”—still in force—that established coordinated county mosquito control commissions, overseen today by Rutgers’ Center for Vector Biology.
Credit: Special Collections and University Archives