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1911-1915
1911-00-00 [N0127052] :
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Newspaper clipping, [The Outlook], [1911] [Enclosed in C0127048]
The article reviews contrasting administrative methods of Gorgas and Goethals in the Panama Canal Zone.
1911-00-00 [S8220001] :
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Yellow fever: A Compilation of Various Publications. Results of the Work of Maj. Walter Reed, Medical Corps, United States Army, and the Yellow Fever Commission, 1911
This 250 page book includes chapters about Walter Reed as well as the publications of Reed and his associates, the publications of James Carroll, reports from the sanitary officers in Havana, Cuba, and directions for destroying mosquitoes. Published in Washington by the Government Printing Office, it includes illustrations, portraits, and diagrams. The book is autographed by Mrs. Walter Reed, Jefferson R. Kean, A. S. Pinto, L. O. Howard, Albert E. Truby, Mrs. Jesse Lazear, William H. Lazear, and A. Diaz Albertini. It is also autographed by John R. Kissinger, John J. Moran, John H. Andrus, James Leonard Hanberry and John R. Bullard, who served as volunteers for the U. S. Yellow Fever Commission's experiments in Cuba. Mrs. Walter Reed gave the book to Philip Showalter Hench who heavily annotated it.
1911-00-00 [C0127005] :
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Letter fragment from Bert W. Caldwell to [Henry Rose Carter, 1911] [Enclosed in C0127001]
Caldwell dispenses gossip about Drs. Gorgas, Brem, and Beverly. Carter supplies additional information.
1911-01-12 [03002001] :
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Surgeon General's Office Record Card, January 12, 1911
Excerpts regard the publication of “Major Walter Reed and the Yellow Fever Commission - A Compilation.” The Smithsonian Institution requests photographs of Walter Reed. The record card is dated January 12, 1911 through September 12, 1911. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1911-01-26 [06239001] :
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Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Aristides Agramonte, January 26, 1911
Kean requests Agramonte's photograph for a publication about the Yellow Fever Commission. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1911-02-26 [N2980001] :
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Newspaper clipping, The World, February 26, 1911
Victory Over Disease Justifies Spanish War Cost of $1,148,000,000
1911-07-03 [03001001] :
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Letter fragment to William Crawford Gorgas, July 3, 1911
Gorgas has been offered the presidency of the University of Alabama.
1911-07-27 [03001003] :
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Letter from William Crawford Gorgas to J.H. Johnson, July 27, 1911
Gorgas declines the offer of the presidency of the University of Alabama.
1911-07-30 [N0127010] :
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Newspaper clipping, July 30, [1911] [Enclosed in C0127001]
Report Says Arosemena Cannot Be Re-Elected [From the Henry Rose Carter Papers]
1911-07-31 [N0127009] :
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Newspaper clipping, July 31, [1911] [Enclosed in C0127001]
Argentine Would Accept John Ridgely Carter [From the Henry Rose Carter Papers]
1911-07-31 [C0128001] :
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Letter from A. H. Glennan to Henry Rose Carter, July 31, 1911
Glennan confidentially informs Carter of a possible detail in Hawaii.
1911-08-01 [N0127011] :
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Newspaper clipping, August 1, [1911] [Enclosed in C0127001]
Raman Acevedo Dismissed as Chief of Cabinet [From the Henry Rose Carter Papers]
1911-08-02 [C0127001] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, August 2, 1911
Carter discusses a possible assignment to Hawaii to Laura Armistead Carter. He also encloses newspaper clippings and letters.
1911-08-04 [06239004] :
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Letter from Aristides Agramonte to Jefferson Randolph Kean, August 4, 1911
Agramonte informs Kean of Finlay's declining health. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1911-08-15 [C0127012] :
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Letter from Laura Eugenia Hook Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, August 15, 1911
Carter chats about relatives and friends.
1911-08-15 [C0127015] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, August 15, 1911
Carter writes about Laura Armistead Carter's sickness and gives her a detailed prescription. He also describes his flower gardens.
1911-08-18 [C0127025] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, August 18, 1911
Carter cautions Laura Armistead Carter about tuberculosis.
1911-08-22 [C0127028] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, August 22, 1911
Carter stresses to his daughter that every effort should be made to get her well. He also discusses his next foreign detail and how he will rise to the challenge.
1911-08-30 [06238001] :
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Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to William Crawford Gorgas, August 30, 1911
Kean denies a rumor that he has been chosen to succeed General Torney. He informs Gorgas that the 10th Infantry has been ordered to Panama.
1911-08-30 [C0127045] :
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Letter from Edward Champe Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, August 30, 1911 [Enclosed in C0127043]
Carter expresses his relief upon graduation and receiving letters of recommendation.
1911-09-04 [C0127033] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, September 4, 1911
Carter informs Laura Armistead Carter that his departure date is still uncertain and encourages her to regain her health.
1911-09-05 [C0127040] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, September 5, 1911
Carter delays his sailing date so that Laura Armistead Carter can remain in the hospital.
1911-09-06 [C0127043] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, September 6, 1911
Carter expresses his devotion to Laura Armistead Carter. He also encloses a letter from Edward Champe Carter.
1911-09-10 [C0127048] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, September 10, 1911
Carter explains the difficulties of being a navy wife and criticizes his daughter's possible suitors.
1911-09-12 [06239008] :
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Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Aristides Agramonte, September 12, 1911
Kean acknowledges that Agramonte should get proper credit for his yellow fever work. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1911-09-16 [C0127056] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, September 16, 1911
1912-00-00 [03014001] :
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Article: Agreement between the History of Yellow Fever and its Transmission By the Culex Mosquito (Stegomyia of Theobald), by Carlos J. Finlay, 1912
Photostat of page 411 of Finlay's Selected Works. Included are notes by Truby.
1912-02-07 [P9190001] :
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Photograph of a property map of Columbia Barracks, Havana, Cuba, with annotations by Philip Showalter Hench and Albert E. Truby, February 7, 1912
1912-02-15 [03005001] :
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Letter from Ida E. Kissinger to James E. Peabody, February 15, 1912
Ida Kissinger sends photographs for Peabody's lecture and mentions Kelly's book. The Kissingers appreciate all the help given to them. They also provide Agramonte's address in Havana.
1912-02-22 [03006001] :
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Letter from Aristides Agramonte to Dr. Santos, February 22, 1912
Strategy in application and nomination for Nobel Prize.
1912-03-27 [03007001] :
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Letter from Bessie C. Wratten to Emilie Lawrence Reed, March 27, 1912
Wratten informs Emilie Lawrence Reed that her husband will offer assistance with her writing.
1912-03-27 [03013001] :
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Surgeon General's Office Record Card, March 27, 1912
These excerpts regard the correspondence between William T. Jenkins and Jefferson Randolph Kean, and the confusion of Jenkins' mailing address. The record card is dated March 27, 1912 through April 20, 1912. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1912-04-01 [03008001] :
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Letter from George M. Wratten to Emilie Lawrence Reed, April 1, 1912
Wratten sends Emilie Lawrence Reed transliterations of [song?] titles.
1912-05-23 [06242020] :
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Lecture: Sanitation Work in Cuba, by Jefferson Randolph Kean, May 23, 1912
Kean discusses the sanitation efforts used to prevent yellow fever in Cuba from 1906 to 1909. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1912-07-06 [N3009001] :
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Newspaper clipping, Baltimore American, July 6, 1912
To Give Credit Where It Is Due
1912-07-26 [00759012] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura [Eugenia Hook Carter], July 26, 1912
Carter describes his public health work in Panama.
1912-08-12 [03010001] :
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Letter from Joseph B. Bishop to John J. Moran, August 12, 1912
Bishop requests a photograph of Moran from the yellow fever experiment years to be used in an article in Scribner's Magazine.
1912-09-25 [03011001] :
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Letter from Caroline Latimer to [s.n.] Waterson, September 25, 1912
Latimer elaborates the differences between the first and second editions of the book: Walter Reed and Yellow Fever.
1912-09-26 [03011004] :
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Letter from Caroline Latimer to [s.n.] Waterson, September 26, 1912
Latimer writes to Waterson regarding Kissinger's pension.
1912-10-07 [C0128004] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, October 7, 1912
Blue informs Carter of his commission as Senior Surgeon.
1912-10-31 [00752001] :
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Biographical notes on Henry Rose Carter, October 31, 1912
This is a detailed account of Carter's public health work and associated study of yellow fever.
1912-11-30 [06240001] :
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Letter from Aristides Agramonte to Jefferson Randolph Kean, November 30, 1912
Agramonte demands that Kean correct the injustice done to him regarding his unfair portrayal in the Yellow Fever Commission. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1912-12-07 [03012001] :
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Letter from George H. Torney to the Director of the Yellow Fever Bureau, December 7, 1912
Torney reports that Agramonte has requested that a statement published in the Yellow Fever Bureau Bulletin be corrected. Torney explains how he believes the apparent injustice occurred, and requests the correction on behalf of the Office of the Surgeon General.
1912-12-07 [06241001] :
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Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Aristides Agramonte, December 7, 1912
Kean states that Carroll was responsible for the injustice done to Agramonte. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1913-00-00 [03017004] :
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Letter from George H. Torney, [1913]
Torney wants to inspect the painting of Walter Reed when it is on exhibition in Washington, D. C. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1913-00-00 [N0448001] :
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Newspaper clipping, Cincinnati Enquirer, 1913
Students Honoring Memory of Heroic Army Surgeon
1913-01-20 [03017001] :
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Surgeon General's Office Record Card, January 20, 1913
Excerpts from a record card pertain to the biographies of Walter Reed, as well as to the discussion of a monument to commemorate the completion of the Panama Canal that should include Walter Reed. The record card is dated from January 20, 1913 through June 28, 1913. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1913-02-15 [N3015001] :
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Newspaper clipping, February 15, 1913
Conquest of Yellow Fever
1913-02-19 [N0454002] :
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Newspaper clipping, Boston, Mass., Transcript, February 19, 1913
Anti-Malarial Measures for Farmhouses
1913-03-12 [01022015] :
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Letter from T.H.D. Griffitts to Henry Rose Carter, March 12, 1913
Griffitts writes to Carter about his anti-malaria work. He describes the problems with ponds and prospective mosquito breeding experiments.
1913-05-26 [00447001] :
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Letter from J.N. Armstrong to Charlotte C. Sweitzer, May 26, 1913
Armstrong requests biographical material on her son, Jesse Lazear, for a college reunion event.
1913-08-04 [03016001] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, August 4, 1913
Blue orders Carter to North Carolina to investigate malaria and propose control measures.
1913-10-15 [03017005] :
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Letter from Charles M. Gandy to Simon Flexner, October 15, 1913
Gandy discusses the various photographs of Walter Reed that are suitable for hanging at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1913-10-17 [03017008] :
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Letter from Charles M. Gandy to Simon Flexner, October 17, 1913
Gandy informs Flexner that a negative of one of Reed's photographs is broken. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1914-00-00 [00928003] :
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Report: Some Observations Bearing on the Control of Malaria, by P.M. Ashburn, [1914]
Ashburn reports on methods of curbing malaria through the control of mosquito populations.
1914-00-00 [00448005] :
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Letter from Emma G. Kane to Charlotte C. Sweitzer, [1914?]
Kane thanks Sweitzer for a photograph of Lazear and describes the new Jesse Lazear School.
1914-01-14 [00448002] :
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Letter from Emma G. Kane to the President of Johns Hopkins Hospital, January 14, 1914
Kane requests a photograph of Jesse Lazear.
1914-01-16 [00759001] :
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Letter from Joseph Y. Porter to Henry Rose Carter, January 16, 1914
Porter thanks Carter for his educational malaria pamphlet for children.
1914-01-28 [00448010] :
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Letter from Rupert Norton to Charlotte C. Sweitzer, January 28, 1914
Norton requests a photograph of Jesse Lazear.
1914-02-11 [00759003] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, February 11, 1914
Carter discusses her presentation on malaria.
1914-03-26 [00920002] :
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Report [in Spanish]: La Fiebre Amarilla, by Henry Rose Carter, March 26, 1914
Carter discusses the transmission, spread and containment of yellow fever.
1914-03-31 [03022001] :
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Recollections of Yellow Fever Epidemic, by Mrs. Tyler, March 31, 1914
Tyler recounts yellow fever outbreaks.
1914-04-20 [00759007] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, April 20, 1914
Blue assigns Carter to represent the Health Service at the Drainage Congress.
1914-05-13 [03020001] :
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Union Calendar No. 297, House of Representatives 16510, May 13, 1914
This bill recognizes the services of certain military officers of the Isthmian Canal Commission.
1914-05-29 [00448009] :
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Letter from Thomas C. Lazear, May 29, 1914
Thomas Lazear transcribes a note written to him by Admiral Dewey on the fly leaf of Dewey's autobiography. The message praises Jesse Lazear.
1914-05-30 [C0128006] :
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Letter from Ronald Ross to Henry Rose Carter, May 30, 1914
Ross discusses the opening of a Tropical School in Hamburg.
1914-06-00 [KAFH0010] :
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Review: Havard's Military Hygiene, 2nd Ed., 1914, [June, 1914]
A review of Havard's book on military hygiene comments on its more comprehensive treatment of infectious diseases and sanitary methods than the first edition. [Courtesy of The Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia Library]
1914-06-23 [00759008] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, June 23, 1914
Carter reports that he is half-way finished with his public health work in South Carolina.
1914-07-14 [03019001] :
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Memorandum of interview with William Crawford Gorgas, by Wickliffe Rose, July 14, 1914
Rose and Gorgas discuss the relative severity of ankylostomiasis and malaria in Malaya, as well as plans to eradicate yellow fever worldwide.
1914-07-23 [00759010] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, July 23, 1914
Carter reports that the field work has been difficult.
1914-07-27 [03020005] :
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Report No. 1022, 63rd Congress: Services of Certain Officers of the Army and Navy, July 27, 1914
This report recognizes officers whose work was instrumental in the construction of the Panama Canal.
1914-08-00 [03046006] :
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Letter from H.O. Benson to John J. Moran, [August] 1914
Moran is ordered to report for physical examination before receiving new orders.
1914-09-08 [00759016] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, September 8, 1914
Blue assigns Carter to investigate malaria in North Carolina.
1914-09-27 [00759017] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, September 27, [1914]
Carter reports on his work; he hopes to finish soon.
1914-10-07 [00759019] :
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Letter from H. R. Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter
Hopes to finish the clean up work early; received galley proof of his lectures.
1914-10-15 [00756001] :
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Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to [s.n.] Tillery, October 15, 1914
[Carter] reports on his observations of mosquito breeding conditions. He recommends mosquito control measures for a pond and inquires about when he will need to appear in court.
1914-10-27 [00757001] :
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Report: Yellow Fever: Feasibility of its Eradication, by Wickliffe Rose, October 27, 1914
Rose describes yellow fever trouble spots and eradication methods.
1914-11-10 [00758001] :
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Editorial from The News Leader, Richmond, Virginia, by Douglas Freeman, November 10, 1914
Freeman celebrates Carter, Reed, and Gorgas as Virginians.
1914-11-10 [C0129001] :
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Excerpt from editorial, by Douglas Freeman, November 10, 1914
Freeman praises the accomplishments of Henry Rose Carter, Walter Reed, and William Crawford Gorgas.
1914-12-01 [00759021] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, December 1, 1914
Carter writes to his wife regarding travel details and the weather.
1914-12-08 [C0128008] :
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Postcard from Ronald Ross to Henry Rose Carter, December 8, 1914
Ross thanks Carter for the reprints of his yellow fever lectures.
1914-12-18 [N3021002] :
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Newspaper clipping, The Baltimore Evening Sun, December 18, 1914
Pertinent Portraits - George W. Goethals
1914-12-21 [N3021001] :
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Newspaper clipping, [includes autograph note by Laura Armistead? Carter], The Baltimore Evening Sun, December 21, 1914
Colonel Goethals Was Not Hampered By The Canal Commission
1915-00-00 [00765001] :
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Draft of a lecture on yellow fever, by [Henry Rose Carter], 1915
[Carter] lectures on immunity to yellow fever.
1915-00-00 [00764113] :
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Report: Hatching Sheet, Coosa River, by the State Board of Health of Alabama, 1915
This report details reproduction of mosquitoes along the Coosa River.
1915-01-08 [00764001] :
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Letter fragment to [s.n.] Thurlow, January 8, 1915
The writer suggests field work instead of lab work.
1915-01-13 [00764002] :
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Letter from Joseph A. LePrince to Henry Rose Carter, January 13, 1915
LePrince discusses malaria distribution in southern states, and field work to eradicate mosquito larvae.
1915-01-16 [N0130001] :
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Newspaper clipping, Press-Knick, January 16, 1915
Malaria [From the Henry Rose Carter Papers]
1915-01-19 [00764004] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 19, 1915
Blue assigns LePrince and Carter to investigate malarial conditions in South Carolina.
1915-01-20 [00764007] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 20, 1915
Blue requests Carter's opinion in regard to ordinances against mosquito propagation.
1915-01-20 [00764005] :
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Letter from the Designing Engineer of the Alabama Power Company to Henry Rose Carter, January 20, 1915
The Designing Engineer reports that he has been unable to obtain samples of fish from local ponds.
1915-01-21 [00764008] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 21, 1915
Blue requests feedback on newspaper article describing the use of bats as an anti-mosquito tool.
1915-01-25 [00764009] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 25, 1915
Blue informs Carter that the Hydro-Electric Company will reimburse his travel expenses.
1915-01-26 [00764011] :
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Letter from J.W. Kerr to Henry Rose Carter, January 26, 1915
Kerr questions the need for multiple investigators examining one subject.
1915-01-26 [00764010] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 26, 1915
Blue orders Carter to proceed to South Carolina to confer with State Health officials.
1915-01-28 [00764012] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 28, 1915
Blue orders Carter to delay his investigation until the waters recede.
1915-01-29 [00803008] :
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Letter from H.F. Moore to Henry Rose Carter, January 29, 1915
Moore informs Carter that it is feasible to ship mosquito-eating fish to Alabama. The Bureau of Fisheries will cooperate with the Public Health Service.
1915-01-30 [00764013] :
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Letter from A.M. Stimson to Henry Rose Carter, January 30, 1915
Stimson discusses his recent investigations of syphilitics.
1915-02-06 [00803014] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, February 6, 1915
Carter reports on his health and his travel plans.
1915-02-11 [00764015] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, February 11, 1915
Blue orders Carter to lecture on yellow fever and malaria.
1915-02-15 [00764016] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, February 15, 1915
Blue grants Carter leave.
1915-02-17 [00764017] :
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Letter to Henry Rose Carter, February 17, 1915
The writer discusses fish stocks in local reservoirs.
1915-02-20 [00761001] :
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Memorandum from Henry Rose Carter to James A. Haynes, February 20, 1915
Carter discusses his role in the prevention of yellow fever and malaria in South Carolina.
1915-02-20 [00764021] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, February 20, 1915
Blue requests that Carter conduct malaria studies in Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
1915-02-24 [00764022] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, February 24, 1915
Blue directs Carter to inspect the waters around the Georgia-Carolina Power Plant.
1915-02-27 [00764024] :
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Letter from Joseph A. LePrince, February 27, 1915
LePrince discusses his survey of Hartsville, South Carolina, and gives his recommendations to inhibit mosquito breeding.
1915-02-27 [00764023] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, February 27, 1915
Blue requests that Carter review a proposed law on mosquito control.
1915-03-01 [00764028] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Rupert Blue, March 1, 1915
Carter discusses legislation designed to inhibit mosquito breeding.
1915-03-04 [00764030] :
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Letter from H. M. Smith to Henry Rose Carter, March 4, 1915
List of fish best suited for stocking ponds of Hydro-Electric Plants.
1915-03-08 [00764033] :
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Letter from J.W. Kerr to Henry Rose Carter, March 8, 1915
Kerr describes rural sanitation investigations and malaria surveys. He requests Carter's assistance.
1915-03-09 [00764034] :
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Letter from Harold Leidelin to Henry Rose Carter, March 9, 1915
Leidelin claims that he has successfully infected a guinea pig with yellow fever. He hopes to receive U.S. Public Health Service support.
1915-03-12 [00764036] :
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Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Earl I. Brown, March 12, 1915
[Carter] requests permission to make a sanitary survey of an area around the Coosa River.
1915-03-12 [N0130002] :
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Newspaper clipping, Washington Times, March 12, 1915
Surgeons Promoted for Canal Service
1915-03-23 [00764038] :
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Letter from Earl I. Brown to Henry Rose Carter, March 23, 1915
Brown grants Carter permission to conduct a sanitary survey around the Coosa River.
1915-04-27 [00764043] :
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Letter from A.H. Glennan to Henry Rose Carter, April 27, 1915
Carter receives orders for his next assignment.
1915-04-27 [00764042] :
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Letter from A.H. Glennan to Henry Rose Carter, April 27, 1915
Glennan discusses studies of impounded waters.
1915-04-29 [00764046] :
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Letter from A.H. Glennan to Joseph A. LePrince, April 29, 1915
LePrince is ordered to meet with Carter regarding studies of impounded waters.
1915-05-17 [00764048] :
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Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to R.H. von Ezdorf, May 17, 1915
[Carter] offers to meet with von Ezdorf.
1915-05-17 [00764047] :
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Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Joseph A. LePrince, May 17, 1915
[Carter] discusses travel preparations.
1915-05-18 [00764049] :
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Letter from Harold Leidelin to Henry Rose Carter, May 18, 1915
Leidelin thanks Carter for a reprint on impounded waters and malaria. He expresses disappointment about the lack of support by others for his work.
1915-06-07 [00764051] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, June 7, 1915
Carter discusses his trip and the lack of field work at the moment.
1915-06-23 [00764053] :
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Letter from James H. Pou to Henry Rose Carter, June 23, 1915
Pou requests an inspection of a site for a lawsuit.
1915-07-02 [00764055] :
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Letter from [P. Allery] to James H. Pou, July 2, 1915
The Carolina Power and Light Company prefers that Carter conduct the investigation.
1915-07-03 [00764056] :
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Letter from James H. Pou to Henry Rose Carter, July 3, 1915
Pou agrees that an additional investigation is necessary.
1915-07-07 [00764057] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, July 7, 1915
Carter describes life in the camp, field work, and financial matters.
1915-07-12 [C0128010] :
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Letter from Ronald Ross to Henry Rose Carter, July 12, 1915
Ross acknowledges receiving Carter's paper on the effect of impounded water on malaria.
1915-07-28 [00764065] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, July 28, 1915
Carter describes life in the camp and the field. He does not know when he will be home again.
1915-08-00 [P1240006] :
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Photograph of Henry Rose Carter from the collection of T. H. D. Griffitts, August, 1915
1915-08-00 [P1240007] :
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Photograph of Henry Rose Carter from the collection of T. H. D. Griffitts, August, 1915
1915-08-00 [P1240003] :
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Photograph of Henry Rose Carter from the collection of T. H. D. Griffitts, August, 1915
1915-08-00 [P1240011] :
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Photograph of Henry Rose Carter from the collection of T. H. D. Griffitts, August, 1915
1915-08-00 [P1240004] :
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Photograph of Henry Rose Carter from the collection of T. H. D. Griffitts, August, 1915
1915-08-14 [03025001] :
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Letter to Daniel Witwer Weaver, August 14, 1915
Weaver is informed of Kelly's biography of Walter Reed. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1915-09-20 [00764069] :
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Memorandum from John W. Kerr, September 20, 1915
Kerr reports on cooperation with the International Health Commission and discusses steps to be taken in eradication of malaria.
1915-09-23 [00764073] :
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Letter from John W. Kerr to Henry Rose Carter, September 23, 1915
Kerr discusses a planned meeting in Washington between Rose, von Ezdorf and Carter.
1915-09-27 [00764074] :
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Minutes from a conference at the Bureau of Public Health Service, September 27, 1915
This conference concerned malaria and ways to combat its spread.
1915-09-29 [00764076] :
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Letter from Wickliffe Rose to Henry Rose Carter, September 29, 1915
Rose discusses methods of malaria control in the rural South.
1915-10-07 [00764078] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, October 7, 1915
Blue orders Carter to Virginia to advise local authorities on anti-malaria measures.
1915-10-15 [00764079] :
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Letter from W.G. Stimpson to Henry Rose Carter, October 15, 1915
Stimpson discusses Carter's expenses.
1915-10-25 [00764081] :
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Letter from Boykin Wright and Boykin Wright, Jr., to Henry Rose Carter, October 25, 1915
The Wrights are returning Carter's report on impounded waters.
1915-10-26 [00449008] :
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Letter from George Derby to Charlotte C. Sweitzer, October 26, 1915
Derby requests information on Jesse Lazear for the National Cyclopedia of American Biography.
1915-10-28 [00764082] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, October 28, 1915
Blue orders Carter to investigate a fever outbreak in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
1915-10-30 [00449001] :
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Letter from Mabel H. Lazear to Charlotte C. Sweitzer, October 30, 1915
Mabel Lazear writes that the National Cyclopedia of American Biography plans a biography on Jesse Lazear.
1915-11-05 [00764084] :
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Letter from W.G. Stimpson to Henry Rose Carter, November 5, 1915
Stimpson discusses reimbursement for expenses.
1915-11-10 [00764085] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to the Director of Sanitation, San Juan Puerto Rico, November 10, 1915
Carter recommends a campaign to eliminate mosquitoes.
1915-11-13 [00764087] :
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Letter from Carl A. Grote to Henry Rose Carter, November 13, 1915
Grote requests suggestions for a malaria eradication campaign. He notes that his county does not have the resources to purchase quinine.
1915-11-18 [03024001] :
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Letter from George W. Goethals to John J. Moran, November 18, 1915
Goethals provides Moran with a transcript of Moran's service record and acknowledges his resignation from the Health Department.
1915-11-19 [00764089] :
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Letter from Sarah Hinds Wilder to Henry Rose Carter, November 19, 1915
Wilder expresses her appreciation for Carter's work.
1915-11-26 [03025003] :
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Letter from [William Crawford Gorgas] to N. M. Miller, November 26, 1915
Gorgas informs Miller that a painting of Walter Reed has been approved and will be hung in the Walter Reed General Hospital. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1915-12-00 [00764111] :
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Report: Work on Mosquito Extinction, by [Henry Rose Carter], [December 1915]
[Carter] reports on mosquito eradication efforts, and includes an itemized list of expenses.
1915-12-00 [P7630001] :
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Photograph of the floor plan of the mosquito building at Camp Lazear, December 1915
1915-12-00 [P7629001] :
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Photograph of the floor plan of the fomite building at Camp Lazear, December 1915
1915-12-04 [03025005] :
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Letter from the Chief Clerk of the Surgeon's General's Office to N. M. Miller, [December 4], 1915
Permission is sought to photograph the painting of Walter Reed recently completed by Miller. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
1915-12-06 [00764092] :
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Telegram from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, December 6, 1915
Blue orders Carter to report to a conference.
1915-12-08 [00764093] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, December 8, 1915
Blue orders Carter to return to Baltimore following the conference.
1915-12-09 [00764094] :
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Letter from B.R. Newton to Henry Rose Carter, December 9, 1915
Newton approves the employment of assistants for malaria field work.
1915-12-12 [00764095] :
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Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Carl A. Grote, December 12, 1915
Carter provides instructions for malaria prevention. He notes that the Rockefeller Foundation has shown interest in sponsoring a anti-malaria campaign.
1915-12-14 [00450001] :
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Letter from Mabel H. Lazear to Charlotte C. Sweitzer, [December 14, 1915]
Mabel Lazear provides family news.
1915-12-22 [00764101] :
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Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, December 22, 1915
Blue orders Carter to attend the Pan-American Scientific Congress.
1915-12-26 [00764102] :
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Letter from Sarah Hinds Wilder to Henry Rose Carter, December 26, 1915
Wilder expresses her appreciation for Carter's work.
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