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Box 12

 Container

Contains 238 Results:

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to G.W. McCoy,  March 19, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 22
Identifier: 01222008
Scope and Contents

[Carter] requests books from the Library of Congress.

Dates:  March 19, 1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to William E. Deeks,  March 21, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 22
Identifier: 01222009
Scope and Contents

[Carter] comments on Deeks' monograph on malaria, and he suggests changes.

Dates:  March 21, 1925

Letter from H. McG. Robertson to Henry Rose Carter,  April 13, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 23
Identifier: 01223001
Scope and Contents

Robertson discusses bubonic plague in temperate climates.

Dates:  April 13, 1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to L.L. Williams,  April 26, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 23
Identifier: 01223005
Scope and Contents

[Carter] discusses the comparative efficacy, as a malaria vector, of three main species of Anopheles mosquitos in the United States.

Dates:  April 26, 1925

Letter from E.J. Scannell to Henry Rose Carter,  May 4, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224001
Scope and Contents

Scannell discusses the mud puddle breeding of mosquitoes in Africa. He is confident that the yellow fever work in Africa will succeed.

Dates:  May 4, 1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to E.J. Scannell,  May 10, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224004
Scope and Contents

[Carter] reports that MacFie is being sent to Africa to research the breeding of Stegomyia in mud puddles. He discusses his health.

Dates:  May 10, 1925

Letter from Laura Armistead Carter to Frederick F. Russell,  May 10, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224006
Scope and Contents

Laura Carter says that she is withholding Russell's letter about possible yellow fever cases because of Henry Carter's poor health.

Dates:  May 10, 1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Joseph H. White,  May 10, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224008
Scope and Contents

[Carter] inquires about and describes the disease "o bicho" found in Venezuela and Brazil.

Dates:  May 10, 1925

Letter from B.H. Ransom to Henry Rose Carter,  May 15, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224009
Scope and Contents

Ransom reports that Carter has been named honorary president of the American Society of Tropical Medicine.

Dates:  May 15, 1925

Letter from Frederick F. Russell to Laura Armistead Carter,  May 21, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224010
Scope and Contents

Russell sends Laura Carter reports on possible yellow fever cases in Brazil, but says she need not show them to her father.

Dates:  May 21, 1925

Letter from G. Jameson Carr to Joseph H. White,  March 26, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224011
Scope and Contents

Carr sends White his clinical history and autopsy report on a Brazilian yellow fever case and describes several other cases.

Dates:  March 26, 1925

History of a Case of Yellow Fever Occurred in Parahyba from 16 to 24/3/25, by G. Jameson Carr,  March 25, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224017
Scope and Contents

Carr gives a clinical account of the illness and death of yellow fever victim Robert Sherman.

Dates:  March 25, 1925

Autopsy on the Body of a Man Known as Robert Sherman, by G. Jameson Carr,  March 25, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01224019
Scope and Contents

Carr gives an autopsy report on yellow fever victim Robert Sherman.

Dates:  March 25, 1925

Letter from G. Jameson Carr to Henry Rose Carter,  June 16, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 25
Identifier: 01225001
Scope and Contents

Carr refers to the diseases O Bicho and Schistomiasis Mansonii.

Dates:  June 16, 1925

Letter from M.A. Barber to Henry Rose Carter,  June 29, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 25
Identifier: 01225002
Scope and Contents

Barber queries Carter on the history of malaria in Virginia. He describes his anti-malaria work and his preparation for a conference, in Rome.

Dates:  June 29, 1925

Letter from Joseph H. White to Henry Rose Carter,  June 30, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 25
Identifier: 01225004
Scope and Contents

White believes that he and Carter are the only scientists with a full understanding of how to eliminate yellow fever, although Scannell and Beeuwkes may learn.

Dates:  June 30, 1925

Letter from Joseph A. LePrince to Henry Rose Carter,  July 16, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 26
Identifier: 01226001
Scope and Contents

LePrince describes the work of Fisher in Alabama and compares it with work in Virginia. He includes diagrams.

Dates:  July 16, 1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to M.A. Barber,  July 30, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 26
Identifier: 01226007
Scope and Contents

Carter describes malaria and living conditions in Virginia after the Civil War.

Dates:  July 30, 1925

Letter from M.A. Barber to Henry Rose Carter,  August 4, 1925

 Item — Box: 12, Folder: 27
Identifier: 01227001
Scope and Contents

Barber discusses his upcoming personal and professional plans.

Dates:  August 4, 1925