Box 12
Contains 238 Results:
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to G.W. McCoy, March 19, 1925
[Carter] requests books from the Library of Congress.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to William E. Deeks, March 21, 1925
[Carter] comments on Deeks' monograph on malaria, and he suggests changes.
Letter from H. McG. Robertson to Henry Rose Carter, April 13, 1925
Robertson discusses bubonic plague in temperate climates.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to L.L. Williams, April 26, 1925
[Carter] discusses the comparative efficacy, as a malaria vector, of three main species of Anopheles mosquitos in the United States.
Letter from E.J. Scannell to Henry Rose Carter, May 4, 1925
Scannell discusses the mud puddle breeding of mosquitoes in Africa. He is confident that the yellow fever work in Africa will succeed.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to E.J. Scannell, May 10, 1925
[Carter] reports that MacFie is being sent to Africa to research the breeding of Stegomyia in mud puddles. He discusses his health.
Letter from Laura Armistead Carter to Frederick F. Russell, May 10, 1925
Laura Carter says that she is withholding Russell's letter about possible yellow fever cases because of Henry Carter's poor health.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Joseph H. White, May 10, 1925
[Carter] inquires about and describes the disease "o bicho" found in Venezuela and Brazil.
Letter from B.H. Ransom to Henry Rose Carter, May 15, 1925
Ransom reports that Carter has been named honorary president of the American Society of Tropical Medicine.
Letter from Frederick F. Russell to Laura Armistead Carter, May 21, 1925
Russell sends Laura Carter reports on possible yellow fever cases in Brazil, but says she need not show them to her father.
Letter from G. Jameson Carr to Joseph H. White, March 26, 1925
Carr sends White his clinical history and autopsy report on a Brazilian yellow fever case and describes several other cases.
History of a Case of Yellow Fever Occurred in Parahyba from 16 to 24/3/25, by G. Jameson Carr, March 25, 1925
Carr gives a clinical account of the illness and death of yellow fever victim Robert Sherman.
Autopsy on the Body of a Man Known as Robert Sherman, by G. Jameson Carr, March 25, 1925
Carr gives an autopsy report on yellow fever victim Robert Sherman.
Letter from G. Jameson Carr to Henry Rose Carter, June 16, 1925
Carr refers to the diseases O Bicho and Schistomiasis Mansonii.
Letter from M.A. Barber to Henry Rose Carter, June 29, 1925
Barber queries Carter on the history of malaria in Virginia. He describes his anti-malaria work and his preparation for a conference, in Rome.
Letter from Joseph H. White to Henry Rose Carter, June 30, 1925
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.
Letter from Joseph A. LePrince to Henry Rose Carter, July 16, 1925
LePrince describes the work of Fisher in Alabama and compares it with work in Virginia. He includes diagrams.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to the Librarian at the Library of the Surgeon General, July 21, 1925
[Carter] requests some books.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to M.A. Barber, July 30, 1925
Carter describes malaria and living conditions in Virginia after the Civil War.
Letter from M.A. Barber to Henry Rose Carter, August 4, 1925
Barber discusses his upcoming personal and professional plans.