Box 12
Contains 238 Results:
Letter to Laura Carter, September 30, 1925
The writer expresses condolences on the death of Henry Carter.
Letter from Frederick F. Russell to Laura Armistead Carter, March 12, 1926
Russell discusses mosquito breeding in crab holes and mentions the Hanson article on yellow fever.
Letter from [Laura Armistead Carter] to Frederick F. Russell, March 15, 1926
[Laura Carter] thanks Russell for the news clipping on Moran and Kissinger. She writes that she will resume work on the book.
It Seems to Me
,New York World, March 15, 1926
]
Letter from William S. Thayer to Laura Armistead Carter, April 14, 1926
Thayer discusses the influence of Carter's and Finlay's work on Reed and Lazear.
Letter from Mazyck P. Ravenel to William S. Thayer, April 26, 1926
Ravenel writes that he doubts the influence of Carter's work on Reed. He believes Reed was inspired by Finlay.
Letter from T.H.D. Griffitts to Laura Armistead Carter, December 13, 1926
Jim (Theodore) Hayne [left] and Henry Rose Carter [right], Parr Shoals, South Carolina, August 1915
T.H.D. Griffitts [left] and Henry Rose Carter at the Cheatam farmhouse, Steven's Creek, South Carolina, August 1915
Henry Rose Carter [and family?], circa 1900-1925
Henry Rose Carter at the Cheatham farmhouse, Steven's Creek, South Carolina, August 1915
Henry Rose Carter at the Cheatam farmhouse, Steven's Creek, South Carolina, August 1915
Henry Rose Carter and others testing the depth of a seepage ditch, Morrison, Virginia, 1918
Attendees of the Wilmington Conference, February 17, 1918-February 20, 1918
Henry Rose Carter and other participants at the Wilmington Conference, February 17, 1918-February 20, 1918
Abstract forOccurrence and Staining ofLeptospira Icteroidesin Guinea-Pigs Inoculated Experimentally
, by R.C. Wanstrom, 1924
Wanstrom's article concerns the inoculation of guinea pigs with Leptospira icteroides.
Abstract forSuggestions for Developing a Campaign to Control Yellow Fever
, by M.E. Connor, 1924
Connor's article concerns yellow fever control by an anti-mosquito campaign.
Abstract forThe Pfeiffer Reaction in Yellow Fever
, by Hideyo Noguchi, 1924
Noguchi's article concerns the Pfeiffer reaction as evidence of a yellow fever infection.
Abstract forEtiology of Yellow Fever
, by A.E.G. Froes, 1924
Froes's article concerns the etiology of yellow fever.
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.