Box 18
Contains 90 Results:
Letter from Walter Reed to [William C.] Borden, March 15, 1894
Reed congratulates Borden on his paper about the fat cell.
Letter from Walter Reed to George Miller Sternberg, June 12, 1894
2 pages
A Précis of the United States Quarantine Regulations for Domestic Ports with Reference to Preventing the Introduction of Yellow Fever into the United States
,Yellow Fever: Its Nature, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prophylaxis, and quarantine regulations relating theretoby Preston H. Bailhache, circa 1898
These regulations describe the inspection, quarantine, and disinfection procedures to be implemented at ports to prevent the introduction of yellow fever into the United States. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Therapeutic Treatment of Yellow Fever
,Annual Report of the Marine-Hospital Service, by Henry Downes Geddings, 1894
Geddings' discussion of the treatment of yellow fever includes baths, purgatives, coal-tar products, cocaine, carbonated beverages, perchloride of iron, ice, counter-irritation, tisane of orange leaves, enemas, and quinine. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Issue ofHarper's Weekly, April 13, 1894
Contains photographs and articles relating to Cuba.
Issue ofHarper's Weekly, May 11, 1895
Print entitled,The Prado, Havana, CubainHarper's Weekly, May 25, 1895
Military records relating to Walter Reed, 1895
The Cuban Insurrection
,Leslie's Weekly, May 28, 1896
Letter from Walter Reed to Jefferson Randolph Kean, August 22, 1896
Letter from Walter Reed to George Miller Sternberg, August 1, 1896
Letter from Walter Reed to Jefferson Randolph Kean, August 10, 1896
Reed writes concerning experimentation. He describes his return from Key West, and mosquito attacks.
Letter from Walter Reed to Jefferson Randolph Kean, November 11, 1896
Military records relating to Walter Reed, 1896
Pages from the diary of Jefferson Randolph Kean with annotations by Philip Showalter Hench, 1897-1900
Military orders for Walter Reed, 1897
Post-Epidemic Disinfection, October 11, 1897
This circular letter gives disinfection instructions to be instigated after a yellow fever epidemic. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Yellow fever mortality Rate report prepared by Jesus Pardinas for Henry Rose Carter, circa 1900
Deaths of yellow fever in the city of Havana in military and civilians between 1871 and 1900.
Letter from George Miller Sternberg to Stanford E. Chaille, February 15, 1898
Sternberg writes about yellow fever infection from soiled linen and flies. He proposes measures for disinfection and quarantine to control epidemics.