Box 21
Contains 85 Results:
Letter from William Ludlow to Leonard Wood, October 27, 1900
Ludlow responds to Wood's accusation that data was concealed regarding the number of cases of yellow fever in Havana.[Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
The Etiology of Yellow Fever
, by Walter Reed, James Carroll, Aristides Agramonte, and Jesse W. Lazear with notes, October 27, 1900
Letter from William Ludlow to the Adjutant General, October 27, 1900
Ludlow defends his position against Wood's charges of concealing facts about yellow fever in Havana. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Mosquito Carries Yellow Fever Germ
,The New York Times, October 27, 1900
Report of Committee on the Etiology of Yellow Fever
,Proceedings of the American Public Health Association, October 1900
Horlbeck concludes in this report to the American Public Health Association that the bacillus icteroides, discovered by Sanarelli, is the cause of yellow fever.
Report from Walter Reed to the Adjutant General, October 31, 1900
Reed reports his duties for the month of October 1900.
Military orders for James Carroll, October 1900
Ninth Report on the Yellow Fever on the Coast of the Mexican Gulf, Being From the 22nd to the 26th of October, 1900
, October 22, 1900-October 26, 1900
Liceaga summarizes the cases of yellow fever that have been observed on the Gulf Coast of Mexico and the measures taken to prevent the spread of the disease.
Mosquitoes and Yellow Fever
,The Sun (New York), November 1, 1900
The Mosquito Hypothesis
,The Washington Post, November 2, 1900
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed, November 3, 1900
Reed will leave New York for Havana soon.
Letter from Leonard Wood to the Editor ofThe New York Evening Post, November 3, 1900
Wood claims that the New York Sun misconstrued his statements regarding yellow fever, and he wants those errors to be corrected. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Letter from Leonard Wood to the Editor ofThe New York Sun, November 3, 1900
Wood rebuts an accusation that Officers concealed outbreaks of yellow fever in Havana.
Letter from Leonard Wood to William Ludlow, November 3, 1900
Wood states that he never accused Ludlow of concealing information, but that newspapers have misconstrued his statements, through false deductions and inferences. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Letter from Lawrence [Walter L.] Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed, November 4, 1900
Lawrence Reed anticipates his father's return to Cuba. He comments on rumors of reassignment, yellow fever cases, and packages from home.
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed, November 5, 1900
Reed describes his voyage to Cuba. He also comments on the upcoming presidential election in the United States.
Letter from L. O. Howard to James Carroll, November 8, 1900
Howard provides information to Carroll about a certain species of mosquito. Howard then asks Carroll to catch a species of mosquito for his own research, which is believed to have migrated to Cuba in slave ships years ago. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed, November 8, 1900
Reed remarks on Bryan's defeat in the United States presidential election. He describes various people at the camp. He discusses his work on yellow fever, including the possibility of human experimentation.
Report from Walter Reed to the Adjutant General, November 10, 1900
Reed reports his duties for the month of September 1900.