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Box 22

 Container

Contains 97 Results:

Military orders for Robert P. Cooke,  August 31, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 67
Identifier: 02267046
Scope and Contents

Special Orders #33 assigns Cooke to a board of officers and then directs him to Guanajay Barracks, Cuba. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  August 31, 1900

Military orders for Robert P. Cooke,  September 13, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 67
Identifier: 02267047
Scope and Contents

Special Orders #158 directs Cooke to the ship, Crook, to act as attending surgeon on board. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  September 13, 1900

Military orders for Rafael T. Echeverria,  April 26, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 67
Identifier: 02267050
Scope and Contents

Special Orders #54 directs Echeverria to additional duties in Havana, Cuba. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  April 26, 1900

Military orders for Rafael T. Echeverria,  June 15, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 67
Identifier: 02267051
Scope and Contents

Special Orders #88 directs Echeverria to temporary duty in Havana, Cuba. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  June 15, 1900

Military orders for Rafael T. Echeverria,  June 16, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 67
Identifier: 02267052
Scope and Contents

Special Orders #38 directs Echeverria to duty at the camp of civilian non-immunes at Quemados de Marianao, Cuba. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  June 16, 1900

Military orders for Rafael T. Echeverria,  June 18, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 67
Identifier: 02267054
Scope and Contents

Special Orders #39 directs a hospital steward and a private to assist Echeverria at the non-immune camp near Quemados de Marianao, Cuba. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  June 18, 1900

Military orders for Newell R. Colby,  November 19, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 67
Identifier: 02267057
Scope and Contents

Special Orders #3 directs Colby to special duty under Reed at Columbia Barracks, Cuba. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  November 19, 1900

Military orders for Newell R. Colby,  November 2, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 67
Identifier: 02267059
Scope and Contents

Special Orders #74 directs Colby to the board of medical officers to determine his fitness for the position of acting hospital steward. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  November 2, 1900

Letter from Walter Reed to L. O. Howard,  November 16, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 1
Identifier: 02201001
Scope and Contents

Reed goes into great detail about the markings of the C. fasciatus and C. taeniatus species of mosquito. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  November 16, 1900

Letter from L. O. Howard to Walter Reed,  November 16, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 2
Identifier: 02202001
Scope and Contents

Howard tries to resolve Reed's questions about the markings of the mosquitoes, but also states that there is still work to be done in the identifying process. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  November 16, 1900

Roster: American volunteers for experimental yellow fever,  November 16, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 3
Identifier: 02203001
Scope and Contents

This is a list of the names, dates, and hometowns of the American volunteers and also lists the individuals who recruited them for the yellow fever experiments.

Dates:  November 16, 1900

Letter from George Miller Sternberg to Walter Reed,  November 17, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 4
Identifier: 02204001
Scope and Contents

Sternberg forwards Reed's paper for peer review. He agrees that the inoculation experiments must continue in order to provide scientific proof. He recommends that a search for the yellow fever parasite should begin.

Dates:  November 17, 1900

Letter from Lawrence [Walter L.] Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed,  November 17, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 5
Identifier: 02205001
Scope and Contents

Lawrence Reed describes a baseball game and gives news from the base. He asks his mother to ship a package to him.

Dates:  November 17, 1900

Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed,  November 18, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 6
Identifier: 02206001
Scope and Contents

Reed writes that he has found mosquitoes and volunteers for his experiments, and will now proceed with the laboratory work. He comments on newspaper reports about yellow fever.

Dates:  November 18, 1900

Letter from Lawrence [Walter L.] Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed,  November 19, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 7
Identifier: 02207001
Scope and Contents

Lawrence Reed describes his quarters and asks his mother to send him reading material. He sends cash to his sister, Blossom, and warns her to be careful when she is out in public.

Dates:  November 19, 1900

Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed,  November 20, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 8
Identifier: 02208001
Scope and Contents

Reed reports that the experimental camp is nearing completion. He notes the effect of cool weather on yellow fever cases and suggests the mosquito as a vector for the disease.

Dates:  November 20, 1900

Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie Lawrence Reed,  November 21, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 9
Identifier: 02209001
Scope and Contents

Reed is sympathetic to his wife's case of gout. He remarks on a bill to Johnnie Moore for work at the Keewaydin house.

Dates:  November 21, 1900

Articles on yellow fever, November 21, 1900

 File — Box: 22, Folder: 10
Identifier: uva-lib:2224452
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series III. Walter Reed consists of materials that document the life of Walter Reed as well as the work and legacy of the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in the series date from 1806 to around 1955 with the bulk of the items dating from 1874 to 1936. The series is particularly rich in materials that document the professional and personal life of Walter Reed from 1874 to his death in 1902. These materials include, but are not limited to the following:...
Dates: November 21, 1900

Letter from L. O. Howard to Walter Reed,  November 21, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 11
Identifier: 02211001
Scope and Contents

Howard identifies the mosquito Reed is working as the Culex fasciatus. Howard appreciates answering Reed's questions and considers it a privilege. He then acknowledges receipt of Reed's report and informs Reed of his own upcoming publication. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]

Dates:  November 21, 1900

Horrendo . . . . . Si es Cierto!,La Discusion, November 22, 1900

 Item — Box: 22, Folder: 12
Identifier: uva-lib:2224457
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series III. Walter Reed consists of materials that document the life of Walter Reed as well as the work and legacy of the U.S. Army Yellow Fever Commission. Items in the series date from 1806 to around 1955 with the bulk of the items dating from 1874 to 1936. The series is particularly rich in materials that document the professional and personal life of Walter Reed from 1874 to his death in 1902. These materials include, but are not limited to the following:...
Dates: November 22, 1900