Box 23
Contains 92 Results:
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean and Lawrence [Walter L.] Reed, September 24, 1900
Special Orders #50 assigns Kean and Reed to a board of survey. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Guy Charles Moore Godfrey, September 27, 1900
Special Orders #227 relieves Godfrey of duty. Slocum is temporarily assigned duty as Acting Chief Quartermaster. Stark's leave of absence is extended. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Walter Reed, September 28, 1900
Special Orders #228 appoints Reed, Kean, and Stark to an examining board to determine the fitness of officers for promotion. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for James Pilcher and Guy Charles Moore Godfrey, October 16, 1900
Special Orders #243 directs Pilcher to Ft. McHenry for medical examination and Godfrey to the Philippines for duty. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean and James Pilcher, October 31, 1900
Special Orders #256 directs Kean to Ft. McHenry. Pilcher is retired from active service. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean, November 5, 1900
Special Orders #260 revokes Special Orders #256 for Kean. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Robert P. Cooke and Alexander N. Stark, November 10, 1900
Special Orders #265 annuls Cooke's contract as acting assistant surgeon for the U. S. Army. Extension to Stark's leave of absence is granted. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Valery Havard, November 12, 1900
Special Orders #266 directs Havard, Gorgas, and Kean to the Pan-American Medical Congress. Echeverria is honorably discharged. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Robert P. Cooke, November 19, 1900
Special Orders #272 revokes Special Order #265 for Cooke. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Theodore C. Lyster and Walter Reed, December 27, 1900
Special Orders #302 relieves Lyster of duty in Cuba. Reed is ordered to attend the Pan-American Medical Congress. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Plan of Walter Reed's quarters in Building 108 at Columbia Barracks with notes, 1900
Diagram of Columbia Barracks Post Hospital. Included are notes written by [Hench].
Reports of U.S. fatalities in Cuba, June 1900
Telegrams to the War Department report deaths caused by yellow fever from May 8 to May 30, 1900. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Reports of U.S. fatalities in Cuba, June 1900
Telegrams to the War Department report deaths from June 1 to June 10, 1900, some by yellow fever. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Reports of U.S. fatalities in Cuba, June 1900
Telegrams to the War Department report individual deaths, including those from yellow fever, from June 10 to June 20, 1900. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Report for Walter Reed, June 30, 1900
Reed writes his efficiency report for the period, June 30, 1899 to June 30, 1900. Both Sternberg and Baldwin officially endorse Reed's report. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Surgeon General's Office Report Card for Walter Reed, 1900
These excerpts detail orders for Reed to give talks at various health conferences. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Walter Reed, October 19, 1900
Reed is recommended to be a delegate at the meeting of the American Public Health Association in Indianapolis to give important information about the cause and prevention of yellow fever. Special Orders #246 is included. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Letter from the Assistant Adjutant General to Walter Reed, October 20, 1900
Reed is ordered to return to Washington, D.C. instead returning to his proper station in Cuba. This is an amendment to Special Orders #246. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Letter from George W. Baird to [s.n.] Carter, October 29, 1900
Baird recommends that Reed's orders be changed so that there will be no confusion in the payment process when Reed returns to Cuba via New York City and Washington D. C. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Letter from Walter Reed to the Adjutant General, November 1, 1900
Reed requests an address change. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]