Box 47
Contains 240 Results:
Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to Paul L. Tate, November 5, 1954
Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to Pedro Nogueira, November 5, 1954
Letter from Robert E. Bitner to Philip Showalter Hench, November 5, 1954
Letter from Paul L. Tate to Philip Showalter Hench, November 10, 1954
Letter from Elida C. Moran to Philip Showalter Hench, November 14, 1954
Letter from Mary W. Standlee to Philip Showalter Hench, November 19, 1954
Postcard from unidentified person to Philip Showalter Hench, November 23, 1954
Letter from J.F. Siler to Philip Showalter Hench, November 22, 1954
Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to Blossom [Emilie M.] Reed, December 26, 1954
Letter from Pedro Nogueira to Philip Showalter Hench, December 13, 1954
Nogeuria finds plans that mark the location of the American cemetery. He also is starting to form a Lazear Camp Friend's Association.
Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to Maria Teresa Rojas and Lidia Cabrera, December 18, 1954
Letter from the secretary of Philip Showalter Hench to Paul L. Tate, December 20, 1954
Letter from Philip Showalter Hench to Mary W. Standlee, December 21, 1954
Christmas card from Estela Agramonte Rodriguez to Philip Showalter Hench, circa December 1954
Finlay Acusado Injustamente De Usurpador De Beauperthuy Por Un Profesor Venezolano, by Cesar Rodriguez Exposito, 1954
Rodriquez Exposito fights for the truth in the Finlay - Beauperthuy controversy.
Roger Post Ames, by Paul L. Tate, circa 1954
[Tate] describes Ames involvement in the yellow fever experiments. Ames applied the mosquitoes, diagnosed the yellow fever patients, and provided exceptional medical care. Ames, fluent in Spanish, was able to persuade the Spanish volunteers to stay and undergo treatment.
Lambert Breaks Quarantine, by Paul L. Tate, 1954
[Tate] explains that Andrus was exceedingly ill and Lambert, in an act of bravery, broke quarantine to fetch Ames.
Letter fragment from [Paul L. Tate] to William M. Brumby, circa 1954
[Tate] thinks it is a shame that worthy men such as Finlay, Ames, and Lambert were not included in the Yellow Fever Roll of Honor.
Gust E. Lambert - Yellow Fever Nurse, by Paul L. Tate, circa 1954
[Tate] gives a brief account of Lambert's achievements as a sailor and nurse.
Letter fragment from Paul L. Tate, circa 1954
Tate finds fault with Howard's play about yellow fever.