Box 62
Contains 256 Results:
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Aristides Agramonte, December 7, 1912
Kean states that Carroll was responsible for the injustice done to Agramonte. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Lectures on sanitation in Cuba by Jefferson Randolph Kean, 1912
Lessons of the Great War, by Jefferson Randolph Kean, 1915
Letter from [s.n.] Miller to Jefferson Randolph Kean, July 28, 1917
Miller informs Kean that he is unable to supply a list of commissioned officers in Allentown.
Letter from [Jefferson Randolph Kean] to Henry P. Birmingham, August 29, 1917
[Kean] questions Birmingham about the organization of the Ambulance Corps in France.
Correspondence of William Crawford Gorgas and Jefferson Randolph Kean, August 1917-December 1917
Letter from William C. Gorgas to Jefferson Randolph Kean, July 30, 1906
Gorgas writes about a planned increase in the Canal Zone medical force, and encloses correspondence recommending physician Alexander Murray for service in Panama.
Letter from George E. Bushnell to William C. Gorgas, April 16, 1906
Bushnell recommends physician Alexander Murray to Gorgas for service in Panama and explains Murray's difficult circumstances owing to his wife's illness.
Letter from William C. Gorgas to George E. Bushnell, May 3, 1906
Gorgas informs Bushnell that his medical staff is full at present, but that he will consider adding physician Alexander Murray if there is an increase in staffing.
Letter from Jose Ramos Almeyda to Jefferson Randolph Kean, August 31, 1907
Ramos writes about the yellow fever work in Cuba. He encloses a table showing charting fatalities from yellow fever smallpox.
Yellow Fever and Smallpox Table: Mortalidad de las Viruelas y de Fiebre Amarilla, circa 1879
This table charts deaths from smallpox and yellow fever in Havana, from 1870-1879.
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to the Provisional Governor of Cuba, February 20, 1908
Kean cites a lack of support for sanitary measures by the Cuban authorities, and an increase in the incidence of yellow fever. He requests assignment of another medical officer to his staff.
Order from the Provisional Governor, February 20, 1908
The Provisional Governor of Cuba grants Kean's request for another medical officer.
Letter from H.D. Thomason to Jefferson Randolph Kean, September 1, 1908
Thomason discusses a yellow fever patient, Manuel Casas.
Fever Chart for Manuel Casas, August 22, 1908
Letter from Carlos J. Finlay to Jefferson Randolph Kean, October 2, 1908
Finlay discusses sanitation measures taken in response to possible cases of yellow fever.
Letter from Mario Lebredo to the Head of National Department of Sanitation, October 1, 1908
Lebredo discusses the diagnosis of a possible yellow fever case.
Telegram from Carlos J. Finlay to [H.D] Thomason, October 2, 1908
Finlay reports on recommendations for prophylactic measures against yellow fever in Felton.
Fever chart for Ensebio Arias, October 2, 1908
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Aristides Agramonte, January 26, 1911
Kean requests Agramonte's photograph for a publication about the Yellow Fever Commission. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]