Box 62
Contains 256 Results:
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Aristides Agramonte, August 22, 1929
Kean inquires about Agramonte's father and explains the delay of Agramonte's medal and pension, approved in February 1929.
Letter from Aristides Agramonte to Jefferson Randolph Kean, August 25, 1929
Agramonte writes to Kean about his family, the pension delay, and his health.
Notes of an interview with Jefferson Randolph Kean, October 21, 1929
The interview centers on Kean's reluctance to give credit to the work done by Roger Ames during the yellow fever experiments.
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Jessie Daniel Ames, November 5, 1929
Kean informs Jessie Ames that physicians other than Roger Ames treated yellow fever patients at Camp Lazear.
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Jesse Daniel Ames, December 9, 1929
Kean does not believe that Roger Ames had yellow fever, in 1901.
Letter from Hermann Hagedorn to Jefferson Randolph Kean, December 20, 1929
Hagedorn relates a conversation with General McCoy concerning Wood's announcement of the Yellow Fever Commission's findings, in 1900. He also comments on Gorgas' sanitary work in Havana.
Memorandum from Albert E. Truby to Jefferson Randolph Kean, July 25, 1930
Truby's recounts his memories of the yellow fever experiments, and his anger with Agramonte for making what he feels are unjustified claims.
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Frank R. McCoy, January 11, 1932
Kean congratulates McCoy on his appointment to Manchuria and comments on Hagedorn's biography of Leonard Wood.
Letter from Frances F. Agramonte to Jefferson Randolph Kean, February 1, 1932
Frances Agramonte gives Kean her new address and discusses her health.
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to John J. Moran, June 18, 1934
Kean thanks Moran for sending him his immunity certificate signed by the Yellow Fever Board members. Kean comments on the political situation in Cuba.
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to John J. Moran, July 24, 1934
Kean accepts Moran's offer to send him his yellow fever clinical chart and comments on conditions in Cuba and the U.S.
Letter from Albert E. Truby to Jefferson Randolph Kean, April 8, 1935
Truby writes to Kean concerning a bust of Reed.
Letter from the Smithsonian Institution to Jefferson Randolph Kean, April 10, 1935
This is an invoice to Kean for the return of a marble bust of Reed from the Smithsonian Institution to the Walter Reed Memorial Association.
Letter from Chauncey B. Baker to Jefferson Randolph Kean, April 15, 1935
Baker sends Kean his recollections of yellow fever work in Havana from 1898 to 1900.
Recollections of Personal Experiences in Connection with the Yellow Fever Epidemics in Havana 1898-1899-1900, related by General Chauncey B. Baker, November 5, 1934
Baker's recollections of yellow fever in Havana from 1898 to 1900 include a description of deaths among the American military officers.
Memorandum from Albert E. Truby to Colonel Meehan, July 26, 1935
Truby's memorandum and attached documents concern the marble bust of Walter Reed that was removed from the Smithsonian Institution and placed at the Walter Reed Army Hospital.
Letter from C.R. Darnall to Commanding General of the Army Medical Center, November 26, 1935
On behalf of the Walter Reed Memorial Association, Darnall requests that the Reed bust be kept in its present place at Walter Reed Hospital.
Memorandum from A.S. Dabney to Commanding Officer, December 2, 1935
Dabney requests a copy of the Commanding Officer's letter acknowledging the Walter Reed Memorial Association's request to house the Reed bust at the hospital.
Copy of the card displayed with the Walter Reed bust, circa 1935
Truby comments on the text of the inscription displayed with the Reed bust.
Letter from Jefferson Randolph Kean to Albert E. Truby, April 20, 1936
Kean inquires about Truby's recollections of the circumstances of Lazear's contraction of yellow fever. He informs Truby that the Cubans intended to memorialize the room at Las Animas where Lazear was said to have been bitten. Kean informed them that this was not true.