Box 80
Contains 53 Results:
Photographs relating to Jesse W. Lazear. sites in Cuba, Charles G. Sontag, John J. Moran, Walter Reed, Albert E. Truby, Leonard Wood, A.S. Pinto, and Theobold Smith, 1895-1951
Unidentified building in Cuba, circa 1900
United States Army 8th Infantry in review, Columbia Barracks, Quemados de Marianao, Cuba, 1900
Unidentified building in Cuba, circa 1900
Rooftops in Havana, Cuba, circa 1900
General Fitzhugh Lee's headquarters at Colgada Real, Quemados de Marianao, Cuba, 1900
Site identified by Albert E. Truby as Camp Columbia, circa 1900
United States Army 8th Infantry in review, Columbia Barracks, Quemados de Marianao, Cuba, 1900
Photograph of statement of Jesse W. Lazear's death by Albert E. Truby on September 25, circa 1900
Charles G. Sonntag holding a medal and the test tube containing two mosquitos which most likely gave him yellow fever, September 1941
Peggy Lazear on the porch of Mabel H. Lazear's house in Santa Barbara, circa 1910-1950
John J. Moran, circa 1900
Moran, who was a civilian clerk in Fitzhugh Lee's headquarters, was inoculated for yellow fever at Camp Lazear, Cuba on December 21, 1900.
John J. Moran, circa 1900
John J. Moran, February, 1938
The photograph is inscribed, "For my good friend, Dr. Philip S. Hench (Havana, Cuba Feb. 1938)" and it is signed by John J. Moran.
John J. Moran, February, 1938
The photograph is inscribed, "For my good friend, Dr. Philip S. Hench (Havana, Cuba Feb. 1938)" and it is signed by John J. Moran.
Philip Showalter Hench and John J. Moran, January 1944
John J. Moran, January 4, 1941
Inscribed, "For my very good friend. Doctor Philip S. Hench, Havana Jan. 4, 1941" and signed by John J. Moran
Site of the United States Army General Hospital, Washington Barracks, Washington, D.C., circa 1951
The hospital was the site of Walter Reed's death.
Marker commemorating the site of the former United States Army General Hospital where Walter Reed died, 1951
Site of the United States Army General Hospital, Washington Barracks, Washington, D.C., 1951
The hospital was the site of Walter Reed's death. Courtesy of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology