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letters (correspondence)

 Subject
Subject Source: Art & Architecture Thesaurus
Scope Note: Pieces of correspondence that are somewhat more formal than memoranda or notes, usually on paper and delivered.

Found in 6939 Collections and/or Records:

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Michael E. Connor,  circa 1900-1925

 Item — Box 13: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 31
Identifier: 01331018
Scope and Contents

[Carter] sends Connor a historical epidemiological study of yellow fever in Mexico and Central America for his comments.

Dates:  circa 1900-1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to M.J. Rosenau,  November 2, 1924

 Item — Box 12: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 15
Identifier: 01215001
Scope and Contents

[Carter] writes that he believes there was no yellow fever in Mexico at the time of the Spanish conquest.

Dates:  November 2, 1924

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to M.V. Veldee,  July 30, 1923

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 13
Identifier: 01113037
Scope and Contents

Carter writes that he has read Veldee's article on the splenic index relation to malaria. He suggests other publications on that topic.

Dates:  July 30, 1923

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to M.Y. Dabney,  June 22, 1923

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 7
Identifier: 01107001
Scope and Contents

Carter answers Dabney's earlier letter, enclosing a discussion of the origin of malaria.

Dates:  June 22, 1923

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to M.Y. Dabney with a report, June 22, 1923

 File — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 7
Identifier: uva-lib:2223335
Scope and Contents From the Series: Series II. Henry Rose Carter consists of materials relating to Henry Rose Carter that Philip Showalter Hench collected while researching the yellow fever experiments. Items in this series date from around 1880 to 1932 with the bulk of the materials dating from 1883 to 1932. The series is particularly rich in materials that document Henry Rose Carter's professional activities in the last eleven years of his life (1914-1925). These materials include, but are not limited to the...
Dates: June 22, 1923

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Philip A. Bruce,  June 24, 1922

 Item — Box 30: Series uva-lib:2223908, Folder: 63
Identifier: 03063001
Scope and Contents

Carter offers a correction to Bruce's “History of the University of Virginia.“

Dates:  June 24, 1922

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Philip Alexander Bruce,  July 2, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 34
Identifier: 00934003
Scope and Contents

Carter maintains that the sanitation of the Isthmus of Panama was Gorgas' work. He credits Reed for laying the foundation of all subsequent yellow fever work.

Dates:  July 2, 1922

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to P.M. Ashburn,  April 15, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 28
Identifier: 00928001
Scope and Contents

[Carter] thanks Ashburn for sending him his manuscript. He discusses issues concerning mosquitos, specifically the Anopheles.

Dates:  April 15, 1922

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Ralph N. Cresne, January 23, 1920

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 22
Identifier: 00822007
Scope and Contents

Carter discusses the control of mosquitoes in southern U.S. ports.

Dates: January 23, 1920

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to R.H. von Ezdorf, May 17, 1915

 Item — Box 7: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 64
Identifier: 00764048
Scope and Contents

[Carter] offers to meet with von Ezdorf.

Dates: May 17, 1915

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to R.H. von Ezdorf, February 16, 1916

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 3
Identifier: 00803018
Scope and Contents

Carter discusses anti-mosquito work and mentions the Rockefeller Foundation.

Dates: February 16, 1916

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Richard H. Creel, December 28, 1918

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 13
Identifier: 00813058
Scope and Contents

Carter requests information regarding the 1911 yellow fever quarantine, in Hawaii.

Dates: December 28, 1918

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Richard H. Creel,  February 15, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 26
Identifier: 00926014
Scope and Contents

[Carter] asks Creel for details of past Mississippi Valley outbreaks that were not yellow fever for a study he is conducting.

Dates:  February 15, 1922

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Robert E. Noble,  December 6, 1924

 Item — Box 12: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 17
Identifier: 01217013
Scope and Contents

[Carter] advises Noble on the importance of a book owned by Gorgas and donated to the Army Medical Museum Library.

Dates:  December 6, 1924

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Robert E. Noble,  December 10, 1923

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 24
Identifier: 01124001
Scope and Contents

Carter inquires if the Surgeon General's library has a book on the treatment of yellow fever with turpentine.

Dates:  December 10, 1923

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Robert E. Noble,  April 4, 1924

 Item — Box 11: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 43
Identifier: 01143002
Scope and Contents

Carter requests a book from the Army Medical Museum.

Dates:  April 4, 1924

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Ronald Ross,  April 2, 1923

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 25
Identifier: 01025001
Scope and Contents

Carter writes about the malaria control work in the U.S. and introduces Peterson.

Dates:  April 2, 1923

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Rupert Blue, March 1, 1915

 Item — Box 7: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 64
Identifier: 00764028
Scope and Contents

Carter discusses legislation designed to inhibit mosquito breeding.

Dates: March 1, 1915

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to [Rupert Blue], February 1, 1916

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 3
Identifier: 00803010
Scope and Contents

Carter requests a leave of absence.

Dates: February 1, 1916

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Rupert Blue, January 20, 1917

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 11
Identifier: 00811003
Scope and Contents

Carter reports that malarial conditions in South Carolina have worsened.

Dates: January 20, 1917