letters (correspondence)
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 6940 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 4, 1918
Blue sends Carter to South Carolina, Georgia, and Arkansas for anti-malaria work.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, February 21, 1918
Blue writes that he opposes War Department control of the U.S. Public Health Service.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, March 29, 1918
Blue permits Carter to travel to other states for malaria research.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, September 3, 1918
Blue sends Carter to Galveston, Texas, in order to investigate dengue fever and to Tampico, Mexico, in order to inspect sanitary conditions.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, August 4, 1913
Blue orders Carter to North Carolina to investigate malaria and propose control measures.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, December 23, 1918
Blue sends Carter to New Orleans, Louisiana, and Memphis, Tennessee, to plan for a malaria investigation.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, April 12, 1919
Blue sends Carter to New Orleans and other southern states to investigate malaria.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, May 9, 1919
Blue directs Carter to Washington, D.C. for a conference on malaria work.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, June 5, 1919
Blue sends Carter to Atlantic City, New Jersey to present a paper at a yellow fever symposium.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, October 6, 1919
Blue directs Carter to proceed to New Orleans, Louisiana to present a paper at the American Public Health Association meeting.
Letter from [Rupert Blue] to Henry Rose Carter, December 5, 1919
[Blue] orders Carter to proceed to Florida for mosquito control work.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 7, 1920
Blue orders Carter to go to Florida to assist in the control of malaria.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 27, 1920
Blue requests that Carter assist in the revision of U.S. quarantine regulations.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Laura Armistead Carter, October 1, 1925
Blue expresses his condolences for the death of Henry Carter.
Letter from Rupert Norton to Charlotte C. Sweitzer, January 28, 1914
Norton requests a photograph of Jesse Lazear.
Letter from Russell Wilder to Philip Showalter Hench, January 28, 1954
Letter from R.W. Kerr to Emilie Lawrence Reed, May 21, 1927
Kerr thanks Emilie Lawrence Reed for her gift of a rose bush.
Letter from S. M. Sparkman to George Miller Sternberg, June 5, 1901
Sparkman requests fifteen to twenty copies of “The Etiology of Yellow Fever” from Sternberg.
Letter from S. M. Sparkman to George Miller Sternberg, June 8, 1901
Sparkman requests 150 to 200 copies of “The Etiology of Yellow Fever” for distribution. He believes several thousand copies should be distributed to southern States.
Letter from S. M. Sparkman to George Miller Sternberg, June 13, 1901
Sparkman encourages the printing of several thousand copies of “The Etiology of Yellow Fever” so that the people of the Gulf Coast can be informed of the mosquito theory. Sparkman realizes that it is very important that the yellow fever issue be cleared up, as there are numerous variant theories about the cause of yellow fever.