letters (correspondence)
Found in 6939 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to [Hugh S. Cumming], November 8, 1921
Carter sends Surgeon General [Cumming] data for lectures as requested.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Hugh S. Cumming, June 10, 1920
Carter returns unused government travel vouchers.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to J. Gil Cardenas, July 30, 1920
Carter informs Cardenas that he will be acting Sanitary Advisor of the Peruvian Government until January, 1921, when Gorgas will take over the post.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to J. Martinez H., April 4, 1924
Carter requests help in translating a section of a foreign book. He announces the completion of the third section of his book on the history of yellow fever.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to J. McKeen Cattell, December 2, 1919
Carter informs Cattell that he published two papers on the incubation of yellow fever, which were the basis of Reed's experiments with the Yellow Fever Commission.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to James E. West, June 11, 1919
Carter writes that he would appreciate the Boy Scouts' help for malaria control.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to J.C. Geiger, March 6, 1919
Carter informs Geiger of his upcoming research on the relation between rice cultivation and malaria.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to J.E.S. Thorpe, October 14, 1919
Carter writes about the relationship between impounded water and malaria.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to J.H.L. Cumpston, June 16, 1923
Carter asks Cumpston to insert the enclosed note at the beginning of Carter's article “The Chance of the Extension of Yellow Fever to Asia and Australia.”
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to J.H.L. Cumpston with article, June 16, 1923
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to J.L. Byrd, June 20, 1923
Carter requests information on mosquitos in Colon.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to John A. Ferrell, August 25, 1922
Carter suggests several possible field studies on malaria.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to John A. Ferrell, August 25, 1922
This is a draft of Carter's letter to Ferrell (August 25, 1922), which includes Carter's signature.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to John D. Long, December 1, 1922
Carter sends Long excerpts from a Stegomyia article he is writing that discusses breeding temperatures.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to John H. Linson, May 30, 1923
[Carter] informs Linson that Colon has established a full quarantine against several Colombian ports. [Carter] also reports on mosquito breeding in Puerto Rico. He believes that Puerto Rico needs more protection than the Canal Zone, which has a low Stegomyia index.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Joseph A. LePrince, May 17, 1915
[Carter] discusses travel preparations.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Joseph A. LePrince, January 11, 1922
Carter writes to LePrince concerning three papers on water impoundment he gave to the U.S. Army Surgeon General.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Joseph A. LePrince, February 13, 1922
[Carter] inquires about LePrince's mosquito work in Illinois.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Joseph A. LePrince, February 8, 1925
[Carter] refutes the statement of the Pasteur Commission that infective mosquitoes bite only at night. He will assist LePrince in setting up an experiment to prove this theory.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Joseph A. LePrince, May 13, 1920
Carter writes that he is considering retiring. Carter believes he is facing a wide-spread yellow fever epidemic in Peru.