Military Medicine
Found in 814 Collections and/or Records:
A Candidate for Honors
, December 14, 1901
“Advance on Santiago” during the Cuban occupation, circa 1898
Photo by US Army Signal Corps
Aerial view of Havana, Cuba with overlay designating significant sites, circa 1930-1950
Aerial view of Quemados de Marianao, Cuba with an overlay designating significant sites, circa 1930-1950
Aerial view of Quemados de Marianao, Cuba with an overlay designating significant sites, circa 1941
Aerial view of Quemados de Marianao, Cuba with an overlay designating significant sites, circa 1930-1950
Aerial view of Quemados de Marianao, Cuba with labels designating sites associated with the yellow fever experiments, circa 1930-1950
Aerial view of Quemados de Marianao, Cuba with overlay designating significant sites, circa 1930-1950
Aerial view of Quemados de Marianao, Cuba with overlay designating significant sites, circa 1930-1950
Aerial view of Quemados de Marianao, Cuba with the Camp Lazear site delineated, circa 1930-1950
Aerial view of the Camp Lazear National Monument, 1952
Albert E. Truby's answers for a questionnaire from Philip Showalter Hench, June 30, 1946
Truby discusses the Yellow Fever Commission in response to Hench's questionnaire.
Albert E. Truby's answers for a questionnaire from Philip Showalter Hench concerning Truby's book, February 1947
Truby adds more information to the answers he supplied for Hench's questionnaire. Truby believes Lambert is trying to discredit him because he didn't support the inclusion of Lambert and Ames on the Yellow Fever Roll of Honor.
Alex Stark and Lom Stark near Jesse W. Lazear's quarters, Camp Columbia, Havana, Cuba, circa 1900
Answers to questionnaire from Paul L. Tate to Philip Showalter Hench, July 27, 1954
Tate gives detailed answers to the questions asked by Hench, including information about the main characters involved in the yellow fever experiments, details on the army nurses, and rumors around the camp.
Aristides Agramonte's answers to questions propounded by Jessie Daniel Ames, May 27, 1930
Agramonte answers Mrs. Ames' questions concerning her husband's actions and responsibilities with the yellow fever board in Cuba.
Army Medical Board Certificate for Walter Reed, February 8, 1875
Reed's Army Medical Board Certificate gives his personal information and includes the names of the Board members. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Article fragment:The Military Government of Cuba
, March, 1903
Wood gives a history of the American occupation in Cuba and discusses the yellow fever outbreak and consequent investigation by Reed and Lazear. Article appears in “The Annals of the American Academy.” Only pages 16 and 17 are included.