Military Medicine
Found in 814 Collections and/or Records:
Military orders for Aristides Agramonte, May 21, 1901
Special Orders #119 relieves Agramonte from duty as a member of the board of medical officers appointed in 1900. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Aristides Agramonte, May 28, 1901
Special Orders #117 assigns Agramonte to duty at Las Animas Hospital. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Aristides Agramonte, June 20, 1901
Special Orders #134 details Agramonte to visit Columbia Barracks four times a week. Included is a note by [Truby]. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Aristides Agramonte, July 16, 1901
Special Orders #153 relieves Agramonte from duty at Las Animas Hospital. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Aristides Agramonte, July 26, 1901
Special Orders #161 grants Agramonte a leave of absence for one month. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Edward Weatherwalks, August 22, 1900
Special Orders #25 sentences Weatherwalks to hard labor for obtaining a team of mules under false pretenses and being drunk. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for enlisted men reporting to Quemados, February 19, 1900
Special Orders #24 directs enlisted men to Quemados, Cuba. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Gustaf E. Lambert, August 3, 1901
Special Orders #166 relieves Lambert from duty at Camp Columbia. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Guy Charles Moore Godfrey, September 27, 1900
Special Orders #227 relieves Godfrey of duty. Slocum is temporarily assigned duty as Acting Chief Quartermaster. Stark's leave of absence is extended. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for James Carroll, February 6, 1901
Special Orders #31 orders Carroll to report to Washington, D. C. for duty in the pathological laboratory of the Army Medical Museum. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for James Carroll, July 25, 1901
Special Orders #172 orders Carroll to Havana to continue the investigation of yellow fever. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for James Carroll, October 1, 1901
Special Orders #226 directs Carroll to return to Washington, D. C. no later than November 1, 1901. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for James F. Presnell, August 6, 1900
Special Orders #129 selects Presnell to accompany 2nd artillery. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for James Pilcher and Guy Charles Moore Godfrey, October 16, 1900
Special Orders #243 directs Pilcher to Ft. McHenry for medical examination and Godfrey to the Philippines for duty. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean, August 24, 1899
Kean, Brewer, and Truby are appointed to investigate the loss of medical supplies at Columbia barracks.
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean, July 3, 1900
Special Orders #51 grants Kean and Hepburn a leave of absence and assigns Teeter to Columbia Barracks. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean, August 14, 1900
Special Orders #18 assigns Kean, Amador, and Cooke to a board of survey to decide about posts that have been infected by yellow fever. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean, November 5, 1900
Special Orders #260 revokes Special Orders #256 for Kean. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean and Alexander N. Stark, March 7, 1901
Special Orders #54 directs Kean to Columbia Barracks in order to relieve Stark. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Military orders for Jefferson Randolph Kean and James Pilcher, October 31, 1900
Special Orders #256 directs Kean to Ft. McHenry. Pilcher is retired from active service. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]