Public health
Found in 1023 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, July 14, 1900
Carter writes that he has been summoned to Washington because his work in Havana may be finished.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, July 11, 1917
Carter discusses his travel plans related to work in Virginia and his health.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter, March 30, 1918
Carter writes about daily life and a possible trip, at Gorgas' request, to Ecuador.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Eugenia Hook Carter and Laura Armistead Carter, November 21, 1904
Carter discusses Henry Carter's academic progress and his plans to come home.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Leslie W. Weedon, May 12, 1919
Carter writes that a mosquito eradication campaign should be started in the ports along the Gulf of Mexico.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Lindsley Arthur, April 15, 1923
[Carter] answers Arthur's questions regarding mosquitos and their relationship to malaria and yellow fever.
Letter From [Henry Rose Carter] to L.L. Hidinger, November 22, 1921
[Carter] refers to the coordination of malaria control with projects for agricultural drainage.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to L.L. Hidinger, January 4, 1922
Carter sends Hidinger an abstract and critique of the National Drainage Congress proceedings.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to L.L. Williams, April 26, 1925
[Carter] discusses the comparative efficacy, as a malaria vector, of three main species of Anopheles mosquitos in the United States.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to L.M. Fisher, November 1, 1922
[Carter] sends Fisher information on impounded waters. He comments on the malaria and mosquito situation in North and South Carolina.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to L.O. Howard, February 11, 1918
Carter writes that he cannot help now because the war has stopped his mosquito research.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Lunsford D. Fricks, May 22, 1919
Carter writes that Mayne should supervise the packing of his laboratory equipment for transport.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Lunsford D. Fricks, December 24, 1921
[Carter] does not see the need to write another systematic treatise on malaria control. He suggests two different alternatives.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Lunsford D. Fricks, January 8, 1922
[Carter] asks that the Public Health Service supervise mosquito study and control of ponds at Badin and other places in North Carolina.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Lunsford D. Fricks, January 21, 1923
[Carter] informs Fricks of the regulations for impounded waters and comments on papers submitted.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Lunsford D. Fricks, May 6, 1923
[Carter] requests that Fricks forward a letter to Welch.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to M.A. Barber, July 30, 1925
Carter describes malaria and living conditions in Virginia after the Civil War.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to M.A. Barber, February 2, 1922
Carter discusses Kudo's article, as well as others. Carter would like to work with Barber for a short period, although he believes a winter attack on Anopheles is fruitless.
Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Michael E. Connor, May 22, 1922
[Carter] critiques Connor's draft on yellow fever.
Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Ralph N. Cresne, January 23, 1920
Carter discusses the control of mosquitoes in southern U.S. ports.