Yellow fever
Found in 2717 Collections and/or Records:
Philip Showalter Hench inside Building Number One of Camp Lazear pointing to the smokestack opening, 1941
Philip Showalter Hench, John J. Moran, and Pedro Nogueira outside of Building Number One, Camp Lazear site, Cuba, March 1948
Philip Showalter Hench, John J. Moran, Ralph Cooper Hutchison, and John R. Kissinger and others, at the dedication of the Lazear Memorial Building at Washington and Jefferson College, Washington, Pennsylvania, October 26, 1940
Philip Showalter Hench next to a plaque commemorating Jesse W. Lazear and Carlos J. Finlay, Las Animas Hospital, 1948
Philip Showalter Hench outside the yellow fever ward, Las Animas Hospital, 1940
Philip Showalter Hench pointing to the double-thick tongued and grooved boards inside Building Number One, Cuba, March 1948
Philip Showalter Hench speaking at a dinner marking the dedication of the Lazear Memorial Building at Washington and Jefferson College, Washington, Pennsylvania, October 26, 1940
Philip Showalter Hench speaking to an unidentified group in Cuba, circa 1945-1960
Philip Showalter Hench standing beside the sliding window panel inside Building Number One, Camp Lazear site, Cuba, March 1948
Philip Showalter Hench standing in front of the house at 404 (formerly 20) General Lee Street, Quemados de Marianao, Cuba, March 1948
Philip Showalter Hench standing in front of the house at either 308 or 309 General Lee Street, Quemados de Marianao, Cuba, January 1952
Philip Showalter Hench's interview with Jefferson Randolph Kean, November 19, 1946
Hench interviews Kean about the Yellow Fever Commission.
Philip Showalter Hench's miscellaneous questions for Albert E. Truby, December 1946
Hench provides an outline of miscellaneous questions for Truby about the yellow fever investigation. Responses by both Truby and Hench are included for some of the questions.
Philip Showalter Hench's questions for Albert E. Truby concerning Truby's book, December 1946
Hench provides as outline of questions for Truby about his book, “Memoir of Walter Reed.” Responses by both Truby and Hench are included for some of the questions.
Philip Showalter Hench's remarks on the acceptance of The Order of Finlay at the Finlay Institute, January 24, 1952
This is Hench's speech, made on his acceptance of “The Order of Finlay.” He speaks highly of Finlay and states that one of his most valued possessions is an original copy of Finlay's first paper on yellow fever and mosquitoes.
Photocopied fragment ofPublic Health Papers and Reports, Volume XXIX, Presented at the Thirty-First Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, Washington, D.C. October 26-30, 1903, October 26-30, 1903
These selections from presentations given at the 1903 annual meeting of the American Public Health Association concern the scientific reception of the Yellow Fever Commission's work, particularly the etiology of yellow fever, quarantine procedures, and the discovery of the role of the mosquito. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Photocopied fragment ofPublic Health Papers and Reports, Volume XXVII, Presented at the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, Buffalo, N.Y., September 16-20, 1901, September 16-20, 1901
Includes papers and reports such as thePresident's Address
, by Benjamin Lee;The Results of Yellow Fever Sanitation in Havana, Cuba, for the Year 1901 Up to September 1st, Carried on Upon the Basis that the Stegomyia Mosquito is the Sole Means of Its Transmission
, by William Crawford Gorgas;Practical Discussion of Yellow Fever
, by Alvah H. Doty; andFomites and Yellow Fever
, by A. N. Bell.
Photocopied fragment ofPublic Health Papers and Reports, Volume XXXI, Presented at the Thirty-Third Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, Boston, Massachusetts, September 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 1905, September 25, 1905-September 29, 1905
Proceedings of the 31st meeting of the American Public Health Association, including “Lessons to be Learned from the Present Outbreak of Yellow Fever in Louisiana” by James Carroll, “Some New Points in the Etiology and Symptomatology of Yellow Fever” by Juan Guiteras, “Yellow Fever in Mexico” by Eduardo Liceaga, and the “Official Report of the Proceedings....”.