Education
Found in 214 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 20, 1916
Blue orders Carter to proceed to Washington to deliver lectures on yellow fever and malaria.
Letter from Rupert Blue to Henry Rose Carter, January 24, 1916
Blue requests that Carter present a paper for the American Society of Tropical Medicine meeting.
Letter from Sue [s.n.] to Philip Showalter Hench, October 17, 1940
Sue sends Hench her congratulations and says she will attend the Washington and Jefferson College exercises.
Letter from T.H.D. Griffitts to Henry Rose Carter, August 19, 1925
Griffitts discusses his new job and expresses admiration for Carter as a friend and mentor.
Letter from T.H.D. Griffitts to Henry Rose Carter, August 16, 1921
Griffitts thanks Carter for lending him memos. He reports on the results of impounded water work in North Carolina and Virginia.
Letter from T.H.D. Griffitts to Henry Rose Carter, January 22, 1922
Griffitts believes that Carter's abstracts are of great value. He may move to Mobile, Alabama for a malaria project.
Letter from Wade H. Frost to Henry Rose Carter, February 17, 1922
Frost asks Carter to give lectures on malaria and yellow fever at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health.
Letter from Wade H. Frost to Henry Rose Carter, February 20, 1922
Frost discusses Carter's upcoming lectures on malaria and yellow fever, at Johns Hopkins.
Letter from Wade H. Frost to Henry Rose Carter, March 21, 1922
Frost comments on Carter's report on influenza and pneumonia in Panama and urges him to publish it. He feels Carter's lectures were the best they have had at Johns Hopkins.
Letter from Wade Hampton Frost to Henry Rose Carter, November 8, 1922
Frost requests that Carter give two epidemiology lectures on yellow fever at Johns Hopkins University.
Letter from Wade Hampton Frost to Henry Rose Carter, March 6, 1923
Frost discusses Snow's book on cholera. He informs Carter that he will be lecturing in Washington, D.C. next month.
Letter from Walter Reed to C. H. Crane, February 18, 1875
Reed declines an appointment as Acting Assistant Surgeon, United States Army. [Courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration]
Letter from Walter Reed to Dorsey M. McPherson, December 26, 1885
Reed is coming to Washington to apply for a leave extension. He plans to visit Florida, and then to visit New York City for coursework.
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie B. Lawrence, September 17, 1874
Reed is exhausted from work. He plans a trip home. His step-mother is curious about his relationship with Emilie Lawrence. He critiques contemporary novels.
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie B. Lawrence, November 23, 1874
Reed is worried that he may be writing Emilie Lawrence too frequently. He is sick but will persevere to take his medical exam.
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie B. Lawrence, January 9, 1875
Reed expresses his love for his dispersed family, and notes that it has been one year since he met her. Reed will delay taking his medical exam.
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie B. Lawrence, August 12, 1875
Reed responds to Emilie Lawrence's teasing. He alludes to their wedding planned for the fall of 1876. He is beginning study of French and German.
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie B. Lawrence, August 19, 1875
Reed misses Emilie Lawrence. He offers a prayer to his deceased natural mother. He also discusses various topics, including medical treatments, a Catholic service, French lessons, and reading.
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie B. Lawrence, September 3, 1875
Reed describes his activities to Emilie Lawrence: French language studies, reading, and chess. He promises no card playing at her request.
Letter from Walter Reed to Emilie B. Lawrence, October 21, 1875
Reed expresses his devotion to Emilie Lawrence. He expects a permanent military assignment in the spring.