Armed Forces
Found in 1133 Collections and/or Records:
A Candidate for Honors
, December 14, 1901
A Memorial to the Late Major Walter Reed
,The Medical Record, August 29, 1903
News of the Week
A World Benefactor
,The Baltimore Sun, December 23, 1902
Address of the Secretary of War, Honorable James W. Good, to the Graduating Class of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, June 13, 1929
Good, the Secretary of War, addresses the 1929 class of West Point and mentions the enrollment of Reed and Wood on the Roll of Honor.
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 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 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 the Camp Lazear National Monument, 1952
Aerial view of the restoration of Camp Lazear, Havana, Cuba, 1952
Albert E. Truby at La Punta, Havana, Cuba, 1899
Albert E. Truby in his tent on the parapet at La Punta, Havana, Cuba, January 1899
Morro castle can be seen in the background.
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.
Alexander N. Stark with his youngest son, Camp Columbia, Havana, Cuba, 1900
American military base at Pinar del Rio, Cuba, circa 1908
Andrus is Dead; 'Guinea Pig' for Yellow Fever
, May 3, 1942
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.