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Mosquitoes

 Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings

Found in 991 Collections and/or Records:

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, February 11, 1914

 Item — Box 7: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 59
Identifier: 00759003
Scope and Contents

Carter discusses her presentation on malaria.

Dates: February 11, 1914

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, August 18, 1917

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 11
Identifier: 00811046
Scope and Contents

Carter writes about his health and financial matters. He would like to continue working for the Rockefeller Foundation in South America next winter.

Dates: August 18, 1917

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Laura Armistead Carter, July 14, 1920

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 23
Identifier: 00823008
Scope and Contents

Carter writes about his travels and his work.

Dates: July 14, 1920

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Leland O. Howard,  February 2, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 26
Identifier: 00926001
Scope and Contents

Carter asks Howard for references on the effect of cold on Aedes calopus mosquitoes.

Dates:  February 2, 1922

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Leslie W. Weedon, May 12, 1919

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 18
Identifier: 00818071
Scope and Contents

Carter writes that a mosquito eradication campaign should be started in the ports along the Gulf of Mexico.

Dates: May 12, 1919

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Lindsley Arthur,  April 15, 1923

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 25
Identifier: 01025021
Scope and Contents

[Carter] answers Arthur's questions regarding mosquitos and their relationship to malaria and yellow fever.

Dates:  April 15, 1923

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to L.L. Williams,  April 26, 1925

 Item — Box 12: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 23
Identifier: 01223005
Scope and Contents

[Carter] discusses the comparative efficacy, as a malaria vector, of three main species of Anopheles mosquitos in the United States.

Dates:  April 26, 1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to L.M. Fisher,  November 1, 1922

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 3
Identifier: 01003004
Scope and Contents

[Carter] sends Fisher information on impounded waters. He comments on the malaria and mosquito situation in North and South Carolina.

Dates:  November 1, 1922

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to L.O. Howard, February 11, 1918

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 13
Identifier: 00813004
Scope and Contents

Carter writes that he cannot help now because the war has stopped his mosquito research.

Dates: February 11, 1918

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Lunsford D. Fricks, January 8, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 25
Identifier: 00925005
Scope and Contents

[Carter] asks that the Public Health Service supervise mosquito study and control of ponds at Badin and other places in North Carolina.

Dates: January 8, 1922

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to M.A. Barber,  February 2, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 26
Identifier: 00926005
Scope and Contents

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.

Dates:  February 2, 1922

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to M.A. Barber,  July 30, 1925

 Item — Box 12: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 26
Identifier: 01226007
Scope and Contents

Carter describes malaria and living conditions in Virginia after the Civil War.

Dates:  July 30, 1925

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to Michael E. Connor,  May 22, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 31
Identifier: 00931015
Scope and Contents

[Carter] critiques Connor's draft on yellow fever.

Dates:  May 22, 1922

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to M.J. Rosenau,  November 2, 1924

 Item — Box 12: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 15
Identifier: 01215001
Scope and Contents

[Carter] writes that he believes there was no yellow fever in Mexico at the time of the Spanish conquest.

Dates:  November 2, 1924

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Philip Alexander Bruce,  July 2, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 34
Identifier: 00934003
Scope and Contents

Carter maintains that the sanitation of the Isthmus of Panama was Gorgas' work. He credits Reed for laying the foundation of all subsequent yellow fever work.

Dates:  July 2, 1922

Letter from [Henry Rose Carter] to P.M. Ashburn,  April 15, 1922

 Item — Box 9: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 28
Identifier: 00928001
Scope and Contents

[Carter] thanks Ashburn for sending him his manuscript. He discusses issues concerning mosquitos, specifically the Anopheles.

Dates:  April 15, 1922

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to R.H. von Ezdorf, February 16, 1916

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 3
Identifier: 00803018
Scope and Contents

Carter discusses anti-mosquito work and mentions the Rockefeller Foundation.

Dates: February 16, 1916

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Ronald Ross,  April 2, 1923

 Item — Box 10: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 25
Identifier: 01025001
Scope and Contents

Carter writes about the malaria control work in the U.S. and introduces Peterson.

Dates:  April 2, 1923

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Rupert Blue, January 20, 1917

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 11
Identifier: 00811003
Scope and Contents

Carter reports that malarial conditions in South Carolina have worsened.

Dates: January 20, 1917

Letter from Henry Rose Carter to Rupert Blue, September 10, 1918

 Item — Box 8: Series uva-lib:2222441, Folder: 13
Identifier: 00813018
Scope and Contents

Carter reports on dengue fever in Galveston, Texas.

Dates: September 10, 1918