Mosquitoes
Found in 991 Collections and/or Records:
Resolution by Alvaro Obregon, Presidente de Los Estados Unidos Mexicanos, January 19, 1921
Obregon establishes a commission under the International Health Board for yellow fever work in Mexico. Officers, administrative structure, and funding are specified.
Review in theSpringfield RepublicanforDr. Reed and Yellow Fever, July 22, 1906
Review inOutlookforWalter Reed and Yellow Fever, August 1906
This article, which appeared in "Outlook," deals with Kelly's biography of Walter Reed.
Review inThe New York TimesforWalter Reed and Yellow Fever, August 4, 1906
Roger Post Ames, by Paul L. Tate, circa 1954
[Tate] describes Ames involvement in the yellow fever experiments. Ames applied the mosquitoes, diagnosed the yellow fever patients, and provided exceptional medical care. Ames, fluent in Spanish, was able to persuade the Spanish volunteers to stay and undergo treatment.
Roger Post Ames, M.D. in Yellow Fever Experimentation at Camp Lazear, Cuba 1900-1901 with Supporting Evidence, circa 1910-1950
This report supports Ames' inclusion in the Act, approved February 28, 1929, to recognize the public service rendered and disabilities incurred as voluntary subjects for inoculation during the yellow fever investigations in Cuba.
Room in which Clara Louise Maass died and Jesse W. Lazear was presumably bitten by an infected mosquito, Las Animas Hospital, 1940
Room in which Clara Louise Maass died and Jesse W. Lazear was presumably bitten by an infected mosquito, Las Animas Hospital, 1940
Sanitary Conditions in Panama
, February 10, 1905
This report was prepared for the Smithsonian Institution and includes autographed notes.
Sanitary work in Cubaa lecture by Jefferson Randolph Kean with notes by Albert E. Truby, May 2, 1910
[Kean] gives a brief summary of conditions in Cuba before the arrival of the Yellow Fever Board. He provides an account of the activities of the Board, which ultimately shows the mosquito as the bearer of yellow fever. Included are notes by Truby.
Script forThe Board of Missing Heirsradio program, September 23, 1941
The script gives a biographical sketch of Forbes, and states that he is wanted by the U.S. Army Finance Department so that he can be given a lump sum of $17,750 and $125 monthly for his service in the yellow fever experiments.
Script ofThe Heroes of the Yellow Fever Experiments in Cuba
forThe Shell Showradio program, May 15, 1937
This radio show script on the yellow fever experiments includes an interview with Kissinger.
Scripts ofThe Heroes of the Yellow Fever Experiments in Cuba in 1900
for theWe the Peopleradio program, January 10, 1937
This radio script presents a fictionalized version of the yellow fever experiments, and portrays Kissinger and Moran as heroes. The radio program was prepared and produced by Young & Rubicam, Inc. for the program, "We The People", for their client the General Foods Corp., to promote their product "Calumet", on January 10, 1937, from 5:00-5:30 on the network WJZ.
Scripts ofThe Heroes of the Yellow Fever Experiments in Cuba in 1900
for theWe the Peopleradio program, January 10, 1937
This radio script presents a fictionalized version of the yellow fever experiments, and portrays Kissinger and Moran as heroes. The radio program was prepared and produced by Young & Rubicam, Inc. for the program, "We The People", for their client the General Foods Corp., to promote their product "Calumet", on January 10, 1937, from 5:00-5:30 on the network WJZ.
Senate Bill No. 1168, December 5, 1907
This is a bill for Mabel Lazear's pension. It credits Lazear with discovering the theory of mosquito transmission of yellow fever.
Senate Document Number 118,The Scientific Works and Discoveries of the Late Major Walter Reed, 1903
This document concerns the work of Walter Reed.
Senate Report No. 6009, James Carroll, February 2, 1907
This report concerns James Carroll.
Some Observations Bearing on the Control of Malaria, by P.M. Ashburn, circa 1914
Ashburn reports on methods of curbing malaria through the control of mosquito populations.
South Carolina Supreme Court Decision:George D. Belton v. Wateree Power Company, April 1922
This opinion discusses a case in which a power company has been sued by a farmer for building a dam. This dam damaged his farm land and created stagnant pools where malarial mosquitoes breed.