photographs
Found in 1114 Collections and/or Records:
The Army Medical Museum and Library Building, circa 1900-1960
Courtesy of U.S. Army Medical Museum
The band of Estado Major Del Ejercito [of the Army General Staff] at the Camp Lazear National Monument dedication ceremony, December 3, 1952
The Base Hospital, Camp Columbia, Havana, Cuba, May 1908
Photo by U. S. Army Signal Corps
The Board of Managers, Walter Reed Memorial Association, Washington, D.C., November 21, 1946
The building in Indianapolis where Walter Reed read his preliminary report on the etiology of yellow fever in October 1900, 1905
The building in Indianapolis where Walter Reed read his preliminary report on the etiology of yellow fever in October 1900, 1907
The commanding officer's quarters and mess hall, possibly Camp Columbia, Havana, Cuba, 1900
Photo by U.S. Army Signal Corps
The Commission on Infectious Diseases in Mariel, Pinar del Rio, Cuba, 1901
Standing in the photograph from left to right: Alfredo Dominquez Rieder, Aristides Agramonte, [s.n.] Taylor, A. Diaz Albertini, [unknown], and Hugo Roberts. Seated from left to right: Carlos Finlay and Juan Guiteras
The Dean Bridge, Fulton Street, Grand Rapids, Michigan, circa 1930-1939
The dedication of the bas-relief of Leonard Wood at the Camp Lazear National Monument, December 3, 1952
The dedication of the bas-relief of Leonard Wood at the Camp Lazear National Monument, December 3, 1952
The Easter Sunday Sunrise Service in the Amphitheater of the Walter Reed Hospital Grounds
,The Washington Star, April 15, 1928
Image of the Easter Sunday sunrise service in the amphitheater of the Walter Reed Hospital grounds.
The environs at the Camp Lazear site, Cuba, 1941
The environs of the Camp Lazear site, circa 1930-1950
The environs of the Camp Lazear site, Cuba, circa 1930-1950
The environs of the Camp Lazear site, Cuba, circa 1930-1950
The Fever That was Epidemic in This Post Last Fall, by Najeem M. Saleeby [Columbia Barracks, Havana, Cuba], June 6, 1900
Saleeby writes about the epidemic that afflicted Columbia Barracks in late 1899 and describes the symptoms of the disease.