United States. Surgeon-General's Office
Found in 28 Collections and/or Records:
United States Surgeon-General's Office Correspondence
Letters while Jefferson Randolph Kean was Surgeon-General. Much of the correspondence relates to the bill to increase the efficiency of the Medical Dept. of the Army, forwarded by the War Dept. to Congress on Feb. 19, 1904. Correspondents extensive.
U.S. Army Medical Miscellany Collection
Includes U.S. Army studies on rations (1898-1920); the Army War College course: The preparation and publication of an official medico-military history of a war of magnitude (1929); Surgeon-General's Office activities (1918); Annual report of the U.S. Army General Hospital, San Francisco (1906); construction of barracks in England (1868); and military garments and helmets in the tropics.
U.S. Army medical officers autobiographical sketch collection
Autobiographical and biographical information on the lives of 162 U.S. Army Medical Officers who served c.1870-1940.
U.S. Surgeon-General's Office medical history of the departments of the Ohio and the Cumberland during the year 1862
General medical history, also containing case reports for John Stanton, Tobias Duell, Henry Fay, Henry Thorncroft, Baylor H. Thinell and Marvin Garrison, all of whom died by disease in October 1862 at general hospital no. 6 in Nashville, or general hospital no. 14.
U.S. Surgeon-General's Office medical report of the Second Corps at the Battle of Gettysburg
Seventeen-page report from Justin Dwinell, surgeon in charge of the Second Corps hospital at Gettysburg, and A. W. Laugherty medical director of the Second Corps.
U.S. Surgeon-General's Office report of the operations of the Medical Dept. of the Army of the Tennessee
Report on the medical operations of the Army of the Tennessee during its march from Atlanta to Savannah in November and December 1865.
U.S. Surgeon-General's Office Sanitary Report of the Army of Arkansas
Sanitary reports sent to the Surgeon General summarizing events and activities in the Dept. of the Arkansas "from its occupation to Dec. 31st, 1864." as signed by Joseph R. Smith, Surgeon, U.S.A., Med. Dir., Dept. of Arkansas.
Warren Palmer Dearing Papers
Correspondence, documents, reports, and printed matter. Papers on a variety of subjects relating to public health, health education, medical administration, federal health legislation, and civil defense.
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