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  1. Major James Carroll (June 5, 1854 – September 16, 1907) [1] was a US Army physician. Carroll was born in England. He moved to Canada in 1874, and enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1874. He graduated with an M.D. from the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1891.

  2. Other articles where James Carroll is discussed: Walter Reed: …appointed Reed and army physician James Carroll to investigate Sanarelli’s bacillus. It also sent Aristides Agramonte, an assistant surgeon in the U.S. Army, to investigate the yellow-fever cases in Cuba. Agramonte isolated Sanarelli’s bacillus not only from one-third of the yellow-fever patients but also from persons ...

    • AAAS Resolution: Death of Dr. James Carroll from Yellow Fever Experimentation
    • Significance
    • Further Resources

    Whereas, The late Major James Carroll, M.D., USA, was the first to submit voluntarily to the bite of an infected stegomyia, and from the bite of this mosquito, suffered a severe attack of yellow fever, the effects of which led to his ultimate death, and Whereas, This was the first experimentally produced case of yellow fever leading to the present ...

    Carroll's widow was awarded a pension of $125 a year by the government from the date of his death. So, too, was the widow of Dr. Jesse Lazear (1866–1900), another member of the board, who contracted and died of yellow fever early on in the investigation. Fortunately, none of the recruited volunteers died during the experiments with the mosquitoes. ...

    Books

    Lock, Stephen, John M. Last, and George Dunea, eds. The Oxford Illustrated Companion to Medicine. Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, 2001.

    Periodicals

    Pierce, John R., and James V. Writer, eds. "Solving the Mystery of Yellow Fever: The 1900 U.S. Army Yellow Fever Board." Military Medicine166 supplement (2001): 1-82.

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  4. Major James Carroll (June 5, 1854 – September 16, 1907) was a US Army physician. Quick Facts Born, Died ... Close. Carroll was born in England. He moved to Canada in 1874, and enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1874. He graduated with an M.D. from the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1891.

  5. May 23, 2018 · Carrolls most important published contributions to science consist of works written jointly with Walter Reed and others defining the method of the propagation of yellow fever, based upon experiments that were executed largely by Carroll, and a series of papers on the etiological agent in that disease. His most important personal contribution ...

  6. Oct 1, 1998 · James Carroll was born in England in 1854; at the age of 15, he emigrated to Canada where he worked at various odd jobs. At age 20, he crossed the border and volunteered for the US Army, in which he remained for the rest of his life. Appointed as Hospital Steward, he became interested in medicine.

  7. Oct 30, 2006 · On September 13, 1900, thirty-four-year-old physician Jesse Lazear believed he was on the brink of a scientific breakthrough that would put an end to yellow fever, the worst epidemic scourge of...

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