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Finding Aid to the Mason V. Hargett Papers, 1932-1986 (bulk 1938-1946)

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Descriptive Summary

Biographical/Historical Note

Collection Summary

Index Terms

Administrative Information

Restrictions

Series Descriptions

Series I: Personal and Biographical

Series II: Rockefeller Foundation, Brazil, 1932-1940

Series III: Photographs, 1938-1940

Series IV: Rocky Mountain Laboratory, Montana, 1940-1946

 

Archives and Modern Manuscripts Program, History of Medicine Division

Processed by Willeke Sandler

Machine-readable finding aid encoded by John P. Rees


Descriptive Summary

Collection Number:MS C 533
Creator:Hargett, Mason V.
Title:Mason V. Hargett Papers
Dates:1932-1986 (bulk 1938-1946)
Quantity:3.75 linear feet
Abstract:Mason V. Hargett contributed greatly to the field of tropical medicine with his work on the yellow fever vaccine, first with the Rockefeller Foundation in Brazil and then at the USPHS Rocky Mountain Laboratory in Montana. Hargett's research facilitated the introduction of a yellow fever vaccine produced without human serum.

Biographical/Historical Note

Mason V. Hargett contributed greatly to the field of tropical medicine with his work on the yellow fever vaccine, first with the Rockefeller Foundation in Brazil and then at the USPHS Rocky Mountain Laboratory in Montana. Hargett's research facilitated the introduction of a yellow fever vaccine produced without human serum, thereby reducing the possibility of contamination that had existed before. Hargett designed, as well as headed, the Yellow Fever Unit at the Rocky Mountain Laboratory in the 1940s. He also worked with the US Public Health Service as a quarantine officer in Miami and Japan.

Mason V. Hargett was born in Farnhamville, Iowa, on April 24, 1904. He received his bachelor's degree from Asbury College in Kentucky in 1925, and his medical degree from Northwestern University in 1929. In 1929, Hargett opened his own practice in Yale, Oklahoma, but could not sustain his practice during the Depression. In 1931, Hargett joined the U.S. Public Health Service, and was stationed at the Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut.

The U.S. Public Health Service was concerned about the possible spread of yellow fever to the United States from South America, and therefore, Hargett was sent to the London School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene from January to June of 1937. He received his D.T.M. & H. from the Examining Board in England (Royal College of Physicians of London and the Royal College of Surgeons of England) in 1937.

Because of his training at the London School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Hargett served as quarantine officer in Miami before he was sent to the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He was a guest student from October 1938 to November 1939, during which time he studied malaria, yellow fever and administration under Dr. Fred L. Soper, the director of the International Health Division in Brazil.

After returning to the United States, Hargett headed the unit established at the Rocky Mountain Laboratory in Hamilton, Montana to make yellow fever vaccine for U.S. Public Health Service. In 1942, the Yellow Fever Unit at the Rocky Mountain Laboratory took over production of the yellow fever vaccine for the U.S. military during World War II.

In 1946, Hargett was sent to Japan to serve at the quarantine officer for the U.S. Army, and to represent the military in the foreign quarantine operation. Due to the massive movement of people following the end of the war, the quarantine operation tried to prevent the introduction of diseases, particularly cholera and typhus, into Japan. Hargett returned to Hamilton, Montana in November 1946 after five months in Japan.

Hargett served at the Leprosarium in Louisiana for a short time before being transferred in 1947 to the Indian Medical Service in Billings, Montana, where he was Regional Medical Director for over two years.

When the Department of the Interior changed its policy concerning Regional Directors in 1950 (no longer privileging Commissioned Officers over Civil Service doctors), Hargett left the Indian Medical Service. He moved to Atlanta, where he worked with the hospital construction program. Hargett was in Atlanta from 1950 to 1952, then in San Francisco from 1952 until 1964, when he retired and moved back to Hamilton, Montana.

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Collection Summary

Photographs, diaries, research materials, slides and reports (1932-1986; 3.75 linear feet) document the official portion of Mason V. Hargett's career in tropical medicine. From 1938 to 1946, Hargett was instrumental in the research and production of yellow fever vaccine, including providing the vaccine for the U.S. military during World War II.

This collection consists primarily of records concerning Hargett's work with the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation in Brazil (1938-1939) and with the Yellow Fever Unit at the Rocky Mountain Laboratory in Montana (1940-1946). The collection includes a significant number of photographs, chiefly from Hargett's time in Brazil, as well as materials relating to the procedure and production of yellow fever vaccine in the Rocky Mountain Laboratory.

Hargett was a guest student with the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil from October 1938 to November 1939. Series II contains documentary material from this period, including physician's manuals (in Portuguese), blank laboratory forms (the majority in Portuguese), a diary kept by Hargett, and photographs pertaining to malaria in Brazil and yellow fever control measures. The photographs document specific cases, prevention methods, facilities and equipment, and the Yellow Fever Service inspectors in Brazil. The Lantern Slides sub-series includes the lantern slides, some of which are negatives of many of the photographs included in this series.

From October 1940 to 1946, Hargett headed the Yellow Fever Unit at the Rocky Mountain Laboratory. The Rocky Mountain Laboratory was established in 1902 in response to the severe problem of Rocky Mountain spotted fever in the western half of the United States. The Laboratory became part of the Division of Infectious Diseases at the National Institute of Health in 1937. In 1948, the Rocky Mountain Laboratory and the Biologics Control Laboratory joined the Division of Infectious Diseases and the Division of Tropical Diseases of the National Institutes of Health to form the National Microbiological Institute. The Institute's name was changed in 1955 to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. In addition to the yellow fever vaccine unit, Rocky Mountain Laboratory also produced spotted fever vaccine. At the start of World War II, the Rockefeller Foundation in Brazil supplied the vaccine for U.S. military. In 1942, an outbreak in hepatitis B among U.S. troops was traced to infected human serum in the Rockefeller yellow fever vaccine. The Rocky Mountain Laboratory took over production of the vaccine for the military. By then Hargett's unit had developed a method of producing the vaccine without using human serum, which they called aqueous base vaccine. After the war, the demand for yellow fever vaccine dropped. Rocky Mountain Laboratory cut back on their operations, and undertook some research studies, including one study concerning the viability of the vaccine under various conditions. When Hargett was transferred to Japan, Harry W. Burruss (bacteriologist at the laboratory) took charge of operations. Production levels were low, and yellow fever vaccine production was closed down in 1957 and transferred to the National Drug Company's Biological Division in Swiftwater, Pennsylvania. Series III contains materials relating to Hargett's work at the Rocky Mountain Laboratory, including experiments reports, laboratory forms and unit orders, and technical reports, as well as a complete description of the method of production of yellow fever vaccine at Rocky Mountain Laboratory, including diagrams of equipment and photographs, compiled by H.W. Burruss. The series also includes tissue section slides of human cases of yellow fever and of diseases commonly confused with yellow fever.

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Restrictions

Restrictions

Collection is not restricted. Contact the Reference Staff for information regarding access. For online customer service, please visit custserv@nlm.nih.gov.

Copyright

Copyright was transferred to the public domain. Contact the Reference Staff for details regarding rights. For online customer service, please visit custserv@nlm.nih.gov.

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Index Terms

These terms are indexed in the National Library of Medicine's online catalog LocatorPlus. Researchers wishing to find related materials should search the catalog using these terms.
MeSH Subjects
Malaria
Yellow Fever Vaccine
Personal Names
Burruss, Harry W.
Corporate Names
Public Health Service (U.S.)
Rockefeller Foundation. International Health Division
Rocky Mountain Laboratory
Geographic Names
Brazil
Montana

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Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

Hargett, Mason V. Mason V. Hargett Papers. 1932-1986. Located in: Modern Manuscripts Collection, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD; MS C 533.

Provenance

Gift of Mason V. Hargett, 6/7/1988. Acession #518.

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Series Descriptions

 

Series I: Personal and Biographical

BoxFolder
11 Resume, n.d.
12 Interview transcript (Hargett, Mason V.), 2-Aug-85
13 Interview transcript (Burruss, Harry W.), 17-Apr-86

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Series II: Rockefeller Foundation, Brazil, 1932-1940

BoxFolder
14 Diary, Oct. 1938-Nov. 1939
Physicians' manuals
16 Antilarvario I, II (2 vols), 1937-38; 1937
17-8 Escriptorio I, II (2 vols), 1936-37; 1937
19 Epidemiologia Entomologia Medico, 1935-38
110 Vacinacao, 1938
111 Viscerotomia, 1932-38
112 Stegomyia Control Training Program -- Bello Horizonte, 1939
113-16 Laboratory Forms, [1937; 1937-39]
21 Maps--Malaria, Brazil, 1938-1939
23-5 Maps--Yellow Fever Control Measures, [1939-1940?]

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Series III: Photographs, 1938-1940

BoxFolder
Malaria, Brazil, 1938-1939
26 Doctor Castro examining for splenomegaly, May 1939
26 Bar and sign halting motorists from the A. gambiae area, May 1939
26 A few "Gambiae doctors" and friends, June 1939
26 The Potengy river near Natal, R.G.N., June 1939
26 The Pirangy river, June 1939
26 Doctor M.A. Barber in Aracaty, Ceara, June 1939
26 167 Anopheles gambiae and 21 Culex recovered from mud house, 5-July-1939
26 Joao Gomes, aged 10 years, ill with malaria and kala azar, 6-July-1939
26 Joao Gomes, improving under treatment, [July 6, 1939]
26 The home of Joao in the caranuba forest, [July 6, 1939]
26 Typical A. gambiae infested village of the sertao, July 1939
26 The Jagauribe river at Iguatu, Ceara, July 1939
26 Pools in the bed of the Banabuihu river in Ceara, July 1939
26 Measuring out paris green, July 1939
26 A. gambiae breeding places, 1939
26 A puddle breeding A. gambiae, 1939
26 Pool in the bed of the Potengy river, 1939
26 A. gambiae love these open small pools, 1939
26 Additional stagnant pools in the bed of the Potengy river, 1939
26 The heat of the sun does not elevate the water temperature sufficiently..., 1939
26 Water will disappear later in the dry season, 1939
26 A muddy pool remaining in creek bottom near Russos, Ceara, 1939
26 Seepage water commonly creates ideal breeding places, 1939
26 Shaded pool in the caranuba forest near Russos, Ceara, which supported A. gambiae, 1939
26 Ferry landing at Aracaty, Ceara, showing the Jarauribe River, 1939
26 Dusting a pond with paris green to destroy possible breeding, 1939
26 A paris green duster with dermatitis caused by contact with the chemical, [1939]
26 The feet of the same man as above, [1939]
26 Doctor Barber searching for larvae, [1939]
26 Doctor Barber dusting water containing Anopheline larvae with paris green in a special demonstration, 1939
26 Doctor Barber drinking the water after dusting with paris green, [1939]
26 Cars and trucks coming from A. gambiae area undergo disinfestations, [1939]
26 Ready to commence spraying with pyrethrum-kerosene mixture, [1939]
26 Doctors Wilson and Damasceno inspecting hut, [1939]
26 Cars and trucks are thoroughly sprayed inside and out, [1939]
26 Pump and sprayer are employed for boat and house work, [1939]
26 An average six room abode hut is sprayed for ten minutes, [1939]
26 Two autos of the anti-gambiae service in Rio Grande de Norte, n.d.
26 Home of the anti-gambiae laboratory in Aracaty, Ceara, n.d.
26 Two typical boys of the gambiae country, n.d.
26 Typical abode hut of the gambiae country, n.d.
26 Typical A. gambiae infested village in the caranuba section, n.d.
26 A case of A. gambiae malaria, n.d.
26 Taking a blood smear in Lagoa de Arroz, n.d.
26 Men such as the one shown are employed to distribute atebrine and quinine to the sick, n.d.
26 The principal means of transportation in the dry sections of northeast Brazil, n.d.
26 "Servico de Malaria do Nordeste", directed by the Rockefeller Foundation, n.d.
Yellow Fever Control Measures, [1939-1940]
27 Waterfall north of Carangola, Feb. 1939
27 Dr. Silveira and Dr. Hoering in conference, Feb. 1939
27 Typical mountain country near Carangola, Feb. 1939
27 Train awaiting a track at Porciuncula, Feb. 1939
27 A sprig of "Fat grass", Feb. 1939
27 Milk being delivered at Manhuassu, Feb. 1939
27 Patent medicine poster, Feb. 1939
27 An everyday scene in Manhuassa, Feb. 1939
27 A poster on the door of a coffee mill, Feb. 1939
27 Oxen pulling a cart, Feb. 1939
27 Typical Laginha country, Feb. 1939
27 Preparing to ford the Jose Pedro river, Feb. 1939
27 Near Laghina, Feb. 1939
27 The leading hotel of Laginha, Feb. 1939
27 Kitchen staff of the Hotel Braga, Feb. 1939
27 Kitchen of the Hotel Braga, Feb. 1939
27 Delivering milk in Laginha, Feb. 1939
27 Doctors Silveira and Musa instructing pharmacist in use of viscerotome, Feb. 1939
27 A coffee-corn field near Laginha, Feb. 1939
27 Doctors with horses, ready to proceed to next case, Feb. 1939
27 Farming on mountainside, Feb. 1939
27 Examining patient in the fifth day of yellow fever, Feb. 1939
27 A typical view, Feb. 1939
27 Doctors Musa, Silveira and Hargett, Feb. 1939
27 Patient in the sixth day of yellow fever, Feb. 1939
27 Delivering wood for the cook-stove in Laginha, Feb. 1939
27 The Laginha road, Feb. 1939
28 A few physicians of the medical staff enjoy a game at the noon hour, n.d.
28 Doctor Servulo-Lima, director, of the Brazilian Yellow Fever Service, n.d.
28 The laboratory of the Brazilian Yellow Fever Service in Rio de Janeiro, n.d.
28 Doctor Henrique A. Penna, in charge of vaccine preparation, and his staff, n.d.
28 Doctor Joao Soares da Silveira, Director of the "Central Region, n.d.
28 Doctors Milton Pessoa de Mello and Manoel Ferreira Neves, n.d.
28 Doctor Carlos Mourao Ratton, n.d.
28 The chief inspector of Bello Horizonte, n.d.
28 Some of the 57 house-to-house inspectors, n.d.
28 Part of the mosquito control force lined up for their monthly pay, n.d.
28 Employees of the control service getting paid, n.d.
28 Another view of the laboratory, n.d.
28 Back porch of the Yellow Fever Service headquarters in Bello Horizonte, n.d.
28 Entrance to the Yellow Fever Service headquarters in Bello Horizonte, n.d.
28 A few of the cages harboring mice in the laboratory, n.d.
28 Mouse cages are sterilized with cresol solution, n.d.
28 Yellow Fever vaccine is prepared in dust proof air-conditioned room, n.d.
28 Sealing and labeling ampoules of vaccine, n.d.
28 Eggshell cap cut loose by acetylene flame to remove embryo, n.d.
28 Removing Infective Embryos for Vaccine Preparation, n.d.
28 A Sterile Forcep for Every Embryo, n.d.
28 Egg in position for cutting cap with flame, n.d.
28 Filtration of vaccine is no longer practiced, n.d.
28 Embryos are ground with glass balls and Alundun, n.d.
28 Transferring Embryo-Serum mixture to Centrifuge bottles, n.d.
28 The finished vaccine, n.d.
28 Filling ampoules with vaccine, n.d.
29 Dragging rosewood logs out of the forest near Laginha, n.d.
29 Friends and neighbors of Joao Carlos, n.d.
29 Road repairs, n.d.
29 The road from Laginha, n.d.
29 A "Pau d'Arco" tree along the Jose Pedro river, n.d.
29 Landemi Marmel in front of his home, n.d.
29 Drawing blood from Landemi for virus isolation, n.d.
29 The home of Landemi Marmel, n.d.
29 A doorway in Landemi's home, n.d.
29 Monkeys are common in forest near Landemi's home, n.d.
29 Monkey jungle not far from where Landemi worked, n.d.
29 Landemi holding his arm after blood was drawn, n.d.
29 Near Landemi's home, n.d.
29 Jungle near Landemi's home, n.d.
29 Another view of Landemi's place, n.d.
29 Another doorway of Landemi's home, n.d.
29 Sebastiao Jose Sobeira ill in bed with yellow fever, n.d.
29 Sebastiao's home, n.d.
29 Jovelina Maria Ferreira, n.d.
29 The home of Jovelina, n.d.
29 Jungle near Jovelina's home, n.d.
29 Forest cabin near Jovelina's home, n.d.
29 Bringing Jovelina to the autopsy house, n.d.
29 The autopsy house, n.d.
29 Mosquito breeding near Jovelina's home, n.d.
29 Capturing mosquitoes near Jovelina's place, n.d.
29 Corn and coffee fields, n.d.
29 Another view of Jovelina's home, n.d.
29 A boy on trail near Jovelina's place, n.d.
29 Jungle near Jovelina's home, n.d.
29 Coffee mill serving as autopsy house, n.d.
29 Bringing Ernesto to the coffee mill, n.d.
29 Ernesto delivered to the coffee mill, n.d.
29 A view near the coffee mill, n.d.
29 Ernesto Cuiostomo Pampais, aged 13, n.d.
29 Casket awaiting Ernesto, n.d.
29 Bello Horizonte, n.d.
29 Avenue in Bello Horizonte, n.d.
29 Mailman in Bello Horizonte, n.d.
29 Avenida Affonso Pena in Bello Horizonte, n.d.
29 Delivering milk, n.d.
29 One of many beautiful churches, n.d.
29 Swimming pool, n.d.
29 One of the many palms, n.d.
29 A couple of boys at home, n.d.
29 Birds in birdcages, n.d.
29 Backyard of the Yellow Fever Service headquarters in Bello Horizonte, n.d.
210 Aedes Aegypti search squad, n.d.
210 Equipment carried by house-to-house inspectors, n.d.
210 District map on the wall of a district headquarters, n.d.
210 Flag of the district inspector at the gate, n.d.
210 House with notices posted by inspector, n.d.
210 Block numbers stenciled for service employees, n.d.
210 Examining a grease trap, n.d.
210 Culex breeding in a water trough, n.d.
210 A special water container made of clay, n.d.
210 Pile of scrap metal, n.d.
210 Clay water jug typical in Brazil, n.d.
210 Water containers often found in houses, n.d.
210 Birdcages, n.d.
210 Typical backyard scene in a better class home, n.d.
210 Inspecting a hole in a papaya tree for breeding, n.d.
210 Building under construction, n.d.
210 Pool of water in the base of a tree, n.d.
210 Concrete wash tub, n.d.
210 Rubbers found in yard, n.d.
210 Inspector breaking holes in a basin, n.d.
210 Stone wall, a hideout for scorpions, n.d.
210 Bamboo stumps are often breeding grounds, n.d.
210 Inspector pouring oil into a grease trap, n.d.
210 Posting a notice on an uninhabited house, n.d.
210 Sampling a stegomyia focus, n.d.
210 A toilet flush box, n.d.
210 Toilet sealed with old paper and oil, n.d.
210 Sealed water tank, n.d.
210 Oil used to end Culex focus in bathtub, n.d.
210 Two water tanks, n.d.
210 A typical scene, n.d.
210 Pool of water unsuitable for stegomyia but favorable for Culex, n.d.
210 Tank of anti-larvivorous minnows, n.d.
210 Catch-basin sprayed to control stegomyia and culex breeding, n.d.
210 Vases and urns filled with sand at cemetery, n.d.
210 Moist sand supports flowers and plants, n.d.
210 Standard method of carrying ship's water, n.d.
210 Boat loaded with coconuts, n.d.
210 Bucket dredge on ship not in use, n.d.
210 Typical Brazilian coaster, n.d.
210 Inspecting rainwater collections for breeding, n.d.
210 Inspecting a barge just after a rain, n.d.
210 Boats with produce coming to market, n.d.
210 Inspector on horse, n.d.
210 Farmhouse in Lagoa de Arroz, Ceara, n.d.
210 Typical well in the country, n.d.
210 Searching for country stegomyia, n.d.
210 Standard means of water storage, n.d.
210 Dry dung kept handy for anti-mosquito smudge making, n.d.
210 [untitled], n.d.
210 Special inspector and his helper, n.d.
210 Draining the juice from a papaya tree, n.d.
210 Trash found by inspectors hidden in lot, n.d.
210 Sewer line man-hole, n.d.
210 Typical vacant lot, n.d.
210 Searching for hidden foci, n.d.
210 Trash perforated and buried by hidden foci squad, n.d.
210 Equipment carried by a capture inspector, n.d.
210 Capture inspector at work, n.d.
210 Zone Inspector Joaquim Januario de Souza, n.d.
211-12 Lantern slides box indexes, n.d.
3 Lantern slides (2 boxes), n.d.

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Series IV: Rocky Mountain Laboratory, Montana, 1940-1946

BoxFolder
213-15 Experiments, 1942-1946
216 Yellow Fever Vaccine Production, n.d.
217 Laboratory Forms, [1943-1946]
218-19 Yellow Fever Unit Orders, 1941-1945
220-24 Technical Reports, 1940-1946
4 Tissue Section Slides (2 boxes), n.d.

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Last reviewed: 02 November 2006
Last updated: 02 November 2006
First published: 23 June 2004
Metadata| Permanence level: Permanent: Dynamic Content