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Titles
- A bird's eye view of New Mexico1
- A brief history of the late expedition against Fort San Juan, so far as it relates to the diseases of the troops: together with some observations on climate, infection and contagion; and several of the endemial complaints of the West-Indies1
- A contribution to the climatological study of phthisis in Pennsylvania1
- A contribution to the study of meteorologic states etiologically related to influenza epidemics1
- A description of the situation, climate, soil, and productions of certain tracts of land in the District of Maine and Commonwealth of Massachusetts1
- A dissertation on the influence of a change of climate in curing diseases1
- A letter respecting Santa Cruz as a winter residence for invalids: addressed to Dr. John C. Warren of Boston, Mass1
- A preliminary comparison of methods and results in operative surgery at the sea-level (New York) and in places of high altitude (Denver)1
- A review of the mountain health resorts of North Carolina, and their possibilities: suggesting the desirability of graduated sanitaria or health stations at different elevations on and about the Asheville plateau1
- A sketch of the soil, climate, weather, and diseases of South-Carolina: read before the Medical Society of that state1
- A study of the climate of Colorado as applied to the arrest and cure of pulmonary disease1
- A treatise on derangements of the liver, internal organs, and nervous system2
- A view of the soil and climate of the United States of America: with supplementary remarks upon Florida; on the French Colonies on the Mississippi and Ohio, and in Canada; and on the aboriginal tribes of America1
- A winter in the West Indies and Florida: containing general observations upon modes of travelling, manners and customs, climates and productions, with a particular description of St. Croix, Trinidad de Cuba, Havana, Key West, and St. Augustine, as places of resort for northern invalids1
- Address of S.P. Hildreth, M.D., president of the third Medical Convention of Ohio: delivered at Cleveland, May 14th, 18391
- Aiken and Thomasville as types of the inland health-resorts of South Carolina and Georgia1
- Aiken and its climate1
- Aiken as a health station1
- Aiken, S.C. as a winter resort1
- An address delivered before the St. Louis Historical Society, December 10, 1868, and repeated by request before the Mercantile Library Association, January 21, 1869 upon the thermometric gateways to the pole, surface currents of the ocean, and the influence of the latter upon the climate of the world1
