APPENDIX,
Containing the number of deaths from cholera registered in the four weeks ending 5th August, 1854, together with the supply of water in the houses in which the fatal attacks took place, in all the sub-districts to which the water supply of either the Southwark and Vauxhall or the Lambeth Company extends. (See Table VII, page [84].) The registers of deaths are copied from the Weekly Returns of the Registrar-General.
St. Saviour, Southwark. Christchurch.
At 34, Charlotte Street, on 29th July, a stock-maker, aged 29, “Asiatic cholera 18 hours”
Lambeth.
At 45, Gravel Lane, on 1st August, the widow of a farmer, aged 48, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 1, Alpha Place, on 1st August, a barrister’s clerk, aged 57, “cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
St. Saviour, Southwark. St. Saviour.
At 1, Park Street, on 25th July, the wife of a labourer, aged 35, “Asiatic cholera 14¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 40, Bankside, on 25th July, the son of a locksmith, aged 5 years, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At same house, on 26th July, the daughter of a locksmith, aged 9 yrs., “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At same house, on 28th July, the daughter of a locksmith, aged 13 yrs., “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 97, Bridge Road, on 28th July, a hatter, aged 36, “Asiatic cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 49, Great Guildford Street, on 29th July, a coal-porter, aged 44, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 20, Zoar Street, on 31st July, a female, formerly a domestic servant, aged 79, “diarrhœa 2 days, cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 22, America Street, on Aug. 1, the wife of an engine-driver, aged 38, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, Pleasant Place, August 1, the daughter of a coal-porter, aged 5 years, “Asiatic cholera 13 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 10, Castle Street, on 1st August, the son of an engineer, aged 7 years, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 36, New Park Street, on 1st August, the son of an artist, aged 2 years, “Asiatic cholera 10¹⁄₂ hours”
Thames water from the tank of a saw-mill.
At 54¹⁄₂, Great Guildford St., on 2nd Aug., a labourer aged 51, “Asiatic cholera 47 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the same house, same day, the wife of a labourer, aged 48, “Asiatic cholera 12¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Emerson Place, on 3rd August, the wife of an engineer, aged 30, “cholera 2 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 29, Norfolk St., on 2d Aug., the son of a labourer, aged 3 years, “Asiatic cholera 12¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 68, Great Guildford St., on 3rd Aug., the widow of a labourer, aged 40, “cholera 19 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 10, Castle Street, on 3rd August, the daughter of a labourer, aged 4 years, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At White Hart Inn Yard, on 3rd August, the wife of a porter, aged 49, “cholera 14 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 22, America Street, on 3rd August, an engine-driver, aged 35, “cholera 9 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 15, Essex Street, on 4th August, a packer, aged 65, “diarrhœa 4 days, cholera 11 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 17, Southwark Square, on 3rd August, the wife of an engineer, aged 31, “diarrhœa 1 day, cholera 3 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 31, York Place, 5th Aug., the daughter of a labourer, aged 5 yrs. “Asiatic cholera, 11¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 50, Great Guildford Street, on 4th August, a baker’s shopwoman, aged 21, “Asiatic cholera”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 10, Russell Place, on 5th August, the widow of a steam-boat stoker, aged 38, “diarrhœa 4 weeks, Asiatic cholera 20 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 14, Keppel St., 31st July, the daughter of a cooper, aged 4 years, “Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 3, Bank End, on 2nd August, a widow of a coach-trimmer, aged 73, “Asiatic cholera 14 hours”
Thames water from tank at Messrs. Barclay & Perkins.
St. Olave, Southwark. St. Olave.
At St. Thomas’s Hospital (from Grey Eagle Street, Spitalfields), on 27th July, a labourer, aged 32, “rheumatism, cholera 20 hours”. This patient, named John Moull, was admitted with rheumatism on 25th July. Water supply of hospital
Southwark and Vauxhall and pump-wells on the premises.
At 5, Marble Court, July 28, the son of a basket maker, aged 4 years, “malignant cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the same house, July 30, a stonemason’s daughter, aged 2 yrs., “choleraic diarrhœa 2 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 3, Gimber’s Rents, July 31, a labourer’s daughter, 13 months, “Asiatic cholera 7 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Guy’s Hospital, July 30, a dressmaker, aged 19, “cholera”; admitted with cholera from 2, Port Place, Walworth Common
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Gimber’s Rents, Aug. 1, a labourer’s daughter, 3 years, “Asiatic cholera 48 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
On board the “Prince Cobourg”, Cotton’s Wharf, on August 2nd, a seaman, aged 38, “Asiatic cholera 14 hours”
Most likely Thames water.
At 5, Marble Court, August 1, the daughter of a basket maker, aged 1 year and 4 months, “cholera, congestion of brain”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 6, Darley’s Buildings, August 2, the daughter of a labourer, 2 yrs., “Asiatic cholera 14 hrs.”
Southwk. & Vauxhall.
At Guy’s Hospital, on August 1st, a sailor, aged 16, “cholera”; admitted with cholera from a ship in the Thames
Most likely Thames water.
At Guy’s Hospital, on 2nd August, a bookbinder, aged 30, “cholera”; was taken ill in the train on his way from Portsmouth
Water supply not ascertained.
At Guy’s Hospital, on 3rd August, the daughter of a block-turner, aged 11 yrs., “cholera”; admitted with cholera from 7, Mint Street, Southwark.
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At St. Thomas’s Hospital, supposed from Red Cross Street, Southwark, on 31st July, a charwoman, aged 50, “cholera”
Water supply not ascertained.
At St. Thomas’s Hospital, from (28) Cole Street, Dover Road, on 2nd August, a cab-driver, aged 40, “cholera”; admitted with cholera
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At St. Thomas’s Hospital, from (1 Star Place) Star Corner, Bermondsey, on 3rd August, a baker, aged 27, “cholera”; admitted with cholera.
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 10, Tattle Court, on 4th August, a labourer, aged 46, “Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 11, Green Bank, on 4th August, the daughter of a pavior, aged 3 years, “Asiatic cholera 18 hours.”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 24, Mellor Street, on 3rd August, a butcher, aged 73, “cholera 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 194, Tooley Street, Aug. 5th, the son of a railway porter, aged 16 months, “cholera”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
St. Olave, Southwark. St. John, Horsleydown.
At 8, Charles Street, July 20, a carman, aged 42, “diarrhœa 3 days, Asiatic cholera 22 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 19, Bermondsey St., July 26, a labourer’s daughter, aged 5 yrs., “cholera Asiatica 4¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 4, Abdy Street, on 29th July, a corn-turner, aged 60, “Asiatic cholera, with premonitory diarrhœa, 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 12, Bermondsey Street, July 29, a railway porter, aged 34, “malignant cholera 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 5, Gibbon’s Rents, July 29, wife of a railway porter, aged 39, “malignant cholera 16 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 18, Parish Street, July 29, a carpenter’s labourer, aged 19, “diarrhœa 4 days, cholera 3 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At the Union Workhouse, on 30th July, a labourer, aged 40, “Asiatic cholera 24 hours”; admitted with cholera from 4, Bethel Place, Vine Yard
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Union Workhouse, on 31st July, an apprentice to the sea, aged 16, “Asiatic cholera 36 hours”; admitted with cholera from on board ship
Most likely Thames water.
At 5, Bethel Place, July 30, the wife of a corn-turner, aged 35, “Asiatic cholera 4 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the same house, Aug. 1, daughter of a corn-turner, aged 1 year, “Asiatic cholera 3 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 8, Gibbon’s Rents, Aug. 1, the wife of a carpenter, aged 32, “Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 6, Gordon Terrace, on 1st August, the daughter of a coal-porter, aged 2 years and 7 months, “Asiatic cholera 4 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Union Workhouse, on 1st August, a slater, aged 56, “Asiatic cholera 24 hours”; admitted with cholera from 4, Magdalen Court, Tooley Street
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At the Union Workhouse, on 3rd August, the wife of a labourer, aged 30, “Asiatic cholera 4 days”; admitted with cholera from 4, Bethel Pl., Vine Yd.
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 22, Magdalen Street, Aug. 1, a single woman, aged 53, “cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Freeman’s Lane, on 2nd August, a labourer, aged 25, “premonitory diarrhœa, with sickness, 24 hours; Asiatic cholera 9 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Charles Street, July 30, the widow of a hatter, aged 62, “cholera 11 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, Charles Street, Aug. 4, a female, aged 45, “diarrhœa 7 days, English cholera 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
Bermondsey. St. James.
On board the ship “Ouse”, off Bermondsey, July 9, a mariner, aged 50, “cholera 16 hours”
Most likely Thames water.
At 5, Gibson’s Cottages, on 18th July, the son of a chair-marker, aged 5 years, “choleraic diarrhœa 2 days, collapse 1 day”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, Bermondsey Wall, on 23rd July, the daughter of a bookseller, aged 4 years, “cholera 9 hours”
Thames water, by dipping a pail in the river.
At 4, Bermondsey Wall, July 24, a sawyer’s daughter, aged 3 yrs., “cholera 20 hours”
Thames water, by dipping a pail.
At 9, Pleasant Row, July 25th, the wife of a labourer, aged 55, “chronic disease of liver 2 years, choleraic diarrhœa 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 10, Marine Street, on 24th July, a mate, mariner, aged 34, “Asiatic cholera 101 hours, after choleraic diarrhœa 16¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 10, Marine Street, on 24th July, a mariner, aged 27, “Asiatic cholera 13 hours, after premonitory diarrhœa 2¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, Bermondsey Wall, July 27, a sawyer, aged 62, “cholera 32 hours”
Thames water, by dipping a pail.
At 6, Perseverance Court, on 28th July, the wife of a hawker, aged 30, “cholera 24 hours, no premonitory symptoms”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 8, Foxlow Street, on 29th July, the daughter of a labourer, aged 18 years, “diarrhœa some days, cholera 13 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 14, Gedling Terrace, Aug. 2, a carman’s daughter, aged 2 years, “cholera maligna 4 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 22, George Row, August 3, a stonemason, aged 30, “cholera maligna 10 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Bermondsey Wall, on 3rd August, the wife of a publican, aged 34, “Asiatic cholera 19 hours”
Thames water, by dipping a pail.
At 6, Pleasant Row, on 3rd August, the daughter of a currier deceased, aged 5 years, “Asiatic cholera 7 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Parker’s Terrace, on 3rd August, the son of an oil-cooper, aged 1 year, “diarrhœa 10 days, cholera 2 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 36, Ernest Street, on 4th August, the wife of an engineer, aged 37, “premonitory diarrhœa 24 hours, cholera 41 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, Bermondsey Wall, on 4th August, the son of a mariner, aged 2 years, “diarrhœa 10 days, cholera 2 days”
Thames water, by dipping a pail.
At 5, George Row, Aug. 2, the son of a lighterman, aged 3 yrs., “choleraic diarrhœa 3¹⁄₂ days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Water Lane, on 29th July, a domestic servant, aged 23, “cholera 10¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 16, Marine Street, on 30th July, the daughter of a labourer, aged 9 yrs., “cholera 11 hrs.”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 8, Printer’s Place, July 30, the widow of a publican, aged 70, “Asiatic cholera 15 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 4, Green Walk, on Aug. 1, the wife of a hoop-bender, aged 47, “Asiatic cholera 7 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, John Place, on 1st August, a leather-dresser, aged 54, “Asiatic cholera 22 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 16, Marine Street, on 2nd August, the wife of a labourer, aged 51, “cholera 30 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Metcalf Court, on 1st August, the son of a labourer, aged 2 years and 6 months, “measles 14 days, diarrhœa 1 week, cholera 2 days”
Beg Southwark and Vauxhall water from neighbours.
At 3, Frederick Place, on 2nd August, a cooper, aged 40 years, “Asiatic cholera”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, Somerset Place, on 2nd August, the daughter of a labourer, aged 3 years, “diarrhœa 18 hours, cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Mill Street, on 3rd August, the wife of a master tin-plate worker, aged 27 years, “diarrhœa 4 hours, cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 14, Gedlin Terrace, 31st July, the son of a carman, aged 4 yrs., “malignant cholera 13 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
Bermondsey. St. Mary Magdalen.
At 13, Abbey Street South, July 25, a trotter-cleaner, aged 18 years, “cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Long Walk, on 26th July, the son of a labourer, aged 2 yrs., “diarrhœa choleraic 15 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 2, Providence Place, on 28th July, the wife of a leather-dresser, aged 56, “diarrhœa 4 hours, cholera 20 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Providence Place, on 28th July, the wife of a currier, aged 58, “diarrhœa 3 hours, cholera 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 13, Willow St., on 2nd Aug., the daughter of a warehouseman, aged 4 yrs., “cholera morbus”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 14, Fendall St., Aug. 4, the son of a leather-dresser, aged 5 yrs., “Asiatic cholera 10 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 2, Finimore’s Court, on 3rd August, a labourer, aged 74, “Asiatic cholera”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 54, Little George St., Aug. 4, son of a labourer, aged 2 yrs., “cholera maligna, 40 hrs”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, on July 29, the son of a pen-cutter, aged 9 yrs., “Asiatic cholera 19 hours. Died 7 hours after admission.” From 12, Minto Street.
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 25, Maltby Street, July 28, the widow of a solicitor’s clerk, aged 65, “Asiatic cholera”.
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, on 31st July, a shoemaker, aged 46, “Asiatic cholera 11 hours after admission in state of collapse”. From 99, Russell Street.
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 19, Grange Walk, on 31st July, a blacksmith, aged 21, “cholera 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 36, Abbey Street, on 30th July, the daughter of a labourer, aged 2 years, “cholera 3 days, congestion of brain, convulsions 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 13, Abbey Street, on 29th July, the daughter of a labourer, aged 2 years, “cholera 56 hours, diarrhœa 2 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, Russell Street, on 1st August, a porter, aged 64, “Asiatic cholera”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, on 2nd August, a sailor, aged 32, “Asiatic cholera, 21 hours after admission in a state of collapse”. From ship “Malvern”
Most likely Thames water.
At 3, Long Walk, on 30th July, the son of a carpenter, aged 2 years, “cholera 2 days, secondary fever 2 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 49, Page’s Walk, on 1st August, the wife of a deal-porter, aged 31, “cholera maligna 10 hours, diarrhœa 4 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, on 2nd August, the daughter of a labourer, aged 7 years, “Asiatic cholera (30 hours) after admission in a state of collapse”. From 7, Chapel Place, Long Lane
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 41, Brunswick Court, on 3rd August, a servant, aged 28, “cholera 48 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Bermondsey. Leather Market.
At 4, Princes Place, Crosby Row, on 19th July, the daughter of a journeyman cordwainer, aged 4 years, “English cholera, 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 17, King’s Place, Crosby Row, on 28th July, the wife of a labourer, aged 29 years, “Asiatic cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 25, Smith’s Buildings, 30th July, the daughter of a labourer, aged 3 yrs., “cholera 19 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 15, Brook Street, on 31st July, the son of a journeyman tanner, aged 20 months, “cholera 15 hours”.
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 27, Nelson Street, July 31, the wife of a labourer, aged 35, “Asiatic cholera 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, Richardson Street, on 30th July, the son of a journeyman leather-dresser, aged 18 years, “diarrhœa 7 days, Asiatic cholera 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Staple Street, on 2nd August, the daughter of a journeyman cordwainer, aged 6 years, “cholera 11 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 185, Long Lane, on 3rd August, the wife of a journeyman tanner, aged 26 years, “cholera biliosa 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, Elizabeth Place, Baalzephon Street, on 2nd Aug., the son of a journeyman cordwainer, aged 1 year, “diarrhœa 1 day, Asiatic cholera 1 day”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Alfred Place, Nelson Street, on 2nd August, the daughter of a cordwainer, aged 17 years, “Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 101, Snow’s Fields, Aug. 3, a journeyman carpenter, aged 63, “Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Staple Street, on 3rd August, the son of a journeymen cordwainer, aged 4 years, “cholera 48 hours, premonitory diarrhœa 3 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 7, Little Charlotte Row, Nelson Street, on 1st August, the son of a carman, aged 1¹⁄₂ years, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the same house, on the same day, the son of a carman, aged 3 yrs., “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 8, Minto Street, on 2nd August, the son of a journeyman tanner, aged 3 yrs., “diarrhœa 3 days, cholera 24 hours, secondary fever 2 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 23, Baalzephon Street, on 4th August, the son of a journeyman wire-weaver, aged 1¹⁄₂ years, “diarrhœa 2 days, Asiatic cholera 36 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 53, Long Lane, on 3rd August, a stay-maker, aged 52, “diarrhœa, Asiatic cholera”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, Grange Road, on 4th August, the son of a journeyman tanner, aged 4 years, “Asiatic cholera 11 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, Wood’s Place, Grange Road, on 4th August, a labourer, aged 24, “cholera 12 hours, premonitory diarrhœa 3 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 16, Alfred Place, Nelson Street, on 3rd August, the daughter of a journeyman bricklayer, aged 1 year, “dentition, diarrhœa, cholera, convulsions”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 15, Wyld’s Rents, on 15th August, the wife of a journeyman baker, aged 27, “cholera Asiatica 17 hours, collapse, premonitory diarrhœa 8 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 7, Alfred Street, on 5th Aug., a journeyman tanner, aged 63, “cholera, collapse 62 hours, premonitory diarrhœa 12 hours, consecutive fever 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 7, Brook Street, on 3rd Aug., a journeyman tanner, aged 40, “cholera, collapse 12 hours, premonitory diarrhœa 7 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
St. George, Southwark. Kent Road.
At 7, Layton’s Buildings, July 29, a tailor, aged 20, “cholera 17 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Dobb’s Cross, July 30, the son of a shop-keeper, aged 10 yrs., “cholera Asiatic 24 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 81, Ann Street, July 29, the son of a labourer, aged 12 years, “cholera 8 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 28, Wickham Pl., Aug. 2, son of a brush-mkr., aged 2¹⁄₂ yrs., “choleraic diarrhœa 24 hours.”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 2, Russell Place, Aug. 2, the widow of a labourer, aged 55, “Asiatic cholera 21 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 9, Tennis Place, 3rd of August, the widow of a sawyer, aged 67 years, “diarrhœa 36 hours, cholera 14 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 13, George St., Aug. 2, the wife of a shoemkr., aged 35, “diarrhœa, cholera, convulsions”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 7, Noel Street, Aug. 4, the widow of a porter, aged 65 years, “Asiatic cholera 39 hours”
Lambeth.
St. George, Southwark. Borough Road.
At the Workhouse, from Savage’s lodging-house, Mint Street, 29th of July, a female servant, aged 28 years, “cholera”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 6, Ebden Court, Pearl Row, 27th of July, the daughter of a butcher, aged 3 years, “Asiatic cholera 10 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 24, Gun St., July 23, the wife of a bookbinder, aged 36, “Asiatic cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, Nelson Pl., July 28, the son of a butcher, aged 5 weeks, “choleraic diarrhœa 3 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, July 29, a hawker, aged 44, “cholera (very bad)”; an inmate
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Union Street, July 27, the widow of a master shoemaker, aged 73, “diarrhœa 7 days, cholera Asiatica 8 hours”
Lambeth.
At 10, Lombard Street, July 29, the daughter of a labourer, aged 2 years, “diarrhœa 4 hours, cholera maligna, 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the same house, August 1, the daughter of a labourer, aged 4 years, sister of above, “cholera maligna 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, Burton’s Buildings, Friar Street, August 2, the daughter of a coppersmith, aged 9 years, “cholera 3 days, fever 2 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, from Hooper’s lodging-house, 9, Angel Place, July 30, a labourer, aged 36, “cholera Asiatica”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, brought in from 29, Wilmot’s Buildings, August 1, a labourer, aged 29, “cholera Asiatic about 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 35, Green Street, 31st of July, the wife of a horse-slaughterman, aged 64, “hepatitis 14 days, gall stones, Asiatica cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, Aug. 3, a widow, aged 70, “cholera Asiatica about 12 hours”; inmate
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, from King’s lodging-house, Mint Street, 3rd August, a hawker, aged 45 years, “cholera Asiatica”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, Aug. 3, a coppersmith, aged 52, “cholera Asiatica 2 days”, from 15, John St., Suffolk Street
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 30, Hill St., Aug. 1, the daughter of an engineer, aged 2 years, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 83, Southwark Bridge Rd., Aug. 1, solicitor’s clerk, aged 21, “cholera 19 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 23, George St., Aug. 3, the wife of a labourer, aged 19, “cholera maligna 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, brought in by the police from the station-house at Stones End, Aug. 4, a servant, aged 50, “cholera Asiatica”
Not ascertained.
At 1, Little Suffolk Street, Aug. 4, the daughter of a hammerman, aged 3 years, “remittent fever 7 days, cholera 20 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, Bean Street, Aug. 5, a female servant, aged 28, “diarrhœa 24 hours, cholera 30 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
St. George, Southwark. London Road.
At 60, Tower Street, July 16, the wife of a butcher, aged 26, “Asiatic cholera 13 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 12, East Pl., West Sq., July 29, an ostler, aged 42, “diarrhœa 6 days, cholera maligna 14 hours”
Lambeth.
At 32, Duke Street, Aug. 1, the son of a smith, aged 5 years, “Asiatic cholera 36 hours”
Lambeth.
At 11, London Road, July 31st, a servant, aged 17, “Asiatic cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Spiller’s Ct., Webber Row, Aug. 1, the daughter of a charwoman, aged 18 months, “chronic diarrhœa 2 months, cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Short St., Tower St., Aug. 2, a coal-porter, aged 32, “cholera 3 days”
Lambeth.
At 8, Princes Court, Princes Street, on the 3rd of August, the son of a butcher, aged 5¹⁄₂ years, “cholera 8 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 105, Blackfriars Road, Aug. 1, a compositor, aged 32, “diarrhœa, cholera 14 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Duke Street, Tower Street, August 4th, the son of a civil engineer (deceased), “consumption 9 months, cholera 8 hours”
Lambeth.
Newington. Trinity.
At 58, Brandon Street, July 26, a house-painter, aged 24, “Asiatic cholera 40 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Winter Terrace, July 31, the wife of an engineer, aged 27, “cholera 26 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 16, Swan St., Aug. 1, the son of a carpenter, aged 8 years, “cholera maligna 14 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 6, St. Andrew’s Rd., Aug. 1, a waiter, aged 35, “diarrhœa 3 days, cholera maligna 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 175, Kent St., Aug. 2, the son of a clothier, aged 7 years, “malignant cholera 23 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 66, Brunswick St., Aug. 3, the wife of an engineer, aged 35, “cholera 1 week, exhaustion”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 64, Trinity Square, August 2, a milliner, aged 32, “cholera maligna 30 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Etham Place, Aug. 3, a paperhanger, aged 42, “cholera Asiatica 6¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 54, Great Dover Rd., Aug. 3, the widow of a wine merchant, aged 64, “English cholera 23 hours, collapse 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 182, Kent Street, August 4th, a labourer, aged 23 years, “diarrhœa 17 hours, cholera Asiatica 8 hours, collapse”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 99, Uxbridge Street, Aug. 4, the son of a jeweller, aged 3 years, “diarrhœa 27 hours, Asiatic cholera 24 hours, collapse”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the same house, on the same day, the daughter of a jeweller, aged 1 year, “Asiatic cholera 28 hours, collapse”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 11, Swan Street, August 5, the wife of a collecting clerk, aged 42, “chronic bronchitis 5 years, English cholera 3 days, collapse 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 58, Brandon St., Aug. 4, the widow of a house-painter, aged 26, “Asiatic cholera 4 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Newington. St. Peter, Walworth.
At 7, Berkeley Terrace, the 25th of July, the wife of a mercantile clerk, aged 35 years, “Asiatic cholera 14 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 8, Townley Place, on the 29th of July, the son of a journeyman shoemaker, aged 6¹⁄₂ years, “cholera 19 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 8, Richmond Street, July 28th, the daughter of a labourer, aged 5 years, “choleraic diarrhœa 3 days, cerebral effusion 2 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 6, John Street, East Street, July 29th, the widow of a carman, aged 83, “cholera Anglica 27 hours, old age”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 29, Pilgrim Street, on the 1st of August, the daughter of an ostler, aged 18 months, “Asiatic cholera 8 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 8, Townley Place, August 1st, the daughter of a journeyman shoemaker, aged 8 years, “cholera Asiatica about 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 29, Beckford Row, Aug. 1, the wife of a greengrocer, aged 46 years, “cholera Asiatica 16 hours, collapse 11 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 15, Smith Street, Aug. 3, the wife of a baker, aged 20, “Asiatic cholera 8 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, John Street, Walworth Common, August 2, the wife of a glue-maker, aged 54, “diarrhœa 2 days, cholera 22 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Milk Street, on the 2nd of August, the daughter of a journeyman shoemaker, aged 6 years, “Asiatic cholera 30 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 7, Blucher St., Aug. 2, a gentleman, aged 36, “cholera Asiatica 20 hours, collapse”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 28, Bronti Place, August 2nd, the wife of a letter carrier, aged 46, “cholera Asiatica 28 hours, collapse 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Totham Place, Boundary Lane, August 2nd, the widow of a journeyman bricklayer, aged 63, “Asiatic cholera 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Sarah Terrace, Hill Street, August 2nd, the son of a clerk in the Post Office, aged 5¹⁄₂ years, “epidemic cholera 7 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 99, Hill Street, on the 3rd of August, the daughter of a traveller, aged 1 year and 10 months, “malignant cholera 9 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 18, West Street, Aug. 4, a needlewoman, aged 22, “cholera maligna 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 26, Penton Row, Aug. 1, an auctioneer, aged 39, “diarrhœa 52 hours, cholera 9 hours”.
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 21, Park Road, August 5th, an iron-planer, aged 43, “cholera 4 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 19, James Place, Hill Street, Aug. 5, a gentleman, aged 89, “choleraic diarrhœa 6 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At the same house, same day, the wife of the above, aged 50, “Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
Newington. St. Mary.
At 4, Parsonage Row, July 30, a gentlewoman, aged 40, “Asiatic cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 31, Weymouth Street, July 28, the wife of a chairmaker, aged 34, “Asiatic cholera 12 hrs.”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 8, Church St., July 30, the daughter of a chairmaker, aged 17 months, “cholera 10 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 8, Peacock Sq., July 31, the widow of a seaman, aged 59, “cholera 12 hours, typhus 4 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 19, Waterloo Pl., Aug. 2, the son of a shoemaker, aged 8 years, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Lambeth. Waterloo (First Part).
At Curtis Hatch, on 29th July, a Baptist minister, aged 52, “diarrhœa 3 days, Asiatic cholera and collapse 18 hours”. The informant stated that deceased, whom he had long known, called at his house about seven in the morning before his death; he was then very ill. He lived at 7, Lower Anne Street, Waterloo Road, where the supply was
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, Hammond’s Place, on 30th July, the wife of a labourer, aged 72, “diarrhœa 24 hours, malignant cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, Queen Street, July 31st, late a brewer’s servant, aged 76, “cholera 1 day”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 41, Brad Street, August 1st, the wife of a printer, aged 51, “cholera 26 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Hammond’s Place, on August 5th, the daughter of a smith, aged 6 years, “diarrhœa and malignant cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Lambeth. Waterloo (Second Part).
At 23, Howley Place, July 29, the wife of a carman, aged 58, “cholera about 11 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 18, Vine Terrace, on 31st July, a butcher, aged 19, “Asiatic cholera 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 36, Isabella St., July 30, a hammerman at a factory, aged 39, “Asiatic cholera 68 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 12, Harriet Street, on 2nd August, a miller, aged 17, “cholera Asiatica 17 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 9, Griffin Street, Aug. 4, the wife of a bricklayer, aged 75, “Asiatic cholera 48 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Lambeth. Lambeth Church (First Part).
At 52, Upper Fore Street, on July 20th, the wife of a bricklayer’s labourer, aged 23, “cholera 12 hours”
Thames water, by dipping a pail.
At 6, Newport Street, on 30th July, the wife of a porter, aged 37, “cholera 8 hours”
Lambeth.
At 32, South St., July 31, a timber-merchant’s widow, aged 67, “Asiatic cholera 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Mount Place, Kennington Road, on 31st July, a wine merchant, aged 35, “Asiatic cholera 16 hours”; address not found
Not ascertained.
At 7, Vauxhall Row, Aug. 2, the son of a bricklayer, aged 4 years, “cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Lambeth. Lambeth Church (Second Part).
At 26, New St., July 28, the wife of a labourer, aged 29, “diarrhœa 3 days, cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 29, Park Street, July 29, an eating-house keeper, aged 39, “cholera 9¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 79, Wickham Street, August 1, the daughter of an engineer, aged 1 year, “choleraic diarrhœa, exhaustion”
Lambeth.
At 24, Caroline Street, on 31st July, the son of a labourer, aged 14 years, “cholera 11 hours”
Lambeth.
At the Workhouse, on 2nd August, a washerwoman, aged 23, “Asiatic cholera”; admitted in a dying state; address not known
Not ascertained.
At 60, Park Street, on 2nd August, the wife of a lathrender, aged 31, “cholera 2 days, consecutive fever 5 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, High St., Vauxhall, Aug. 3, a musician, aged 35, “malignant cholera after 2 days diarrhœa, 6 days secondary fever, with cerebral congestion.”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Vauxhall Gardens, on 2nd August, a widow, aged 56, “cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 33, East Street, on 3rd Aug., a carpenter, aged 40, “diarrhœa 7 days, cholera 3 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 19, Bennett’s Buildings, on 4th August, the daughter of a carpenter, aged 2 years, “cholera Asiatica 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Lambeth. Kennington (First Part).
At 6, William Street, Clapham Road, on 26th July, the son of a carpenter, aged 2 years, “Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Lambeth.
At 3, Dudley Place, Clapham Road, on 24th July, the wife of a bookseller, aged 42, “sero-spasmodic cholera 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 7, Henry Street, Dorset Street, Clapham Road, on 28th July, the daughter of a butcher, aged 4 years, “cholera sero-spasmodica 15 hours”
Pump-well.
At 23, Cambridge Terrace, Clapham Road, on 30th July, the daughter of a commercial traveller, aged 20, “choleraic diarrhœa 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Belmont Place, Wandsworth Road, on 29th July, the daughter of a railway-guard, aged 8 years, “cholera 10¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 9, Regency Place, White Hart Street, on 31st July, the widow of a brass-worker, aged 44, “cholera 30 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, Bowling Green Mews, on 28th July, the daughter of a chairmaker, aged 8 years, “cholera 13 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 61, Prince’s Square, July 31, widow of a linen-agent, aged 42, “Asiatic cholera 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, Southville, Wandsworth Road, on 2nd August, a paperhanger, aged 26, “Asiatic cholera, premonitory diarrhœa 24 hours, collapse 24 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 5, South Lambeth, Aug. 4, the wife of an equestrian, aged 39, “cholera Asiatica 36 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 19, Mansion House Street, Kennington, on 3rd August, formerly a dressmaker, aged 36, “cholera Asiatica 6 hours, premonitory diarrhœa 2 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
Lambeth. Kennington (2nd Part).
At 14, Robertson Place, Stockwell, on 3rd August, the wife of a carpenter, aged 35, “Asiatic cholera 5 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, James Street, on 5th August, the son of a bricklayer, aged 7 yrs., “cholera 7 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, Somerset Place, Aug. 3, a gentleman, aged 56, “spasmodic cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Lambeth. Brixton.
At 2, Sussex Road, July 14th, the widow of a coachman, aged 53, “diarrhœa 6 days, English cholera 3 days”
Lambeth.
Lambeth. Norwood.—No death from cholera.
Wandsworth. Clapham.
At 5, Cook’s Buildings, Park Road, on 29th July, the daughter of a sawyer, aged 3 years, “cholera 12 hours, diarrhœa 3 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, Howard Street, Wandsworth Road, July 30, a labourer, aged 74, “cholera 52 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 1, Waterloo Retreat, Bromell’s Road, July 29, a gardener, aged 46, “cholera 12 hours”
Pump-well.
At High Street, July 31, a domestic servant, aged 28, “cholera 52 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 13, Prospect Place, Wandsworth Road, on 2nd August, a Government clerk, aged 50, “malignant cholera 4 days, diarrhœa 48 hours, collapse”.
Southwark and Vauxhall, and pump-well.
Wandsworth. Battersea.
At 6, Church Road, July 19, the wife of a house-agent, aged 48, “Asiatic cholera 48 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Nine Elms, on 26th July, the widow of a cooper, aged 79, “cholera 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Albert Villas, on 27th July, the son of a clerk in the Customs, aged 2 years, “premonitory diarrhœa a month, Asiatic cholera 16 hours, consecutive fever 30 hours, convulsions 2 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Lavender Hill, on 25th July, the wife of a gentleman, aged 46, “premonitory diarrhœa 20 hours, cholera 16 hours”
Pump-well.
At 25, Little Europa Place, on 30th July, the wife of a gardener, aged 50 years, “Asiatic cholera 33 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At York Road, on 31st July, the daughter of a gardener, aged 12 years, premonitory diarrhœa neglected 8 hours, “Asiatic cholera, 11 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 18, York Street, Battersea Fields, on 29th July, the son of a boiler-maker, aged 1 year and 7 months, “cholera 10 hours”
Thames water supplied by a cart.
At Canterbury Place, York Road, on 2nd August, the wife of a bricklayer, aged 35, “diarrhœa unattended 2 days, Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 33, Little Europa Place, on 2nd August, a labourer, aged 48, “premonitory diarrhœa 4 hours, cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Falcon Lane, on 3rd August, the daughter of a chemist deceased, aged 14 years, “premonitory diarrhœa 4 hours, cholera 24 hours”
Water from a ditch into which the cesspools empty themselves.
At Lavender Road, on 3rd August, a clockmaker, aged 47, “Asiatic cholera”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At York Road, August 4, the daughter of a gardener, aged 21, “cholera maligna 11 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 30, Ægis Terrace, Battersea Fields, on 2nd August, the son of a horse-dealer, aged 12 years, “cholera 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Wandsworth. Wandsworth.
At Armoury Yard, on 3rd August, the daughter of a labourer, aged 4 years, “measles 6 days, cholera 6 hours”
Thames water fetched in pails.
At Apothecaries’ Row, 5th Aug., the son of a sawyer, aged 10, “cholera 12 hours”
Thames water and pump-well.
Wandsworth. Putney.
At Cooper’s Arms Lane, on 5th August, a bricklayer’s labourer, aged 38, “premonitory diarrhœa 9 hours, cholera 15 hours”
Pump-well.
Wandsworth. Streatham. No death from cholera.
Camberwell. Dulwich. No death from cholera.
Camberwell. Camberwell.
At 1, Rose Cottages, Waterloo Street, on 23rd July, the daughter of a proctor’s clerk, aged 8 years, “cholera Asiatica 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the same house, on same day, the sister of the above, aged 1 year, “cholera Asiatica 9 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At Garden Cottage, Harris Street, on 22nd July, a carman, aged 49, “cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 17, James Street, on 26th February, the daughter of a single woman, aged 14 days, “natural exhaustion from choleraic diarrhœa” (Inquest.)
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Ann’s Place, George Street, on 2nd August, the daughter of a coachman, aged 4 years, “cholera 8 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 9, Martha Street, on 3rd August, a fish-hawker, aged 62, “cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 8, Cork Street, on 4th August, the wife of a labourer, aged 33, “cholera 32 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the Workhouse, on 29th July, a nurse, aged 60 years, “cholera 24 hours”. From 5, Martin’s Road, Peckham
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 57, James Street, on 5th August, the wife of a waiter, aged 33, “cholera 17 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Camberwell House, on 1st August, a male, aged 69 years, “exhaustion from mania 3 months, cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Camberwell House, on 1st August, a mariner, aged 53 years, “general paralysis 11 months, cholera 17 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 13, Waterloo Street, on 30th July, the son of a labourer, aged 4 yrs., “cholera 7 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 3, Caroline Place, Wyndham Road, on 31st July, the daughter of a brewer’s servant, aged 1 year, “cholera 9 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Camberwell House, Lunatic Asylum, on 28th July, a male, aged 32, “epilepsy 7 years, cholera 8 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Camberwell House, Lunatic Asylum, on 29th July, a labourer, aged 43, “general paralysis 2 years, cholera 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Camberwell House, on 29th July, a servant, aged 47, “cholera 26 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 30, Clarendon Street, on 30th July, a grocer, aged 56, “Asiatic cholera 9 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, Absolom Place, South Street, on 2nd August, a girl, aged 21 months, “diarrhœa 48 hours, cholera 21 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 17, Cork Street, on 1st August, the son of a painter, aged 1 year, “diarrhœa 2 days, cholera 1 day”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
Camberwell. Peckham.
At 5, Martin’s Road, July 27th, the wife of a labourer, aged 40, “cholera maligna 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At the same house, on 29th July, the daughter of a labourer, aged 2 yrs., “cholera 28 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 33, Rye Lane, on 30th July, a domestic servant, aged 23, “cholera 5¹⁄₂ hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Nun Green, Nunhead, on August 4, the daughter of a potter’s labourer, aged 4 years, “cholera 48 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
Camberwell. St. George.
At Binfield House, Windmill Lane, July 28, the son of a labourer, aged 4 years, “cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 2, Waterloo Place, Coburg Road, July 31, a girl, aged 3 months, “cholera 20 hours”
Lambeth.
At 1, Oakley Ter., Old Kent Rd., July 29, the wife of an oilman, aged 30, “Asiatic cholera”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At the same house, Aug. 1, the son of an oilman, aged 8 weeks, “cholera maligna 3 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 6, Brown’s Terrace, Wyndham Road, Aug. 3, the son of a labourer, aged 3 months, “infantile cholera 6 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 27, Thomas Street, Wyndham Road, Aug. 4, the widow of a labourer, aged 68, “diarrhœa 6 days, cholera 4 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 7, Rosemary Terrace, Southampton Street, Aug. 5, the son of a labourer, aged 7 years, “Asiatic cholera 15 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, Chatham Place, Windmill Lane, August 3rd, a plumber, aged 60, “diarrhœa 2 days, cholera 2 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 7, Gloucester Pl., Old Kent Rd., Aug. 4, a carman, aged 19, “Asiatic cholera 15 hours”
Lambeth.
Rotherhithe. Rotherhithe.
At 2, Albert Place, Union Road, July 8, the wife of a coffee-shopkeeper, aged 32, “cholera 30 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 7, Spread Eagle Court, July 22nd, the wife of a labourer, aged 25, “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 19, Spread Eagle Court, July 24th, the daughter of a labourer, aged 1 year and 9 months, “cholera 20 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 4, John’s Place, July 25th, a blacksmith, aged 41, “cholera 10 hours”
Water pumped from beneath the Thames Tunnel, by the Engine of the Thames Tunnel Company.
At 1, John’s Place, July 27th, the wife of a biscuit baker, aged 45, “cholera 26 hours”
Same as above.
At 5, John’s Place, July 25, the son of a baker, aged 4 years, “cholera 24 hours”
Same as above.
At 89, Adam Street, on the 28th July, the widow of a blacksmith, aged 36 years, “diarrhœa 24 hours, cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 5, King St., July 29th, the wife of a labourer, aged 40, “cholera 2¹⁄₂ days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At Charlotte Place, Charlotte Row, July 29, the son of a barge-builder, aged 3 years, “cholera 3 days”
Tidal ditch.
At 5, Slater’s Alley, July 29, a labourer, aged 33, “cholera 3¹⁄₂ days”
Thames Tunnel water, fetched from John’s Place.
At 18, Upper Queen Street, Aug. 2, the daughter of a labourer, aged 7 years, “cholera 2 days, typhoid fever 7 days”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 1, Thetford Place, August 1, the son of a labourer, aged 7 years, “cholera 7 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
On board ship in the Surrey Canal Dock, August 2, a mariner, aged 65, “Asiatic cholera 18 hours”
Most likely Thames Water.
On board the brig “Borcas”, of Sunderland, in the river Thames, Aug. 2, the wife of a master mariner, aged 38, “cholera 13¹⁄₂ hours”
Most likely Thames Water.
At 20, Spread Eagle Court, Aug. 1, a labourer, aged 28, “cholera 16 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 7, Midway Pl., Aug. 1, the daughter of a domestic servant, aged 3 years, “measles 14 days, Asiatic cholera 18 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 12, St. Helena Pl., Aug. 1, the wife of a carpenter, aged 31, “morbus cordis 5 years, Asiatic cholera 24 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 18, Stanley Terrace, August 1, the son of a mercantile clerk, aged 2 years, “premonitory diarrhœa 3 hours, Asiatic cholera 5 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At York St., near Swan Lane, Aug. 1, the son of a carpenter, aged 3 yrs., “cholera 12 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At York Street, near Swan Lane, on 3rd August, a carpenter, aged 38, “cholera 8 hours”
Southwark and Vauxhall.
At 8, Norfolk Place, August 4, the son of a labourer, aged 5 years, “cholera 8 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 16, Charlotte Row, Aug. 3, the wife of a waterman, aged 57, “cholera 20 hours”
Tidal ditch.
At 3, Plough Bridge, Aug. 3, the daughter of a warehouseman, aged 12, “Asiatic cholera 12 hours”
Surrey Canal.
At 53, Clarence Street, Aug. 4, the wife of a labourer, aged 48, “cholera 14 hours”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At York St., near Swan Lane, Aug. 5, the son of a carpenter, aged 1 year, “cholera 3 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
At 9, New St., Neptune St., Aug. 5, the wife of a brushmaker, aged 57, “cholera 3 days”
Southwark & Vauxhall.
Lewisham. Sydenham.—No death from cholera.
THE END.
T. RICHARDS, 37 GREAT QUEEN STREET.
[1]. Report on the Epidemic Cholera, 1824, p. 5.
[2]. On the Infectious Origin and Propagation of Cholera.
[3]. See “London Journal of Medicine,” May, 1849.
[4]. London Journal of Medicine, loc. cit.
[5]. In the so-called secondary fever there is toxicohæmia, arising from suppressed excretion by the kidneys.
[6]. See “London Gazette”, 18th Sept. 1849.
[7]. See Report in “Med. Gaz.”, vol. ii, 1849, p. 429.
[8]. Edin. Med. and Sur. Jour., vol. xxxvii.
[9]. Scot, “Report on the Epidemic Cholera”, p. 237.
[10]. The particulars of each death connected with this outbreak were published in the “Weekly Returns” of the Registrar-General to 16th September, and I procured the remainder through the kindness of the Registrar-General and the District Registrars.
[11]. The deaths are obtained from the “First Report of the Metropolitan Sanitary Commission”, 1847; and the water supply, chiefly from a work entitled “Hydraulia”, by William Matthews, 1835.
[12]. A small part of the Whitechapel District is supplied with New River water.
[13]. A Microscopic Examination of the Water supplied to London. London: 1850.
[14]. P. 207. In the table at page 206, Dr. Baly has fallen into the mistake of supposing that the Lambeth Water Company obtained their supply from Thames Ditton in 1849. It was not till 1852 that their works were removed to that place. Dr. Baly has also mistaken the name and identity of all the three Companies which supply the south districts of London with water.
[15]. A part of Rotherhithe was supplied by the Kent Water Company; but there was no cholera in this part.
[16]. Weekly Return, Oct. 14, p. 433.
[17]. A small part of Rotherhithe is now supplied by the Kent Water Company.
[18]. In 1849, there were forty-eight deaths from cholera in Millbank prison, amounting to 4·3 per cent. of the average number of prisoners. In Tothill Fields prison there were thirteen deaths among eight hundred prisoners, or 1·6 per cent. The other prisons on the north side of the Thames are supplied either by the New River Company, or from pump-wells, and there was but one death from cholera in all of them; that death took place in Newgate.
[19]. Report by the Government Commission on the Chemical Quality of the Supply of Water to the Metropolis. (177.)
[20]. Medical Gazette, vol. xliv, p. 749.
[21]. History of the Cholera in Exeter in 1832.
[22]. Report of the General Board of Health on the Supply of Water to the Metropolis, 1850, p. 55.
[23]. See Report of Commissioners on the Cholera at Newcastle, etc., p. 474.
[24]. Opus cit., p. xxv.
[25]. Report of Swedish Commissioners, quoted in the Second Report of the Metropolitan Sanitary Commission, 1848.
[26]. Medical Times and Gazette, Lancet, and Association Journal.
[27]. Various conditions are requisite for the production of a disease, as they are for the production of a crop of wheat or turnips; but it is not necessary to dignify these conditions with the name of causes.
[28]. Medical Times and Gazette, 1854, vol. i, p. 182.
[29]. Cholera, with Reference to the Geological Theory. Cincinnati, 1850.
[30]. Trans. of Roy. Med. and Chir. Soc., 1844.
[31]. Med. Times and Gazette, Nov. 25th, 1854.
[32]. Report on the Cholera of 1848–49, p. xl.
[33]. Rolle’s Account of the Burning of London in 1666.
[34]. Official Reports on the Province of Kumaon, by J. H. Batten, Esq., C.E. Agra, 1851.
[35]. Dr. Cheyne on Dysentery, Dublin Hospital Reports, vol. iii.
[36]. Statistical Reports on the Health of the Navy. Part II. 1853.
[37]. See Clinical Reports of Continued Fever, by Austin Flint, M.D.: Buffalo, 1852, p. 380. Also Med. Times and Gazette, March 12, 1853, p. 261.
[38]. Association Journal, October 6, 1854.
[39]. 8vo., 1842, p. 66.
[40]. Essai de Géographie Médicale, p. 52.
[42]. De Aere, Aquis, et Locis.
London, New Burlington Street,
February, 1855.
MR. CHURCHILL’S
Publications,
IN
MEDICINE, SURGERY,
AND
SCIENCE.
“It would be unjust to conclude this notice without saying a few words in favour of Mr. Churchill, from whom the profession is receiving, it may be truly said, the most beautiful series of Illustrated Medical Works which has ever been published.”—Lancet.
“All the publications of Mr. Churchill are prepared with so much taste and neatness, that it is superfluous to speak of them in terms of commendation.”—Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal.
“No one is more distinguished for the elegance and recherché style of his publications than Mr. Churchill.”—Provincial Medical Journal.
“Mr. Churchill’s publications are very handsomely got up: the engravings are remarkably well executed.”—Dublin Medical Press.
“The typography, illustrations, and getting up are, in all Mr. Churchill’s publications, most beautiful.”—Monthly Journal of Medical Science.
“Mr. Churchill’s illustrated works are among the best that emanate from the Medical Press.”—Medical Times.
“We have before called the attention of both students and practitioners to the great advantage which Mr. Churchill has conferred on the profession, in the issue, at such a moderate cost, of works so highly creditable in point of artistic execution and scientific merit.”—Dublin Quarterly Journal.
Mr. Churchill is the Publisher of the following Periodicals, offering to Authors a wide extent of Literary Announcement, and a Medium of Advertisement, addressed to all Classes of the Profession. Communications, Books for Review, addressed to the respective Editors, are received and duly forwarded by Mr. Churchill.
THE BRITISH AND FOREIGN MEDICO-CHIRURGICAL REVIEW;
OR,
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF PRACTICAL MEDICINE.
Price Six Shillings. Nos. 1 to 29.
THE MEDICAL TIMES AND GAZETTE.
Published Weekly, price Sevenpence, or Stamped, Eightpence.
Annual Subscription, £1. 10s., or Stamped, £1. 14s. 8d. and regularly forwarded to all parts of the Kingdom.
The Medical Times and Gazette is favoured with an amount of Literary and Scientific support which enables it to reflect fully the progress of Medical Science, and insure for it a character, an influence, and a circulation possessed at the present time by no Medical Periodical.
THE HALF-YEARLY ABSTRACT OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES.
Being a Digest of the Contents of the principal British and Continental Medical Works; together with a Critical Report of the Progress of Medicine and the Collateral Sciences. Edited by W. H. Ranking, M.D., Cantab., and C. B. Radcliffe, M.D., Lond. Post 8vo. cloth, 6s. 6d. Vols. 1 to 20.
THE JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE AND MENTAL PATHOLOGY.
Being a Quarterly Review of Medical Jurisprudence and Insanity. Edited by Forbes Winslow, M.D. Price 3s. 6d. Nos. 1 to 29.
THE PHARMACEUTICAL JOURNAL.
EDITED BY JACOB BELL, F.L.S., M.R.I.
Published Monthly, price One Shilling.
Under the sanction of the Pharmaceutical Society, whose Transactions form a distinct portion of each Number.
⁂ Vols. 1 to 13, bound in cloth, price 12s. 6d. each.
THE DUBLIN MEDICAL PRESS.
Published Weekly, Stamped, price Sixpence, free to any part of the Empire.
THE LONDON AND PROVINCIAL MEDICAL DIRECTORY.
Published Annually. 12mo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
MR. ACTON, M.R.C.S.
A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON DISEASES OF THE URINARY AND GENERATIVE ORGANS OF BOTH SEXES, INCLUDING SYPHILIS. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 20s.
“Mr. Acton’s work must be diligently studied by every practitioner who would desire to benefit instead of injuring his patient; it has a distinctive and pre-eminently diagnostic value.”—Med. Gazette.
“The present edition of Mr. Acton’s work is very much enlarged, and contains a most valuable collection of matter.”—The Lancet.
“We cannot too highly recommend this treatise; it should be found wherever Surgery is practised throughout the British Empire.”—Provincial Medical Journal.
DR. WILLIAM ADDISON, F.R.S., F.L.S.
ON HEALTHY AND DISEASED STRUCTURE, and the True Principles of Treatment for the Cure of Disease, especially Consumption and Scrofula, founded on Microscopical Analysis. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
“A work deserving the perusal of every one interested in the late rapid advance of physiology and pathology.”—Medico-Chirurgical Review.
MR. ANDERSON, F.R.C.S.
I.
HYSTERICAL, HYPOCHONDRIACAL, EPILEPTIC, AND OTHER NERVOUS AFFECTIONS; their Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
II.
THE SYMPTOMS AND TREATMENT OF THE DISEASES OF PREGNANCY. Post 8vo. 4s. 6d.
DR. JAMES ARNOTT.
I.
ON THE REMEDIAL AGENCY OF A LOCAL ANÆSTHENIC OR BENUMBING TEMPERATURE, in various painful and inflammatory Diseases. 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
II.
ON INDIGESTION; its Pathology and its Treatment, by the Local Application of Uniform and Continuous Heat and Moisture. With an Account of an improved Mode of applying Heat and Moisture in Irritative and Inflammatory Diseases. With a Plate. 8vo. 5s.
III.
PRACTICAL ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE TREATMENT OF OBSTRUCTIONS IN THE URETHRA, AND OTHER CANALS, BY THE DILATATION OF FLUID PRESSURE. 8vo. boards, 3s.
MR. F. A. ABEL, F.C.S.,
PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY AT THE ROYAL MILITARY ACADEMY, WOOLWICH; AND
MR. C. L. BLOXAM,
DEMONSTRATOR OF PRACTICAL CHEMISTRY IN KING’S COLLEGE.
HANDBOOK OF CHEMISTRY: THEORETICAL, PRACTICAL, AND TECHNICAL. 8vo. cloth, 15s.
MR. T. J. ASHTON,
SURGEON TO THE BLENHEIM-STREET DISPENSARY.
I.
ON THE DISEASES, INJURIES, AND MALFORMATIONS OF THE RECTUM AND ANUS. 8vo. cloth, 8s.
“We can conscientiously declare, that we find in it more information than is to be obtained from any single volume yet published on the subject of which it treats.”—Lancet.
“It is the most complete of all the works at present under consideration.”—New York Journal of Medicine.
II.
A TREATISE ON CORNS AND BUNIONS, AND IN-GROWING OF THE TOE-NAIL: their Causes and Treatment. Post 8vo. cloth, 3s. 6d.
MR. ATKINSON.
MEDICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. Vol. I. Royal 8vo. 16s.
“We have never encountered so singular and remarkable a book. It unites the German research of a Plouquet with the ravings of Rabelais,—the humour of Sterne with the satire of Democritus,—the learning of Burton with the wit of Pindar.”—Dr. Johnson’s Review.
“In Mr. Atkinson, I have found a gentleman, and a man of varied talent, ardent and active, and of the most overflowing goodness of heart. In his retirement from an honourable profession (Medicine and Surgery), he knows not what the slightest approximation to ennui is. The heartiest of all the octogenarians I ever saw, he scorns a stretch, and abhors a gape. It is ‘up and be doing’ with him from sunrising to sunset. His library is suffocated with Koburgers, Frobens, the Ascensii, and the Stephens.”—Dibdin’s Northern Tour.
ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS.
DR. WILLIAM BALY, F.R.S.,
ASSISTANT PHYSICIAN TO ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S HOSPITAL; AND
DR. WILLIAM W. GULL,
ASSISTANT PHYSICIAN TO GUY’S HOSPITAL.
REPORTS ON EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, its Cause and Mode of Diffusion, Morbid Anatomy, Pathology and Treatment. Drawn up at the desire of the Cholera Committee. With Maps, 8vo. cloth, 16s.
MR. RICHARD BARWELL, F.R.C.S.,
DEMONSTRATOR OF ANATOMY AT ST. THOMAS’S HOSPITAL.
ASIATIC CHOLERA; its Symptoms, Pathology, and Treatment. Post 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
“Here is a book well worthy of attention, for Mr. Barwell writes from the bedside of the numerous cholera patients placed under his care at St. Thomas’s Hospital.”—The Lancet.
DR. BASCOME.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC PESTILENCES, FROM THE EARLIEST AGES. 8vo. cloth, 8s.
“This work appears very opportunely, and will no doubt attract a considerable share of attention.”—Lancet.
“This book will be found useful as a work of reference, as it contains a notice of all the most remarkable pestilences that have occurred from 1495 years before the birth of our Saviour to 1848.”—Athenæum.
MR. BATEMAN.
MAGNACOPIA: A Practical Library of Profitable Knowledge, communicating the general Minutiæ of Chemical and Pharmaceutic Routine, together with the generality of Secret Forms of Preparations; including Concentrated Solutions of Camphor and Copaiba in Water, Mineral Succedaneum, Marmoratum, Silicia, Terro-Metallicum, Pharmaceutic Condensions, Prismatic Crystallization, Crystallized Aromatic Salt of Vinegar, Spa Waters; newly-invented Writing Fluids; Etching on Steel or Iron; with an extensive Variety of et cætera. Third Edition. 18mo. 6s.
MR. LIONEL J. BEALE, M.R.C.S.
THE LAW OF HEALTH IN THEIR RELATIONS TO MIND AND BODY. A Series of Letters from an Old Practitioner to a Patient. Post 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
“We gladly welcome Mr. Beale’s work. The observations are those of a most experienced and intelligent practitioner, and do equal credit to his head and heart. It is not to the lay reader only that Mr. Beale’s work will be acceptable, and we augur for it an extensive popularity.”—Lancet.
“Although addressed to the public, a vast variety of excellent practical matter is contained in it, which is calculated to interest the practitioner. It conveys in an agreeable and epistolary style most of the important truths connected with preventive medicine, and their practical application on the development and maturity of mind and body. Mr. Beale’s volume is calculated to make a favourable impression on the minds of all intelligent readers.”—Dublin Quarterly Journal.
MR. BEASLEY.
I.
THE BOOK OF PRESCRIPTIONS; containing 2900 Prescriptions. Collected from the Practice of the most eminent Physicians and Surgeons, English and Foreign. 24mo. cloth, 6s.
II.
THE DRUGGISTS’ GENERAL RECEIPT-BOOK; comprising a copious Veterinary Formulary and Table of Veterinary Materia Medica; Patent and Proprietary Medicines, Druggists’ Nostrums, &c.; Perfumery, Skin Cosmetics, Hair Cosmetics, and Teeth Cosmetics; Beverages, Dietetic Articles, and Condiments; Trade Chemicals, Miscellaneous Preparations and Compounds used in the Arts, &c.; with useful Memoranda and Tables. Third Edition. 24mo. cloth, 6s.
“The ‘General-Receipt Book’ is an extensive appendix to the ‘Pocket Formulary.’ No Pharmaceutist who possesses the latter ought to be without the former, for the two form a complete Counter Companion.”—Annals of Pharmacy.
III.
THE POCKET FORMULARY AND SYNOPSIS OF THE BRITISH AND FOREIGN PHARMACOPŒIAS; comprising standard and approved Formulæ for the Preparations and Compounds employed in Medical Practice. Fifth Edition, corrected and enlarged. 24mo. cloth, 6s.
“Extremely useful as an adjunct to the shop library; a pocket Pharmacopœia Universalis, containing, in addition to the officinal formulæ, those magistral preparations which are so continually required at the hands of the dispenser.”—Annals of Chemistry and Pharmacy.
DR. O’B. BELLINGHAM.
ON ANEURISM, AND ITS TREATMENT BY COMPRESSION. 12mo. cloth, 4s.
“In our opinion, he has conferred a signal benefit upon the art of surgery by his improvement of the mode of employing pressure, and upon the science by his ingenious and philosophical exposition of its operation.”—Medico-Chirurgical Review.
DR. HENRY BENNET,
OBSTETRIC PHYSICIAN TO THE WESTERN DISPENSARY.
A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON INFLAMMATION AND OTHER DISEASES OF THE UTERUS. Third Edition, revised, with additions. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“We are firmly of opinion, that in proportion as a knowledge of uterine diseases becomes more appreciated, this work will be proportionally established as a text-book in the profession.”—Lancet.
MR. P. HINCKES BIRD, F.R.C.S.
PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE DISEASES OF CHILDREN AND INFANTS AT THE BREAST. Translated from the French of M. Bouchut, with Notes and Additions. 8vo. cloth. 20s.
DR. GOLDING BIRD, F.R.S.
I.
URINARY DEPOSITS; THEIR DIAGNOSIS, PATHOLOGY, AND THERAPEUTICAL INDICATIONS. With Engravings on Wood. Fourth Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
II.
ELEMENTS OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY; being an Experimental Introduction to the Study of the Physical Sciences. Illustrated with numerous Engravings on Wood. Fourth Edition. By Golding Bird, M.D., F.R.S., and Charles Brooke, M.B. Cantab., F.R.S. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
DR. BLAKISTON, F.R.S.,
LATE PHYSICIAN TO THE BIRMINGHAM GENERAL HOSPITAL.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON CERTAIN DISEASES OF THE CHEST; and on the Principles of Auscultation. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
“Dr. Blakiston’s production not only gives him a place in the rather thin ranks of sound and accomplished physicians, possessed of a true notion of the importance of their science, and of the means by which it should be cultivated,—but adds to English Medical Literature one of the few really inductive works by which it is adorned.”—Medico-Chirurgical Review.
DR. JOHN W. F. BLUNDELL.
MEDICINA MECHANICA; or, the Theory and Practice of Active and Passive Exercises and Manipulations in the Cure of Chronic Disease. Post 8vo. cloth, 6s.
MR. JOHN E. BOWMAN,
PROFESSOR OF PRACTICAL CHEMISTRY IN KING’S COLLEGE, LONDON.
I.
PRACTICAL CHEMISTRY, including Analysis. With numerous Illustrations on Wood. Second Edition. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 6s. 6d.
“One of the most complete manuals that has for a long time been given to the chemical student. Every process is indicated with clearness, and the manipulatory details are assisted by an extensive series of woodcuts.”—Athenæum.
II.
MEDICAL CHEMISTRY; with Illustrations on Wood. Second Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 6s. 6d.
“We have examined this treatise, and we can recommend it to the student as a useful elementary guide. The illustrations are numerous and accurate, and well calculated to aid diagnosis.”—Medical Gazette.
DR. JAMES BRIGHT.
ON DISEASES OF THE CHEST AND AIR PASSAGES; with a Review of the several Climates recommended in these Affections. Second Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
MR. ISAAC BAKER BROWN, F.R.C.S.,
SURGEON ACCOUCHEUR TO ST. MARY’S HOSPITAL.
ON SOME DISEASES OF WOMEN ADMITTING OF SURGICAL TREATMENT. With Plates, 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
“The most valuable chapter in the book is that on Ruptured Perinæum. It is in the treatment of this distressing accident, which has long held a prominent place amongst the opprobria of Surgery, that Mr. Brown has, in our opinion, shown the greatest amount of originality, and in which his efforts have been rewarded with the greatest success.”—The Lancet.
“We can recommend Mr. Brown’s work most strongly to all those who are called upon to treat the Diseases peculiar to Women, as a book in which they will find a great deal of really valuable practical information.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
DR. BUDD, F.R.S.,
PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE IN KING’S COLLEGE, LONDON.
ON DISEASES OF THE LIVER. Illustrated with Coloured Plates and Engravings on Wood. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 16s.
“In Dr. Budd’s work the practitioner will find abundant instructions upon symptoms and treatment. We hope the specimen we have exhibited will induce many to search the work for themselves.”—Lancet.
DR. WILLOUGHBY BURSLEM,
SENIOR PHYSICIAN TO THE BLENHEIM-STREET DISPENSARY.
PULMONARY CONSUMPTION AND ITS TREATMENT. Post 8vo. cloth, 5s.
“We find a series of original and important observations on the state of the periodical functions of the female in relation to the development and treatment of phthisis, and a commentary on the various phenomena of the disease, which impress us with the conviction that the author is as painstaking in his literary pursuit of knowledge as he is evidently a practical physician.”—Lancet.
DR. CARPENTER, F.R.S.
I.
PRINCIPLES OF HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY. With numerous Illustrations on Steel and Wood. Fourth Edition. 8vo. cloth, 28s.
II.
PRINCIPLES OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY. Illustrated with 300 Engravings on Wood. Fourth Edition. 8vo. cloth, 24s.
⁂“The whole work has been most carefully revised; and the Author ventures to think that the present Edition more completely represents the state of the Science at the period of its publication than any of its predecessors have done. He can honestly say, that he has spared no time or labour in its preparation which it has been in his power to bestow.”—Extract from Preface.
III.
A MANUAL OF PHYSIOLOGY. With numerous Illustrations on Steel and Wood. Second Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“Dr. Carpenter has brought up his Manual, in this new and beautiful edition, to the present state of physiological science. The work is complete. We recommend it as an admirable text-book.”—London Journal of Medicine.
“We can strongly recommend this volume to the student. This second edition contains the latest additions to physiological science.”—Medical Gazette.
MR. ROBERT B. CARTER, M.R.C.S.
THE PATHOLOGY AND TREATMENT OF HYSTERIA. 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
MR. H. T. CHAPMAN, F.R.C.S.
THE TREATMENT OF OBSTINATE ULCERS AND CUTANEOUS ERUPTIONS OF THE LEG WITHOUT CONFINEMENT. Second Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 3s. 6d.
“Mr. Chapman has done much by directing the attention of the profession to the advantages of this combined treatment. We have read his work with much pleasure, and have used the compress, straps of linen, and roller, as directed, and have found them to answer admirably well.”—Dublin Quarterly Medical Journal.
DR. G. C. CHILD.
ON INDIGESTION, AND CERTAIN BILIOUS DISORDERS OFTEN CONJOINED WITH IT. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
SIR JAMES CLARK, M.D., BART.,
PHYSICIAN TO THE QUEEN.
THE SANATIVE INFLUENCE OF CLIMATE. With an Account of the Principal Places resorted to by Invalids in England, South of Europe, the Colonies, &c. Fourth Edition, revised. Post 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
MR. J. PATERSON CLARK, M.A.,
DENTIST EXTRAORDINARY TO HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS PRINCE ALBERT.
THE ODONTALGIST; OR, HOW TO PRESERVE THE TEETH, CURE TOOTHACHE, AND REGULATE DENTITION FROM INFANCY TO AGE. With plates. Post 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DR. CONOLLY.
THE CONSTRUCTION AND GOVERNMENT OF LUNATIC ASYLUMS AND HOSPITALS FOR THE INSANE. With Plans. Post 8vo. cloth, 6s.
MR. BRANSBY B. COOPER, F.R.S.,
LECTURES ON THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF SURGERY. 8vo. cloth, 21s.
“Mr. Cooper’s book has reminded us, in its easy style and copious detail, more of Watson’s Lectures, and we should not be surprised to see it occupy a similar position to that well-known work in professional estimation.”—Medical Times.
MR. W. WHITE COOPER,
OPHTHALMIC SURGEON TO ST. MARY’S HOSPITAL.
ON NEAR SIGHT, AGED SIGHT, IMPAIRED VISION, AND THE MEANS OF ASSISTING SIGHT. With 31 Illustrations on Wood. Second Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
MR. COOPER,
LATE PROFESSOR OF SURGERY IN THE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LONDON.
A DICTIONARY OF PRACTICAL SURGERY; comprehending all the most interesting Improvements, from the Earliest Times down to the Present Period. Seventh Edition. One very thick volume, 8vo., 1l. 10s.
MR. COOLEY.
COMPREHENSIVE SUPPLEMENT TO THE PHARMACOPŒIAS.
THE CYCLOPÆDIA OF PRACTICAL RECEIPTS, AND COLLATERAL INFORMATION IN THE ARTS, MANUFACTURES, AND TRADES, INCLUDING MEDICINE, PHARMACY, AND DOMESTIC ECONOMY; designed as a Compendious Book of Reference for the Manufacturer, Tradesman, Amateur, and Heads of Families. Third Edition. In the Press.
SIR ASTLEY COOPER, BART., F.R.S.
ON THE STRUCTURE AND DISEASES OF THE TESTIS. Illustrated with 24 highly-finished Coloured Plates. Second Edition. Royal 4to. Reduced from £3. 3s. to £1. 10s.
DR. COTTON,
ASSISTANT PHYSICIAN TO THE HOSPITAL FOR CONSUMPTION, BROMPTON.
I.
ON CONSUMPTION: Its Nature, Symptoms, and Treatment. To which Essay was awarded the Fothergillian Gold Medal of the Medical Society of London. 8vo. cloth, 8s.
“Notwithstanding the hackneyed nature of the subject, and the multitude of works which have appeared upon phthisis, the present work is of very considerable interest, from the clear and simple manner in which it is arranged, and from the use made by the author of the ample materials placed at his disposal at the Brompton Hospital.”—Medical Times.
II.
PHTHISIS AND THE STETHOSCOPE: a concise Practical Guide to the Physical Diagnosis of Consumption. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 3s. 6d.
MR. COULSON,
SURGEON TO ST. MARY’S HOSPITAL.
I.
ON DISEASES OF THE BLADDER AND PROSTATE GLAND. The Fourth Edition, revised and enlarged. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
“Mr. Coulson’s work may be stated to be full and practical, to fill a vacant space in Medical Literature, and to be highly valuable to both students and practitioners.”—Medical Times.
“The practical and comprehensive character of Mr. Coulson’s volume claims for it a place in the library of every surgeon who desires to be on a level with modern improvements.”—London Journal of Medicine.
II.
ON LITHOTRITY AND LITHOTOMY; with Engravings on Wood. 8vo. cloth, 8s.
DR. JOHN GREEN CROSSE, F.R.S.
CASES IN MIDWIFERY, arranged, with an Introduction and Remarks by Edward Copeman, M.D., F.R.C.S. 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
MR. T. BLIZARD CURLING, F.R.S.,
SURGEON TO THE LONDON HOSPITAL.
A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON DISEASES OF THE TESTIS, SPERMATIC CORD, AND SCROTUM. Second Edition, with Additions. 8vo. cloth. Just ready.
MR. JOHN DALRYMPLE, F.R.S., F.R.C.S.
PATHOLOGY OF THE HUMAN EYE. Complete in Nine Fasciculi: imperial 4to., 20s. each; half-bound morocco, gilt tops, 9l. 15s.
“A work reflecting credit on the profession has been brought to a successful conclusion. Had Mr. Dalrymple’s life been spared but a few short months longer, the chorus of praise which now greets the completion of this great work would have fallen gratefully on his ear. The Publisher may well be proud of having issued such a work.”—London Journal of Medicine.
“The satisfaction with which we should have announced the completion of this unrivalled work is overclouded by the regret which we feel, in common with all who were acquainted with its distinguished and estimable author, at his early decease. The value of this work can scarcely be over-estimated: it realizes all that we believe it possible for art to effect in the imitation of nature.”—British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Review.
DR. DAVEY,
FORMERLY OF THE COUNTY OF MIDDLESEX LUNATIC ASYLUMS AT HANWELL AND COLNEY HATCH.
ON THE NATURE AND PROXIMATE CAUSE OF INSANITY. Post 8vo. cloth, 3s.
“It gives us much pleasure to state that the method of treatment inculcated in this little Essay is most judicious, and that the general statements which pervade the work are such as do honour to the head and heart of the writer.”—Psychological Journal.
DR. HERBERT DAVIES,
SENIOR PHYSICIAN TO THE ROYAL INFIRMARY FOR DISEASES OF THE CHEST.
ON THE PHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS OF DISEASES OF THE LUNGS AND HEART. Second Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 8s.
DR. TOOGOOD DOWNING.
NEURALGIA: its various Forms, Pathology, and Treatment. The Jacksonian Prize Essay for 1850. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
DR. DRUITT, F.R.C.S.
THE SURGEON’S VADE-MECUM; with numerous Engravings on Wood. Sixth Edition. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“Without any of the adventitious aids to which most publications of the present day owe their success—the previous heralding and subsequent puffing which are usually in requisition at a literary début—without the prestige of rank or official distinction on the part of its author—the ‘Vade-Mecum’ has secured an extraordinary popularity in Great Britain, and the most flattering commendations of medical critics; such testimony to its intrinsic merits has encouraged its republication here.”—Preface to the American Edition.
DR. DUNDAS,
PHYSICIAN TO THE NORTHERN HOSPITAL, LIVERPOOL, ETC.
SKETCHES OF BRAZIL; including New Views on Tropical and European Fever; with Remarks on a Premature Decay of the System, incident to Europeans on their Return from Hot Climates. Post 8vo. cloth, 9s.
DR. JAMES F. DUNCAN.
POPULAR ERRORS ON THE SUBJECT OF INSANITY EXAMINED AND EXPOSED. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
DR. JOHN C. EGAN,
FORMERLY SURGEON TO THE WESTMORELAND LOCK HOSPITAL.
SYPHILITIC DISEASES: THEIR PATHOLOGY, DIAGNOSIS, AND TREATMENT: including Experimental Researches on Inoculation, as a Differential Agent in Testing the Character of these Affections. 8vo. cloth, 9s.
“This is an interesting practical work, and as such it is worthy of the attention of the profession.”—Lancet.
SIR JAMES EYRE, M.D.
I.
THE STOMACH AND ITS DIFFICULTIES. Second Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 5s.
II.
PRACTICAL REMARKS ON SOME EXHAUSTING DISEASES. Second Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
MR. FERGUSSON, F.R.S.,
PROFESSOR OF SURGERY IN KING’S COLLEGE, LONDON.
A SYSTEM OF PRACTICAL SURGERY; with numerous Illustrations on Wood. Third Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
DR. ERNEST VON FEUCHTERSLEBEN.
DIETETICS OF THE SOUL. Translated from the Seventh German Edition. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DR. D. J. T. FRANCIS.
CHANGE OF CLIMATE; considered as a Remedy in Dyspeptic, Pulmonary, and other Chronic Affections; with an Account of the most Eligible Places of Residence for Invalids in Spain, Portugal, Algeria, &c., at different Seasons of the Year; and an Appendix on the Mineral Springs of the Pyrenees, Vichy, and Aix les Bains. Post 8vo. cloth, 8s. 6d.
“Proceeds from the pen of a well informed practitioner and an accomplished gentleman, well acquainted with the subject upon which he treats.”—The Lancet.
“A very meritorious production.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
C. REMIQIUS FRESENIUS.
ELEMENTARY INSTRUCTION IN CHEMICAL ANALYSIS, AS PRACTISED IN THE LABORATORY OF GIESSEN. Edited by LLOYD BULLOCK, late Student at Giessen.
Qualitative; Third Edition. 8vo. cloth, 9s.
Quantitative. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 15s.
“I can confidently recommend this work, from my own personal experience, to all who are desirous of obtaining instruction in analysis, for its simplicity and usefulness, and the facility with which it may be apprehended.”—Baron Liebig.
MR. FRENCH, F.R.C.S.,
SURGEON TO THE INFIRMARY OF ST. JAMES’S, WESTMINSTER.
THE NATURE OF CHOLERA INVESTIGATED. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 4s.
“This is one of the best treatises on cholera which we have lately read. His theory of the nature of cholera is ingenious, and is argued with acuteness.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
MR. FOWNES, PH.D., F.R.S.
I.
A MANUAL OF CHEMISTRY; with numerous Illustrations on Wood. Fifth Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
Edited by H. Bence Jones, M.D., F.R.S., and A. W. Hofmann, Ph.D., F.R.S.
“An admirable exposition of the present state of chemical science, simply and clearly written, and displaying a thorough practical knowledge of its details, as well as a profound acquaintance with its principles. The illustrations, and the whole getting-up of the book, merit our highest praise.”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
II.
CHEMISTRY, AS EXEMPLIFYING THE WISDOM AND BENEFICENCE OF GOD. Second Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
III.
INTRODUCTION TO QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS. Post 8vo. cloth, 2s.
IV.
CHEMICAL TABLES. Folio, price 2s. 6d.
DR. FULLER,
ASSISTANT PHYSICIAN TO ST. GEORGE’S HOSPITAL.
ON RHEUMATISM, RHEUMATIC GOUT, AND SCIATICA: their Pathology, Symptoms, and Treatment. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“We have been much pleased by the perusal of Dr. Fuller’s interesting volume. The views it enforces are sound and judicious, and are based upon that foundation on which all doctrines in medicine ought to rest—namely, clinical experience.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
“We would particularly recommend a careful perusal of Dr. Fuller’s pages, for in them will be found much sound and practical information, drawn from a large field of observation and experience.”—Lancet.
DR. GAIRDNER.
ON GOUT; its History, its Causes, and its Cure. Third Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 8s. 6d.
“No one can rise from the perusal of Dr. Gairdner’s treatise without the conviction that it contains a trustworthy history of the disease,—that it conveys sound directions for treatment,—and that it is the work of a physician who, amid the wearying toil of a large and successful practice, keeps himself thoroughly conversant with all the recent advances in physiological science, both at home and abroad.”—Medical Times.
MR. GALLOWAY,
I.
THE FIRST STEP IN CHEMISTRY. Post 8vo. cloth, 3s.
“We heartily commend this unpretending and useful work to the heads of scholastic establishments, and to others who are anxious to initiate their pupils into the principles of a most fascinating and most useful branch of human knowledge.”—London Journal of Medicine.
II.
A MANUAL OF QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS. Post 8vo. cloth, 4s.
“This is really a valuable little book. We have not for a long time met with an introductory Manual which so completely fulfils its intention.”—Athenæum.
MR. ROBERT GARNER,
SURGEON TO THE NORTH STAFFORDSHIRE INFIRMARY, ETC.
EUTHERAPEIA; or, AN EXAMINATION OF THE PRINCIPLES OF MEDICAL SCIENCE, including Researches on the Nervous System. Illustrated with 9 Engravings on Copper, and Engravings on Wood. 8vo. cloth, 8s.
DR. GAVIN.
ON FEIGNED AND FACTITIOUS DISEASES, chiefly of Soldiers and Seamen; on the means used to simulate or produce them, and on the best Modes of discovering Impostors; being the Prize Essay in the Class of Military Surgery in the University of Edinburgh. 8vo. cloth, 9s.
DR. GLOVER.
ON THE PATHOLOGY AND TREATMENT OF SCROFULA; being the Forthergillian Prize Essay for 1846. With Plates. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
DR. GRANVILLE, F.R.S.
ON SUDDEN DEATH. Post 8vo. cloth, 7s.
“Abounding in illustrations, which are often striking and appropriate.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
“The entire question is considered by the author in a philosophic style, and the facts contained presented in eloquent language; indeed, we have been charmed with Dr. Granville’s book.”—Dublin Quarterly Journal.
MR. GRAY, M.R.C.S.
PRESERVATION OF THE TEETH indispensable to Comfort and Appearance, Health, and Longevity. 18mo. cloth, 3s.
“This small volume will be found interesting and useful to every medical practitioner, the heads of families, and those who have the care of children; while persons who have lost teeth will be made aware of the cause, and enabled to judge for themselves of the rationale of the principles pointed out for their replacement, and preservation of the remainder.”
MR. GRIFFITHS.
CHEMISTRY OF THE FOUR SEASONS—Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter. Illustrated with Engravings on Wood. Second Edition. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
“This volume combines, in an eminent degree, amusement with instruction. The laws and properties of those wonderful and mysterious agents—heat, light, electricity, galvanism, and magnetism, are appropriately discussed, and their influence on vegetation noticed. We would especially recommend it to youths commencing the study of medicine, both as an incentive to their natural curiosity, and an introduction to several of those branches of science which will necessarily soon occupy their attention.”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
DR. GULLY.
I.
THE WATER CURE IN CHRONIC DISEASE: an Exposition of the Causes, Progress, and Terminations of various Chronic Diseases of the Viscera, Nervous System, and Limbs, and of their Treatment by Water and other Hygienic Means. Fourth Edition. Foolscap 8vo. sewed, 2s. 6d.
II.
THE SIMPLE TREATMENT OF DISEASE; deduced from the Methods of Expectancy and Revulsion. 18mo. cloth, 4s.
DR. GUY,
PHYSICIAN TO KING’S COLLEGE HOSPITAL.
HOOPER’S PHYSICIAN’S VADE-MECUM; OR, MANUAL OF THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF PHYSIC. New Edition, considerably enlarged, and re-written. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
DR. MARSHALL HALL, F.R.S.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS IN MEDICINE. Post 8vo. cloth, 8s. 6d.
DITTO. Second Series. Post 8vo. cloth, 8s. 6d.
“The work affords fruits of the mental energy of an observer who is anything but content to follow the beaten path where more successful roads lie open before him. It is not a work of speculative dreamy philosophy, but of sound practical common sense, and as such will recommend itself to the judicious practitioner.”—Northern Journal of Medicine.
MR. HARE, M.R.C.S.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE PREVENTION, CAUSES, AND TREATMENT OF CURVATURES OF THE SPINE; with Engravings. Third Edition. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
MR. HARRISON, F.R.C.S.
THE PATHOLOGY AND TREATMENT OF STRICTURE OF THE URETHRA. 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
MR. JAMES B. HARRISON, F.R.C.S.
ON THE CONTAMINATION OF WATER BY THE POISON OF LEAD, and its Effects on the Human Body. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 3s. 6d.
MR. HIGGINBOTTOM, F.R.C.S.
I.
ADDITIONAL OBSERVATIONS ON THE NITRATE OF SILVER; with full Directions for its Use as a Therapeutic Agent. 8vo. 2s. 6d.
II.
AN ESSAY ON THE USE OF THE NITRATE OF SILVER IN THE CURE OF INFLAMMATION, WOUNDS, AND ULCERS. Second Edition. Price 5s.
MR. F. W. HEADLAND. B.A., M.R.C.S.
ON THE ACTION OE MEDICINES. Being the Prize Essay to which the Medical Society of London awarded the Fothergillian Gold Medal for 1852. Second Edition. In the Press.
MR. JOHN HILTON, F.R.S.,
SURGEON TO GUY’S HOSPITAL.
ON THE DEVELOPMENT AND DESIGN OF CERTAIN PORTIONS OF THE CRANIUM. Illustrated with Plates in Lithography. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
DR. HINDS.
THE HARMONIES OF PHYSICAL SCIENCE IN RELATION TO THE HIGHER SENTIMENTS; with Observations on Medical Studies, and on the Moral and Scientific Relations of Medical Life. Post 8vo., cloth, 5s.
MR. C. HOLTHOUSE,
ASSISTANT SURGEON AND LECTURER ON ANATOMY TO THE WESTMINSTER HOSPITAL.
LECTURES ON STRABISMUS, delivered at the Westminster Hospital. 8vo. cloth, 4s.
“We have perused Mr. Holthouse’s lectures with much pleasure. They contain not only an accurate exposition of the principles upon which the treatment of the disorder should be conducted, but also various original suggestions, which will prove useful to the oculist or surgeon in performing the operation; for, with all its improvements, it has not hitherto proved so invariably satisfactory as might be desired.”—Edinburgh Monthly Journal.
DR. W. CHARLES HOOD,
RESIDENT PHYSICIAN AND SUPERINTENDENT OF BETHLEM HOSPITAL.
SUGGESTIONS FOR THE FUTURE PROVISION OF CRIMINAL LUNATICS. 8vo. cloth, 5s. 6d.
DR. HENRY HUNT,
MEMBER OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS, LONDON.
ON HEARTBURN AND INDIGESTION. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
MR. THOMAS HUNT, M.R.C.S.
THE PATHOLOGY AND TREATMENT OF CERTAIN DISEASES OF THE SKIN, generally pronounced Intractable. Illustrated by upwards of Forty Cases. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
“We have found Mr. Hunt’s practice exceedingly successful in severe obstinate cases.”—Braithwaite’s Retrospect of Medicine.
“The facts and views he brings forward eminently merit attention.”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
DR. ARTHUR JACOB, F.R.C.S,
PROFESSOR OF ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY IN THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS IN IRELAND.
A TREATISE ON THE INFLAMMATIONS OF THE EYE-BALL. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 5s.
It includes the Description and Treatment of the Idiopathic, Scrofulous, Rheumatic, Arthritic, Syphilitic, Gonorrhœal, Post-febrile, and Neuralgic Species; as well as the circumscribed Inflammations of the Cornea, Membrane of the Aqueous Humour, Choroid, Crystalline Lens and Retina; and also Inflammation from Injury, with the Sympathetic and Phlebitic varieties.
DR. HANDFIELD JONES, F.R.S., & DR. EDWARD H. SIEVEKING.
A MANUAL OF PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY. Illustrated with numerous Engravings on Wood. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
⁂ Mr. Churchill is happy to announce this additional volume to his Manuals, and believes it will be found fully to sustain the high reputation which the Series has attained.
MR. WHARTON JONES, F.R.S.,
PROFESSOR OF OPHTHALMIC MEDICINE AND SURGERY IN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE.
I.
A MANUAL OF THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF OPHTHALMIC MEDICINE AND SURGERY; illustrated with 102 Engravings, plain and coloured. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“We can assure students that they cannot meet with a hand-book on this subject that is more ably or more carefully written.”—Medical Gazette.
“We entertain little doubt that this work will become a manual for daily reference and consultation by the student and general practitioner.”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
II.
THE WISDOM AND BENEFICENCE OF THE ALMIGHTY, AS DISPLAYED IN THE SENSE OF VISION; being the Actonian Prize Essay for 1851. With Illustrations on Steel and Wood. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
“A fit sequel to the Bridgewater Treatises: it is philosophically and admirably written.”—Literary Gazette.
“This treatise resembles in style of treatment the famous Bridgewater Treatises.”—Athenæum.
DR. BENCE JONES, F.R.S.
ON ANIMAL CHEMISTRY, in its relation to STOMACH and RENAL DISEASES. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
“The work of Dr. Bence Jones is one of the most philosophical and practical which has issued from the press for many years past.”—Lancet.
“Dr. Bence Jones is already favourably known as the author of works and papers on animal chemistry, and this contribution to his favourite science is calculated to extend his reputation as an able chemist and sound physician.”—Monthly Medical Journal.
MR. KNAGGS.
UNSOUNDNESS OF MIND CONSIDERED IN RELATION TO THE QUESTION OF RESPONSIBILITY IN CRIMINAL CASES. 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
MR. LAWRENCE, F.R.S.
A TREATISE ON RUPTURES. The Fifth Edition, considerably enlarged. 8vo. cloth, 16s.
“It must be superfluous to express our opinion of its value to the surgical practitioner. As a treatise on hernia, presenting a complete view of the literature of the subject, it stands in the first rank.”—Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal.
MR. LAWRENCE, M.R.C.S.
THE DIAGNOSIS OF SURGICAL CANCER. The Liston Prize Essay for 1854. Plates, 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
DR. HUNTER LANE, F.L.S.
A COMPENDIUM OF MATERIA MEDICA AND PHARMACY; adapted to the London Pharmacopœia, 1851, embodying all the new French, American, and Indian Medicines, and also comprising a Summary of Practical Toxicology. Second Edition. 24mo. cloth, 5s. 6d.
MR. EDWIN LEE.
I.
THE WATERING PLACES OF ENGLAND, CONSIDERED with Reference to their Medical Topography. Third Edition. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 5s. 6d.
II.
THE BATHS OF FRANCE, CENTRAL GERMANY, &c. Third Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 6s. 6d.
III.
THE BATHS OF RHENISH GERMANY. Post 8vo. 3s.
MR. HENRY LEE, F.R.C.S.,
SURGEON TO THE LOCK HOSPITAL.
PATHOLOGICAL AND SURGICAL OBSERVATIONS; including an Essay on the Surgical Treatment of Hemorrhoidal Tumors. 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
DR. ROBERT LEE, F.R.S.
I.
CLINICAL REPORTS OF OVARIAN AND UTERINE DISEASES, with Commentaries. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 6s. 6d.
II.
CLINICAL MIDWIFERY; comprising the Histories of 545 Cases of Difficult, Preternatural, and Complicated Labour, with Commentaries. Second Edition. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 5s.
“More instructive to the juvenile practitioner than a score of systematic works.”—Lancet.
“Will be consulted by every accoucheur who practises his art with the zeal which it merits.”—Medical Gazette.
“A storehouse of valuable facts and precedents.”—American Journal of the Medical Sciences.
III.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON DISEASES OF THE UTERUS. With coloured Plates. Two Parts. Imperial 4to., 7s. 6d. each Part.
MR. LISTON, F.R.S.
PRACTICAL SURGERY. Fourth Edition. 8vo. cloth, 22s.
LONDON MEDICAL SOCIETY OF OBSERVATION.
WHAT TO OBSERVE AT THE BED-SIDE, AND AFTER DEATH. Published by Authority. Second Edition. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
MR. EDWARD F. LONSDALE,
SURGEON TO THE ROYAL ORTHOPÆDIC HOSPITAL.
OBSERVATIONS ON THE TREATMENT OF LATERAL CURVATURE OF THE SPINE. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
“We would wish that this treatise on lateral curvature of the spine were generally read, since much ignorance prevails concerning the subject, and, consequently, it presents an ample field for the quack, and an opprobrium to the profession.”—Lancet.
M. LUGOL.
ON SCROFULOUS DISEASES. Translated from the French, with Additions by W. H. Ranking, M.D., Physician to the Suffolk General Hospital. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
MR. JOSEPH MACLISE, F.R.C.S.
SURGICAL ANATOMY. A Series of Dissections, illustrating the Principal Regions of the Human-Body.
The singular success of this Work exhausted the First Edition of 1000 Copies within six months of its completion.
The Second Edition, now in course of publication, Fasciculi I. to VIII. Imperial folio, 5s. each.
MR. MACILWAIN,
ON TUMOURS, THEIR GENERAL NATURE AND TREATMENT. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DR. MAYNE.
AN EXPOSITORY LEXICON OF THE TERMS, ANCIENT AND MODERN, IN MEDICAL AND GENERAL SCIENCE, including a complete MEDICAL AND MEDICO-LEGAL VOCABULARY, and presenting the correct Pronunciation, Derivation, Definition, and Explanation of the Names, Analogues, Synonymes, and Phrases (in English, Latin, Greek, French, and German) employed in Science and connected with Medicine. Parts I. to IV., price 5s. each.
DR. WM. H. MADDEN.
THOUGHTS ON PULMONARY CONSUMPTION; with an Appendix on the Climate of Torquay. Post 8vo. cloth, 5s.
“This work is the product of a mind, sensible alike to the value of carefully observed facts, and of philosophical reasoning. We cordially recommend our readers to peruse this instructive treatise; the views brought forward are such as to merit careful attention from every candid pathological inquirer.”—London Journal of Medicine.
DR. MARTIN.
THE UNDERCLIFF, ISLE OF WIGHT: its Climate, History, and Natural Productions. Post 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
“Dr. Martin has rendered good service to patients and practitioners by the publication of this work.”—Medical Gazette.
“A great variety of information, collected with much labour, and so agreeably placed before the general and professional reader, speak highly for the seal and ability of the author.”—Lancet.
DR. MASON,
INVENTOR OF MASON’S HYDROMETER.
ON THE CLIMATE AND METEOROLOGY OF MADEIRA: Edited by James Sheridan Knowles; to which are attached a Review of the State of Agriculture and of the Tenure of Land, by George Peacock, D.D., F.R.S.; and an Historical and Descriptive Account of the Island, and Guide to Visitors, by John Driver, Consul for Greece, Madeira. 8vo. cloth, 18s.; royal 8vo. £1. 11s. 6d.
DR. MASSY,
4TH LIGHT DRAGOONS.
ON THE EXAMINATION OF RECRUITS; intended for the Use of Young Medical Officers on Entering the Army. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DR. CHARLES D. MEIGS,
PROFESSOR OF MIDWIFERY AND THE DISEASES OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN IN JEFFERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE, U.S.
A TREATISE ON ACUTE AND CHRONIC DISEASES OF THE NECK OF THE UTERUS. With numerous Plates, coloured and plain, 8vo. cloth, 25s.
MR. JOHN L. MILTON, M.R.C.S.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON A NEW WAY OF TREATING GONORRHŒA. With some Remarks on the Cure of Inveterate Cases. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DR. MONRO,
FELLOW OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS.
I.
REMARKS ON INSANITY: its Nature and Treatment. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
“We see throughout its pages evidences of a highly cultivated mind without any assumption, and an honest spirit of inquiry marked by great seal and an earnest desire to afford a helping hand to benefit the condition of the insane.”—Dublin Quarterly Journal.
II.
AN ESSAY ON STAMMERING. 8vo. 2s. 6d.
III.
REFORM IN PRIVATE LUNATIC ASYLUMS. 8vo. cloth, 4s.
DR. MILLINGEN.
ON THE TREATMENT AND MANAGEMENT OF THE INSANE; with Considerations on Public and Private Lunatic Asylums. 18mo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
“Dr. Millingen, in one small pocket volume, has compressed more real solid matter than could be gleaned out of any dosen of octavos on the same subject. We recommend this vade-mecum as the best thing of the kind we ever perused.”—Dr. Johnson’s Review.
DR. NOBLE.
I.
ELEMENTS OF PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE PRACTICAL STUDY OF INSANITY. Post 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
II.
THE BRAIN AND ITS PHYSIOLOGY. Post 8vo. cloth, 6s.
DR. J. NOTTINGHAM,
SURGEON TO THE ST. ANNE’S EYE AND EAR INSTITUTION, LIVERPOOL.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON CONICAL CORNEA, AND on the Short Sight, and other Defects of Vision connected with it. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
MR. NOURSE, M.R.C.S.
TABLES FOR STUDENTS. Price One Shilling.
1. Divisions and Classes of the Animal Kingdom. 2. Classes and Orders of the Vertebrate Sub-kingdom. 3. Classes of the Vegetable Kingdom, according to the Natural and Artificial Systems. 4. Table of the Elements, with their Chemical Equivalents and Symbols.
MR. NUNNELEY.
A TREATISE ON THE NATURE, CAUSES, AND TREATMENT OF ERYSIPELAS. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
Orford Editions.—Edited by Dr. Greenhill.
I. ADDRESS TO A MEDICAL STUDENT. Second Edition, 18mo. cloth, 2s. 6d. II. PRAYERS FOR THE USE OF THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. Second Edition, cloth, 1s. 6d. III. LIFE OF SIR JAMES STONHOUSE, BART., M.D. Cloth, 4s. 6d. IV. ANECDOTA SYDENHAMIANA. Second Edition, 18mo. 2s. V. LIFE OF THOMAS HARRISON BURDER, M.D. 18mo. cloth, 4s. VI. BURDER’S LETTERS FROM A SENIOR TO A JUNIOR PHYSICIAN, ON PROMOTING THE RELIGIOUS WELFARE OF HIS PATIENTS. 18mo. sewed, 6d. VII. LIFE OF GEORGE CHEYNE, M.D. 18mo. sewed, 2s. 6d. VIII. HUFELAND ON THE RELATIONS OF THE PHYSICIAN TO THE SICK, TO THE PUBLIC, AND TO HIS COLLEAGUES. 18mo. sewed, 9d. IX. GISBORNE ON THE DUTIES OF PHYSICIANS. 18mo. sewed, 1s. X. LIFE OF CHARLES BRANDON TRYE. 18mo. sewed, 1s. XI. PERCIVAL’S MEDICAL ETHICS. Third Edition, 18mo. cloth, 3s. XII. CODE OF ETHICS OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. 8d. XIII. WARE ON THE DUTIES AND QUALIFICATIONS OF PHYSICIANS. 8d. XIV. MAURICE ON THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF MEDICAL STUDENTS. 9d. XV. FRASER’S QUERIES IN MEDICAL ETHICS. 9d.
MR. PAGET,
LECTURER ON PHYSIOLOGY AT ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S HOSPITAL.
A DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF THE ANATOMICAL MUSEUM OF ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S HOSPITAL. Vol. I. Morbid Anatomy. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DITTO. Vol. II. Natural and Congenitally Malformed Structures, and Lists of the Models, Casts, Drawings, and Diagrams. 5s.
MR. LANGSTON PARKER,
SURGEON TO QUEEN’S HOSPITAL, BIRMINGHAM.
THE MODERN TREATMENT OF SYPHILITIC DISEASES, both Primary and Secondary; comprising the Treatment of Constitutional and Confirmed Syphilis, by a safe and successful Method. Third Edition, 8vo. cloth, 10s.
DR. THOMAS B. PEACOCK, M.D.,
ASSISTANT PHYSICIAN TO ST. THOMAS’S HOSPITAL, ETC.
ON THE INFLUENZA, OR EPIDEMIC CATARRHAL FEVER OF 1847–8. 8vo. cloth, 5s. 6d.
“We know of no work which contains a more complete description of the disease, and its complications.”—Lancet.
DR. PEREIRA, F.R.S.
SELECTA E PRÆSCRIPTIS. Twelfth Edition. 24mo. cloth, 5s.
MR. PETTIGREW, F.R.S.
ON SUPERSTITIONS connected with the History and Practice of Medicine and Surgery. 8vo. cloth, 7s.
“The anecdotal character of this work cannot fail to render it generally acceptable; while the good sense that pervades it, as distant from empty declamation as from absurd credulity, stamps it with true historic value.”—Gentleman’s Magazine.
MR. PIRRIE, F.R.S.E.,
REGIUS PROFESSOR OF SURGERY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF ABERDEEN.
THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF SURGERY. With numerous Engravings on Wood. 8vo. cloth, 21s.
“Professor Pirrie has produced a work which is equally worthy of praise as an admirable text-book for surgical pupils, and as a book of reference for experienced practitioners. We rejoice to find that the chair of surgery is so ably filled in Aberdeen.... Professor Pirrie’s work is clear and trustworthy. All recent improvements, real or pretended, are judiciously and candidly discussed.”—London Journal of Medicine.
PHARMACOPŒIA COLLEGII REGALIS MEDICORUM LONDINENSIS. 8vo. cloth, 9s.; or 24mo. 5s.
Imprimatur.
Hic liber, cui titulus, Pharmacopœia Collegii Regalis Medicorum Londinensis. Datum ex Ædibus Collegii in comitiis censoriis, Novembris Mensis 14to 1850.
Johannes Ayrton Paris. Præses.
PROFESSORS PLATTNER & MUSPRATT.
THE USE OF THE BLOWPIPE IN THE EXAMINATION OF MINERALS, ORES, AND OTHER METALLIC COMBINATIONS. Illustrated by numerous Engravings on Wood. Third Edition. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
⁂ This Edition has been most carefully revised by Professor Muspratt, and received from him considerable additions.
THE PRESCRIBER’S PHARMACOPŒIA; containing all the Medicines in the London Pharmacopœia, arranged in Classes according to their Action, with their Composition and Doses. By a Practising Physician. Fourth Edition. 32mo. cloth, 2s. 6d.; roan tuck (for the pocket), 3s. 6d.
“Never was half-a-crown better spent than in the purchase of this ‘Thesaurus Medicaminum.’ This little work, with our visiting-book and stethoscope, are our daily companions in the carriage.”—Dr. Johnson’s Review.
SIR WM. PYM, K.C.H.,
INSPECTOR-GENERAL OF ARMY HOSPITALS.
OBSERVATIONS UPON YELLOW FEVER, with a Review of “A Report upon the Diseases of the African Coast, by Sir Wm. Burnett and Dr. Bryson,” proving its highly Contagious Powers. Post 8vo. 6s.
DR. RADCLIFFE,
ASSISTANT PHYSICIAN TO THE WESTMINSTER HOSPITAL.
I.
EPILEPSY, AND OTHER AFFECTIONS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM which are marked by Tremor, Convulsion, or Spasm: their Pathology and Treatment. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
“This sketch will serve to make our readers aware of the important nature of the book under notice. Sufficient has been said to show the grounds upon which Dr. Radcliffe hopes to effect a complete revolution in all matters relating to the pathology and treatment of epilepsy and the cognate disorders, and to stimulate inquirers to read the book itself.”—The Lancet.
II.
PROTEUS; OR, THE LAW OF NATURE. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
III.
THE PHILOSOPHY OF VITAL MOTION. 8vo. cloth, 6s.
DR. F. H. RAMSBOTHAM,
PHYSICIAN TO THE ROYAL MATERNITY CHARITY, ETC.
THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF OBSTETRIC MEDICINE AND SURGERY. Illustrated with One Hundred and Twenty Plates on Steel and Wood; forming one thick handsome volume. Third Edition. 8vo. cloth, 22s.
“Dr. Ramsbotham’s work is so well known, and so highly approved by the profession as a work of reference and authority in obstetric medicine and surgery, that we need do little more than direct the attention of our readers to the publication of a third edition. With regard to the engravings, they are so numerous, so well executed, and so instructive, that they are in themselves worth the whole cost of the book.”—Medical Gazette.
DR. RAMSBOTHAM,
CONSULTING PHYSICIAN TO THE ROYAL MATERNITY CHARITY.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON MIDWIFERY, with a Selection of Cases. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
DR. RANKING & DR. RADCLIFFE.
HALF-YEARLY ABSTRACT OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES; being a Practical and Analytical Digest of the Contents of the Principal British and Continental Medical Works published in the preceding Half-Year; together with a Critical Report of the Progress of Medicine and the Collateral Sciences during the same period.
Volumes I. to XX., 6s. 6d. each.
“The sifting which the journals and other medical works undergo, and the judicious selection from their pages of points of practical interest, and of discoveries of importance in the collateral sciences, form an important part of the duty of the editor; and, after a careful examination of Dr. Ranking’s volumes, we are bound to state that the duty has been most ably performed.”—Provincial Medical Journal.
DR. DU BOIS REYMOND.
ANIMAL ELECTRICITY; Edited by H. BENCE JONES, M.D., F.R.S. With Fifty Engravings on Wood. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 6s.
“This small volume is a valuable addition to our scientific literature. Those who read with attention will learn many most important facts from this work, but it demands such attention.”—Athenæum.
“The name of M. Du Bois Reymond is probably known to most of our readers, as that of a zealous investigator into Animal Electricity. We have now had the opportunity of witnessing some of the most interesting of these experiments. We beg to tender our thanks to Dr. Bence Jones for this very seasonable publication, and for the very efficient mode in which he has performed the task.”—Medico-Chirurgical Review.
MR. EVANS RIADORE, F.R.C.S, F.L.S.
I.
ON SPINAL IRRITATION, THE SOURCE OF NERVOUSNESS, INDIGESTION, AND FUNCTIONAL DERANGEMENTS OF THE PRINCIPAL ORGANS OF THE BODY; with Cases, illustrating the Importance of attending to the peculiar Temperature of the Patient, and the most successful Mode of Treatment, and on the legitimate Remedial Use of Water. Post 8vo. cloth, 5s. 6d.
II.
THE REMEDIAL INFLUENCE OF OXYGEN, NITROUS OXYDE, AND OTHER GASES, ELECTRICITY, AND GALVANISM. Post 8vo. cloth, 5s. 6d.
MR. ROBERTON,
FORMERLY SENIOR SURGEON TO THE MANCHESTER AND SALFORD LYING-IN HOSPITAL.
ON THE PHYSIOLOGY AND DISEASES OF WOMEN, AND ON PRACTICAL MIDWIFERY. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
“We honestly recommend this work to our readers as one calculated to interest them in the highest degree.”—Provincial Medical and Surgical Journal.
“We recommend this work very strongly to all engaged in obstetric practice, or interested in ethnological studies. It possesses practical utility and physiological interest, combined with the fruits of a large experience, great power of observation, and an extensive and varied erudition.”—Medical Gazette.
DR. W. H. ROBERTSON,
PHYSICIAN TO THE BUXTON BATH CHARITY.
I.
THE NATURE AND TREATMENT OF GOUT. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
“We cannot conclude this notice of Dr. Robertson’s treatise without cordially recommending it as a sound and practical work, fitted for reference, both as a work of information on the subject and as a guide to practice.”—Provincial Medical Journal.
II.
A TREATISE ON DIET AND REGIMEN. Fourth Edition. 2 vols. post 8vo. cloth, 12s.
“It is scarcely necessary that we should add our hearty recommendation of Dr. Robertson’s treatise, not merely to our medical readers, but to the public, over whom they have an influence. It is one of the few books which is legitimately adapted, both in subject and manner of treatment, to both classes.”—British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Review.
DR. ROTH.
ON MOVEMENTS. An Exposition of their Principles and Practice, for the Correction of the Tendencies to Disease in Infancy, Childhood, and Youth, and for the Cure of many Morbid Affections in Adults. Illustrated with numerous Engravings on Wood. 8vo. cloth, 10s.
DR. ROWE, F.S.A.
NERVOUS DISEASES, LIVER AND STOMACH COMPLAINTS, LOW SPIRITS, INDIGESTION, GOUT, ASTHMA, AND DISORDERS PRODUCED BY TROPICAL CLIMATES. With Cases. Thirteenth Edition. 8vo. 5s. 6d.
“Dr. Rowe, the first edition of whose work appeared in 1820, claims, with justice, a priority of authorship over many other writers in this field of inquiry.”—Lancet.
DR. ROYLE, F.R.S.
A MANUAL OF MATERIA MEDICA AND THERAPEUTICS. With numerous Engravings on Wood. Second Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“This is another of that beautiful and cheap series of Manuals published by Mr. Churchill. The execution of the woodcuts of plants, flowers, and fruits is admirable. The work is indeed a most valuable one.”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
DR. SHAPTER.
I.
THE CLIMATE OF THE SOUTH OF DEVON, AND ITS INFLUENCE UPON HEALTH. With short Accounts of Exeter, Torquay, Teignmouth, Dawlish, Exmouth, Sidmouth, &c. Illustrated with a Map geologically coloured. Post 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
“This volume is far more than a guide-book. It contains much statistical information, with very minute local details, that may be advantageously consulted by the medical man before he recommends any specific residence in Devonshire to his patient.”—Athenæum.
II.
THE HISTORY OF THE CHOLERA IN EXETER IN 1832. Illustrated with Map and Woodcuts. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
MR. SAVORY,
MEMBER OF THE SOCIETY OF APOTHECARIES.
A COMPENDIUM OF DOMESTIC MEDICINE, AND COMPANION TO THE MEDICINE CHEST; comprising Plain Directions for the Employment of Medicines, with their Properties and Doses, and Brief Descriptions of the Symptoms and Treatment of Diseases, and of the Disorders incidental to Infants and Children, with a Selection of the most efficacious Prescriptions. Intended as a Source of Easy Reference for Clergymen, and for Families residing at a Distance from Professional Assistance. Fourth Edition. 12mo. cloth, 5s.
MR. SHAW.
THE MEDICAL REMEMBRANCER; OR, BOOK OF EMERGENCIES: in which are concisely pointed out the Immediate Remedies to be adopted in the First Moments of Danger from Poisoning, Drowning, Apoplexy, Burns, and other Accidents; with the Tests for the Principal Poisons, and other useful Information. Third Edition. 32mo. cloth, 2s. 6d.
“The plan of this little book is well conceived, and the execution corresponds thereunto. It costs little money, and will occupy little room; and we think no practitioner will regret being the possessor of what cannot fail, sooner or later, to be useful to him.”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
MR. SKEY, F.R.S.
OPERATIVE SURGERY; with Illustrations engraved on Wood. 8vo. cloth, 18s.
“Mr. Skey’s work is a perfect model for the operating surgeon, who will learn from it not only when and how to operate, but some more noble and exalted lessons, which cannot fail to improve him as a moral and social agent.”—Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal.
“We pronounce Mr. Skey’s ‘Operative Surgery’ to be a work of the very highest importance—a work by itself. The correctness of our opinion we trustfully leave to the judgment of the profession.”—Medical Gazette.
DR. SPURGIN.
LECTURES ON MATERIA MEDICA, AND ITS RELATIONS TO THE ANIMAL ECONOMY. Delivered before the Royal College of Physicians. 8vo. cloth, 5s. 6d.
“Dr. Spurgin has evidently devoted much time and labour to the composition of these lectures; and the result is, that he has produced one of the most philosophical essays on the subject of “Materia Medica” existing in the English language.”—Psychological Journal.
DR. W. TYLER SMITH,
PHYSICIAN-ACCOUCHEUR TO ST. MARY’S HOSPITAL.
I.
THE PATHOLOGY AND TREATMENT OF LEUCORRHŒA. With Engravings on Wood. 8vo. cloth, 6s. 6d.
II.
THE PERIODOSCOPE, a new Instrument for determining the Date of Labour, and other Obstetric Calculations, with an Explanation of its Uses, and an Essay on the Periodic Phenomena attending Pregnancy and Parturition. 8vo. cloth, 4s.
“We anticipate for the work that which it deserves for its novelty, ingenuity, and utility—a wide circulation. It should be in the hands of all medical men who practise midwifery.”—Medical Gazette.
DR. SNOW.
ON THE MODE OF COMMUNICATION OF CHOLERA. Second Edition, much Enlarged, and Illustrated with Maps. 8vo. cloth, 7s.
MR. SQUIRE,
CHEMIST ON HER MAJESTY’S ESTABLISHMENT.
THE PHARMACOPŒIA, (LONDON, EDINBURGH, AND DUBLIN) arranged in a convenient Tabular Form, both to suit the Prescriber for comparison, and the Dispenser for compounding the formulæ; with Notes, Tests, and Tables. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
“Mr. Squire has rendered good service to all who either prescribe or dispense medicines by this work. He has succeeded in bringing together the similar formulæ for ready comparison and reference. The work offers a striking comment on the necessity of uniformity in the strength and preparation of all medicines which are used in the United Kingdom.”—Lancet.
“A very valuable work. Mr. Squire’s volume combines the formulæ of the three Pharmacopœias, and at one glance shows the difference of the official preparations of the three kingdoms.”—Medical Times.
“A most convenient and well-arranged work; it will be found of very great utility, both to the prescriber and to the dispenser.”—Medical Gazette.
J. STEPHENSON, M.D, & J. M. CHURCHILL, F.L.S.
MEDICAL BOTANY; OR, ILLUSTRATIONS AND DESCRIPTIONS OF THE MEDICINAL PLANTS OF THE PHARMACOPŒIAS; comprising a popular and scientific Account of Poisonous Vegetables indigenous to Great Britain. Edited by GILBERT BURNETT, F.L.S., Professor of Botany in King’s College.
In three handsome royal 8vo. volumes, illustrated by Two Hundred Engravings, beautifully drawn and coloured from nature, cloth lettered.
Reduced from £6. 6s. to £4.
“The most complete and comprehensive work on Medical Botany.”—Pharmaceutical Journal.
“So high is our opinion of this work, that we recommend every student at college, and every surgeon who goes abroad, to have a copy, as one of the essential constituents of his library.”—Dr. Johnson’s Medico-Chirurgical Review.
DR. STEGGALL.
STUDENTS’ BOOKS FOR EXAMINATION.
I.
A MEDICAL MANUAL FOR APOTHECARIES’ HALL AND OTHER MEDICAL BOARDS. Eleventh Edition. 12mo. cloth, 10s.
II.
A MANUAL FOR THE COLLEGE OF SURGEONS; intended for the Use of Candidates for Examination and Practitioners. Second Edition. 12mo. cloth, 10s.
III.
GREGORY’S CONSPECTUS MEDICINÆ THEORETICÆ. The First Part, containing the Original Text, with an Ordo Verborum, and Literal Translation. 12mo. cloth, 10s.
IV.
THE FIRST FOUR BOOKS OF CELSUS; containing the Text, Ordo Verborum, and Translation. Second Edition. 12mo. cloth, 8s.
⁂ The above two works comprise the entire Latin Classics required for Examination at Apothecaries’ Hall.
V.
A TEXT-BOOK OF MATERIA-MEDICA AND THERAPEUTICS. 12mo. cloth, 7s.
VI.
FIRST LINES FOR CHEMISTS AND DRUGGISTS PREPARING FOR EXAMINATION AT THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY. 18mo. cloth, 3s. 6d.
DR. ALFRED TAYLOR, F.R.S.,
LECTURER ON MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE AND CHEMISTRY AT GUY’S HOSPITAL.
I.
A MANUAL OF MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE. Fifth Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“We recommend Dr. Taylor’s work as the ablest, most comprehensive, and, above all, the most practical useful book which exists on the subject of legal medicine. Any man of sound judgment, who has mastered the contents of Taylor’s ‘Medical Jurisprudence,’ may go into a Court of Law with the most perfect confidence of being able to acquit himself creditably.”—Medico-Chirurgical Review.
“Dr. Taylor possesses the happy art of expressing himself on a scientific topic in intelligible language. The size of his Manual fits it to be a circuit companion.”—Law Times.
II.
ON POISONS, in relation to MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE AND MEDICINE. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“An excellent and valuable manual. We predict for it a very favourable reception by the profession. It contains all that kind of information which a medical man will be glad to have access to when he has the prospect of appearing in the witness-box.”—Edinburgh Medical Journal.
MR. TAMPLIN, F.R.C.S.E.,
SURGEON TO, AND LECTURER ON DEFORMITIES AT, THE ROYAL ORTHOPÆDIC HOSPITAL.
LATERAL CURVATURE OF THE SPINE: its Causes, Nature, and Treatment. 8vo. cloth, 4s.
DR. THEOPHILUS THOMPSON, F.R.S.,
PHYSICIAN TO THE BROMPTON HOSPITAL FOR CONSUMPTION AND DISEASES OF THE CHEST.
CLINICAL LECTURES ON PULMONARY CONSUMPTION. With Plates. 8vo. cloth, 7s. 6d.
“The extracts we have already made are sufficient to show the practical character of Dr. Thompson’s work. The volume abounds in useful and instructive matter, and displays Dr. Thompson’s talents in a very favourable light.”—Dublin Medical Press.
HENRY THOMPSON, M.B. LOND., F.R.C.S.,
SURGEON TO THE MARYLEBONE AND TO THE BLENHEIM DISPENSARIES.
STRICTURE OF THE URETHRA; its Pathology and Treatment. The last Jacksonian Treatise of the Royal College of Surgeons. With Plates. 8vo. cloth, 10s.
DR. TILT.
I.
ON DISEASES OF WOMEN AND OVARIAN INFLAMMATION IN RELATION TO MORBID MENSTRUATION, STERILITY, PELVIC TUMOURS, AND AFFECTIONS OF THE WOMB. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 9s.
“We rejoice to see that physicians of weight and authority are beginning to look beyond the os and cervix uteri for the causes of disease in these parts. Already a reformation somewhat analogous to what Abernethy effected for surgical diseases has commenced, and we feel assured that Dr. Tilt’s work will powerfully co-operate in helping it forward, and in placing the pathology and therapeutics of diseases of the female generative organs upon a sound and permanent basis.”—Dublin Quarterly Review.
II.
ON THE PRESERVATION OF THE HEALTH OF WOMEN AT THE CRITICAL PERIODS OF LIFE. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
MR. TOD, M.R.C.S.
A DISQUISITION ON CERTAIN PARTS AND PROPERTIES of the BLOOD. With Illustrative Woodcuts. 8vo., 10s. 6d.
DR. ROBERT B. TODD, F.R.S.,
PHYSICIAN TO KING’S COLLEGE HOSPITAL.
CLINICAL LECTURES ON PARALYSIS, DISEASES OF THE BRAIN, and other AFFECTIONS of the NERVOUS SYSTEM. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 6s.
“The work will soon be in the hands of every practitioner who desires to be informed of the present state of knowledge in regard to diseases of the nervous system. It is exceedingly easy reading, and replete with just such information as the scientific practitioner requires.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
MR. TUKE.
DR. JACOBI ON THE CONSTRUCTION AND MANAGEMENT OF HOSPITALS FOR THE INSANE. Translated from the German. With Introductory Observations by the Editor. With Plates. 8vo. cloth, 9s.
DR. TURNBULL,
PHYSICIAN TO THE LIVERPOOL NORTHERN HOSPITAL.
I.
A TABULAR VIEW AND SYNOPSIS OF THE PHYSICAL SIGNS AND DIAGNOSIS OF THE DISEASES OF THE LUNGS. With Woodcuts, mounted on cloth, 5s. boards.
“This tabular view, affording a coup d’œil of the various auscultatory &c. phenomena discoverable in health and disease, will prove useful to many practitioners, as well as students, in their investigation of thoracic maladies.”—Medico-Chirurgical Review.
II.
AN INQUIRY HOW FAR CONSUMPTION IS CURABLE; WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE TREATMENT AND ON THE USE OF COD-LIVER OIL AND OTHER REMEDIES. Second Edition. 8vo. cloth, 4s.
DR. UNDERWOOD.
TREATISE ON THE DISEASES OF CHILDREN. Tenth Edition, with Additions and Corrections by HENRY DAVIES, M.D. 8vo. cloth, 15s.
VESTIGES OF THE NATURAL HISTORY OF CREATION. Tenth Edition. Illustrated with 100 Engravings on Wood. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
EXPLANATIONS: A SEQUEL TO “VESTIGES.” Second Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DR. VAN OVEN.
ON THE DECLINE OF LIFE IN HEALTH AND DISEASE; being an Attempt to Investigate the Causes of LONGEVITY, and the Best Means of Attaining a Healthful Old Age. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
DR. WAGSTAFF.
ON DISEASES OF THE MUCOUS MEMBRANE OF THE THROAT, and their Treatment by Topical Medication. Post 8vo. cloth, 4s. 6d.
MR. WADE, F.R.C.S.,
SENIOR SURGEON TO THE WESTMINSTER DISPENSARY.
STRICTURE OF THE URETHRA; its Complications and Effects. With Practical Observations on its Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment; and on a Safe and Efficient Mode of Treating its more Intractable Forms. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
“Mr. Wade is well known to have paid great attention to the subject of stricture for many years past, and is deservedly looked upon as an authority on this matter.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
DR. WALLER,
LECTURER ON MIDWIFERY AT ST. THOMAS’S HOSPITAL.
ELEMENTS OF PRACTICAL MIDWIFERY; OR, COMPANION TO THE LYING-IN ROOM. With Plates. Third Edition. 18mo. cloth, 3s. 6d.
“Students and practitioners in midwifery will find it an invaluable pocket companion.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
MR. HAYNES WALTON, F.R.C.S.,
SURGEON TO THE CENTRAL LONDON OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL.
OPERATIVE OPHTHALMIC SURGERY. With Engravings on Wood. 8vo. cloth, 18s.
“We have carefully examined the book, and can consistently say, that it is eminently a practical work, evincing in its author great research, a thorough knowledge of his subject, and an accurate and most observing mind.”—Dublin Quarterly Journal.
DR. WARDROP.
ON DISEASES OF THE HEART. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
DR. EBEN. WATSON, A.M.,
LECTURER ON THE INSTITUTES OF MEDICINE IN THE ANDERSONIAN UNIVERSITY, GLASGOW.
ON THE TOPICAL MEDICATION OF THE LARYNX IN CERTAIN DISEASES OF THE RESPIRATORY AND VOCAL ORGANS. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DR. WEGG.
OBSERVATIONS RELATING TO THE SCIENCE AND ART OF MEDICINE. 8vo. cloth, 8s.
“We have much pleasure in stating, that the work is highly instructive, and proclaims its author to be a sober, sound, and able physician.”—London Journal of Medicine.
MR. T. SPENCER WELLS, F.R.C.S.,
LATE ASSISTANT SURGEON IN MALTA HOSPITAL.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON GOUT AND ITS COMPLICATIONS, and on the Treatment of Joints Stiffened by Gouty Deposits. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 5s.
DR. WHITEHEAD, F.R.C.S.,
SURGEON TO THE MANCHESTER AND SALFORD LYING-IN HOSPITAL.
I.
ON THE TRANSMISSION FROM PARENT TO OFFSPRING OF SOME FORMS OF DISEASE, AND OF MORBID TAINTS AND TENDENCIES. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
II.
THE CAUSES AND TREATMENT OF ABORTION AND STERILITY: being the result of an extended Practical Inquiry into the Physiological and Morbid Conditions of the Uterus, with reference especially to Leucorrhœal Affections, and the Diseases of Menstruation. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
“The work is valuable and instructive, and one that reflects much credit alike on the industry and practical skill of the author.”—Medico-Chirurgical Review.
MR. WILLIAM R. WILDE, F.R.C.S.I.
AURAL SURGERY, AND THE NATURE AND TREATMENT OF DISEASES OF THE EAR. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“We have no hesitation in expressing our opinion that the book is by far the best treatise on Aural Surgery which has yet appeared in any language.”—Medical Times and Gazette.
DR. JOHN CALTHROP WILLIAMS,
LATE PHYSICIAN TO THE GENERAL HOSPITAL, NOTTINGHAM.
PRACTICAL OBSERVATIONS ON NERVOUS AND SYMPATHETIC PALPITATION OF THE HEART, as well as on Palpitation the Result of Organic Disease. Second Edition, 8vo. cloth, 6s.
“From the extracts we have given, our readers will see that Dr. Williams’s treatise is both able and practical.”—Medical Times.
“The work is calculated to add to the author’s reputation, and it is creditable to the provincial practitioners of England that so useful a treatise should have emanated from one of their body.”—Dublin Medical Press.
DR. J. WILLIAMS.
I.
INSANITY: its Causes, Prevention, and Cure; including Apoplexy, Epilepsy, and Congestion of the Brain. Second Edition. Post 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
II.
ON THE ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY, AND PATHOLOGY OF THE EAR; being the Prize Essay in the University of Edinburgh. With Plates. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
DR. JAMES WILSON.
THE PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF THE WATER CURE, and HOUSEHOLD MEDICAL SCIENCE, in Conversations on Physiology, on Pathology, or the Nature of Disease, and on Digestion, Nutrition, Regimen, and Diet. 8vo. cloth, 10s. 6d.
DR. G. C. WITTSTEIN.
PRACTICAL PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMISTRY: An Explanation of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Processes, with the Methods of Testing the Purity of the Preparations, deduced from Original Experiments. Translated from the Second German Edition, by STEPHEN DARBY. 18mo. cloth, 6s.
MR. ERASMUS WILSON, F.R.S.
I.
THE ANATOMIST’S VADE-MECUM: A SYSTEM OF HUMAN ANATOMY. With numerous Illustrations on Wood. Sixth Edition. Foolscap 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
“As a satisfactory proof that the praise we bestowed on the first edition of this work was not unmerited, we may observe it has been equally well thought of in foreign countries, having been reprinted in the United States and in Germany. In every respect, this work, as an anatomical guide for the student and the practitioner, merits our warmest and most decided praise.”—Medical Gazette.
II.
DISEASES OF THE SKIN: A Practical and Theoretical Treatise on the DIAGNOSIS, PATHOLOGY, and TREATMENT OF CUTANEOUS DISEASES. Third Edition. 8vo. cloth, 12s.
The same Work; illustrated with finely-executed Engravings on Steel, accurately coloured. 8vo. cloth, 30s.
“The work is very considerably improved in the present edition. Of the plates it is impossible to speak too highly. The representations of the various forms of cutaneous disease are singularly accurate, and the colouring exceeds almost anything we have met with in point of delicacy and finish.”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
III.
HEALTHY SKIN: A Treatise on the Management of the Skin and Hair in relation to Health. Fifth Edition. Foolscap 8vo. 2s. 6d.
“The student will be delighted to find his labours so much facilitated; and a few hours of agreeable society with a most pleasantly-written book will do more to make him acquainted with a class of obscure diseases than all that has been previously written on the subject.”—Lancet.
IV.
PORTRAITS OF DISEASES OF THE SKIN. Folio. Fasciculi I. to XI. Containing Four highly-finished Coloured Plates. 20s. each.
“May be truly designated a splendid performance, surpassing, in the artistic beauty of its delineations, and fully equalling in their fidelity to nature, any thing which has yet been brought out in this country or on the continent. We can scarcely speak too strongly of the merits of this work.”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
“We have never before seen a work more beautifully got up, both as regards the typography and the execution and colouring of the plates. Even Alibert’s grand work sinks into the shade when placed by the side of that of Mr. Wilson’s.”—Lancet.
V.
ON SYPHILIS, CONSTITUTIONAL AND HEREDITARY; AND ON SYPHILITIC ERUPTIONS. With Four Coloured Plates. 8vo. cloth, 16s.
DR. FORBES WINSLOW.
I.
LETTSOMIAN LECTURES ON INSANITY. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
II.
A SYNOPSIS OF THE LAW OF LUNACY; as far as it relates to the Organization and Management of Private Asylums for the Care and Treatment of the Insane. In the form of a Chart, varnished, mounted on canvas and rollers, price 6s.
MR. YEARSLEY.
DEAFNESS PRACTICALLY ILLUSTRATED; being an Exposition of Original Views as to the Causes and Treatment of Diseases of the Ear. Fourth Edition. Foolscap 8vo., 2s. 6d.
II.
ON THE ENLARGED TONSIL AND ELONGATED UVULA, and other Morbid Conditions of the Throat. Fourth Edition. 8vo. cloth, 5s.
CHURCHILL’S SERIES OF MANUALS.
“We here give Mr. Churchill public thanks for the positive benefit conferred on the Medical Profession, by the series of beautiful and cheap Manuals which bear his imprint”—British and Foreign Medical Review.
AGGREGATE SALE 68,500 COPIES.
DR. GOLDING BIRD, F.R.S., and CHARLES BROOKE, M.B. Cantab, F.R.S.
ELEMENTS OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY; Being an Experimental Introduction to the Study of the Physical Sciences, with numerous Illustrations on Wood. Fourth Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
DR. CARPENTER, F.R.S.
A MANUAL OF PHYSIOLOGY. With numerous Illustrations on Steel and Wood. Second Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
MR. FERGUSSON, F.R.S.E.
A SYSTEM OF PRACTICAL SURGERY. With numerous Illustrations on Wood. Third Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
MR. FOWNES, PH.D., F.R.S.
A MANUAL OF CHEMISTRY. With numerous Illustrations on Wood. Fifth Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
MR. WHARTON JONES, F.R.S.
A MANUAL OF OPHTHALMIC MEDICINE & SURGERY. With Coloured Engravings on Steel, and Illustrations on Wood. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
Dr. HANDFIELD JONES, F.R.S., & Dr. EDWARD H. SIEVEKING.
A MANUAL OF PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY. Illustrated with numerous Engravings on Wood. Foolscap 8vo., cloth, 12s. 6d.
DR. ROYLE, F.R.S.
A MANUAL OF MATERIA-MEDICA. With numerous Illustrations on Wood. Second Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth. 12s. 6d.
DR. ALFRED TAYLOR, F.R.S.
A MANUAL OF MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE. Fifth Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
ON POISONS. Fcap. 8vo. cloth. 12s. 6d.
MR. ERASMUS WILSON, F.R.S.
THE ANATOMIST’S VADE-MECUM; A System of Human Anatomy. With numerous Illustrations on Wood. Sixth Edition. Fcap. 8vo. cloth, 12s. 6d.
Printed by W. Blanchard & Sons, 62, Millbank Street, Westminster.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
- Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in spelling.
- Silently corrected palpable typographical errors; retained non-standard spellings and dialect.
- Reindexed footnotes using numbers and collected together at the end of the last chapter.
- Click on either map to view a larger version.