This plate, together with some others yet unpublished, are from the accurate pencil of Mr. now Dr. Harrington, of this city.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
FOOTNOTES:
[11] This was first at Bush Hill, and subsequently at the Sugar House, near the Alms House.
[12] The largest proportion of these deaths was in the six months from the 1st of November, 1823, to 1st of May, 1824, being in that period about four hundred.
[13] Kept by Reuben Haines, at Germantown, seven miles from the city. The thermometrical mean is that from daily observations made by this gentleman at sunrise and at 2 P. M.
[14] Of these 165 were by yellow fever.
[15] The deaths from inflammation of the different viscera, were as reported in this year, 290, and from infantile flux and cholera morbus, 177.