- Regulations concerning hospitals2
- The army ration: how to diminish its weight and bulk, secure economy in its administration, avoid waste, and increase the comfort, efficiency, and mobility of troops2
- The nervous and vascular connection between the mother and foetus in utero2
- A brief description of James A. Foster's patent union artificial limbs: manufactured at Philadelphia, Pa., Cincinnati, Ohio, Detroit, Michigan, and Rochester, N.Y1
- A collection of recipes for the use of special diet kitchens in military hospitals1
- A digest of the military and naval laws of the Confederate States: from the commencement of the Provisional Congress to the end of the First Congress under the permanent Constitution1
- A handbook of uterine therapeutics1
- A manual for the medical officers of the United States Army1
- A manual of medical diagnosis: being an analysis of the signs and symptoms of disease1
- A manual of military surgery: for the use of surgeons in the Confederate States army : with explanatory plates of all useful operations1
- A new and comprehensive system of materia medica and therapeutics, arranged upon a physiologico-pathological basis: for the use of practitioners and students of medicine1
- A new and comprehensive system of materia medica and therapeutics, arranged upon a physiologico-pathological basis: for the use of practitioners and students of medicine (Volume 1)1
- A new and comprehensive system of materia medica and therapeutics, arranged upon a physiologico-pathological basis: for the use of practitioners and students of medicine (Volume 2)1
- A new method for treating fractures of the femur in children1
- A new mode of treating disease by the application of heat and cold over the ganglionic centres of the sympathetic nervous system1
- A practical treatise on diseases of the skin1
- A practical treatise on inflammation of the uterus, its cervix and appendages: and on its connection with uterine diseases1
- A practical treatise on pulmonary tuberculosis: embracing its history, pathology, and treatment1
- A proclamation to suspend writ of habeus corpus, and establishing martial law in Kentucky1
- A proclamation: whereas it has become necessary to define the cases in which insurgent enemies are entitled to the benefits of the Proclamation of the President of the United States, which was made on the eighth day of December, 1863, and the manner in which they shall proceed to avail themselves of those benefits1