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Titles
- A biography of Dr. Zalamon James McMaster: late surgeon in the United States Army1
- A brief plea for an ambulance system for the army of the United States: as drawn from the extra sufferings of the late Lieut. Bowditch and a wounded comrade1
- A collection of the papers of the Sanitary Commission1
- A contribution to the history of the hip-joint operations performed during the late civil war: being the statistics of twenty cases of amputations and thirteen of resections at this articulation in the Southern service1
- 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 journal of hospital life in the Confederate army of Tennessee: from the battle of Shiloh to the end of the war : with sketches of life and character, and brief notices of current events during that period1
- A letter on the sanitary condition of the troops in the neighborhood of Boston, addressed to his excellency the governor of Massachusetts1
- A letter to Mrs. [blank], and other loyal women: touching the matter of contributions for the army, and other matters connected with the war1
- A letter to the women of the northwest, assembled at the fair at Chicago, for the benefit of the U.S. Sanitary Commission1
- A manual for the medical officers of the United States Army1
- A manual of military surgery: for the use of surgeons in the Confederate army : with an appendix of the rules and regulations of the medical department of the Confederate army1
- A meeting of the Associate Members of the U.S. Sanitary Commission1
- A proclamation5
- A proclamation ... that martial law shall be no longer in force in Kentucky1
- A proclamation respecting soldiers absent without leave1
- 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
- A record of certain resolutions of the Sanitary Commission, passed in the second, third, and fourth sessions1
- A report to the Secretary of War of the operations of the Sanitary Commission: and upon the sanitary condition of the volunteer army, its medical staff, hospitals, and hospital supplies1
- Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States1