- Old family letters (Series B)1
- On the relations of meteorology to yellow fever1
- Outbreak of yellow fever at Biloxi, Harrison County, Miss., and its relation to interstate notification1
- Physician's report on closing the Roper Hospital after the yellow fever epidemic of 1854, made to the trustees of the institution1
- Preliminary report on the yellow-fever epidemic of 1882, in the state of Texas1
- Proceedings of a court martial for the trial of Surgeon B.M. Byrne, held at Fort Moultrie, S.C., on March 24th, 18591
- Quarantine: the prevailing sickness at Biloxi leads the Board of Health to declare quarantine against Harrison County, Mississippi : a careful examination of the facts1
- Rapport fait à la Société médicale sur la fiévre jaune qui a regné d'une manière épidemique pendant l'été de 18171
- Reconnaissance for yellow fever in the Nuba Mountains, southern Sudan, 19541
- Reply of the president of the Board of Health to the "Memorial to the Legislature": published in the Ǹew Orleans medical and surgical journal, of March, 18581
- Report of a special committee of the House of Assembly of the State of New-York on the present quarantine laws, 18461
- Report of the Board of Health of the State of Louisiana, on the sanitary condition of the island of Jamaica1
- Report of the Committee of the City Council of Charleston upon the epidemic yellow fever of 18581
- Report of the Committee on Health and Drainage on the origin and diffusion of yellow fever in Charleston in the autumn of 1856: to the City Council of Charleston1
- Report of the Joint Committee of Councils, relative to the malignant or pestilential disease of the summer and autumn of 1820, in the city of Philadelphia1
- Report of the committee of the Physico-Medical Society of New-Orleans on the epidemic of 18201
- Report of the yellow fever epidemic of 1873, Shreveport, La1
- Report on yellow fever in Ohio as it appeared during the summer of 18781
- Santiago as a yellow fever center1
- Sketches from the history of yellow fever: showing its origin, together with facts and circumstances disproving its domestic origin, and demonstrating its transmissibility1