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Yellow fever -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia in subject [X]
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BOOK

Title:  
Medical inquiries and observations: containing an account of the bilious remitting and intermitting yellow fever, as it appeared in Philadelphia in the year 1794. Together with an inquiry into the proximate cause of fever; and a defence of blood-letting as a remedy for certain diseases
Creator:
Rush, Benjamin, 1746-1813
Publication:
Printed by Thomas Dobson, Philadelphia, 1796.
Notes:  
Library has vol. 4 only.
Call #:  
610.8 R89
Extent:
v.4 (xi, 258 p.) ; octavo.



BOOK

Title:  
An address in Christian love, to the inhabitants of Philadelphia; on the awful dispensation of the yellow fever, in 1798
Creator:
Brown, Thaddeus.
Publication:
Printed for the author, by R. Aitken, no. 22, Market-street, Philadelphia, 1798.
Notes:  
Half-title: Philadelphia reformed; or else destroyed. Crowther. Signatures: A-Fp6s.
Call #:  
204 B81
Extent:
71 p. ; duodecimo.



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1776-1809
Abstract:  

Letters written by Julia Rush, wife of Benjamin Rush, mainly to her husband, with one to Samuel Stockton and one to Mary Rush. Eight letters were written during the 1793 yellow fever epidemic. The letters are not included in Lyman Butterfield's edition of Benjamin Rush's letters, vol. 30 of APS Memoirs (1951).
Call #:  
Mss.B.R894
Extent:
0.25 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1765-1798
Abstract:  

Jacob Hiltzheimer, farmer and assemblyman, emigrated from Germany to Philadelphia in 1748 and lead a moderately active political and social life. He was a successful farmer and raised select livestock in the city of Philadelphia. He also boarded horses including those of John Penn and George Washington. He served in the Pennsylvania Assembly for 11 consecutive years beginning in 1786. He was an active contributor in civil affairs and took a remarkable enthusiastic interest in events, in persons, and in every day life all of which he wrote down in his diary. As a result of his Revolutionary War and political acquaintances his contacts were numerous. Hiltzheimer's record of social affairs are for the most part routine daily events such as buying and trading horses, attending barbecues and funerals, and drinking punch. However it is his every day accounts that also records significant events such as the Revolutionary War, transactions of the Pennsylvania Assembly, and Philadelphia's yellow fever epidemics, as well as the dealings of significant people including George Washington, Thomas Mifflin, and John Hancock.
Call #:  
Mss.B.H56d
Extent:
28 volume(s)