
Samuel L. Mitchill
1764 – 1831
65 works on record
Works

A discourse pronounced by request of the Society for Instructing the Deaf and Dumb, at the city hall in the city of New York, on the 24th day of March, 1818
1818

A concise memorandum of certain articles contained in the museum of S.L. Mitchill ... Professor in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at New-York

Address pronounced before the New-York Horticultural Society ... on the annual celebration, August 29, 1826

Some of the memorable events and occurrences in the life of Samuel L. Mitchill, of New-York, from the year 1786 to 1826

Letter from Dr. Samuel L. Mitchill of New York to Samuel M. Burnside

A discourse on the character and scientific attainments of De Witt Clinton

A discourse on the life and character of Samuel Bard, M.D. & LL. D

The picture of New-York, or, The traveller's guide through the commercial metropolis of the United States

A concise description of Schooley's Mountain, in New-Jersey

A discourse on the character and services of Thomas Jefferson

Catalogue of the organic remains, which, with other geological and some mineral articles, were presented to the New-York lyceum of natural history, in August, 1826
A discourse on the state and prospects of American literature
A discourse on the character and scientific attainment of DeWitt Clinton, late governor of the state of New York
Catalogue of the organic remains, which, with other geological and some mineral articles, were presented to the New-York Lyceum of Natural History, in August 1826, by their associate, Samuel L. Mitchill, honorary president of the Parisian branch of its Linnæan Society at New-York; lecturer on botany and vegetable physiology to the Horticultural Society; member of the American Geological Society at New-Haven; of the Academy of Natural Sciences at Philadelphia; of the Western Museum Society at Cincinnati; of the Linnæan Society of New-England; honorary fellow of the Lyceums at Hudson, Delaware, Catskill, and Pittsfield; of the Agricultural Society in the Bahama Islands; of the Literary and Philosophical Society at Montreal; and of the Philo-Phusian Society in Brown University; correspondent of the Society for Promoting Natural and Physical Sciences at Buenos Ayres, &c. & c &c. &c. &c. &c
Address to the officers composing the medical staff
A lecture on some parts of the natural history of New Jersey
A discourse delivered before the New York historical society
Remarks on the gaseous oxyd of azote or of nitrogene
Catalogue of the organic remains
A discourse on the character and scientific attainments of De Witt Clinton, late Governor of the State of New-York, pronounced at the Lyceum of Natural History, of which he was an honorary member, on the 14th July, 1828
The present state of learning in the College of New-York
An inaugural dissertation on the chemical and medical history of septon, azote, or nitrogene; and its combination with the matter of heat and the principle of acidity
Address, &c
A collection of papers on the subject of bilious fevers, prevalent in the United States for a few years past
Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, to Samuel L. Mitchell
The fishes of New York
Letter from Dr. Daniel L. Green, of Bethlehem, to Dr. Samuel L. Mitchell, of New York, with the answer
Devotional somnium, or, A collection of prayers and exhortations uttered by Miss Rachel Baker
A chemical examination of the mineral water of Schooley's Mountain Springs, together with a physical geography of the fist range of mountains extending across New Jersey, from the Hudson to the Delaware
Letter from Dr. Daniel L. Green, of Bethlehem, to Dr. Samuel L. Mitchell [sic] of New York
The case of the manufacturers of soap & candles, in the city of New-York, stated and examined
Observations on the disease called the plague, on the dysentery, the ophthalmy of Egypt, and on the means of prevention
Generic names for the country and people of the United States of America
Report of the committee, appointed by the Medical Society, of the State of New-York
An historical summary of the several attacks that have been made upon the city of New-York since its first settlement
The life, exploits, and precepts of Tammany, the famous Indian chief
Address to Fredes, or people of the United States ..
Mr. Mitchill's motion
Mr. Mitchill submitted the following motion for consideration
Report, in part, of Samuel L. Mitchill-- on the fishes of New-York
The present state of medical learning in the city of New-York
An oration, pronounced before the Society of Black Friars
Amendment proposed by Mr. Mitchill, to the Constitution of the United States, relative to the prohibition of a duty on exports
A chemical examination of the mineral water of Schooley's Mountain springs
Disputatio physiologica, inauguralis, circa novi genituram animalis
Hints towards promoting the health and cleanliness of the city of New York
Nomenclature of the new chemistry
Observations anatomical, physiological, and pathological, on the absorbent tubes of animal bodies
Mr. Mitchell's motion, in the form of joint resolutions of the two houses
An address to the citizens of New-York
An oration pronounced before the Society of Black Friars at their anniversary festival, in the city of New-York, on Monday the 11th of November, 1793
Outline of the doctrines in natural history, chemistry, and economics
Explanation of the synopsis of chemical nomenclature and arrangement
Amendment proposed by Mr. Mitchill, to the Constitution of the U. States, relative to the prohibition of a duty on exports
Application of the doctrine of septic fluids to explain some of the diseases of human teeth and bones
Address to the Fredes
A discourse on the character and services of Thomas Jefferson, more especially as a promoter of natural and physical science. Pronounced, by request, before the New York Lyceum of Natural History, on the 11th October, 1826
Views of the process in nature by which, under particular circumstances, vegetables grow on the bodies of living animals
The life, exploits, and precepts of Tammany
Mr. Mitchill submitted the following motions ..
Address pronounced before the New-York Horticultural Society, in the literary and philosophical hall of the institution, on the annual celebration, August 29, 1826
A discourse on the character and services of Thomas Jefferson, more especially as a promoter of natural and physical science
A chymical examination of the mineral water of Schooley's Mountain
Remarks on the gaseous oxyd of azote or of nitrogene, and on the effects it produces when generated in the stomach, inhaled into the lungs, and applied to the skin
A discourse on the life and character of Thomas Addis Emmet