1357308 A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION. Th. Buckler, H.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.
A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.

A HISTORY OF EPIDEMIC CHOLERA, AS IT APPEARED AT THE BALTIMORE CITY AND COUNTY ALMS-HOUSE, IN THE SUMMER OF 1849. WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE MEDICAL TOPOGRAPHY AND DISEASES OF THIS REGION.

Baltimore: James Lucas, 1851. Octavo, 45 pages, [5] plates. In Good condition. Pamphlet rebound in modern burgundy cloth and black leather with marbled endpapers. Binding tight. Text block has liquid stain, acid-free tape repair to pamphlet paper cover. Five folding plates present and intact with some tears to folds. Inscribed on pamphlet cover in ink "Blanchard Randall from Wm. H. Buckler Mch '22" and "to V. G. Elliott (??) 1925". MF consignment.

1357308

Special Collections

Price: $1,000

NOTES

Dr Thomas Hepburn Buckler (1812–1901) practiced as a physician in his native Baltimore until 1866, when he moved to Paris and gained a license to practice there which he renewed until 1890.

His son William Hepburn Buckler, FBA (1867–1952) was born in France, and became a classical scholar, archaeologist, diplomat and lawyer. He practised as a lawyer in Baltimore before serving in a number of diplomatic posts, which included service in London during the First World War and membership of the US delegation to the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. While a lawyer, Buckler developed an interest in archaeology and classical scholarship. He was part of the US archaeological expedition (1910–14) to Sardis in modern-day Turkey and returned there in the 1920s to catalogue and decipher ancient inscriptions uncovered at the site – a project he remained involved with throughout the 1930s. He became an expert in the Lydian language and authored two monographs and three volumes of Monumenta Asiæ Minoris Antiqua. His scholarship was recognised with three honorary doctorates, a Festschrift (co-edited by his colleague W. M. Calder) and fellowship of the British Academy.

Blanchard Randall was born in Annapolis in 1856. A grain broker and banker, he was a leader in Baltimore's business world in the early part of the twentieth century. He served as President of The Baltimore Museum of Art from 1914 to 1937 and played a large role in the Museum's early success and the funding and building of the 1929 John Russell Pope building. He was also a trustee of The Johns Hopkins University, president of the National Board of Trade for several years, president of the Baltimore Chamber of Commerce in 1907, and was active in the Episcopal Church. He died in Baltimore in 1942.