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[APPENDIX C.1 ESSAY .lead Wore the Medical Society of the State of North Carolina ; at the Annual Meeting in WUmisjtonj May 25th, 1810 ; BY . Ar. President S : S . SATCHVWELL, A . 112 ., M. D . OF NEWHOVER CONY, N. C. During each of its annual ' meetingsi for the last three' years, this Society has honored me with a request to report upon the Topography and Prevailing Diseases of Need Hanover County . The laborious duties incident to aii ar-duous country practice, conjoined with 'those constant in-terruptions and orifices, which since the late war, more than ever, attend the life of the true Physician and Surgeon of this war-stricken Southern land, have prevented my res-ponse to this generous call. And even now, the continuance of these demands upon me enforce the conviction that I can only :hope tV perform the task assigned me'in a manner. Meomplete and unsatisfactory to myself:. To remain longer anent, however, with the invitation still extended, would &i'gue, what I : cannot . Acknowledge-either insensibility to duly on ~~y part, or an indifference to the high claims of the medical profession upon the members of this Association to contribute, each his mite, to that medical fabric, broad; strong and enduring, which the Society has been building up'
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Full Text | [APPENDIX C.1 ESSAY .lead Wore the Medical Society of the State of North Carolina ; at the Annual Meeting in WUmisjtonj May 25th, 1810 ; BY . Ar. President S : S . SATCHVWELL, A . 112 ., M. D . OF NEWHOVER CONY, N. C. During each of its annual ' meetingsi for the last three' years, this Society has honored me with a request to report upon the Topography and Prevailing Diseases of Need Hanover County . The laborious duties incident to aii ar-duous country practice, conjoined with 'those constant in-terruptions and orifices, which since the late war, more than ever, attend the life of the true Physician and Surgeon of this war-stricken Southern land, have prevented my res-ponse to this generous call. And even now, the continuance of these demands upon me enforce the conviction that I can only :hope tV perform the task assigned me'in a manner. Meomplete and unsatisfactory to myself:. To remain longer anent, however, with the invitation still extended, would &i'gue, what I : cannot . Acknowledge-either insensibility to duly on ~~y part, or an indifference to the high claims of the medical profession upon the members of this Association to contribute, each his mite, to that medical fabric, broad; strong and enduring, which the Society has been building up' |