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John Ordronaux (doctor)

John Ordronaux (August 3, 1830 – January 20, 1908) was an American Civil War army surgeon, a professor of medical jurisprudence, a pioneering mental health commissioner and a generous patron of university endowments.[1] Between 1859 and 1901 Ordronaux published at least fifteen books and articles about subjects as diverse as heroes of the American Revolution of 1776, military medicine, medical jurisprudence, mental health, United States constitutional law and historical treatises. He left an estate worth $2,757,000 much of which he gave in endowments to several US universities and other institutions.[2]

John Ordronaux
Born(1830-08-03)August 3, 1830
New York City, United States
DiedJanuary 20, 1908(1908-01-20) (aged 77)
Roslyn, New York, United States
CitizenshipAmerican
Alma materDartmouth College
Harvard Law School
National Medical School
Occupation(s)U.S. Army surgeon, Professor of medical jurisprudence, mental health Commissioner
Employer(s)Columbia Law School
Dartmouth College
The University of Vermont
Boston University
U.S. Army
New York State
Known forExpertise in medical jurisprudence, mental healthcare, United States constitutional law. Civil War surgery, donating $1 million to charity
Signature

Early life edit

Johh Ordronaux was born in New York City on August 3, 1830.[3] He was the only son of Captain John Ordronaux (a notable privateer of the War of 1812), and his wife Jean Marie Elizabeth Ordronaux (née Charretton). This is supported by the younger Ordronaux's will[4] which mentions a bequest to his sister Florine, and to his nieces Clara and May Molan, matching genealogical information prepared by an Ordronaux family member.[5]

He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1850, from Harvard Law School in 1852, and from the National Medical School in 1859.[1] In 1859 he published his first book, a Eulogy on the life and character of Rev. Zachariah Greene, who, before taking Holy Orders, had fought under Washington in the revolution of 1776 at the age of seventeen.[6] In 1860 Ordronaux became a Professor of medical jurisprudence at Columbia Law School, a post that he held until 1887.[7] Since 1861 he had also been a lecturer at Dartmouth College, The University of Vermont and Boston University.[1]

American Civil War edit

During the American Civil War Ordronaux served as an army surgeon stationed in New York.[1] He also acted as a military medical advisor and between 1861 and 1863 he published two textbooks on the health of armies,[8][9] and an instruction manual of medical criteria for examining recruits.[10] In the introduction to the latter,[9] which was written for the United States Sanitary Commission, he said,

The preservation of health in armies, is everywhere a subject of recognized importance. So much, in fact, depends upon it, that precautionary measures in this behalf can never be exaggerated. All that can be done, should be done to protect troops against preventable disease. It seems to have been formerly believed, that the presence of a surgeon in each regiment was all sufficient for this purpose ; and that officers and men could go their way free from any responsibility or apprehension on that score. But experience has proved that the preservation of health, in either one man, or many, is not purely objective with surgeons. Too much, in this particular, is expected from them, and too little is done by officers to cooperate with them. Armies, like patients, must act in concert with their medical advisers, and make the matter of health subjective as well as objective. Officers and men need an insight into the general principles of hygiene, in order to be able to assist, themselves, in furthering prophylactic measures. To supply them with the requisite amount of information, the accompanying popular manual has therefore been prepared.

In 1863 he wrote a historical treatise in French (with Reinaud) on the commercial and political relations between the Roman Empire and the countries of Oriental Asia.[11] In 1864 he wrote a second report for the United States Sanitary Commission. This concerned pensions for the war wounded and was subtitled, "On a system for the economical relief of disabled soldiers, and on certain proposed amendments to our present pension laws".[12]

After the war edit

After the war he returned to Columbia Law School and began writing again. Between 1867 and 1871 he produced a book on preventative medicine[13] and two textbooks on medical jurisprudence.[14][15] He also translated into English verse the medieval Latin text of Regimen sanitatis Salernitanum, the medical encyclopedia of the Scuola Medica Salernitana.[16] This school in Salerno, Italy was the pre-eminent medical school in Europe in the 11th century. This was not the first English translation but an attempt to make a medically accurate one. He appears to have done this as a tribute to former members of his profession and in an introduction to his work he said,

Regimen Sanitatis Salerni was a work of transcendent merit. Though written in the early twilight of the Middle Ages and in inferior Latin, it at once took its place alongside of such classic productions as the Aphorisms of Hippocrates. No secular work, indeed, ever met with more popular favor, nor infused its canons so radically into the dogmas of any science. It was for ages the medical Bible of all Western Europe, and held undisputed sway over the teachings of its schools, next to the writings of Hippocrates and Galen.[16]

Work on mental health edit

Ordronaux developed an interest in mental health and between 1872 and 1882 he was a member of the New York State Commission in Lunacy writing two books on the subject.[17][18] The second of these books mentions the opening of a ground breaking mental hospital and in his preface to the book he says,

The recent establishment of a department of Lunacy supervision by the State of New York, has turned public attention to it as a source for consultation, in the application of our Statute and Common Law to the legal relations of the insane......Insanity is a subject which touches our civil rights at so many different points, that it may be said to have a place in every problem involving human responsibility. It begins with man in the cradle, and follows him to the grave. It is often part of his physical heritage, and may become a qualifying element in all his civil acts. To collect and embody in one treatise the principles of law by which courts govern their adjudications in questions of mental incapacity, and to expound through commentaries both the philosophy of these decisions and the rules of procedure under which they are rendered, is the object aimed at in this manual of Lunacy practice.[18]

Ordronaux's activity as a Commissioner was frequently mentioned in the press. In 1875, he was called in to adjudicate whether a man, who was under sentence of death for murder, was insane.[19] The same newspaper reported again on January 7, 1876, how Ordronaux had found that Kings County Lunatic Asylum was being mismanaged by the charity commissioners (17).[20] He also investigated complaints from two inmates in Buffalo asylum of abusive behaviour by their carers. In his report Ordronaux upheld the complaints and recommended the discharge of the two staff involved.[21] By 1882 his forward thinking and outspokenness had made him some enemies and in 1882 his salary of $4000 as Commissioner in Lunacy was temporarily opposed in debate in the finance committee of the New York State Senate.[22]

U.S. Constitution edit

Ordronaux's work on State law in New York led him to consider its relationship with Federal law, and in 1891[23] he published what may be his most important book, on the relationship between the powers of Congress and State legislatures.[24] About this book of more than 600 pages, Ordonaux said in the preface,

The accompanying work is an attempt to present in a concrete form the entire system of Federal and State legislation, as practised under a written Constitution in the United States. Its object is to expound those administrative powers which, in our dual form of representative government, are sovereign within their several spheres of action.....A written Constitution is a political grammar to whose rules administrative laws must conform, in order to give them judicial validity.....The government of forty four independent States, dwelling in harmonious relations under a supervisory Federal sovereignty, would seem, therefore, to justify the treatment of Legislation as a department of jurisprudence meriting more textual consideration than it has yet received.....the present treatise has been prepared to meet the wants of those who, desiring to practise or interpret the canons of representative government in the United States, may seek to master the secrets of its architecture through a study of the labors of its founders, and to trace its genesis and development to a providential origin in the Spartan Commonwealths of our colonial period.

Later life edit

In 1898 Ordronaux wrote a biography of a Leonice Sampson Moulton,[25] a presumed relative of his foster father, possibly his foster mother.[1] She was born in 1811 and descended from the original Mayflower settlers to America. As Miss Sampson, she was sent on a secret mission to the US embassy in Buenos Aires to enquire into the sovereignty dispute between Great Britain and Argentina over the Falkland Islands. She is interesting according to Ordronaux for, among other things, keeping a very detailed diary which was far more comprehensive than the logs of the ships upon which she travelled.

On June 27, 1901, Ordronaux addressed the graduate students of The University of Vermont.[26] Reading like a tribute to his own life's work he says,

A strange feeling possesses me as I rise to address you......I am here to perform, with much surprise to myself, the same duty which devolved upon me, on a similar occasion, thirty six years ago.......I stand in the presence of two distinct periods with all their differing and startling results. In this long interval, too long to be measured by the standard of months, and falling more properly in the category of cycles, the drama of human society has moved with accelerated pace. A generation has acted its part of good and evil, then passed to its final account. Science, the industrial art, Education, Commerce, Navigation, have all spread their wings as never before. Our country has added nine states to the framework of our Federal Union, and buttressed its Constitution with armor plated Amendments whose necessity had never been contemplated. Our very name, the United States, has changed its former significance and been adjudicated by our highest Appellate Tribunal to be no longer a plural substantive, but a noun in the singular number describing a nation of political equals, and not a league or partnership of States.

Ordronaux died of "apoplexy" at his home, Glen Head, in Roslyn, New York on January 20, 1908.[1] His estate was initially valued at nearly $1,000,000.[4] A large part of his bequests were to hospitals, universities, churches and other public institutions. These included $30,000 to Dartmouth College and $10,000 each to Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, The University of Vermont and the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island.[4] However, the New York Times reported on 8 August 1908 that Ordronaux's total estate amounted to $2,757,000, the bulk of which was left to his three surviving sisters.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Dr. John Ordronaux" (PDF). The New York Times. January 21, 1908. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Ordronaux Left $2,757,000.; Transfer Tax Appraiser..." (PDF). The New York Times. August 8, 1908. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  3. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Vol. XII. James T. White & Company. 1904. p. 331. Retrieved August 17, 2020 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ a b c "Many Bequests to Charity.; Will of Dr. Ordronaux D..." (PDF). The New York Times. March 29, 1908. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  5. ^ Pedigrees provided by Captain Charles Reader, Corps of Engineers, Dept. of Military Science & Tactics, The Johns Hopkins University for the Bureau of Navigation, US Navy Department on February 8, 1940 and December 9, 1941. Capt. Reader was the great grandson-in-law of Dr Ordronaux's father. Ref. Nav-2-LM DD617/S6-2(1)
  6. ^ Ordronaux, J. Eulogy on the life and character of Rev. Zachariah Greene. Baker & Godwin, 1859.
  7. ^ . www.law.columbia.edu. Archived from the original on June 24, 2010. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  8. ^ Ordronaux, J. Hints on the preservation of health in armies. Appleton, 1861.
  9. ^ a b Ordronaux, J. Hints on health in armies. D. Van Nostrand, 1863.
  10. ^ Ordronaux, J. Manual of Instructions for Military Surgeons on the Examination of Recruits. D Van Nostrand, 1863.
  11. ^ Ordronaux, J. (with Reinaud, J.T.). Relations Politique et Commerciales de l'Empire Romain avec l'Asie Orientale. Imprimerie imperiale, 1863.
  12. ^ Ordronaux, J. Report to the U.S. Sanitary Commission. Sanford, Harroun & Co., 1864.
  13. ^ Ordronaux, J. Prophylaxis, an anniversary oration. Baillière brothers; London, 1867.
  14. ^ Ordronaux, J. The jurisprudence of medicine in its relation to the law of contracts, torts, and evidence. T. & J.W. Johnson, 1869.
  15. ^ Ordronaux, J. In re William Winter. s.n., 1870.
  16. ^ a b Ordronaux, J. Translation into English verse of Regimen Sanitatis Salerni. Scuola Medica Salernitana. Lippincott, 1871.
  17. ^ Ordronaux, J. The proper legal status of the insane & feeble-minded. McDivitt, Campbell & Co., 1875
  18. ^ a b Ordronaux, J. Commentaries on the lunacy laws of New York. J. D. Parsons, Jr., 1878.
  19. ^ "Was Staudermann Insane?; Dr. Ordronaux Ready To Tell..." (PDF). The New York Times. December 14, 1875. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  20. ^ "The Kings County Asylum; A Mismanaged Institution..." (PDF). The New York Times. January 7, 1876. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  21. ^ "Buffalo Asylum Abuses.; Commissioner Ordronaux" (PDF). The New York Times. March 3, 1881. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  22. ^ "The Senate Deliberations" (PDF). The New York Times. March 31, 1882. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  23. ^ "The Fundamental Law.; Constitutional Legislation..." (PDF). The New York Times. July 26, 1891. Retrieved February 20, 2009.
  24. ^ Ordronaux, J. Constitutional legislation in the United States. T. & J.W. Johnson, 1891.
  25. ^ Ordronaux, J. Memoir of Leonice Marston Sampson Moulton. C.A. Hack & Son, printers, 1898.
  26. ^ Ordronaux, J. Address delivered to the medical graduates of the University of Vermont. Free Press Association, 1901

External links edit

  • Works by or about John Ordronaux at Internet Archive
  • Eulogy on the life and character of Rev. Zachariah Greene. Open Library online document
  • Hints on health in armies. Open Library online document
  • Manual of instructions for military surgeons on the examination of recruits. Internet Archive online document
  • Relations politiques et commerciales de l'Empire romain avec l'Asie. Internet Archive online document
  • Report to the U.S. Sanitary Commission - On a system for the economical relief of disabled soldiers. Open Library online document
  • Prophylaxis, an anniversary oration. Open Library online document
  • The Jurisprudence of Medicine in Its Relation to the Law of Contracts, Torts. Internet Archive online document
  • Code of Health of the School of Salernum: Translated Into English Verse. Internet Archive online document
  • Constitutional legislation in the United States. Open Library online document
  • Memoir of Leonice Marston Sampson Moulton. Open Library online document
  • Address delivered to the medical graduates of the University of Vermont at their commencement. Internet Archive online document

john, ordronaux, doctor, this, article, contains, many, overly, lengthy, quotations, please, help, summarize, quotations, consider, transferring, direct, quotations, wikiquote, excerpts, wikisource, june, 2019, john, ordronaux, august, 1830, january, 1908, ame. This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations Please help summarize the quotations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource June 2019 John Ordronaux August 3 1830 January 20 1908 was an American Civil War army surgeon a professor of medical jurisprudence a pioneering mental health commissioner and a generous patron of university endowments 1 Between 1859 and 1901 Ordronaux published at least fifteen books and articles about subjects as diverse as heroes of the American Revolution of 1776 military medicine medical jurisprudence mental health United States constitutional law and historical treatises He left an estate worth 2 757 000 much of which he gave in endowments to several US universities and other institutions 2 John OrdronauxBorn 1830 08 03 August 3 1830New York City United StatesDiedJanuary 20 1908 1908 01 20 aged 77 Roslyn New York United StatesCitizenshipAmericanAlma materDartmouth CollegeHarvard Law SchoolNational Medical SchoolOccupation s U S Army surgeon Professor of medical jurisprudence mental health CommissionerEmployer s Columbia Law SchoolDartmouth CollegeThe University of VermontBoston UniversityU S ArmyNew York StateKnown forExpertise in medical jurisprudence mental healthcare United States constitutional law Civil War surgery donating 1 million to charitySignature Contents 1 Early life 2 American Civil War 3 After the war 4 Work on mental health 5 U S Constitution 6 Later life 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editJohh Ordronaux was born in New York City on August 3 1830 3 He was the only son of Captain John Ordronaux a notable privateer of the War of 1812 and his wife Jean Marie Elizabeth Ordronaux nee Charretton This is supported by the younger Ordronaux s will 4 which mentions a bequest to his sister Florine and to his nieces Clara and May Molan matching genealogical information prepared by an Ordronaux family member 5 He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1850 from Harvard Law School in 1852 and from the National Medical School in 1859 1 In 1859 he published his first book a Eulogy on the life and character of Rev Zachariah Greene who before taking Holy Orders had fought under Washington in the revolution of 1776 at the age of seventeen 6 In 1860 Ordronaux became a Professor of medical jurisprudence at Columbia Law School a post that he held until 1887 7 Since 1861 he had also been a lecturer at Dartmouth College The University of Vermont and Boston University 1 American Civil War editDuring the American Civil War Ordronaux served as an army surgeon stationed in New York 1 He also acted as a military medical advisor and between 1861 and 1863 he published two textbooks on the health of armies 8 9 and an instruction manual of medical criteria for examining recruits 10 In the introduction to the latter 9 which was written for the United States Sanitary Commission he said The preservation of health in armies is everywhere a subject of recognized importance So much in fact depends upon it that precautionary measures in this behalf can never be exaggerated All that can be done should be done to protect troops against preventable disease It seems to have been formerly believed that the presence of a surgeon in each regiment was all sufficient for this purpose and that officers and men could go their way free from any responsibility or apprehension on that score But experience has proved that the preservation of health in either one man or many is not purely objective with surgeons Too much in this particular is expected from them and too little is done by officers to cooperate with them Armies like patients must act in concert with their medical advisers and make the matter of health subjective as well as objective Officers and men need an insight into the general principles of hygiene in order to be able to assist themselves in furthering prophylactic measures To supply them with the requisite amount of information the accompanying popular manual has therefore been prepared In 1863 he wrote a historical treatise in French with Reinaud on the commercial and political relations between the Roman Empire and the countries of Oriental Asia 11 In 1864 he wrote a second report for the United States Sanitary Commission This concerned pensions for the war wounded and was subtitled On a system for the economical relief of disabled soldiers and on certain proposed amendments to our present pension laws 12 After the war editAfter the war he returned to Columbia Law School and began writing again Between 1867 and 1871 he produced a book on preventative medicine 13 and two textbooks on medical jurisprudence 14 15 He also translated into English verse the medieval Latin text of Regimen sanitatis Salernitanum the medical encyclopedia of the Scuola Medica Salernitana 16 This school in Salerno Italy was the pre eminent medical school in Europe in the 11th century This was not the first English translation but an attempt to make a medically accurate one He appears to have done this as a tribute to former members of his profession and in an introduction to his work he said Regimen Sanitatis Salerni was a work of transcendent merit Though written in the early twilight of the Middle Ages and in inferior Latin it at once took its place alongside of such classic productions as the Aphorisms of Hippocrates No secular work indeed ever met with more popular favor nor infused its canons so radically into the dogmas of any science It was for ages the medical Bible of all Western Europe and held undisputed sway over the teachings of its schools next to the writings of Hippocrates and Galen 16 Work on mental health editOrdronaux developed an interest in mental health and between 1872 and 1882 he was a member of the New York State Commission in Lunacy writing two books on the subject 17 18 The second of these books mentions the opening of a ground breaking mental hospital and in his preface to the book he says The recent establishment of a department of Lunacy supervision by the State of New York has turned public attention to it as a source for consultation in the application of our Statute and Common Law to the legal relations of the insane Insanity is a subject which touches our civil rights at so many different points that it may be said to have a place in every problem involving human responsibility It begins with man in the cradle and follows him to the grave It is often part of his physical heritage and may become a qualifying element in all his civil acts To collect and embody in one treatise the principles of law by which courts govern their adjudications in questions of mental incapacity and to expound through commentaries both the philosophy of these decisions and the rules of procedure under which they are rendered is the object aimed at in this manual of Lunacy practice 18 Ordronaux s activity as a Commissioner was frequently mentioned in the press In 1875 he was called in to adjudicate whether a man who was under sentence of death for murder was insane 19 The same newspaper reported again on January 7 1876 how Ordronaux had found that Kings County Lunatic Asylum was being mismanaged by the charity commissioners 17 20 He also investigated complaints from two inmates in Buffalo asylum of abusive behaviour by their carers In his report Ordronaux upheld the complaints and recommended the discharge of the two staff involved 21 By 1882 his forward thinking and outspokenness had made him some enemies and in 1882 his salary of 4000 as Commissioner in Lunacy was temporarily opposed in debate in the finance committee of the New York State Senate 22 U S Constitution editOrdronaux s work on State law in New York led him to consider its relationship with Federal law and in 1891 23 he published what may be his most important book on the relationship between the powers of Congress and State legislatures 24 About this book of more than 600 pages Ordonaux said in the preface The accompanying work is an attempt to present in a concrete form the entire system of Federal and State legislation as practised under a written Constitution in the United States Its object is to expound those administrative powers which in our dual form of representative government are sovereign within their several spheres of action A written Constitution is a political grammar to whose rules administrative laws must conform in order to give them judicial validity The government of forty four independent States dwelling in harmonious relations under a supervisory Federal sovereignty would seem therefore to justify the treatment of Legislation as a department of jurisprudence meriting more textual consideration than it has yet received the present treatise has been prepared to meet the wants of those who desiring to practise or interpret the canons of representative government in the United States may seek to master the secrets of its architecture through a study of the labors of its founders and to trace its genesis and development to a providential origin in the Spartan Commonwealths of our colonial period Later life editIn 1898 Ordronaux wrote a biography of a Leonice Sampson Moulton 25 a presumed relative of his foster father possibly his foster mother 1 She was born in 1811 and descended from the original Mayflower settlers to America As Miss Sampson she was sent on a secret mission to the US embassy in Buenos Aires to enquire into the sovereignty dispute between Great Britain and Argentina over the Falkland Islands She is interesting according to Ordronaux for among other things keeping a very detailed diary which was far more comprehensive than the logs of the ships upon which she travelled On June 27 1901 Ordronaux addressed the graduate students of The University of Vermont 26 Reading like a tribute to his own life s work he says A strange feeling possesses me as I rise to address you I am here to perform with much surprise to myself the same duty which devolved upon me on a similar occasion thirty six years ago I stand in the presence of two distinct periods with all their differing and startling results In this long interval too long to be measured by the standard of months and falling more properly in the category of cycles the drama of human society has moved with accelerated pace A generation has acted its part of good and evil then passed to its final account Science the industrial art Education Commerce Navigation have all spread their wings as never before Our country has added nine states to the framework of our Federal Union and buttressed its Constitution with armor plated Amendments whose necessity had never been contemplated Our very name the United States has changed its former significance and been adjudicated by our highest Appellate Tribunal to be no longer a plural substantive but a noun in the singular number describing a nation of political equals and not a league or partnership of States Ordronaux died of apoplexy at his home Glen Head in Roslyn New York on January 20 1908 1 His estate was initially valued at nearly 1 000 000 4 A large part of his bequests were to hospitals universities churches and other public institutions These included 30 000 to Dartmouth College and 10 000 each to Trinity College Hartford Connecticut The University of Vermont and the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island 4 However the New York Times reported on 8 August 1908 that Ordronaux s total estate amounted to 2 757 000 the bulk of which was left to his three surviving sisters 2 References edit a b c d e f Dr John Ordronaux PDF The New York Times January 21 1908 Retrieved February 20 2009 a b Ordronaux Left 2 757 000 Transfer Tax Appraiser PDF The New York Times August 8 1908 Retrieved February 20 2009 The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography Vol XII James T White amp Company 1904 p 331 Retrieved August 17 2020 via Google Books a b c Many Bequests to Charity Will of Dr Ordronaux D PDF The New York Times March 29 1908 Retrieved February 20 2009 Pedigrees provided by Captain Charles Reader Corps of Engineers Dept of Military Science amp Tactics The Johns Hopkins University for the Bureau of Navigation US Navy Department on February 8 1940 and December 9 1941 Capt Reader was the great grandson in law of Dr Ordronaux s father Ref Nav 2 LM DD617 S6 2 1 Ordronaux J Eulogy on the life and character of Rev Zachariah Greene Baker amp Godwin 1859 Columbia Law School Expanding Curriculum Part 1 www law columbia edu Archived from the original on June 24 2010 Retrieved February 20 2009 Ordronaux J Hints on the preservation of health in armies Appleton 1861 a b Ordronaux J Hints on health in armies D Van Nostrand 1863 Ordronaux J Manual of Instructions for Military Surgeons on the Examination of Recruits D Van Nostrand 1863 Ordronaux J with Reinaud J T Relations Politique et Commerciales de l Empire Romain avec l Asie Orientale Imprimerie imperiale 1863 Ordronaux J Report to the U S Sanitary Commission Sanford Harroun amp Co 1864 Ordronaux J Prophylaxis an anniversary oration Bailliere brothers London 1867 Ordronaux J The jurisprudence of medicine in its relation to the law of contracts torts and evidence T amp J W Johnson 1869 Ordronaux J In re William Winter s n 1870 a b Ordronaux J Translation into English verse of Regimen Sanitatis Salerni Scuola Medica Salernitana Lippincott 1871 Ordronaux J The proper legal status of the insane amp feeble minded McDivitt Campbell amp Co 1875 a b Ordronaux J Commentaries on the lunacy laws of New York J D Parsons Jr 1878 Was Staudermann Insane Dr Ordronaux Ready To Tell PDF The New York Times December 14 1875 Retrieved February 20 2009 The Kings County Asylum A Mismanaged Institution PDF The New York Times January 7 1876 Retrieved February 20 2009 Buffalo Asylum Abuses Commissioner Ordronaux PDF The New York Times March 3 1881 Retrieved February 20 2009 The Senate Deliberations PDF The New York Times March 31 1882 Retrieved February 20 2009 The Fundamental Law Constitutional Legislation PDF The New York Times July 26 1891 Retrieved February 20 2009 Ordronaux J Constitutional legislation in the United States T amp J W Johnson 1891 Ordronaux J Memoir of Leonice Marston Sampson Moulton C A Hack amp Son printers 1898 Ordronaux J Address delivered to the medical graduates of the University of Vermont Free Press Association 1901External links editWorks by or about John Ordronaux at Internet Archive Eulogy on the life and character of Rev Zachariah Greene Open Library online document Hints on health in armies Open Library online document Manual of instructions for military surgeons on the examination of recruits Internet Archive online document Relations politiques et commerciales de l Empire romain avec l Asie Internet Archive online document Report to the U S Sanitary Commission On a system for the economical relief of disabled soldiers Open Library online document Prophylaxis an anniversary oration Open Library online document The Jurisprudence of Medicine in Its Relation to the Law of Contracts Torts Internet Archive online document Code of Health of the School of Salernum Translated Into English Verse Internet Archive online document Constitutional legislation in the United States Open Library online document Memoir of Leonice Marston Sampson Moulton Open Library online document Address delivered to the medical graduates of the University of Vermont at their commencement Internet Archive online document Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Ordronaux doctor amp oldid 1134875882, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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