RobinsonC.B.Major-GeneralC. W., “Wellington's Campaigns,” Part III, p. 459, London, 1908.
2.
HutchinsonMajor-General H. D., “The Story of Waterloo,” 1910
3.
Robinson, p. 475.
4.
Letter to Lord Stewart, May 8, 1815.
5.
Robinson, p. 473.
6.
Robinson, pp. 484–486.
7.
Robinson, pp. 688–691.
8.
HallidayAndrewSir M.D., “A Memoir of the Campaign of 1815.”
9.
Introduction to “Roll of Commissioned Officers in the Medical Service of the British Army,” by Colonel W. Johnston, C.B., A.M.S. (retired), edited by HowellH. A. L.Lt.-Col., R.A.M.C. (Aberdeen, 1917), and “The Fifth Report of Military Inquiry 1808.”
10.
Paper by McGrigor in Med. Chir. Journ. of Edinburgh, 163.
11.
DupinM., “A View of the Military Forces of Great Britain,” 1822.
12.
GuthrieG. J., “On Gunshot Wounds,” 1815.
13.
DaltonCharles, “Waterloo Roll Call,” 2nd Ed., and Johnston's “Roll.”
14.
Idem, also “General Orders of Wellington,” April to June, 1815, and War Office Records of Personal Services of Medical Officers.
15.
LongmoreC.B. Suirgeon-General Sir T., “Manual of Ambulance Transport,” 2nd Ed., edited by MorrisW. A.Surgeon-Captain, A.M.S., 1893.
16.
HennenJohnD.I.H., “Observations. … in Military Surgery,” 1818.
17.
The account of the battles of Quatre Bras and Waterloo is chiefly from Hutchinson's “Story of Waterloo.”
18.
“The Battle of Waterloo, described by Eye-witnesses,” Borth, London, 1852.
19.
20.
21.
22.
Halliday, and Sergeant-Major Cotton's “A Voice from Waterloo,” 3rd Ed., 1849.
23.
Oman, Professor, in English Historical Review, 1904.
24.
“Eighty Years Ago, Recollections of an Old Army Doctor,” by the late Dr. Gibney of Cheltenham, London, 1896.
25.
“The History of Lord Seaton's Regiment at the Battle of Waterloo,” by Rev. LeekeWilliam, M.A., who carried the Regimental Colour at Waterloo.
26.
SimmondsGeorgeMajor, “A British Rifleman” (Black), 1899.
27.
TomkinsonLt.-Col., “The Diary of a Cavalry Officer, 1809–1815,” London, 1895.
28.
“The Battle of Waterloo,” by Eye-witnesses, 1852.
29.
HayCaptainWilliamC.B., “Reminiscences, 1808–1815, under Wellington,” London, 1901.
30.
Guthrie, “On Gunshot Wounds.” Other authorities are, “Dispatches of the Duke of Wellington,” by Lt.-Col. Gurwood, (Ed. 1852). “Supplementary Wellington Dispatches,” 1865, by the Duke of Wellington. “History of the War in France and Belgium in 1815,” by Capt. Siborne, 1844. “Waterloo Letters,” by Major-General H. T. Siborne, 1891. Lists of Medical Officers present at Waterloo can be found in Johnston's “Roll,” Dalton's “Waterloo Roll Call,” and in the Circumstantial detail in Gleig's “Story of the Battle of Waterloo,” J. Murray, 1861.