Parry was admitted licentiate of the
Royal College of Physicians on 22 December 1806, and elected
Fellow of the Royal Society in 1812. He practised for some years at Bath, where he was physician to the General Hospital from 1818 to 1822. He retired early from practice, and settled at
Brighton, where he died at his residence, 5 Belgrave Place, on 21 January 1860. His remains were interred at
Weston, Bath.[2]
De Græcarum atque Romanarum Religionum ad Mores formandos Vi et Efficacia Commentatio, Göttingen, 1799.
On Fever and its Treatment in General, translated from the German of
Gottfried Christian Reich, 1801.
Commentatio inauguralis de synocho tropico, vulgo febre flava dicta, Edinburgh, 1804.
The Question of the Necessity of the existing Corn Laws, considered in their Relation to the Agricultural Labourer, the Tenantry, the Landholder, and the Country, Bath, 1816.
Additional Experiments on the Arteries of warm-blooded Animals: with a brief examination of certain arguments which have been advanced against the doctrines maintained by the author of "An Experimental Enquiry", London, 1819; defence of his father Caleb Hillier Parry.
Introductory Essays to Collections from the unpublished Medical Writings of the late Caleb Hillier Parry, M.D., London, 1825.
Winchcombe: a poem, in
Thomas Dudley Fosbroke's Picturesque and Topographical Account of Cheltenham and its Vicinity, Cheltenham, 1826.
The Parliaments and Councils of England, chronologically arranged, from the reign of William I to the Revolution in 1688, London, 1839.
A Memoir of the Rev. Joshua Parry: with some original essays and correspondence (posthumous, edited by
Sir John Eardley-Wilmot, 2nd Baronet), London, 1872.[3]
Notes
^Johanna Oehler: »Abroad at Göttingen« Britische Studenten als Akteure des Kultur- Wissenstransfers 1735–1806, Wallstein, Göttingen 2016, p. 198-285 (German)