973.06273
Ain35a
1918^1920
suppl.
n
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2012
http://archive.org/details/annualreportofa191820amer
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
American Historical Association
FOR
THE YEAR 1918
SUPPLEMENT
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918
COMPILED BY GRACE GARDNER GRIFFIN
WASHINGTON
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
1921
1427475
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918.
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF BOOKS AND ARTICLES ON UNITED STATES AND
CANADIAN HISTORY PUBLISHED DURING THE YEAR 1918, WITH
SOME MEMORANDA ON OTHER PORTIONS OF AMERICA.
COMPILED BY
GRACE GARDNER GRIFFIN.
m
PREFACE,
The annual bibliography which follows is the thirteenth number
of a continuous series opening with 1906. A volume entitled Wjit-
ings oil American History, 1902, prepared by Professor Ernest C.
Eichardson, librarian of Princeton University, and Mr. Anson Ely
Morse, was published at Princeton in 1904. A volume upon a plan
more like the present. Writings on American History, 1903, prepared
by Professor Andrew C. McLaughlin, Mr. William A. Slade, and
Mr. Ernest D. Lewis, under the auspices of the Carnegie Institution
of Washington, was published by that institution at Washington in
1905. After an interval followed the series. Writings on American
History, 1906, 1907, and 1908, prepared by Miss Grace Gardner
Griffin, and originally published by the Macmillan Company (New
York, 1908, 1909, 1910).
Independent publication ceased for a time with the volume for
1908. Beginning with the volume for 1909, though the preparation
of the material continued to be provided for by subscription, the
printing and publication of the annual bibliography was assumed
by the American Historical Association. In its Annual Reports ioT
1909, 1910, 1911, bibliographies of the material published in those
years were included. The Yale University Press, with much public
spirit, took up at this point the publication of the series, and issued
as independent volumes the bibliographies for 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915,
1916, and 1917. Publication by that concern having now ended, the
plan of incorporating this annual survey in the Annual Reports is
now resumed.
To those who desire to have complete sets of the volumes hitherto
published, it may be useful to know that the volume for 1902 can
still be obtained from the library of Princeton University, that for
1903 from the Carnegie Institution of Washington, while those for
1906, 1907, 1908 (independent volumes), and bound '^ separates" of
those for 1909, 1910, and 1911, can be obtained from the secretary
of the American Historical Association. The volumes for the years
1912 to 1917, inclusive, are to obtained from the Yale University
Press.
The ensuing pages have been prepared upon the same system as
in the preceding volumes. The intention of the compiler has been
to include all books and articles, however brief, which contain any-
thing of value to the history of the United States and of British
North America. With respect to the regions lying south of the con-
tinental United States, however, and to the Pacific islands, the
intention has been to include all writings on the history of these
regions published in the United States or Europe; but the product
(not relating to the United States) of South America and other
southward regions has been left to their own bibliographers. New
editions of books, if they contain no new material, have not been
VI PREFACE.
noticed. Wlien no other date of publication is given, the date is
1918. The annotations have been confined to explanations of titles
which seem to need explanation; or analyses of contents (in many
cases taken from the catalogue cards of the Library of Congress),
when analyses seemed requisite; or mention of critical appraisals in
a few journals whose criticisms have value.
A topical arrangement has been followed. As a rule, the books
and articles in any division are arranged alphabetically by the au-
thors' names. In a few cases another arrangement appeared to be
more helpful; in the case of biography and genealogy the subject
of the book or article determines the alphabetical arrangement.
In the compilation of the material, performed at the Library of
Congress, Miss Griffin has had most obliging assistance from Mr.
Appleton P. C. Griffin, Chief Assistant Librarian, and the Librarian,
Dr. Herbert Putnam has kindly afforded her every facility for her
work.
Meanwhile the preparation of the manuscript, as distinguished
from the printing and publication, has from 1906 to the present
time been sustained by a group of subscribers consisting of various
historical societies and individuals, the list for the present volume
being the following: the American Historical Association, the Chi-
cago Historical Society, the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, the
Massachusetts Historical Society, the Michigan Historical Commis-
sion, the Minnesota Historical Society, the Morrisson-Reeves Library,
the New York Historical Society, the New York State Historical
Association, the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Mr. C. B.
Alexander, Mr. T. E. Brittingham, Professor Henry W. Farnam,
Mr. E. F. Greene, and Dr. J. G. Rosengarten. Several other friends
of the undertaking have kindly contributed lesser sums towards the
expenses of the year.
J. Fkanklin Jameson.
CONTENTS.
Generalities: Pag^-
Bibliography 1
Indexes (cumulative) to serial publications 3
Archives and manuscript collections 3
Historiography, methodology, study, and teaching 4
America IN General:
Aboriginal America —
Antiquities 8
Indians. 10
Mexico, Central America, West Indies, and South America 13
Discovery and exploration 15
Later discovery and exploration — Arctic explorations and others 17
United States:
Description and travel 19
Comprehensive 20
Textbooks, outlines, etc 21
National characteristics and ideals 22
Miscellaneous 23
Colonial history to 1763 —
General 23
French and Indian War 24
Regional colonial [arranged geographically] 24
1763-1783—
Sources and documents 30
General 31
Special .^ 32
Revolutionary soldiers: Names 35
1783-1789 .' 35
1789-1829—
Miscellaneous 36
Sources and documents .* 37
War of 1812 37
1829-1861—
Miscellaneous 38
Mexican War 39
Slavery 39
1861-1865—
General 40
Regimental histories . . . . , 45
1865-1918—
General 45
Spanish-American War 45
Regional (local) history —
General 46
Alabama 47
Alaska 47
Arkansas 48
California , 48
Colorado 49
Connecticut 49
District of Columbia 50
Florida 50
Georgia 50
Idaho 51
Illinois 51
VII
Vin CONTENTS.
United States — Continued.
Regional (local) history — Continued. Page.
Indiana 53
Iowa 54
Kansas .■ 54
Kentucky 55
Louisiana 55
Maine 56
Maryland 57
Massachusetts 57
Michigan 59
^Minnesota 60
Mississippi - 61
Missouri 61
Nebraska. 61
Nevada 61
New Hampshire 62
New Jersey , 62
New Mexico 63
New York 63
North Carolina 65
North Dakota 65
Ohio 65
Oregon 65
Pennsylvania 66
Rhode Island 67
South Carolina 68
South Dakota 68
Tennessee 69
Texas 69
Utah 70
Vermont 70
Virginia 70
Washington 71
West Virginia 71
Wisconsin 71
Wyoming 72
Biography —
Comprehensive 73
Individual [arranged alphabetically by subject] 74
Genealogy —
General 83
Collected genealogy 83
Individual families 84
Regional genealogy, vital records, etc 90
Military and naval history 95
Politics, government, and law —
Diplomatic history and foreign relations ." 97
Monroe doctrine 100
Constitutional law and history 101
Politics 102
Law 102
National government and administration 103
State and local government and administration 104
Social and economic history —
General 105
Agi'iculture ; forestry; land 105
Commerce and industry 105
Communication; transportation; pu'bHc works 106
Finance ; money 107
La])or 107
Libraries; societies; institutions 108
Life and manners lOg
Philanthropy ....'....'..'. 109
Population and race elements \[\ 109
Printing and publishing !.'.*.'.".".'!!!!!! 110
CONTENTS. IX
United States — Continued.
Religious history — . Page.
General Ill
Particular denominations arranged alphabetically by denominations . Ill
Biography 115
Educational history —
General 117
Regional. 117
Particular institutions 118
Biography 120
Fine arts-
General ;. - - . 1 21
Biography 121
Literature —
General 122
Regional 123
Biographical and critical 124
Music 125
Science 126
British America:
General 127
Discovery to 1763 130
1763-1867 ' - . . 132
War of 1812 133
1867-1917 134
Regional history —
New Brunswick 134
Newfoundland 134
Nova Scotia 134
Province of Quebec 135
Province of Ontario 136
Western Provinces and Territories 137
Latin America:
General 140
Mexico 143
Central America 144
Honduras 144
Nicaragua .' 144
Panama 144
Panama Canal 145
West Indies 145
British West Indies 145
Cuba 145
French West Indies 145
Haiti 146
Porto Rico 146
Virgin Islands 146
South America —
General 147
Argentine Republic 147
Bolivia 148
Brazil 148
Chile 149
Colombia 149
Dutch Guiana 150
Ecuador 150
Peru 150
Venezuela 150
Pacific Islands:
Hawaiian Islands 151
Philippine Islands 151
Index 153
PUBLISHERS REPRESENTED, WITH ABBREVIA-
TIONS USED.
A. M. E. book concern, African Methodist book concern, 631 Pine at., Phila.
Abingdon press. Abingdon press (Methodist book concern), 150 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Alcan. Librairie Felix Alcan, 108 boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris.
Allen. Allen, Lane and Scott, 1211 Clover st., Phila.
Allen and Unwin. George Allen and Unwin, ltd., 40 Museum st., W. C, London.
Allyn. Allyn and Bacon, 50 Beacon st., Boston; 1006 S. Michigan ave., Chicago.
Altemus. Henry Altemus co., 1326 Vine st., Phila.
Am. bk. CO. American book co., 100 Washington square, N, Y.; 330 E. 22d st.,
Chicago.
Am. hist. soc. American historical society, 267 Broadway, N. Y.
Am. Unitarian assoc. American Unitarian association (Beacon press), 25 Beacon st.,
Boston.
Appleton. D. Appleton and co., 29-35 W. 32d st., N. Y.; 25 Bedford st., W. C,
London.
Aste press, 67 Spring st., N. Y.
Atlantic print, co. Atlantic printing co., 201 South st., Boston.
Augsburg pub. house. Augsburg publishing house, 425 S. 4th st,, Minneapolis, Minn,
Badger. R. G. Badger (The Gorham press), 195-200 Boylston st., Boston.
Bailly-Bailliere. Casa editorial Bailly-Bailliere, Niiiiez de Balboa, 21, Madrid.
Beacon press. See American Unitarian association.
Beauchesne. Gabriel Beauchesne et cie, 117 rue de Rennes, Paris. '
Belisari. Belisari et cie., editeurs, 16 boulevard Montmartre, Paris.
Beltran. Francisco Beltran, libreria espaiiola y extranjera, Principe, 16, Madrid.
Bemporad. R. Bemporad e figlio, 7 via del Proconsolo, Florence.
Berger-Levrault. Impr. de Berget-Levrault, 5 rue des Beaux-Arts, Paris.
Bloud. Bloud et Gay, editeurs, 3 rue Garanciere, Paris; calle del Bruch, 35
Barcelona,
Boston bk. co. Boston book co., 83-91 Francis st., Boston.
Brentano's. Brentano's, Fifth ave. and 27th st., N. Y.
Briggs. William Briggs, Queen and John sts., Toronto.
Calleja. Casa editorial Calleja, Valencia, 28, Madrid.
Caro Raggio. Rafael Caro Raggio, editor, Ventura Rodriguez, 18^ Madrid.
Carswell. Carswell co,, ltd,, 19 Duncan st., Toronto.
Century. Century co., 353 Fourth ave., N. Y.
Clark CO. Arthur H, Clark co,, 209 Caxton building, Cleveland, 0.
Clarke. S. J. Clarke publishing co,, 608 S, Dearborn st,, Chicago,
Colin, Librairie Armand Colin, 103 boulevard Saint-Michel, Paris.
Columbia univ. press. Columbia university plress, Lemcke and Buechner, agents,
30-32 W, 27th st., N. Y.
Conkey. W. B. Conkey co., 140 S. Dearborn st,, Chucago.
Cornhill, Cornhill co., 45 Cornhill, Boston.
Dent, J. M. Dent and sons, Toronto, Can.
Dodd. Dodd, Mead and co., Fourth ave. and 30th st., N. Y.
Donnelley. R. R. Donnelley and sons co., Plymouth court, cor. Polk st., Chicago.
Doran. George H. Doran co., 244 Madison ave., N. Y.
Doubleday. Doubleday, Page and co.. Garden City, N. Y.
Duffield. Duffield and co., 211 E. 19th st., N. Y.
Dutton. E. P. Dutton and co., 681 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Editorial- America. Concesiondria exclusiva para la venta, Sociedad espaiiola de
libreria, Ferraz, 25, Madrid.
Ellis. Press of George H. Ellis co., 272 Congress st., Boston.
Fe. Fernando Fe, Puerta del Sol, 15, Madrid.
Figu^re. Eugene Figuiere, 7 rue Corneille, Paris.
Franklin pub. co. Franklin publishing co., 240 N. 16th st., Phila.
XII PUBLISHERS HEPEESENTED.
Gallacli. Casa editorial "Gallach," Consejo de Ciento, 416, Barcelona.
Ginn. Ginn and co., 15 Ashburton place, Boston; 2301-2311 Prairie ave., Chicago.
Giro. Fidel Gir6, impresor, Valencia, 233, Barcelona.
Goodspeed. C. E. Goodspeed and co., 5a Park st., Boston.
Gorham press. See Badger.
Gov. print, off. Government printing office, Washington.
Hachette. Hachette et cie., 79 boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris.
Harper. Harper and brothers, Franklin square, N. Y.; 45 Albemarle st., W., London.
Harv. univ. press. Harvard universitv press, 29 Randall Hall, Cambridge, Mass.
Heath. D. C. Heath and co., 50 Beacon st., Boston; 231 W. 39th st., N. Y.
Holt. Henry Holt and co., 19 W. 44th st., N. Y.
Houghton Mifflin. Houghton Mifflin co., 4 Park st., Boston; 16 E. 40th st., N. Y.
International print, co. International printing co., 236 Chestnut st., Phila.
Jacobs. G. W. Jacobs and co., 1628 Chestnut st., Phila.
Jarrolds. Jarrolds, publishers, ltd., 10 and 11 Warwick Lane, E. C, London.
Jorro. Daniel Jorro, editor, Paz, 23, Madrid.
Knickerbocker press, 2 W. 45th st., N. Y.
Laflamme. Typ. J. A. K. Laflamme, 34 rue Garneau, Quebec.
Lane. John Lane, The "Bodley Head," Vigo st., W., London.
Lane co. John Lane co., 116-120 W. 32d st., N. Y.
Laurel bk. co. Laurel book co., 623 S. Wabash ave., Chicago; 603 Chestnut st., Phila.
Law print, co. The Law printing co., 6 Church st., N. Y.
Lewis pub. co. Lewis publishing co., 542 S. Dearborn st., Chicago.
Lippincott. J. B. Lippincott co.. East Washington square, Phila.; 16 John st.,
Adelphi, W. C, London.
Little. Little, Brown and co., 34 Beacon st., Boston.
Longmans. Longmans, Green and co., 443-449 Fourth ave., N. Y.
Lopez del Horno. Impr. de G. Lopez del Horno, San Bernardo, 92, Madrid.
Lowdermilk. H. V/. Lowdermilk and co., 1424 F st., Washington.
McClelland, Goodchild and Stewart, 215-219 Victoria st., Toronto, Can.
Macmillan. The Macmillan co., 66 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Manzi. Impr. -edit. Manzi, Joyant et cie., 15 rue de la Ville-l'Eveque, Paris.
Marlier pub. oo. Marlier publishing co., 21 Harrison ave., Boston.
Marvin. T. R. Marvin and son, printers, 152 Purchase st., Boston.
Mass. biog. soc. Massachusetts biographical society, 142 Berkeley st., Boston.
Mateu. Artes graficas Mateu, Paseo del Prado, 34, Madrid.
Methodist bk. concern. Methodist book concern, 150 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Milford. Humphrey Milford, Oxford university press. Amen Corner, E. C, London.
Moffat. Moffat, Yard and co., 30 Union square, N. Y.
Morang. Morang and co., 145 Wellington st., Toronto, Can.
Moring. Alexander Moring, ltd. (De La More press), 32 George st., Hanover square,
W., London.
Neale. Neale publishing co., 440 Fourth ave., N. Y.
Nijhoff. Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague.
Nouvelle revue natibnale. Editions de la Nouvelle revue nationale, Whis impasse
de la Visitation, Paris.
Ouseley. J. M. Ouseley and son, 9 John st., Adelphi, W. C, London.
Oxford univ. press. See Milford, Humphrey.
Oxford univ. press, Am. branch. Oxford university press, American branch,
35 W. 32d St., N. Y.
Page. The Page co.", 53 Beacon st., Boston.
Payot. Payot et cie., 106 boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris.
Penn pub. co. Penn publishing co., 925 Filbert st., Phila.
Petersfield press, 319 E. 19th st., N. Y. _
Pefia Cruz. Establecimiento tipografico de Felipe Peiia Cruz, calle de Pizarro, 16,
Madrid.
Picard. Auguste Picard, ^diteur, 82 rue Bonaparte, Paris.
Plon-Nourrit. Plon-Nourrit et cie., 8 rue Garanciere, Paris.
Presbyterian board of publication. Presbyterian board of publication (Westminster
press), 1319 Walnut st., Phila.
Pueyo. Imprenta de Juan Pueyo, Luna, 29, Madrid.
Putnam. G. P. Putnam's sons, Putnam building, 2-6 W. 45th st., N. Y.; 24 Bedford
St., Strand, W. C, London.
Rand, McNally. Rand, McNally and co., Rand, McNally building, Chicago; 40 E.
22d St., N. Y.
Ratee. Establecimiento tipografico de Jaime Rates, Costanilla de San Pedro, 6,
Madrid.
PUBLISHERS REPRESENTED. XIII
Keilly and Britton. Reilly and Britton co., now Reilly and Lee co., 1006-1012
S. Michigan ave., Chicago.
Renaissance du livre. La Renaissance du livre, 78 boulevard Saint-Michel, Paris,
Revell. Fleming H. Revell co., 158 Fifth ave., N. Y.; 17 N. Wabash ave., Chicago.
Rev. of rev. co. Review of reviews co., 30 Irving place, N. Y.
Rico. Imprenta de V. Rico, Paseo del Prado, 30, Madrid.
Sanborn. B. H. Sanborn and co., 623 S. Wabash ave., Chicago; 24 W. 29th st., N. Y.
Saul. Saul brothers, 626 Federal st., Chicago.
Scribner. Charles Scribner's sons, 597 Fifth ave., N. Y.; 608 S. Dearborn st., Chicago.
Silver. Silver, Burdett and co. , 126 Fifth ave. , N . Y. ; 218-223 Columbus ave. , Boston.
Sweet and Maxwell, ltd., 3 Chancery Lane, W. C, London.
Tasso. Imprenta de la viuda de Luis Tasso, Arco del Teatro, 21 y 23, Barcelona.
Tenin. Librairie de la Societe du recueil Sirey, Leon Tenin, directeur, 22 rue Souf-
flot, Paris.
Tequi. Pierre Tequi, 82 rue Bonaparte, Paris.
Univ. of Chicago press. University of Chicago press, 58th st. and Ellis ave., Chicago.
Univ. pub. CO. University publishing co., 2126 Prairie ave., Chicago; 1126-1128
Q St., Lincoln, Neb.
Wilson. H. W. Wilson co., 958-965 University (Lind) ave., N. Y.
Winston. The John C. Winston co., 1006-1016 Arch st., Phila.
World bk. co. World book co.. Park Hill, Yonkers-on-Hudson, N. Y.; 2126 Prairie
ave., Chicago.
Yale univ. press. Yale university press, New Haven, Conn.
LIST OF PERIODICALS, WITH ABBREVIATIONS
USED.
Acad, inscrip. comptes rendus. Academie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, comptes
rendus, Paris,
Acad. nac. ciencias Cordoba bol. Academia nacional de ciencias de Cordoba, boletin
de la, Buenos Aires.
Acad. pol. sci. proc. Academy of political science in the city of New York, pro-
ceedings.
Am. ann. deaf. American annals of the deaf, Baltimore, Md.
Am. anthrop. American anthropologist, Lancaster, Pa.
Am. anthrop. assoc. mem. American anthropological association, memoirs, Wash-
ington, D. C.
Am. antiq. soc; proc. American antiquarian society, proceedings, Worcester, Mass.
Am. bankers assoc. jour. American bankers association, journal, N. Y.
Am. bar assoc. jour. American bar association, journal, Baltimore, Md.
Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec. American Catholic historical society of Philadelphia,
records.
Am. Cath. quar. rev. American Catholic quarterly review, Phila.
Am. econ. rev. American economic review, Princeton, N. J.
Am. educ. American education, Albany, N. Y. _
Am, hist, assoc. rep. American historical association, annual report, Washington,
D. C.
Am. hist. rev. American historical review, N. Y.
Am. Indian mag. American Indian magazine, Washington, D. 0.
Am. inst. arch. jour. American institute of architects, journal, Washington, D. C.
Am. Irish hist. soc. jour. American Irish historical society, journal, N. Y.
Am. Jew. hist. soc. pub. American Jewish historical society, publications, N. Y. ,
Am. jour, archaeol, American journal of archaeology, N, Y.
Am. jour, internat. law. American journal of international law, N. Y.
Am. jour, physical anthrop. American journal of physical anthropology, Washington,
J). C.
Am. jour. sci. American journal of science. New Haven, Conn.
Am. jour, sociol. American journal of sociology, Chicago.
Am. jour, theol. American journal of theology, Chicago.
Am. law rev. American law review, St. Louis, Mo.
Am. legal news. American legal news, Detroit, Mich.
Am. lib. assoc. bul. American library association, bulletin, Chicago.
Am. mag. American magazine, N. Y.
Am. mag, art, American magazine of art, Washington, D, C.
Am, mus, jour. American museum journal, published by the American museum of
natural history, N. Y.
Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap. American museum of natural history, anthropo-
logical papers, N. Y.
Am. phil. soc. proc. American philosophical society, proceedings, Phila.
Am, pol, sci. rev. American political science review, Baltimore, Md.
Am. Scandinavian rev, American Scandinavian review, N, Y.
Am. scenic and hist, preservation soc. rep. American scenic and historic preservation
society, annual report, Albany, N. Y.
Am. schoolmaster. American schoolmaster, Ypsilanti, Mich.
Am. statistical assoc. pub, American statistical association, quarterly publications,
Boston.
.Americana. Americana, N. Y.
Ann. Am, acad. pol, sci. Annals of the American academy of political and social
science, Phila,
Ann, geog, Annales de geographie, Paris,
Ann. revolution. Annales revolutionnaires, Besangon, France.
XV
XVI LIST OF PERIODICALS.
Appalachia. Appalachia, Boston.
Arch. rec. Architectural record, N. Y.
Archaeol. bul. Archaeological bulletin, Hico, Tex.
Archiv. francisc. hist. Archivum franciscanum historicum, Florence, Italy.
Art and archaeol. Art and archaeology, Washington, D. C.
Art in America. Art in America, N. Y.
Art world. The art world, N. Y.
Les arts. Les arts, Paris.
Athenj^um. Athengeum, London.
Atlantic. Atlantic monthly, Boston.
Bellman. The Bellman, Minneapolis, Minn.
Bib. sacra. Bibliotheca sacra, Oberlin, 0. ■
Bib. world. Biblical world, Chicago.
Bibliog. soc. Am. pap. Bibliographical society of America, papers, Chicago.
Bibliotheque de I'Ecole des chartes. Bibliotheque de I'Ecole des chartes, Paris.
Blackwood's. Blackwood's magazine, Edinburgh.
Bol. centro estud. Am. Sevilla. Boletin del centro de estudios Americanistas de
Sevilla, Seville, Spain.
Bookman. Bookman, N. Y.
Bostonian soc. proc. Bostonian society, proceedings, Boston.
Branch hist. pap. The John P. Branch historical papers of Randolph-Macon college,
Ashland, Va.
Brookline hist. soc. proc. Brookline historical society, proceedings, Brookline,
Mass.
Buffalo hist. soc. pub. Buffalo historical society, publications, Buffalo, N. Y.
Bul. med. Quebec. Bulletin medical de Quebec, Societe medicale de Quebec,
Quebec.
Bul. of bibliog. Bulletin of bibliography, Boston.
Bul. recherches hist. Bulletin des rec*herches historiques, Levis, Quebec.
Burton hist. coll. mss. Manuscripts from the Burton historical collection, Detroit,
Mich.
Cal. law rev. California law review. University of California, Berkeley, Cal.
Cal. univ. chron. University of California chronicle, Berkeley, Cal.
Canad. bankers' assoc. jour. Canadian bankers' association, journal, Toronto, Can.
Canad. law times. Canadian law times, Toronto, Can.
Canad. mag. Canadian magazine, Toronto, Can.
Canada frang. Le Canada franyais, Universite Laval, Quebec.
Canada law jour. Canada law journal, Toronto, Can.
Caribbeana. Caribbeana, London.
Case and comment. Case and comment, Bochester, N. Y.
Cath. educ. rev. Catholic educational review, Washington, D. C.
Cath. hist. rev. Catholic historical review, Washington, D. C.
Cath. world. Catholic world, N. Y.
Central law jour. Central law journal, St. Louis, Mo.
Century. Century magazine, N. Y.
Chamb. jour. Chambers's journal, London and Edinburgh.
Chicago hist. soc. coll. Chicago historical society's collection, Chicago.
Chronique med. Chronique medicale, Paris.
Churchman. The Churchman, London.
Ciudad de Dios. La Ciudad de Dios, Madrid.
Col. soc. Mass. pub. Colonial society of Massachusetts, publications, Boston.
Columbia hist. soc. rec. Columbia historical society, records, Washington, D. C.
Columbia law rev. Columbia law review, N. Y.
Columbia univ. quar. Columbia university quarterly, N. Y.
Columbia univ, stud. Columbia university studies in history, economics, and public
law, N. Y.
Confed. vet. Confederate veteran, Nashville, Tenn.
Congregational hist. soc. trans. Congregational historical society, transactions,
London.
Conn. acad. arts and sci. trans. Connecticut academy of arts and sciences, transac-
tions, New Haven, Conn.
Conn. 'hist. soc. coll. Connecticut historical society, collections, Hartford, Conn.
Const, rev. Constitutional review, Washington, D. C.
(Vmstructive quar. Constructive quarterly, N. Y. and London.
C'ontemp. rev. Contemporary review, London.
(Cornell law quar. Cornell law quarterly, Ithaca, N. Y,
Cornhill mag. Cornhill magazine, London.
Corresp. Correspondant, Paris.
LIST OF PERIODICALS. XVII
D. A. R. mag. Daughters of the American revolution magazine, Washington, D. C.
D. A. R. rep. National society of the Daughters of the American revolution, annual
report, Washington, D. C.
Danvers hist. soc. coll. Danvers historical society, historical collections, Danvers,
Dial. The Dial, N. Y.
Dublin rev. Dublin review, London.
East and West Baton Rouge ly.st. soc. proc. Historical society of East and West
Baton Rouge, proceedings, Baton Rouge, La.
Eccles. rev. Ecclesiastical review, Phila.
Econ. jour. Economic journal, London.
Edinburgh rev. Edinburgh review, Edinburgh.
Educ. administration. Educational administration and supervision, Baltimore, Md.
Educ. foundations. Educational foundations, N. Y. ,
Educ. rev. Educational review, N. Y.
Education. Education, Boston.
Element, school jour. Elementary school journal, University of Chicago, Chicago.
Emp. rev. Empire review, London.
Eng. hist. rev. English historical review, London.
Espafia y Amer. Espaiia y America, Madrid.
Essex inst., hist. coll. ^ Essex institute historical collections, Salem, Mass.
Etudes. Etudes, Paris.
Everybody's. Everybody's magazine, N. Y.
Field artillery jour, Field artillerj^ journal, Washington, D. C,
Filson club pub. Filson club publications, Louisville, Ky.
Firelands pioneer. The Firelands pioneer, Norwalk, 0.
Fortn. rev. Fortnightly review, London.
Forum. Forum, N. Y.'
France- Am erique. France-Amerique, Paris.
Frankford hist. soc. pap. Historical society of Frankford, papers, Frankford, Pa.
Franklin inst. jour. Franklin institute journal, Phila.
Friends' hist. soc. bul. Friends' historical society of Philadelphia, bulletin.
Friends' hist. soc. jour. Friends' historical society, journal, London.
Ga. hist. quar. Georgia historical quarterly, Georgia historical society, Savannah.
Geneal. Genealogist, London.
Geog. jour. Geographical journal, London.
Geog. rev. Geographical review, N. Y.
Geog. tidskrift. Geografisk tidskrift, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Geografia. La geografia; Istituto geografico de Agostini, Novara, Italy.
Geographic. La geographic; bulletin de la Societe de geographic, Paris.
Ger. Am. ann. German American annals, Phila.
Grande rev. Grande revue, Paris.
CTranite mo. Granite monthly, Concord, N. H.
Greek- Am. rev. Greek- American review, Boston.
Grizzly Bear. The Grizzly Bear; a monthly magazine devoted to all California, Los
Angeles, Cal.
Harper's. Harper's monthly magazine, N\ Y.
Harv. grad. mag. Harvard graduates' magazine, Cambridge, Mass.
Harv. law rev. Harvard law review, Cambridge, Mass.
Harv. theol. rev. Harvard theological review, Cambridge, Mass.
Hispanic Am. hist. rev. Hispanic American historical review, Baltimore, Md., and
Washington, D. C.
Hist, and phil. soc. O. pub. Historical and philosophical society of Ohio, quarterly
publication, Cincinnati, O.
Hist, outlook. Historical outlook, Phila.
Hist, teach, mag. History teacher's magazine, Phila. '
History. History, London.
Holland soc. yr. bk. Holland society of New York, yearbook, N. Y.
Hug. soc. S. C. trans. Huguenot society of South Carolina, transactions, Charleston,
S. C.
la. jour. hist. Iowa journal of history and politics, Iowa City, la.
la. law bul._ Iowa law bulletin, Iowa City, la.
111. Cath. hist. rev. Illinois Catholic historical review, Chicago.
111. hist. lib. pub. Illinois state historical library, publication, Springfield, 111.
111. hist. soc. jour. Illinois state historical society, journal, Springfield, 111.
111. hist. soc. trans. Illinois state historical society, transactions, Springfield, 111.
111. law rev, Illinois law re^dew, Chicago.
136908°— 21— VOL. 3—2
XVIII LTST OF PERIODICALS.
Ind. hist. soc. pub. Indiana historical societ}^, publications, Indianapolis, Ind.
Ind. mag. hist. Indiana magazine of history, Bloomington, Ind.
Indep. Independent, N. Y.
Index to legal period, and Law lib. jour. Index to legal periodicals and Law
library journal, N. Y.
Infantry jour. Infantry journal, Washington, D. C.
Inter-America. Inter-America, N. Y.
Internat. studio. International studio, N. Y. _
Ipswich hist. soc. pub. Ipswich historical society, publications, Ipswich, Mass.
Johns Hopkins alumni mag. Johns Hopkins alumni magazine, Baltimore, Md.
Johns Hopkins hospital bul. Johns Hopkins hospital bulletin, Baltimore, Md.
Johns Hopkins univ. stud. Johns Hopkins university studies in historical and polit-
ical science, Baltimore, Md.
Jour, allied dent. socs. Journal of allied dental societies, N. Y.
Jour. Am. folk-lore. Journal of American folk-lore, N. Y.
Jour. Am. hist. Journal of American history, N. Y.
Jour, criminal law. Journal of criminal law and criminology, Chicago.
Jour. geog. Journal of geography, Madison, Wis.
Jour. hist. Journal of history, published by the Reorganized church of Jesus Christ
of Latter day saints, Lamoni, la.
Jour, negro hist. Journal of negro history, Washington, D. C.
Jour. pol. econ. Journal of political economy. Chicago.
Jour, race develop. Journal of race development, Worcester, Mass.
Jour, savants. Journal des savants, Paris.
Jour. soc. comp. legis. Journal of the Society of comparative legislation and inter-
national law, London.
Jour. U. S. artillery. Journal of the United States artillery, Fort Monroe, Va.
Kansas hist. soc. coll. Kansas state historical society, collections, Topeka, Kan.
Ky. hist. soc. reg. Kentucky state historical society, register, Frankfort, Ky.
Ky. law jour. Kentucky law journal, Lexington, Ky.
La. hist. quar. Louisiana historical quarterly. New Orleans, La.
La. hist. soc. pub. Louisiana historical society, publications, New Orleans, La.
Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap. Lancaster county historical society, papers, Lancaster,
Pa.
Larousse mensuel. Larouse mensuel illustre; revue encyclopedique, Paris.
Law lib. jour. Law library journal. See Index to legal periodicals.
Lawyer and banker. Lawyer and banker, New Orleans, La.
Lebanon co. hist. soc. pap. Lebanon county historical society, papers read before,
Lebanon, Pa.
Lectura. La lectura, Madrid.
Lib. jour. Library journal, N. Y.
London and Middlesex hist. soc. trans. London aiid Middlesex historical society,
transactions, London, Ont.
Luth. ch. rev. Lutheran church review, Phila.
Luth. quar. Lutheran quarterly, Gettysburg, Pa.
Maine law rev. Maine law review, Bangor, Me.
Maiden hist. soc. reg. Maiden historical society, register. Maiden, Mass.
Man. Man; a monthly record of anthropological science, London.
Manchester geog. soc. jour. Manchester geographical society, journal, Manchester,
Eng.
Manchester quarterly. Manchester quarterly; an illustrated journal of literature and
art, Manchester, Eng.
Marietta coll. hist. coll. Marietta college historical collections, Marietta, O.
Marine corps gazette. Marine corps gazette, N. Y.
Mass. hist. soc. coll. Massachusetts historical society, collections, Boston.
Mass. hist. soc. proc. Massachusetts historical society, proceedings, Boston.
Mass. law quar. Massachusetts law quarterly, Boston.
Mass. mag. Massachusetts magazine, Salem, Mass.
Mayfl. desc. Mayflower descendant, Boston.
Md. hist. mag. Maryland historical magazine, Baltimore, Md.
Medford hist. reg. Medford historical register^ Medford, Mass.
Mercure de France. Mercure de France, Paris.
Meth. quar. rev. Methodist quarterly review, Nashville, Tenn.
Moth. rev. Methodist review, N. Y. and Cincinnati, O.
Mich. hist. mag. Michigan history magazine, Lansing, Mich.
Mifh. hist. pub. Michigan historical publications, Lansing, Mich.
Mich, law rev. Michigan law review, Ann Arbor, Mich.
LIST OF PERIODICALS. XIX
Mid-West quar. Mid-West quarterly, N. Y.
Mil. hist. soc. pap. Military historical society of Massachusetts, papers, Boston.
Minn. hist. bul. Minnesota history bulletin. Saint Faul, Minn.
Minn, law rev. Minnesota law review, Minneapolis, Minn.
Miss. hist. soc. pub. Mississippi historical society, publications, Jackson, Miss.
Miss. Valley hist, assoc. proc. Mississippi Valley historical association, proceedings,
Cedar Rapids, la.
Miss. Valley hist. rev. Mississippi Valley historical review, Cedar Rapids, la.
Mission, rev. Missionary review of the world, N. Y.
Mo. hist. rev. Missouri historical review, Columbia, Mo,
Munsey's. Munsey's magazine, N. Y.
N. C. booklet. North Carolina booklet. Raleigh, N. C.
N. C. hist. com. pub. North Carolina historical commission, publications, Raleigh,
N. C.
N. C. lit. and hist, assoc. proc. North Carolina state literary and historical associa-
tion, proceedings, Raleigh, N. C.
N. J. hist. soc. proc. New Jersey historical society, proceedings, Newark, N. J.
N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec. New York genealogical and biographical record, N. Y.
N. Y. hist. soc. bul. New York historical society, quarterly bulletin, N. Y.
N. Y. hist. soc. coll. New York historical society, collections, N. Y.
N. Y. pub. lib. bul. New York public library bulletin, N. Y.
N. Y. state hist, assoc. proc. New York state historical association, proceedings,
Albany, N. Y.
N. Y. state mus. bul. New York state museum, Museum bulletin, Albany, N. Y.
Nantucket hist, assoc. proc. Nantucket historical association, proceedings, Nan-
tucket, Mass.
Nation. Nation, N. Y.
Nation (London). Nation, London.
Nation, acad. sci. proc. National academy of sciences, proceedings, Washington, D.C.
Nation, educ. assoc. jour. National education association, journal, Washington, D. C.
Nation, educ. assoc. proc. National education association, journal of proceedings and
addresses, Washington, D. C.
Nation, geneal. soc. quar. National genealogical society, quarterly, Washington, D.C.
Nation, geog. mag. National geographic magazine, Washington, D. C.
Nation, municipal rev. National municipal review, Phila.
Nation, rev. National review, London.
Nation, service. National service, N. Y.
Naturaliste canad. Le Naturaliste canadien, Quebec.
Navorscher. De Navorscher, Amsterdam, Holland.
Neb. hist, and rec. pioneer days. Nebraska history and record of pioneer days,
Lincoln, Neb.
Nederlandsch arch, v. kerkgeschiedenis. Nederlandsch archief voor kerkgeschie-
denis. The Hague, Holland.
New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg. New England historical and genealogical register,
Boston.
New Eng. soc. anniv. celeb. New England society in the city of New York, anniver-
sary celebration, N. Y.
New Haven colony hist. soc. pap. New Haven colony historical society, papers,
New Haven, Conn.
New Mex. hist. soc. pub. Historical society of New Mexico, publications, Santa Fe,
N. Mex.
Newport hist. soc. bul. Newport historical society, bulletin, Newport, R. I.
News notes of Cal. libraries. News notes of California libraries, Sacramento, CaL
Niagara hist. soc. pub. Niagara historical society, publications, Niagara, Ont.
19th cent. Nineteenth century and after, London and N. Y.
No. Am. rev. North American review, N. Y.
Normal instructor. Normal instructor and Primary plans, Dansville, N. Y.
Nouv. -France. Nouvelle-France, Quebec, Can.
Nouv. rev. Nouvelle revue, Paris.
Nova Scotia hist. soc. coll. Nova Scotia historical society, collections, Halifax, N. S.
Nuestro tiempo. Nuestro tiempo, Madrid.
Nuova antologia. Nuova antologia di lettere, scienze ed arti, Rome, Italy.
Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar, Ohio archaeological and historical quarterly, Colum-
^ bus, O.
Ohio educ. mo. Ohio educational monthly, Columbus, O.
Ohio hist, teach, jour. Ohio history teachers' journal, Columbus, 0.
Ohio law rep. Ohio law reporter, Cincinnati, 0.
XX LIST OF PERIODICALS.
Ont. hist. soc. pap. Ontario historical society, papers and records, Toronto, Can.
Ore. hist. soc. quar. Oregon historical society, quarterly, Portland, Ore.
Outlook. Outlook, N. Y.
Overland. Overland monthly, San Francisco, Cal.
Pa. geneal. soc. pub. Genealogical society of Pennsylvania, publications, Phila.
Pa. mag. hist. Penns^dvania magazine of history and biography, Phila.
Pa. soc" yr. bk. Pennsylvania society, yearbook, N. Y.
Palacio. " El Palacio; journal of the Museum of New Mexico and the Archaeological
society of New Mexico, Santa Fe, N. Mex.
Pan Ani. union bol. Union panamericana, boletin, Washington, D. C.
Pan Am. union bul. Pan American union, bulletin, Washington, D. C.
Pan-American mag. Pan-American magazine, N. Y.
Pedagog. sem. Pedagogical seminary, Worcester, Mass.
Phila. ge©g. soc. bul. JPhiladelphia geographical society, bulletin, Phila.
Philip]une law jour. Philippine law journal, Manila, P. I.
Pol. sci. quar. Political science quarterly, N. Y.
Popular educ. Popular educator,, Boston.
Presbyterian hist. soc. jour. Presbyterian historical society, journal, Phila.
Princeton theol. rev. Princeton theological review, Princeton, N. J.
Quar. jour. econ. Quarterly journal of economics, Cambridge, Mass.
Quar. rev. Quarterly review, London.
Queen's quar. Queen's quarterly, Kingston, Can.
R. I. hist. soc. coll. Rhode Island historical society collections. Providence, R. I.
Real acad. bol. Real academia de la historia, boletin, Madrid,
Real soc. geog. bol. Real sociedad geogrdfica, boletin, Madrid.
Reformed ch!^ rev. Reformed church review, Lancaster, Pa.
Rev. and expositor. Review and expositor; a Baptist theological quarterly, Louie
ville, Ky.
Rev. anthrop. Revue anthropologique, Paris.
Rev. archeol. Revue archeologique, Paris.
Rev. archivos. Revista de archives, bibliotecas y museos, Madrid.
Rev. canad. Revue canadienne, Montreal, Can.
Rev. cath. inst. et droit. Revue catholique des institutions et du droit, Lyon, Franco
Rev. chretienne. Revue chretienne, Paris.
Rev. derecho. Revista de derecho, historia y letras, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Rev. deux mondes. Revue des deux mondes, Paris.
Rev. dix-huitieme siecle. Revue du dix-huitieme siecle, Paris.
Rev. etudes hist. Revue des etudes historiques, Paris.
Rev. gen. droit internat. Revue generale de droit international public, Paria.
Rev. geog. col. y mere. Revista de geografia colonial y mercantil, Madrid.
Rev. hebdomadaire. Revue hebdomadaire, Paris.
Rev. hispanique. Revue hispanique, N. Y. and Paris.
Rev. hist. Revue historique, Paris.
Rev. hist, colonies fran?. Revue de I'histoire des colonies frangaises, Paria.
Rev. hist. dipl. Revue d'histoire diplomatique, Paris.
Rev. hist, relig. Revue de I'histoire des religions, Paris.
Rev, hist, revol. frang. Revue historique de la revolution fran^aise, Paria.
Rev. nueva. Revista nueva, Panama.
Rev. of, rev. Review of reviews, N, Y.
Rev. Paris. Revue de Paris, Paiis.
Rev. pol. et lit. Revue politique et litteraire (Revue bleue), Paris.
Rev. pol. et pari. Revue politique et parlementaire, Paris.
Rev. sci. pol. Revue des sciences politiques, Paris.
Rev. theol. Revue de theologie et de philosophic, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Rev. trirnestrielle canad. Revue trimestrielle canadienne, Montreal, Can.
Rev. universitaire. Revue universitaire, Paris,
Revolution franc;. Revolution frangaise, Paris.
Revue. La Revue, Paris.
Riv. geog. ital. Ri vista geogi-afica italiana e Bollettino della societa di studi geo-
grafica c coloniali in Firenze, Florence, Italy.
Royal anthrop. inst. jour. Royal anthropological institute of Great Britain and
Ireland, journal, London.
Royal artillery jour. Journal of the Royal artillery, Woolwich, Eng.
Royal astronom. soc. Canad. jour. Royal astronomical society of Canada, journal,
Toi-onto, Can.
Royal hist. hoc. trans. Royal historical society, transactions, London.
Royal HOC. Canad, trans. Royal society of Canada, transactions, Ottawa. Can.
LIST OF PEllIODICALS. XXI
Royal unit. ser. inst. jour. Royal united service institution, journal, London.
S. A. R. yr. bk. National society of the Sons of the American revolution, year book,
Washington, D, C.
S. C. hist. mag. South Carolina historical and genealogical magazine, Charleston, S. C.
Sat. rev. Saturday review, London.
School and home educ. School and home education, Bloomington, 111.
School and soc. School and society, N. Y.
School news. School news and practical educator, Taylorsville, lU,
School rev. School review, Chicago.
Science. Science, N. Y.
Scientific mo. Scientific monthly, N. Y.
Scottish geog. mag, Scottish geographical magazine, Edinburgh.
Scottish hist. rev. Scottish historical review, Glasgow.
Scribner's. Scribner's magazine, N. Y.
Sewanee rev. Sewanee review, Sewanee, Tenn.
Sierra club bul. Sierra club bulletin, San Francisco, Cal.
Smith coll. stud, in hist. Smith college studies in history, Northampton, Masa.
Smithsonian misc. coll. Smithsonian miscellaneous collections, Washington, D. C.
So. American. The South American, N. Y.
So. Atlan. quar. South Atlantic quarterly, Durham, N. C.
So. Cal. hist. soc. pub. Historical society of Southern California, annual publica-
tions, Los Angeles, Cal.
So. Dak. hist. coll. South Dakota historical collections, Pierre, So. Dak.
So. law quar. Southern law quarterly, New Orleans, La.
So. workm. Southern workman, Hampton, Va.
Soc. ecuatoriana estud. am. bol. Sociedad ecuatoriana de estudios historicos ameri-
canos, boletin, Quito, Ecuador.
Soc. geog. comm. Paris bul. Society de geographic commerciale de Paris, bulletin,
Paris.
Soc. geog. La Paz bol. Sociedad geografica de La Paz, boletin. La Paz, Bolivia.
Soc. g^og. Quebec bul. Society de giographie de Quebec, bulletin, Quebec.
Soc. geog. Toulouse bul, Societe de geographie de Toulouse, bulletin, Toulouse,
France.
Soc." Juridico Literaria " rev. Sociedad " Juridico-Literaria ", revista, Quito, Ecuador.
Soc. preservation New Eng. antiq. bul. Society for the preservation of New England
antiquities, bulletin, Boston.
Soc. sci. Chili actes. Societe scientifique du Chili, actes, Santiago, Chile.
Somerset co. hist. quar. Somerset county historical quarterly, Somerville, N. J,
Southw. hist. quar. Southwestern historical quarterly, Austin, Tex.
Southw. law rev. Southwestern law review, Los Angeles, Cal,
Sprague's jour. Maine hist. Sprague's journal of Maine history, Dover, Maine.
Spectator. Spectator, London.
St. Louis Cath. hist. rev. St. Louis Catholic historical review, St. Louis, Mo.
St. Louis law rev, St. Louis law review, St. Louis, Mo,
Teachers' coll. rec. Teachers' college record, N. Y.
Tech, rev. Technology review, Boston,
Tenn. hist. mag. Tennessee historical magazine, Nashville, Tenn.
Texas hist, teach, bul. Texas history teachers' bulletin, Austin, Tex.
Texas rev. Texas review, Austin, Tex.
Tijdschrift v. gesch. Tijdschrift voor geschiedenis^ land- en volkenkunde, Groningen,
Netherlands.
U. S. bur. Am. ethnol. rep. U. S. Bureau of American ethnology, annual report,
Washington, D. C.
U. S. Cath. hist. rec. U. S. Catholic historical society, records and studies, N. Y.
U, S. cavalry assoc. jour. United States cavalry association, journal. Fort Leaven-^
worth, Kan.
U. S. N. inst. proc. U. S. Naval institute proceedings, Annapolis, Md,
U, S. Nation, mus, proc. United States National museum, proceedings, Washington,
D. C.
Unit, empire. United empire; the Royal colonial institute journal, London.
Uait. ser. mag. United service magazine, London.
Univ. mag. University magazine, Montreal, Can.
Univ. of Cal, pub. Am, archaeol. University of California publications, American
archaeology and ethnology, Berkeley, Cal.
Univ. of Col. hist. coll. University of Colorado historical collections, Boulder, Col.
Univ. of Ga. bul. University of Georgia, bulletin, Athens, Ga.
XXII LIST OF PERIODICALS.
Univ. of No. Dak, quar. jour. Quarterly journal of the University of North Dakota,
University, No. Dak.
Univ. of Penn. alumni reg. The alumni register, University of Pennsylvania, Phila.
Univ. of Penn. law rev. University of Pennsylvania law review and American law
register, Phila.
Univ. "of Penn. mus. jour. University of Pennsylvania, The Museum journal, Phila.
Univ. of Va. alumni bul. Alumni bulletin of the University of Virginia, Charlottes-
ville, Va.
Unpopular rev. Unpopular review, N. Y.
Utah geneal. and hist. mag. Utah genealogical and historical magazine. Salt Lake
city, Utah.
Va. jour. educ. Virginia journal of education, Richmond, Va.
Va. law reg. Virginia law register, Charlottesville, Va.
Va. law rev. Virginia law review, University, Va.
Va. mag. hist. Virginia magazine of history and biography, Richmond, Va.
Va. state lib. bul. Virginia State library, bulletin, Richmond, Va.
Vineland hist. mag. Vineland historical magazine, Vineland, N. J.
Volta rev. Volta review, Washington, D. C.
Vt. hist. soc. proc. Vermont historical society, proceedings, Montpelier, Vt.
Wash. acad. sci. jour. Washington academy of sciences, journal, Washington, D. C.
Wash. hist. quar. Washington historical quarterly, Seattle, Wash.
Wash. univ. stud. Washington university studies, St. Louis, Mo.
Waterloo hist. soc. rep. Waterloo historical society, annual report. Kitchener, Ont.
West Va. law quar. West Virginia law quarterly, Morgantown, W. Va.
Western mag. Western magazine, St. Paul, Minn.
Western Pa. hist. mag. Western Pennsylvania historical magazine, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Western Reserve hist. soc. pub. Western Reserve historical society, publication,
Cleveland, O.
Wis. archeol. Wisconsin archeologist, Milwaukee, Wis.
Wis. hist. soc. coll. Wisconsin state historical society, collections, Madison, Wis.
Wis. mag. hist. Wisconsin magazine of history, Madison, Wis.
Wm. and Mary quar. William and Mary college quarterly historical magazine, Wil-
liamsburg, Va.
Women's Canad. hist. soc. Toronto trans. Women's Canadian historical society of
Toronto, transactions, Toronto, Can.
World's work. World's work, N. Y.
Wy. commem. assoc. proc. Wyoming commemorative association, proceedings,
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
Yale law jour. Yale law journal, New Haven, Conn.
Yale rev. Yale review, New Haven, Conn.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918.
GENERALITIES.
Bibliography.
Annual magazine subject-index, 1917. A subject index to a selected list of American
and English periodicals and society publications! Edited by Frederick Winthrop
Faxon. Boston, Boston bk. co. 267 p. [1
This index specializes in History, Travel, Mountaineering, Exploration, Outdoor life, Fine arts,
and Architecture. Should be used as a complementary volume to the Readers' Guide.
Boening, Rose M. Bibliography of Isaac I. Stevens. Wash. hist, quar., IX
(July) 174-196. [2
Bibliography of the writings of, and material about, Isaac I. Stevens, the first territorial governor
of Washington.
Boyd, William Kenneth, and Robert Preston Brooks. A selected bibliography and
syllabus of the history of the South, 1584-1876. Athens, Ga., The McGregor co,
133 p. (Univ. of Ga. bul., v. XVIII, no. 6) [3
Brigham, Clarence S. Bibliography of American newspapers, 1690-1820. Am.
ANTIQ. SOC. PROC, XXVIII, pt. 1, 63-133. [4
Contents.— Pt. IX: New York (M-W), excepting New York city.
The Catholic "Encyclopedia" diocesan bibliography. Oath. hist, rev., IV (July-
Oct.) 264-273, 389-392. [5
A list of the bibliographies to be found at the end of all articles in the "Catholic Encyclopedia" which
treat of the dioceses and archdioceses of the United States, prepared as a step toward a bibliography of
American Catholic history.
Contents.— I. Province of Baltimore (1808). II. Province of Oregon City (1846). III. Province of
St. Louis (1826-1847). IV. Province of New Orleans (1793-1850). V. Province of New York (1808-
1850). VI. Province of Cincinnati (1821-1850). VII. Province of San Francisco (1840-1853). VIII.
of Boston (1808-1875). IX. Province of Philadelphia (1808-1875).
Chapin, Howard Millar. Check list of maps of Rhode Island [in the Rhdde Island
historical society library] Providence, Preston and Rounds co. 48 p. (Contribu-
tions to Rhode Island bibliography, no. V) [6
Reprinted from the Collections of the Rhode Island historical society, V. XI.
Chapin, Howard Millar. List of Roger Williams' writings. Providence, Preston and
Rounds CO. 7 p. (Contributions to Rhode Island bibliography, no. IV) [7
Cooley, Laura C, Selected list of source material in the Los Angeles public library:
California — from the discovery to the end of the Spanish period. So. Cal. hist.
SOC. PUB., XI, no. 1, 91-101. [8
The Cumulative book index. Twentieth annual cumulation. Author, title and
subject catalog in one alphabet of books published in 1917. Compiled by Marion
E. iPotter, Emma L. Teich and Louise D. Teich. N. Y., H. W. Wilson co. [6],
790 p. [9
Genealogical society of Utah. Catalogue of family histories in the library of the
Genealogical society of Utah. Utah geneal. and hist, mag., IX (Apr.-Oct.)
83-96, 139-144, 184-192. [10
Griffin, Grace Gardner. Writings on American histor}^, 1916. A bibliography of
books and articles on United States and Canadian history published during the
year 1916, with some memoranda on other portions of America. New Haven,
Yale univ. press; London, Humphrey Milford, Oxford univ. press, xvi, 200 p. [11
Compiled under the direction of Dr. J. Franklin Jameson.
Harris, Henry J. Some sources for tracing joint resolutions of Congress. Am. hist.
REV., XXIII (Apr.) 602, 603. [12
Henriquez ITrena, Pedro. The first book by an American writer. Inter- Am erica,
I (Aug.) 389-392. [13
Takes issue with the statement made by Carlos M. Trelles in his "Ensayo de bibhografia cubana de
los siglos XVII y xvni,'/ attributing to Priar Alonsode Espinosa, author of the "Imagen deCandelaria,"
1541, the distinction of being the first American to have written and published a book, and claims for the
Mexican authors Friar Juan de Guevara and Friar Pedro de Agurto the honor of so doing.
2 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Historical articles in Missouri newspapers, June-July-August, 1917. Mo. hist.
REV., XII (Jan.) 111-123. [14
Ispiztia, Segundo de. Bibliografia historica sudamericana; ensayo. Bilbao [The
compiler?] 1915. 19 p. [14a
Jones, C. K. Recent acquisitions of the Library of Congress mainly treating of
Mexico in revolution. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 480-481. [16
Lammers, Sophia J. A provisional list of Nebraska authors. Lincoln, University of
Nebraska. 60 p. (Bibliographical contributions from the library of the University
of Nebraska, no. V) [16
MacCaughey, Vaughan. The one hundred most important books and files relating
to the Hawaiian Islands. Bul. op bibliog., X (Oct.) 71-73. [17
Marple, Alice. Iowa authors and their works; a contribution toward a bibliography.
Introduction by Edgar R. Harlan. Des Moines, la.. Historical department of Iowa,
viii, 359 p. [18
Revised and extended edition.
New-York historical society. Seventeenth century Americana in the library of the
N ew- York liistorical society. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., II (Apr.) 3-8. [19
New York (State) University. Division of school libraries. Annotated book list for
secondary school libraries. History section. Albany, The University of the state
of New York. 75 p. (University of the state of New York bulletin, no. 667) [20
O'Hara, John F. Readings in Latin American church history. Cath. hist, rev.,
Ill (Jan.) 488-492. [21
Bibliographical guide made by the compiler in connection with his prospective volume to be entitled
"Readings in Latin American church history."
Deals with the periods of discovery and conquest.
Readers' guide to periodical literature. Eighteenth annual cumulation. Author
and subject index to a selected list of periodicals. Edited by Elizabeth J. Sher-
wood, assisted by Estella E. Painter. N. Y., H. W. Wilson CO. [6], 582 p. [22
Readers' guide to periodical literature. Supplement. Fifth annual cumulation,
1917. Author and subject index to a selected list of periodicals not included in the
Readers' guide. Edited by Elizabeth J. Sherwood. N. Y., H. W. Wilson co.
[6], 228 p. [23-24
Silva Cruz, Carlos._ Suggestions for, and advantages of, a Pan-American biblio-
graphical association. Hispanic-Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 481-491. [25
Translation of an article taken from a pamphlet entitled " La 'Association bibliografca Pan-Americar a'
por menos de la Union Pan-Americana de Bibliotecas nacionales," pub. at Santiago de Chile, Imprenta
universitaria, 1915. The English translation is by Mr. Richard E. Latcham.
Skinner, Avery Warner. Suggested readings for history classes, 1918-1919. [Albany,
N. Y., 1918?] 19 p. [26
At head of title : The University of the state of New York, the State department of education, Exami-
• nations and inspections division.
Swem, Earl G. An analysis of Ruffin's Farmers' register, with a bibliography of
Edmund Rufhn. Va. state lib. bul., XI (July) 36-114. [27
The "Farmers' register" was a monthly magazine of 64 pages, edited and published by Edmund
Ruffin from June, 1833, to December, 1842. It was the second agricultural periodical published in
Virginia.
Swem, Earl G., ed. A contribution to the bibliography of agriculture in Virginia;
ed. by Earl G. Swem, assistant state librarian, from the manuscript of N. F. Cabell.
Richmond, D. Bottom, superintendent of public printing. 35 p. (Va. state lib.
bul., V. XI, nos. 1, 2) [28
TJ. S. Superintendent of documents. Immigration, naturalization, citizenship, Chi-
nese, Japanese, negroes, enlistment of aliens; list of publications relating to above
subjects for sale by superintendent of documents, Washington, D. C. [2d ed.]
[Washington, Gov. print, off.] 16 p. (Price list 67— 2d ed.) [29
Wisconsin. State historical society. Supplementary catalogue of newspaper files
in the WiscoasLn historical library listing the papers acquired during the years
1911-1917; prepared by Lillian J. Beecroft and Marguerite Jenison. [Madison,
The State historical society] 91 p. (Its Bulletin of information, no. 93) [30
This list is supplementary to the Annotated catalogue . . . published in 1911.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 3
Indexes (Cumulative) to Serial Publications.
American geographical society of New York. Index to the Bulletin of the American
geographical society, 1852-1915. By Arthur A. Brooks. N. Y., American geo-
graphical society, x, 242 p. [31
American historical association. General index to Papers and Annual reports of the
American historical association, 1884-1914. Comp. by David Maydole Matteson.
Washington, Gov. print, off. 793 p. (Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year 1914, v. II)
[32
Review of historical publications relating to Canada. Index, vols. XI-XX. By
Laura Mason. [Toronto] University of Toronto, Pub. by the librarian. 218 p.
(University of Toronto studies) [33
Archives and Manuscript Collections.
Blegen, Theodore C. A report on the public archives. [Madison] 115 p. front.
(The State historical society of Wisconsin. Bulletin of information no. 94) [34
Contents.— Preface. Archives and their administration; a study of European and American
practices. The public archives of the state of Wisconsin ; an examination of the situation and a proposed
solution. Appendix: Bibliographv of printed materials on the archives question.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Oct. 1919) 144-145.
Chapman, Charles Edward. A description of certain legajos in the Axchivo general
de Indias. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (May-Aug.) 209-230, 352-371. [35
The documents described relate to California and the border states of the United States and Mexico.
They are "of general utility to the historian of colonial institutions, as well as to the narrator of Spain's
activities along what is now our southwestern border and the PaciAc coast."
Chapifian, Charles Edward. Researches in Spain; containing the introduction to
the Catalogue of materials in the Archivo general de Indias for the history of the
Pacific coast and the American Southwest. Berkeley, University of California
press. 30 p. [36
Connecticut. Record commissioner. Report of the examiner of public records for
the two years ended September 30, 1918. Hartford, Pub. by the state. 23 p.
facsim. [37
Holweck, F. G. The historical archives of the archdiocese of St. Louis. St. Louis
Cath. hist, rev,, I (Oct.) 24-39. [38
Michigan. Dept. of state. Report on the archives in the Department of state, state
capitol, Lansing. Mich. hist, mag., II (July) 437-454. [39
Michigan. Executive dept. Report on the archives in the Executive department,
state capitol, Lansing. Mich. hist, mag., II (Apr.) 238-256. [40
New York. State historian. Historical account and inventory of records of the city
of Kingston. Albany, The University of the state of New York. 48 p. plates.
(New York state local history. City records. Prepared by the Division of archives
and history) [41
Includes the records of the village of Wildwyek and the to^\n of Kingston prior to 1805.
Our war documents. Mil. hist, and econ., Ill (Jan.) 1-6. [42
Outlines the situation of the ^¥ar department in regard to its documents with suggestions for the
handling of the documents of the present war.
Torres Lanzas, Pedro, and Geijiian Latorre. Archivo general de Indias. Catalogo;
cuadro general de la documentacion. Sevilla, Centro oficial de estudios ameri-
canistas. 165 p. (Biblioteca colonial americana, t. I) [43
Originally published in the Boletin del Centro de estudios americanistas de Se\'il]a.
U. S. Library of Congress. Division of manuscripts. Check list of collections of
personal papers in historical societies, university and public libraries, and other
learned institutions in the United States. Washington, Gov. print, off, 87 p, [44
J, C. Fitzpatrick, acting chief, Manuscript division.
A gui'^e to the location of the important collections of the papers of prominent Americans, civil,
religious, and military.
U. S. Library of Congress. Division of manuscripts. Handbook of manuscripts in
the Library of Congress. Washington, Gov. print, off. xvi, 750 p. [45
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIII (July) 900-901.
4 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Historiography, Methodology, Study and Teaching.
Adams, George B. The English background of American institutions. Hi8t. out-
look, IX (Nov.) 423-425. [46
Tho writer inako> the point that "there is abundant evidence to be had m any community that the
uneonsMous ba •k^round of our institutional life is English history, and that in it is to be found the
sourto not of piaM;iies and institutions merely, but of ideas and convictions", and expresses his opinion
that it is a part of the natural and direct business of the teacher to bring out this evidence.
Alvord, Clarence Walworth. Sources of early Catholic history in Illinois. III. Cath.
HIST. REV., I (July) 73-78. [46a
American historical association. The meeting of the American historical association
at Philadelphia. Am. hist, rev., XXIII (Apr.) 505-530. [47
Includes brief resumes of the papers read.
Andrews, Arthur I. Some suggestions as to the use and abuse of current events in
history classes. Hist, teach, mag., IX (Mar.) 144-146. [48
Andrews, Matthew Page. The cases of John Cabot and John Smith in American
historical narrative. D. A. R. mag., LII (Mar.) 128-134. [49
A plea for greater recognition of the services of John Cabot and John Smith, inasmuch as it is upon
"Anglo-Celtic" ideals and principles that our civilization has been founded and developed.
Aspinwall, William B., and Horace G. Brown. Some new aims in the teaching of
history. Normal instructor and primary plans, XXVII (Oct.) 38, 62. [50
Association of history teachers of the middle states and Maryland. Proceedings
of the meetings held in 1917 at Philadelphia, Poughkeepsie, and Philadelphia.
Number 15. 61 p. [51
L. R. Schuyler, secretary, College ot the city of Nevi^ York.
Partial contknts.— How far should the teaching of history and civics be used as a means of encour-
aging patriotism? by H. V. Ames, W. S. Myers, and Louise H. Haessler. Should the curriculum in
history for vocational students differ from that for academic students? If so, vv^hy? by A. S. Beatman.
Should vocational interests determine the history curriculum? by J. M. Gambrill. What can the
teacher of history do now? by D. C. Knovv^lton, H. W. Hoagland, W. B. Guthrie, and Lucy E. Trextor.
Association of history teachers of the middle states and Maryland, and American
historical association. The school course in history: some precedents and a
possible next step. Hist, teach, mag., IX (Feb.) 74-83. [62
Report of a joint session of the Association of history teachers of the middle states and Marvland
and the American historical association, Philadelphia, Dec. 29, 1917.
Barnard, J. Lynn. A program of civics teaching for war times and after. Hist,
outlook, IX (Dec.) 492-500. [63
Benjamin, Gilbert Giddings. Conventionality in history. Hist, teach, mag.,
IX (Apr.) 190-192. [64
Blegen, Theodore C. The historical records of the Scandinavians in America. Minn.
HIST, bul., II (May) 413-418. [65
Makes suggestions in regard to a plan for collecting materials for and research in the history of Scandi-
navians in this country.
Brooks, Fowler D. The upper grade history teacher's opportunity. Normal
INSTRUCTOR AND PRIMARY PLANS, XXVIII (NoV.) 47-48. [66
Buck, Solon J. Historical preparedness. Hist, teach, mag., IX (May) 249-251. [67
The writer's subject is preparedness for history, and especially for the history of our participation in
the present war.
Buell, Bertha G. Historv in the primary grades-*why and what. Am. school-
master, XI (June) 241-251. [58
Carnegie institution of Washington. Annual report of the director of the Depart-
ment of historical research. [Washington, D. C] p. 139-147. [59
J . Franklin Jameson, director.
Extracted from the Year book no. 17, for the year 1918.
Carter, Clarence E. Ohio historiography since the Civil war. Ohio hist, teach.
JOUR., no. 8 (Jan.) 274-277. [60
Chapman, Charles E. The founding of the Review. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I
(Feb.) 8-23. [61
Refers to the Hispanic American historical review
WKITIN-GS ON AMERICAIT HISTORY, 1918. 6
Chapman, Charles E. The Native sons' fellowships. Southw. hist, quar., XXI
(Apr.) 389-394. [62
Describes the fellowships in history founded by the Native sons of the Golden West, a society which
devotes its efforts and its funds to the promotion of the history of California.
Chapman, Charles E. A producing class in Hispanic-American history. Hist.
TEACH. MAG., IX (Feb.) 84-86. [63
Outhnes the plans for and progress of a bibliography of periodical articles about Hispanic America
undertaken by an undergraduate class in history at the University of California.
Cohen, I. David. Teaching patriotism in the schools. Education, XXXIX (Oct.)
65-72. [64
Cole, Arthur C. Historical activities in the Old Northwest [1917] Miss. Valley
hist, rev., V (June) 51-69. [65
Davison, Walter B. The history teacher's patriotic opportunity. Educ. rev., LV
(Feb.) in-116. [66
Dawson, Edgar. Early textbooks on government. Nation, CVII (Aug. 10) 147-148.
[67
Eagleton, Clyde. The attitude of our textbooks toward England. Educ. rev., LVI
(Dec.) 424-429. [68
A plea for a fairer treatment of England in our textbooks.
Evans, Mary Sibley. The international mind in the teaching of history. Hist,
teach, mag., IX (Mar.) 129-130. [69
Ford, Worthington Chauncey. The editorial function in United States history. Am.
HIST. REV., XXIII (Jan.) 273-286. [70
Gallen, Helen. Improvements in our recent textbooks in American history. Ohio
HIST. TEACH. JOUR., HO. 8 (Jau ) 268-271. [71
Gathany, J. Madison. Tying history to life. Outlook, CXX (Sept. 11) 58-64. [72
Giddings, Franklin H. Our mythological history; a new perspective needed to
adequately teach American history. Forum, LX (Sept.) 333-339. [73
Greene, Evarts Boutell. Right and wrong uses of history in a scheme of civic educa-
tion. School and home educ, XXVII (Apr.) 157-178. [74
Hallock, Constance M. Songs and history teaching. Hist, outlook, IX (Oct.)
388-389. [76
Hockett, Homer C. The World war and the teaching of American history. Ohio
HIST. TEACH. JOUR., HO 10 (May) 318-326. [76
Hoover, Thomas G. The teaching of history in the high schools of Ohio; a report by
a committee on this subject. Thomas G. Hoover, chairman. Ohio hist, teach.
JOUR., no. 8 (Jan.) 266-267. [77
Jameson, J. Franklin. A new American historical journal. Hispanic-Am. hist.
REV., I (Feb.) 2-7. ^ [78
Notice of the Hispanic American historical review.
Kendall, Calvin Noyes, and Florence Elizabeth Stryker. History in the elementary
school. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Houghton Mifflin co. vii, 134 p. (Riverside educa-
tional monographs, ed. by H. Suzzallo) [79
An aid in the teaching of history in the elementary school. "It offers invaluable suggestions for
making a functional choice of historic facts and develops in detail the tried and successful methods
that will make the travails and lessons of national groups long since dead, vital and useful vicarious
experiences to that growing citizen— the American youth."
Kenney, James F. Historical activities in Canada, 1917-1918. Miss. Valley hist.
REV., V (Sept.) 190-206. [80
Knowlton, Daniel C. The power of ideals in history. Hist, teach, mag., IX (Jan.)
17-19. [81
Lindley, Harlow. Possibilities in state historical celebrations. Miss. Valley hist.
REV., extra number (Oct.) 307-317. [82
Naval history: Mahan and his successors. Mil. hist, and econ., Ill (Jan.) 7-19 [83
Signed: H. H.
Nebraska history teachers' association. Report of the Committee on course of study
in history to the Nebraska history teachers' association, Omaha, November 8, 1917.
Hist, teach, mag., IX (Jan.) 24-25. [84
6 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Neumann, Henry. Teaching American ideals through literature. Washington,
Gov. print, off. 21 p. ([U. S.] Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1918. no. 32) [85
Osgood, Edith Whitten. The development of transportation in connection with
problems of western expansion. Hist, outlook, IX (Dec.) 490^92. [86
Concerned with the method of teaching this aspect of American history to juvenile classes,
Ots Capdequi, Jose M. Cuestiones de historia del derecho, alcance que debe darse
al estudio historico de nuestra legislacion de Indias, en un programa universitario
de historia general del derecho espafiol. Madrid, Imp. clasica espaiiola. (Asocia-
ci6n espaiiola para el progreso de las ciencias. Congreso de Sevilla. t. VIII.
Seccion 6*. Ciencias historicas, filosoficas y filologicas) [87
Concerned with the legal aspects of Spanish colonization in the Indies.
Rev. in: Bol. centro estud. Am. Sevilla, ano VI, num. 22 (Jan. 1919) 47-48.
Paxson, Frederic L. The spirit of present history. Hist, teach, mag., IX (June)
318-319. [88
Peck, Paul E, Latin-American history as a field of study for Mississippi valley
students. Miss. Valley hist, rev., extra number (Oct.) 292-300. [89
Phillips, James Duncan. Teaching patriotism. Education, XXXVIII (Feb.)
443-446. [90
Rapeer, Louis W., ed. How to teach elementary subjects. N. Y., Chicago [etc.]
Scribner. vii, 343 p. illus., plates, diagrs. [91
History, by H. E. Bourne: p. 444-164.
Ross, A. Franklin. American ideals: how to teach them. Educ. rev., LVI (Dec")
399-404. [92
Ross, Earle D. The history teacher as an image breaker. So. Atlan. quar., XVII
(Oct.) 330-333. [93
Ross, Earle D. Some problems in teaching the history of American political parties.
Hist, outlook, IX (Oct.) 385-387. [94
Saurwalt, Alma V. American history since 1880. How can it be taught adequately
without sacrificing things of importance in earlier American history? In Pennsyl-
vania. University. Schoolmen's week proceedings, April 11-13, 1918. Phila.,
Pa., Pub. by the University, p. 307-313. [95
Schuyler, Robert L. History and public opinion; the nationalistic interpretation of
history and Anglo-American antagonism. Educ. rev., LV (Mar.) 181-190. [96
Concerned largely with the traditional interpretation of the American revolution and the animosity
toward England thus engendered, and points out that "informed students of American history can no
longer accept the traditional interpretation."
Scott, Jonathan F. History teaching and international friendship. Nation, CVI
(May 4) educational supplement, 537-538. [97
Calls particular attention to the unfavourable influence which some American history textbooks
have had upon the friendship between Great Britain and the United States.
Sears, Louis Martin. Historical ideals and the Great war. Am. jour, sociol., XXIV
(Sept.) 202-212. [98
Shearer, Augustus Hunt. American historical periodicals. Miss. Valley hist. rev. ,
IV (Mar.) 485-491. [99
Siedenburg, Frederic. A Catholic historical society. III. Oath. hist, rev., I
(July) 3-7. [99a
Simpson, Mabel E. Supervised study in American history. N. Y., Macmillan.
xiv, 278 p. (Supervised study series, ed. by A. L. Hall-Quest) [100
a manual for the teaching of American history, giving outlines of lessons, with suggestions, for the
seventh and eighth grades.
Sioussat, St. George L. Some suggestions as to the equipment needed in the teaching
of history. Tenn. hist, mag., IV (June) 95-105. [101
Skinner, Avery Warner. Suggested readings for history classes, 1918-1919. [Albany,
N. Y., 1918?] 19 p. [101a
At head of title: The University of the state of New York, the State department of education, Exami-
nations and inspections division.
Smith, Paul Tincher. Collateral reading in recent American history. Hist, teach,
mag., IX (Apr.) 202-203. [102
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 7
Sobel, Bernard. Pageantry possibilities. Miss. Valley hist, rev., extra number
(Oct.) 301-306. [103
Stanard, Everett Earle. The use of historical poetry. Hist, outlook, IX (Dec.)
487-490. [104
Stickle, W. A. History and civics as a training for citizenship. School (Toronto)
VII (Nov.) 168-173. [105
Swiggett, Glen Levin. Training for foreign service; how history may aid. Educ.
REV., LV (Apr.) 271-283. [106
Teggart, Frederick John. The processes of history. New Haven, Yale univ. press.
ix, 162 p. [107
Contents. — The nature and scope of the inquiry. The geographical factor in history. The human
factor in history. Method and results.
Thayer, William Roscoe. History — quick or dead? Atlantic, XXII (Nov.) 635-643.
[108
Thomas, S. E. United States history — seventh year. School news, XXXI (Oct.-
Dec.) 75-76, 124-126, 179-181. - [109
University of Chicago. Progressive requirements in American history for junior and
senior high schools. Hist, outlook, IX Wov.) 442-449; and School rev., XXVI
(Sept.) 473-489. [110
Report of a committee to the Department of history and other social studies of academies and high
schools in relation with the University of Chicago, May 10, 1918.
E. M. Tryon, chairman of the committee.
Van Sant, Louise. How to connect the teaching of history with current events. In
Alabama educational association. Official proceedings of the thirty-seventh annual
convention . . . held at Birmingham, March 28-30, 1918. p. 31-35. [Ill
Van Tyne, Claude H. Democracy's educational problem. New York city, National
security league. 8 p. (Patriotism through education series, no. 38) [112
Calls attention to the injustice to Great Britain which is shown in much of our history teaching.
VoUweiler, A. T. Directions for observation work and practice leaching in history.
Hist, outlook, IX (Oct.) 383-385. [113
Wade, Martin J. Education in Americanism. Case and comment, XXIV (Feb.)
730-739. [114
Wayland, John W. History teaching in the light of present war conditions. Va.
jour, educ, XII (Dec.) 131-134. [115
Williams, Mary Wilhelmine. Outline for the incidental study of Latin-American
history in secondary schools. Hist, teach, mag., IX (June) 335-337. [116
Wilson, H. B. Guiding principles in American history teaching. School and
home educ, XXXVII (Jan.) 102-107. [117
Woodhouse, Edward James. Function and method in the teaching of history.
So. Atlan. quae., XVII (Apr.) 136-154. [118
AMERICA IN GENERAL.
Aboriginal America — Antiquities.
Abbott, Charles C. The archaeological significance of an ancient dune. Am. phil.
soc. PROC, LVII, 49-59. [119
Describes a sand dune along the Delaware river, which contains traces of man's handicraft.
Beuchat, Henri. Manual de arqueologia americana. Prologo de M. Vignaud.
Traduccion de Domingo Vaca. Madrid, Daniel Jorro, editor, xliv, 755 p.
plates. (Biblioteca de historia y arte) [119a
The original French edition was published in 1912 (Paris, A. Picard).
Booy, Theodoor de. Certain archaeological investigations in Trinidad, British West
Indies. N. Y., Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation. 471-486 p.
illus., plates. (Contributions from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye
foundation, v. IV, no. 2) [120
Reprinted from the American anthropologist, n. s. XIX, October 1917.
Brown, Charles E. Grooved stone axes. Wis. archeol., XVII (Apr.) 1-18. [121
Brown, Charles E. Indian trade implements and ornaments. Wis. archeol., XVII
(Sept.) 61-97. [122
Buell, Ira M. Archaeological reconnaissance of Juneau county [Wis.] Wis.
ARCHEOL., XVII (Dec.) 107-136. [123
Colton, Harold Sellers. The geography of certain ruins near the San Francisco
mountains, Arizona. Phila. geog. soc. bul., XVI (Apr.) 37-60. [124
A study of the "smallhouse ruins," in Arizona, so called in contrast to the large communal dwellings
or pueblos. The writer draws the conclusion that at some time antedating the building of large com-
munal dwellings the high plateau of New Mexico and Arizona was inhabited by a people of pueblo
culture who dwelt in small isolated houses.
Colton, Mary B,. F., and Harold Sellers Colton. The little-known small house ruins
in the Coconino Forest. Lancaster, Pa., Pub. for the American anthropological
association. 101-126 p. illus., plates, maps. (Am. anthrop. assoc. mem., v. V,
no. 4) [125
Delabarre, E. B, Middle period of Dighton rock history. Col. soc. Mass. pub.,
XIX, 46-149. [126
Fewkes, J. Walter. Prehistoric towers and castles of the Southwest. Art and
archaeol., VII (Nov.) 353-366. [127
Fewkes, J. Walter. A unique form of prehistoric pottery. Wash. acad. sci. jour.,
VIII (Nov. 4) 598-601. ' [128
Describes a specimen of pottery found in a field near Dolores, in the southwestern corner of Colorado.
Fox, George R., and Harvey O. Younger. Marinette county. Wis. archeol., XVII
. (June) 33-45. [129
Report on the Menominee Indian remains in Marinette county, Wisconsin.
Grinnell, George Bird, Early Cheyenne villages. Am. anthrop., n. s. XX (Oct.)
359-380. [130
Harris, W. R. The mystery of a land that disappeared. In Toronto. Ontario
Provincial museum. Thirtieth annual archseological report, 1918. Toronto,
Printed and published by A. T. Wilgress. p. 54-73. [131
Consideration of the possibility of prehistoric land communication between Europe and America,
the lost Atlantis of the ancients, and its bearing on the origin of the American aborigines. The writer
is con\inced that a great continent did at one time exist in the Atlantic and that the Azores and Canary
islands are the remains of the submerged land.
Hasque, Urban de. A remarkable Illinois statuette. Archaeol. bul., IX (Sept.)
55-59. [132
Describes a prehistoric sculptured effigy statuette, unearthed at a place near the town of Chester,
in Randolph county, Illinois, in 1886.
8
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 9
Hay, Oliver P. Further consideration of the occurrence of human remains in the
Pleistocene deposits at Vero, Florida. Am. anthrop., n. s. XX (Jan.) 1-36. [133
Heye, George G. The Nacoochee mound in Georgia, by George G. Heye, F. W.
Hodge, and George H. Pepper. N. Y., Museum of the Amerian Indian, Heye
foundation.. 103 p. illus., plates. (Contributions from the Museum of the
American Indian, Heye foundation, v. IV, no. 3) [134
Hodge, Frederick Webb. Excavations at the Zuni pueblo of llawikuh in 1917. Art
AND ARCHAEOL., VII (Nov.) 367-379. [135
HrdlicKa, Ales. Recent discoveries attributed to early man in America. Wash-
ington, Gov. print, off. 67 p. illus., plates. (Smithsonian institution. Bureau
of American ethnology. Bulletin 66) [136
Inscription rock or El Morro. El Palacio, V, no. 13 (Oct. 19) 213-217. (National
monuments of New Mexico, II) " [137
Lawson, B. H. Explorations at Pensacola, Florida. Archaeol. bul., IX (Nov.)
66-68. [138
Lewis, T. H. Effigy mounds in northern Illinois. Wis. archeol., XVII (Apr.)
19-21. . [139
Loud, Llewellyn L. Ethnogeography and archaeology of the Wiyot territory.
Berkeley, Univ. of California press, p. 221-436. plates. (Univ. of Cal. pub.
Am. archaeol., v. XIV, no. 3) [140
Account of archaeological exploration of the territory around Humboldt Bay.
Mcintosh, H. T, Antiquities of southwest Georgia Indians. Ga. hist, quar., II
(Sept.) 145-149. [141
Moore, Clarence B. The northwestern Florida coast revisited. Phila. 515-579 p.
illus., plates, maps, folio. [142
Reprinted from the Journal of the Academy of natural sciences of Philadelphia, v. XVI.
An account of the Indian mounds and sites on the northwestern Florida coast and rivers.
Morris, Earl H. Further discoveries at the Aztec ruin. Am. mus. jour., XVIII
(Nov.) 603-610. [143
An account of recent discoveries at the prehistoric Pueblo community-dwelling in northwestern
New Mexico.
Nelson, N. C. Chronology in Florida. N. Y., Pub. by order of the Tnistees [of the
American museum of natural history] p. 75-103. (Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap.,
V. XXII, pt. 2) [144
Concerns chiefly a large shellmound situated, until recently, on the bank of the Indian river at Oak
, Hill, Florida.
Parker, Arthur C, Notes on the banner stone, with some inquiries as to its purpose.
N. Y. STATE MUS. BUL., uo. 196 (Apr. 1, 1917) 165-176. [145
Parker, Arthur C. A prehistoric Iroquoian site on the Reed farm, Richmond Mills,
Ontario county, N. Y. [New York state archeological association] Morgan chapter,
Rochester, N. Y. 41 p. (Researches and transactions of the New York state
archeological association, v. I, no. 1) [146
Parsons, Elsie Clews. War god shrines of Laguna and Zuiii. Am. anthrop., n. s.
XX (Oct.) 381-405. [147
A prehistoric Pueblo Indian ruin. Science, n. s. XLVII (Mar. 29) 309-310. [148
Describes the excavation of the Pueblo ruin, popularly known as the "Aztec ruin."
Prudden, T. Mitchell. A further study of prehistoric small house ruins in the San
Juan watershed . Lancaster, Pa. , Pub . for the American anthropological association.
50 p. illus., plans. (Am. anthrop. assoc. mem., v. V, no. 1) [149
Eemsburg, George J. Traces of the Indians in Tulare county, California. Archaeol.
BUL., IX (July) 39-43. [150
Schrabisch, Max. Archaeology of Warren and Hunterdon counties. Trenton, N. J.,
MacCrellish and Quigley co., state printers, 1917. 88 p. map. (New Jersey.
Dept. of conservation and development. Division of geology. Bulletin 18.
(Geologic series)) [150a
Schumacher, J. P. Indian remains in Door county. Wis. archeol., XVI (Jan.)
124-145. [151
I
10 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Smith, G. Elliot. Ancient mariners. Manchester geog. soc. jour., XXXIII
(Apr.) 1-22. [161a
The writer has endoarored "not so much to give details of the voyages ... as to suggest how vast a
part early maritime intercourse has played in the development and the diffusion abroad of the civiliza-
tion to which the world at large is now heir".
Smith, Harlan I. Prehistoric Canadian art as a source of distinctive design. Royal
ROC. Canada trans., 3d ser., XII (June) 151-153. [152
Smithsonian institution. Explorations and field-work of the Smithsonian institution
in 1917. "Washington, Smithsonian institution, 133 p. plates, illus. (Smith-
sonian misc. coll., V. LXVIII, no. 12) [153
Partial contents. — ExcaA^ations at Hawikuh, New Mexico, by F. W. Hodge. Ancient pit dwell-
ings in New Mexico, by Walter Hough. Archeological work in Arizona and Utah, by Neil M. .Tudd.
Tribal rites of the Osage Indians, by Francis I aFlesche. Study of the Fox, Sauk and Potawatomi
Indians, by Truman Michelson. Studies among the Indians of California, by .T. P. Harrington. Study
of Chippewa material culture, by Frances Densmore. Ethnologic work in Louisiana, by John R.
Swanton. Ethnology of the Iro iliois, by J. N. B. Hewitt. Prehistoric ruins in southwestern Colorado
and southeastern Utah, by J. Walter Fewkes.
Spier, Leslie. Notes on some Little Colorado ruins. N. Y., Pub. by order of the
Trustees [of the American museum of natural history] p. 333-362. (Am. mus. nat.
liist. anthrop. pap., v. XVIII, pt. 4) [164
Ruins in the Little Colorado drainage.
Spier, Leslie. The Trenton argillite culture. N. Y., Pub. by order of the Trustees
[of the American museum of natural history] p. 167-226. illus., diagr. (Am. mus.
nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XXII, pt. 4) [155
Den Sten paa vort Hjerte. In Kvartalskrift, 1918. Eau Claire, Wis., Norske Selskab
1 Amerika. [156
Tells the story of the Kensington runestone and argues in favor of the genuineness of the inscription
upon it.
Susquehanna archaeological expedition. Report of the work of the Susquehanna
archaeological expedition conducted during the summer of 1916. In Pennsylvania
historical commission. Second report . . . [Ilarrisburg, Pa.] p. 115-151. [157
A brief summary of the archaeology of the Susquehanna, by Warren K. Moorehead: p. 117-126. The
Susquehanna archaeological expedition, by George P. Donehoo: p. 126-151.
Wainwright, R. D. Further archaeological exploration in southern Florida, winter
of 1917. Archaeol. bul., IX (May-July) 28-32, 43-47. ' [153
Wilson, Lucy L. W. Hand sign or avanyu; a note on a Pajaritan biscuit- ware motif.
Am. anthrop., n. s. XX (July) 310-317. [I59
"The word 'avanyu' has been given to a decoration motif frequently found on prehistoric Pajaritan
biscuit ware."
Wissler, Clark. Archaeology of the Polar Eskimo. N. Y., Pub. by the Trustees [of
the American museum of natural history] 105-166 p. illus., plate, map. (Am.
mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XXII, pt. 3) [I60
Wood and wood products; their uses by the prehistoric Indians of Ontario. In
Toronto. Ontario Provincial museum. Thirtieth annual archaeological report
1918. Toronto, Printed and published by A. T. Wilgress. p. 25-48. [lei
Aboriginal America — Indians. See also Antiquities.
Armbruster, Eugene L. The Indians of New England and New Netherland. [Brook-
lyn, N. Y., The author] 11 p. map. [162
Babcock, William H. Certain pre-Columbian notices of the inhabitants of the Atlantic
islands. Am. anthrop., n. s. XX (Jan.) 62-78. [163
The writer concludes that "there is ample and detailed information concerning a native poinilation
of the ( anarios who must have reached their island homes by navigation in remote times, who occupied
stations well advanced toward America on the route first followed by Columbus and who present many
traits, customs and characteristics which remind one of the North American Indians.
Babcock, William H. Early observations in American physical anthropology Am
JOUR. PHYSICAL ANTHROP., I (July) 305-315.
[164
A review of the recorded impressions made by the physique of the natives of the American coast on the
early Europeans. The study ends witb the first quarter of the 16th centiiry.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 11
Barce, Elmore. Topenebee and the decline of the Pottawattomie nation. Ind. mag.
HIST., XIV (Mar.) 3-12. [165
Topenebee was for forty years the principal chief and sachem of the Pottawattomie Indians. During
the War of 1812 he was hostile to the United States.
Birket-Smith, Kay. A geographical study of the early history of the Algonquian In-
dians. Internat. arch, ethnog., XXIV, 174-222. [166a
The Chippewa Indians. In Toronto. Ontario Provincial museum. Thirtieth
annual archaeological report, 1918. Toronto, Printed and published by A. T. Wil-
gress. p. 9-23. [166
Connelley, William Elsey. Notes on the early Indian occupancy of the Great Plains.
Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 438-470. [167
Connelley, William Elsey. The Prairie band of Pottawatomie Indians (reservation,
Jackson county, Kansas) Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 488-570. [168
Crane, Verner W. An historical note on the Westo Indians. Am. anthrop., n. s. XX
(July) 331-337. [169
A suggestion in regard to the identification of the Westo Indians of the 17th century South Carolina
frontier.
Crane, Verner W. The origin of the name of the Creek Indians. Miss. Valley hist.
REV., V (Dec.) 339-342. [170
Custer, Mile. Kannekuk or Keeanakuk, the Kickapoo prophet. III. hist. soc.
JOUR., XI (Apr.) 48-56. [171
Densmore, Frances. Teton Sioux music. Washington, Gov. print off. xxviii, 561 p.
illus., plates. (Smithsonian institution. Bureau of American ethnology. Bulle-
tin 61) [172
Dixon, R. B. Culture contact and migration versus independent origin: a plea for
more light. Am. anthrop., n. s. XX (Jan.) 124-128. [173
Eastman, Charles Alexander. Indian heroes and great chieftains. Boston, Little,
Brown and co. [8], 241 p. ports. [174
Contents.— Red Cloud. Spotted Tail. Little Crow. Tamahay. Gall. Crazy Horse. Sitting
Bull. Rain-in -the-Face. Two Strike. American Horse. Dull Knife. Roman Nose. Chief Joseph.
Little Woif. Hole-in-the-Day.
FuUerton, Aubrey. The passing of the totem-pole. Bellman, XXV (Sept. 7) 263-
265. [175
Totem-poles of the North Pacific Indians. They were tribal memorials and records of history.
Gifford, Edward Winslow. Clans and moieties in southern California. Berkeley,
University of California press, p. 155-219. illus. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am.
archaeol.,'v. XIV, no. 2) [176
Goldenweiser, A. A. Form and content in totemism Am. anthrop., n. s. XX
(July) 280-295. [177
Goodpasture, Albert V. Indian wars and warriors of the Old Southwest, 1730-1807.
Tenn. hist, mag., IV (Mar.-Dec.) 3-49, 106-145, 161-210, 252-289. [178
Gordon, George Byron. Native American art. Univ. of Penn. mus. jour., IX
(Mar.) 7-28. [179
A study of the art of the aboriginal Americans.
Haeberlin, Herman K. Principles of esthetic form in the art of the north Pacific
coast. Am. anthrop., n. s. XX (July) 258-264. [180
Holmes, W. H. On the antiquity of man in America. Science, n. s. XLVII (June 7)
561-562. [181
Hough, Walter. The Hopi Indian collection in the United States National museum.
U. S. Nation, mus. proc, LIV, 235-296. [182
" This publication aims to give an impression of the arts and industries of a tribe of Pueblo Indians
at a period when they were little modified by outside influences."
Houghton, Louise Seymour. Our debt to the red man; the French-Indians in the
development of the United States. With an introduction by Francis E. Leupp.
Boston, The Stratford co. xi, 210 p. plates, ports. [183
Deals with the ser\-ices of the French-Indian metis rather than those of the full-blooded Indians.
Howay, F. W. The dog's hair blankets of the coast Salish. Wash. hist, quar., IX
(Apr.) 83-92. [184
136908°— 21— VOL 3 3
12 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Hunt, H. F. Slavery among the Indians of Northwest America. Wash. hist, quar.,
IX (Oct.) 277-283. [185
Jenks, Albert Ernest. Review of Wissler's "The American Indian." Am. mus.
JOUR., XVIII (Dec.) 646-661. [186
The American Indian; an introduction to the anthropology of the New world. By Clark Wissler.
N. Y., McMurtrie, 1917.
Kelsey, Rayner W, American Indians and the Inward Light. Friends' hist. soc.
BUL., VIII (May) 54-56. [187
" The fact that the Indians gave ready assent to the doctrine of the Inward Light, and that it seemed
to tally with their spiritual conceptions was mentioned Iby many early Friends.''
MacRitchie, David. A red Indian camp in the old days. Chamb, jour., 7th ser.,
VIII (Jan.) 29-32. [188
Merwin, Bruce W. The art of quillwork, Univ. op Penn. mus, jour., IX (Mar.)
50-55. [189
The art of quillwork as developed by the Indians.
Parker, Arthur C. The constitution of the Five Nations: a reply. Am. anthrop.,
n. s. XX (Jan.) 120-124. [190
a reply to an article by Mr. J. N. B. Hewitt, in the Anthropologist, v. XIX, no. 3, in which he criti-
cised a recent publication by Mr. Parker, entitled "The constitution of the Five Nations."
Parkins, A. E. The Indians of the Great Lakes region and their environment, Geog.
REV., VI (Dec.) 504-512. [191
Three main families were found living in the Great Lakes region: the Iroquoian, the Algonquian,
and the Siouan.
Pierson, Adrian A, The prehistoric Indian in Otsego and his immediate successor.
N. Y. STATE hist. ASSOC. PROC, XVI, 1917, 103-119. [192
Piatt, Mrs. E, G. Some experiences as a teacher among the Pawnees. Kansas hist.
soc. COLL., XIV, 784-794, [193
Pope, Saxton T. Yahi archery. Berkeley, University of California press. 103-152 p.
illus., plates. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. and ethnol., v. XIII, no. 3) [194
The Yahi or Deer Creek Indians of north central California, the most southerly division of the Yanan
stock,
Quaife, Mile M,, ed. The Chicago treaty of 1833, Wis. mag. hist., I (Mar.)
287-303. [195
Copies of two documents, the first giving the charges preferred against George B. Porter; the second
a letter from George B. Porter to President Andrew Jackson, Dec. 15, 1833.
By the treaty of 1833 the Potawatomi and allied tribes, the Chippewa and Ottawa, agreed to leave
the territory adjacent to Lake Michigan.
Riggs, Stephen R. Dakota portraits. Minn. hist, bul., II (Nov.) 481-568, [196
Descriptions of the Dakota Indians, written in 1858, and published in the Minnesota Free press.
The writer was a Presbyterian missionary to the Sioux in Minnesota.
Sabin, Edwin L, Boys' book of Indian warriors and heroic Indian women, Phila.,
Jacobs. 349 p. plates, ports. [197
Severance, Frank H. Our neighbors the Tuscaroras, Buffalo hist, soc, pub
XXII, 311-331, [198
Shetrone, Henry C. The Indian in Ohio; with a map of the Ohio country. Ohio
archaeol, and hist, quae., XXVII (Jan.) 274-510. [199
Contents.— The native American race. The Ohio country— the land and its people. The Indians,
the French and the English. The Indian and the Revolutionary period. The Indian and the Ohio
commonwealth. The pre-historic Ohio Indians.
Speck, Frank G. Kinship terms and the family band among the northeastern
Algonkian. Am. anthrop., n. s. (Apr.) 143-161. [200
Speck, Frank G. Remnants of the Nehantics. So. workman, XLVII (Feb )
65-69, [201
Swanton, John R. An early account of the Choctaw Indians. Lancaster, Pa., Pub.
for the Am. anthropological association, p. 53-72. (Am. anthrop. assoc. mem , v
V, no. 2, Apr. 1918) [202
A translation of chapters relating to the Choctaw Indians, from a French manuscript narrative of
Louisiana, in the Edward E. Ayer collection in the Newberry Ubrary, Chicago, entitled: Relation dela
Louisianne.
Teakle, Thomas, The Spirit Lake massacre. Iowa City, la., State historical society
of Iowa, xii, 336 p. map.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 13
Ten Kate H. F. C. Notes on the hands and feet of American natives. Am. anthrop.,
n. s. XX (Apr.) 187-202. [204
Van Rippen, Bene. Mutilations and decorations of teeth among the Indians of North,
Central and South America. Jour, allied dent, socs., XIII (Sept.) 219-242.
[204a
Waterman, Thomas Talbot. The Yana Indians. Berkeley, University of California
press 35-102 p. plates, map. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. and ethnol.,
V. Xill, no. 2) [205
"An attempt to summarize the history of a small group of Indians in northeastern California."
Wissler, Clark. The sun dance of the Blackfoot Indians. N. Y., The trustees [of
the American museum of natural history] 223-270 p. (Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop.
pap., V. XVI, pt. 3) [206
Zeh, Lillian E. Penn wampum treaty belts. So. workman, XLVII (Mar.) 138-144.
[207
Presented to William Penn by the Pennsylvania Indians.
Zimmerman, Mark E. The Ground-house Indians and stone-cist grave builders of
Kansas and Nebraska. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 471-487. [208
a descriptive record of archaeological remains left by the prehistoric inhabitants of Kansas.
Aboriginal America — Mexico, Central America, West
Indies, and South America.
Aitken, Robert T. A Porto Rican burial cave. Am. anthrop., n. s. XX (July)
296-309. [209
Describes the excavation of the cave known as "Antonio's cueva," located about ten miles west
of the town of Utuado, and of the remains of a "juego de bola," or ball court, this term being applied
generally in Porto Rico to the remains of prehistoric villages and settlements of all sorts.
Breton, A. C. Peruvian tapestries at Toronto. Man, XVIII (Mar.) 33-35. [210
Describes two specimens of ancient Peruvian tapestry contained in the Royal Ontario museum at
Toronto.
Crequi-Montfert, G. de, and Paul Rivet. L'origine des aborigenes du Perou et de la
Bolivie. Paris, Auguste Picard, editeur. 6 p. [210a
"Extrait des Comptes rendus des sceances de I'Academie des inscriptions et belles-lettres," 1914.
Debenedetti, Salvador. La xiva expedicion arcjueologica de la Facultad de filosofia
y letras. Nota preliminar sobre los yacimientos de Perchel, Campo Morado y
La Huerta, en el provincia de Jujuy. Buenos Aires, Imp. y casa editorial
'*Coni." 14 p. [211
Reprinted from Physis, IV, 196-207.
Debenedetti, Salvador. Investigaciones arqueologicas en los valles preandinos de la
provincia de San Juan. Buenos Aires [Universidad de Buenos Aires] 1917. 185 p.
(Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de filosofia y letras. Publicaciones de la
seccion antropologica, no. 15.) [211a
Reprinted from the Revista de la Universidad de Buenos Aires, t. XXXII and XXXIV.
Debenedetti Salvador. Las ruinas prehispanicas de El Alfarcito (departamento de
Tilcara, provincia de Jujuy. Acad. nac. ciencias Cordoba bol., XXIII, 287-318.
[212
Debenedetti, Salvador. Los yacimientos arqueologicos occidentales del valle de
Famatina (provincia de la Rioja). Physis, III, 1917, 386-404. [212a
Farabee, William Curtis. The central Arawaks. Phila., The University museum.
288 p. illus., plates, map. (University of Pennsylvania. The University
museum. Anthropological publications, v. IX) [213
Farabee, William Curtis. Decorative arts of the Amazon. Univ. op Penn. mus.
jour., IX (Mar.) 59-71. [213a
Gann, Thomas W. F. The Maya Indians of southern Yucatan and northern British
Honduras. Washington, Gov. print, off. 146 p. illus., plates, map. (Smith-
sonian institution. Bureau of American ethnology. Bulletin 64j [214
Gordon, George Byron. The trail of the Golden Dragon. Uifiv. op Penn. mus.
JOUR., IX (Mar.) 29-38. [214a
Discusses the legends and myths relating to the Golden Dragon in Central America.
14 AMERICAN" HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Henning, Paul. La arc^ueologia mexicana como para el estudio de las antiguedades
nahoa-pipiles. El Xipe del Tazumal de Chalchuapa departamento de Santa Ana,
Rep. de El Salvador. Mexico [The author?] 30 p. (Disertaciones cientificas de
autores alemanes eu Mexico, t. IV) [215
Jijon y Caamaflo, J., and Carlos M. Larrea. Un cementerio incasico en Quito y
notas acerca de los Incas en el Ecuador. Soc. "Juridico-Literaria" rev., XX,
159-260. [215a
Long, Richard C. E. The Maya and Christian eras. Man, XVIII (Aug. -Sept.)
121-126, 133-138. [216
Presents some calculations toward a correlation of Mas^a and Christian chronology. Prints a table
of Maya dates with equivalents in the Julian calendar.
MacCurdy, George Grrant. Surgery among the ancient Peruvians. Art and
ARCHAEOL., VII (Nov.) 381-394. [216a
Morley, Raymond K. On computations for the Maya calendar. Am. anthrop.,
n. s. XX (Jan.) 49-61. [217
Nordenskiold, Erland. Eine geographische und ethnographische Analyse der
materiellen Kultur zwcior Indianersamme in El Gran Chaco (Siidamerika). Gote-
borg, Sweden, Elanders Boktryckeri. 304 p. illus., maps. (Vergleichende
ethnographische Forschungen, I) [218
"An analytic study based upon the facts of culture distribution in South America." The two Indian
tribes under consideration are the Choroti and the Ashluslay.
Rev. in: Am. anthrop., n. s. XXI (Apr. 1919) 194-196.
Nordenskiold, Erland. Die ostliche Ausbreitung der Tiahuanacokultur in Bolivien
und ihr Verhaltnis zur Aruakkultur in Mojos. Zeits. f. Ethnol., XLIX, no. 13,
1917, 10-20. [219
Nordenskiold, Erland. Om Indianernes Anvendelse af Gummi i Sydamerika; et
lille Bidrag til Gummiindustriens Historic. Geog. tidskrift, XXIV (1917) 80-86.
[220
The ^v^iter has come to the conclusion "that the entire civilized rubber manufacture is based on
experiments carried out by the Indians before the advent of the white man."
Pastor, Cesar Alfonso. Barros precolombianos del Ecuador. Real acad. hist.
BOL., LXXII (June) 484-494. [221
Perrier, Joseph Louis. Araucana, the first American poem; the inspired work of
Don Alonso de Ercilla y Zuhiga. So. American, VI (May) 10. [222
Perrier, Joseph Louis. Ollantay, an ancient Quecha drama; shows that the Incas
were patrons of the stage before the conquest. So. American, VI (June) 14. [223
Posnansky, Arthur. El gran templo del sol en los Andes. La edad de Tiahuanaco.
Astronomia prehistorica. Soc. geog. La Paz bol., aiio XVI, 36-46. [223a
Rengifo, Roberto. Noticias y comentarios arqueologicos. Soc. sci. Chili actes, 2®
ser., XXVIII, 43-74. [224
Romero, Antonio A. El homo pampaeus; contribucion al estudio del origen y
antiguedad de la raza humana en Sud America segiin recientes descubrimientos.
Buenos Aires, Impr. y casa editoral "Coni." 48 p. illus., plates. [224a
"Publicado en los ' Anales de la Sociedad cientifica argentina,' " t. LXXXVI, p. 5-48.
Saintyves, P. La croix en Afrique et dans I'Amerique du Sud. Rev. hist, ret^ig.,
LXXVI (July). [225
Shows that the cross was used by primitive peoples as a magico-religious symbol, a sort of sacred
talisman.
Smith, G. Elliot. An American dragon. Man, XVIII (Nov.) 161-166. [225a
Describes a specimen from Santa Rita, Honduras, contained in the collection of Maya pottery in the
Liverpool Free public museums.
Tello, Julio C. El uso de las cabezas humanas artificialmente momificadas y su>
representaciun en el antiguo arte peruano. Lima, Peru, Villarin. 60 p. plates.
Torres Quintero, Gregorio. Education among the ancient Mexicans. Inter-
America, II, no. 1 (Oct.) 15-21. [227
"A eomprohensivo study of education among the pre-Columbian Aztecs of the central valley of
Mexico prepared for a school journal."
Urteaga, Horacio H. The ancient races and civilizations of Peru. Inter-America,
I (Aug.) 380-382. [228
WRITINGS ON" AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 15
Discovery and Exploration.
Altolaguirre y Duvale, Angel de. Los argumentos aducidos para demonstrar que Don
Cristobal Colon nacio en Galicia. Real acad. hist, bol., LXXII (June) 522-551.
[229
Altolaguirre y Duvale, Angel de. La patria de D. Cristobal Colon, segiin las actas
notariales de Italia. Real Xcad. hist, bol., LXXII (Mar.) 200-224. [230
Arce, Enrique J. Amerigo Vespucci and the name America. Inter- America, I
(Aug.) 323-332. [231
Beaufreton, Maurice. Aper^us nouveaux sur I'iconographie de Christophe Colomb.
Archiv. francisc. hist., ann. XI (July) 374-383. ' [231a
Beltran y Rozpide, Ricardo. Cristobal Col6ii y Cristoforo Columbo; estudio critico
documental. Madrid, Imprenta del Patronato de Huerfanos de Intendencia e
Intervencion militares. 22 p. [232
Also pub. in Real soc. geog. bol., LX, no. 3, p. 359-376.
Beltran y Rozpide, Ricardo. Cristobal Colon y la fiesta de la raza. La lectura, aiio
XVIII (July) 275-278. [233
Notice regardins: the national holiday appointed for Oct. 12, 1918, called the "festival of the race,''
when Spain will celebrate in honor of the Spanish nation and of Christopher Columbus.
Birket-Smith, Kay. Skrselingerne i Vinland og Eskimoernes Sydost-Graense. Geog.
tidskrift, XXIV. Bd., Hefte v, 157-167. [234
Bruun, Daniel. The Icelandic colonization of Greenland and the finding of Vine-
land. Kjoebenhavn, Reitzel. 234 p plate. (Danmark- ExpeditionentilGron-
lands nordostkyst, 1906-1908. Meddelelser om Gronlond, LVII) [235
Carbia, Romulo D. Origen y patria de Cristobal Colon; critica de sus fuentes
historicas. Buenos Aires, Talleres grdficos del Ministerio de amcultura de la
nacion. 50 p. facsims. [(Buenos Aires. Universidad nacionai] Facultad de
filosofia y letras. Publicaciones de la Secci6n de historia, no. V]) [236
From the Revista de la Universidad de Buenos Aires, t. XL.
Compaiiia general de Tabacos de Filipinas. Colecci6n general de documentos
relatives a las Islas Filipinas existentes en el Archive de Indias de Sevilla.
Publicada por la Compaiiia general de Tabacos de Filipinas. Tomo I. (1493-1518).
Barcelona, Imp. de viuda de Luis Tasso. xix, 365 p. [237
Contains 47 documents relating mostly to the demarcation disputes of Spain and Tortugal a^d to
the voyage of Magellan.
Davenport, Harbert, and Joseph K. Wells. The first Europeans in Texas, 1528-1536.
SouTHW. hist, quar., XXII (Oct.) 111-142. [238
Analyzes the two original narratives describing the journey from Texas to Sinaloa, Mexico, of Alvar
Nufiez Cabeza de Vaca and his companions, survivors from the expedition of Vamphilo de Narvaez—
the "Naufragios" of Cabeza de Vaca, and the account written for the Audiencia Real at Santiago
Domingo, a paraphrase of which was incorporated by Oviedo y Vald^s, in his "Historia general y
natural de los Indios."
Fossum, Andrew. The Norse discovery of America. Minneapolis, Minn., Augsburg
publishing house. 160 p. illus. [239
The writer maintains that Wineland was situated, not on the Atlantic coast, but on the St. Lawrence
river.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 292-293.
Gagnon, Alphonse. I^ question du Vinland. Soc. geog. Quebec b-ul., XII (July)
211-216. [240
Guzman y Gallo, J. P. de. Pedro Menendez de Aviles adelantado de la Florida.
Real acad. hist, bol., LXXIII (Aug.) 218-223. ' [241
Hackett, Charles W. The delimitation of political jurisdictions in Spanish North
America to 1535. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Feb.) 40-68. [242
Contents.— I. Espafiola and the founding of Castilla del Oro, 1492-1524. IT. Florida, Amichel,
and Rio de las Palmas, 1512-1528. Ill, The founding of New Spain, 1519-1525. IV. Political readjust-
ments on the mainland, 1525-1535.
Hannay, David. Spanish trade with the Indies. Edinburgh rev., no. 466 (Oct.)
247-264. [243
A review of several recent books.
16 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Ispiztia, Segundo de. Los Vascos en America; historia de America, v. IV. Vene-
zuela, t. I: Descubrimiento. Madrid, Imp. de V. Rico, xvi, 382 p. [244^
^'Contmldo- T^rVer^^iajrde ColV.n.' Tlano de la rata. Los emluistes de Amerigo Vespucci Viaje
del vasco Tnan de la Cosa v Alonso de Ojeda. Fueron en realidad los pnmeros descubndores del Nueyo
Mimdo continental. Mapa de la rata. Descubren Brasil, las Guayanas, Venezuela y Colombia
Reproduccion a gran tamaiio y estudio del mapa del vizcaino Juan de la Cosa, el primero de Ame,rica.'»
J6nssoii, Finniir. La decouverte du Vinland et les voyages a ce pays. In the
Aarboo-er for nordisk OldkyndiQ-hed og Historic, udgivne af det kongelige nordiske
Oldski-ift-Selskab. 1915. iii. Raekke. 5. Bind. Kj0benhavn, 1915. [245
Insists upon the importance of the saga of Eric the Red as a source and rejects the account given in
the Flateyjarbdk.
La Ronciere, Charles de. Le passage nord-est et la Compagnie fran?aise du pole
arctique au temps de Henri IV. Bibliotheque de l'ecole des chartes,
LXXVTII, 154-178. [246
Contents.— Nos premieres explorations polaires. Isaac Le Maire et Henry Hudson. La Com-
pagnie du pole arctique. Le de.troit d'Anian. Appendice.
Latorre, German. Diego Ribero, cosmografo y cartografo de la Casa de la con-
trataci6n de Sevilla. Bol. centro estud. Am. Sevilla, ano V, num. 20 (Nov.)
27-31; num. 21 (Dec.) 18-35. [247
McAdie, Alexander G. Nova Albion-1579. Worcester, Mass., The Society. 12 p.
plates, maps. [247a
Reprinted from the Proceedings of the American antiquarian society for October, 1918, published
in 1919
Ivocates the place of anchorage of Sir Francis Drake, in 1579, as under the lee of Point Reyes, which
the writer believes to be the locality which Drake called Nova Albion, from a fancied resemblance of
the white clifls to those of his native land. |
Martinez Saralegui, P. Un mundo nuevo. (Relate hist6rico del descubrimiento de |
America) Dibujos de Mariano Pedrero. Madrid, Imp. Clasica espanola. 134 p. j
(Biblioteca La leyenda blanca) [248 |
Massip, Salvador. The discovery of America by the Chinese. Inter-America, I
(June) 267-275. [249 '
Means, Philip Ainsworth. A footnote to the history of the conquest of Peru. His- !
panic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 453-457. [260 !
Identifies the location of the landing-place of Pizarro, in 1532, as several miles south of Tumbes, and
traces his journey southward from that point.
Merriman, Roger Bigelow. The rise of the Spanish empire in the Old world and the
New. N. Y., Macmillan. 2 v. maps, tables. [251
The Indies: v. II, p. 192-239.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 83-85; Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 435-441.
Mixon, Ada. De Soto's route in Arkansas. Americana, XII (July) 302-318.
[252
Mixon, Ada. De Soto's route west of the Mississippi river, Americana, XII (Jan.)
70-77. [253
Throws light on the question of the route of De Soto after he crossed the Mississippi river on June 18,
1541.
Ocampo, Juan de. La Gran Florida, por el maestro Juan de Ocampo. Los Chiapas
(rios de La Plata y Paraguay) por F. Salcedo y Ord6iiez. Los desiertos de Achaguas
(llanos de Venezuela) por Diego Albeniz de la Cerrada. Madrid, Editorial-
America [1918?] 269 p. (Biblioteca americanade historia colonial) 254
"El texto original se conserva manuscrito en la Biblioteca nacional Codice 2.999, forro de piel cruda.
Se rotula asi: 'La Oran Florida.'" — Editor's note, p. 13.
Los Chiapas; letras y aditamientos de Diego Albeniz de la Cerrada; memoria de su descubrimiento y
conquisi a yior el alrairante L6pe de la Puebla en 1521. Resena de lo muy curiosas que son las costumbres,
cultos, indole, inclinaciones guerras de estos infieles, mandada a ordenar per Su Majestad el rey Don
Felipe v: p. 153-205.
Los desiertos de Achaguas (llanos de Venezuela): 207-269.
Rowland, Dunbar. Did De Soto discover the Mississippi river in Tunica county,
Miss.? Miss. hist. soc. pub., centenary ser., II, 144-148. [255
It is the opinion cif the writer that the place of discovery w^as in Tunica county, Mississippi, and not
at the Chickasaw IjIuITs where Memphis now stands.
Rowland, Dunbar. A second chapter concerning the discovery of the Mississippi
river by De Soto, in Tunica county, Mississippi. Miss. hist. soc. pub., centenary
eer., II. 158-104. [256
_i
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 17
Salaverria, Jose Maria. Los conquistadores; el origen heroico de America. Madrid,
Rafael Caro Raggio, editor 219 p. [257
Sanfuentes y Correa, Enrique. Cristobal Colon y su detractor el Marques de Dos
Fuentes. Santiago de Chile. [258
Santa Cruz, Alonso de. Islario general de todas las islas del mundo dirigido a la
S. C. R. M. del rey don Phelipe, nuestro senor — , su cosmographe mayor. Real
soc. GEOG. BOL., LX, 7-88, 231-264, 383-392, 491-516. 258a
Saville, Marshall Howard. The discovery of Yucatan in 1517 by Francisco Hernandez
de C6rdoba. Geog. rev., VI (Nov.) 436-448. [259
Saville, Marshall Howard. A letter of Pedro de Alvarado relating to his expedition
to Ecuador. N. Y., Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation, 1917. 6 p.
facsim. (Contributions from the museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation.
v. V, no. 1) [259a
Relates to the attempt of the adelantado Pedro de Alvarado to take -cart in the conquest of the empire
of the Incas, when he endeavored to outstrip Pizarro, Almasro, and Benalcazar in the conquest of the
territory held by the Quichuas in the interior of Ecuador. The letter was written Jan. 20, 1534.
Serrano y Sanz, Manuel. Origenes de la dominacion espanola en America; estudios
historicos. Tomo primero. Madrid, Bailly-Bailliere. dcvii p. facsims (Nuevo
biblioteca de autores espanoles . . . XXV) [260
Contents.— Los amigos y protectores aragoneses de Cristobal Colon. Preliminares del gobierno de
Pedrarias Davila en Castilla del Oro. El gobierno de las Indias por frailes jeronimos, anos 1516 a 1518.
Apendices.
Steenshy, H. P. The Norsemen's route from Greenland to Wineland. Copenhagen,
Henrik Koppels Forlag. 110 p. maps. [261
Locates Wineland within the mouth of the St. Law^rence.
Also pub. in Meddelelser om Gronland, Bd. LVI, 1917.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 290-292.
Suite, Benjamin. Decouverte de TAmerique. In his Melanges historiques. Mon-
treal, G. Ducharme, libraire-editeurs. p. 13-26. [262
White, T. W. Reparaciones de la historia de Espana; Fernandez de Navarre te y
Washington Irving. Real acad. hist, bol., LXXIII (Aug.) 258-281. [263
Introductory note, by J. P. de Guzman y Gallo.
A summary of the work entitled: "Coleccion de los viajes y descubrimientos quehicieron por mar los
espafioles desde fines del siglo xv, con varios documentos ineditos, concernientes a la historia de la
marina castellana y de los establecimientos espafioles en Indias, coordinada ^ ilustrada por D. Martin
Fernandez de Navarrete. Madrid, Imprenta real, 1825."
Wood, Edwin O. Father Marquette at Michilimackinac. Mich. hist, mag., II (Jan.)
125-142. [264
A chapter from v. I of the writer's book entitled "Historic Mackinac."
Wood, William. Elizabethan sea-dogs; a chronicle of Drake and his companions.
New Haven, Yale university press [etc.] xi, 252 p. ports., map. (The chronicles of
America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. Ill) [265
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
The story of the voyages of Hawkins and the fighting traders, and of Sir Francis Drake, the "sea-
dogs" who prepared the way for the pioneers from the Old world to the New.
"Anglo-American history begins with that century of maritime adventure and naval war in which
English sailors blazed and secured the long trail for the men of every kind who found or sought their
for times in America."
Young, J. P. De Soto at Chickasaw Bluffs; a review of the works of various historians
of the great Spaniard's life. Miss. hist. soc. pub., centenary ser., II, 149-164. [266
A reply to the paper of Dr. Rowland regarding the place where De Soto discovered the Mississippi
river. See no. 255, above. It is the conviction of the present writer that the place of the discovery
and crossing of the river by De Soto is identified as the lower Chickasaw blufts, where Memphis now
stands.
Later Discovery and Exploration — Arctic Explorations
and Others.
Dale, Harrison Clifford. The Ashley-Smith explorations and the discovery of a
central route to the Pacific, 1822-1829, with the original journals. Cleveland, The
Arthur H. Clark co. 352 p. plates, map, [267
Contents.— I. The fur trade and the progress of discovery to 1822. II. William Henry Ashley.
The Ashley narrative. III. Jedediah Strong Smith. The Smith narrative. Journal of Harrison G.
Rogers, member of the company of J. S. Smith. The second journal of Harrison G. Rogers.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIII (Apr.) 671-673.
18 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION-.
Flaherty, Robert J. The Belcher Islands of Hudson Bay: their discovery and
exploration. Geog. rev., V (June) 433^58. [268
Le Conte, J. N. Record of an early exploration of Tenaya caiion. Sierra club bul.,
X, no. 3 (Jan ) 276-281. [269
Exploration of Tenaya canon in the Yosemite national park by Joseph L. Ferrell and Alfred Jessup,
in lS6t).
Manjarres, Ram6n de. En el Mar del Sur; expediciones espanolas del siglo xvin.
BoL. CENTRO ESTUD. Am. Sevilla, aiio V, num. 2] (Dec.) 1-17. [270
Cont. from num. 18, Feb. 1916.
A study of Spanish explorations of the Pacific in the 18th century.
Riobo, John. An account of the voyage made by the frigates "Princesa" and
"Favorita" in the year 1799 from San Bias to northern Alaska. Cath. hist, rev.,
IV (July) 222-229. [271
Report of a Franciscan missionary to his superior detailing a voyage to A laska in 1779.
"An account of the voyage made by Father John Riobo, as chaplain of His Majesty's frigates ... to
discover new lands and seas north of the settlements of the ports of Monterey and of our Father, San
Francisco."
Translated from an unpuVilished manuscript in the archives of the University of Santa Clara,
California.
Also pub. in U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XII, 76-89.
Robinson, Doane. The Lesueur tradition. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 336-346. [272
Discusses the probability of the tradition that Le Sueur penetrated west of the mouth of the Wis-
consin river as fai as the site of Sioux Falls on the Big Sioux river in 1683.
Robinson, Doane. Lewis and Clark in South Dakota. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX,
514-596. [273
Review of the explorations of the Missouri river region by the Lewis and Clark expedition of 1804,
compiled from the journals kept by various members of the party.
Stevenson, C. Stanley. Expeditions into Dakota. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 347-375.
[274
Account of two exploring parties in South Dakota in 1844 and 1845; the expedition under Captain
James Allen, and that commanded by Captain E. V. Sumner.
i
UNITED STATES.
Description and Travel.
Acco[in]tt of expences of a journy to New Yorke vizt. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XIX,
28-32. [275
Account of expenses of a journey from Boston to New Jersey,undated, but perhaps undertaken about
the year 1688. The value of the document lies in the itinerary of the travellers.
Ailing, Prudden. An adventurous journey to Chicago in 1835. Firelands pioneer,
n. s. XX, 2016-2024. [276
Copy of the diary of Mr. Prudden Ailing, a business man of Norwalk, Ohio, in May 1835.
Baldwin, Simeon E. A ride across Connecticut before the Revolution. New
Haven COLONY HIST. soc. pap., IX, 161-169. [277
Quotes from the jom-nal of Bethiah Baldwin, giving an account of her journey from Norwich to
Danbury, in 1770. It gives "a lively picture of the discomforts of travel in Connecticut in the eighteenth
centiiry."
Baldwin, William. The travels of William Baldwin in America, 1709. Friends'
HIST. soc. JOUR., XV, no. 1, 27-30. [278
From the minutes of the London yearly meeting of Friends.
He landed in Virginia and from there traveled to Philadelphia, New York and New England, and
then back to Virginia.
Barnard, Henry. The south Atlantic states in 1833, as seen by a New Englander;
being a narrative of a tour taken by Henry Barnard, principal of St. John's college,
Annapolis (1866-1867). Ed. by Bernard C. Steiner. Md. hist, mag., XIII (Sept.-
Dec.) 267-294, 295-386. [279
Dean, Thomas. Journal of Thomas Dean. A voyage to Indiana in 1817. [Indian-
apolis, J. C. Dean] 78 p. port., plate. [280
Journal of Thomas Dean, of Deansboro, N. Y. His journey described therein was made as agent of
the Brothertown Indians of New York who were seeking a western home.
Ed. by John Candee Dean.
Faris, John T. Historic shrines of America; being the story of one hundred and
twenty historic buildings and the pioneers who made them notable. N. Y., George
H. Doran co. 421 p. plates. [281
Griselle, Eugene. Un voyage en Amerique au temps de la guerre de I'lndependance.
Rev. xviiie siecle, Ve ann. (Jan.) 52-73. [282
Gives a reprint with explanatory introduction, of an anonymous ms. in the Bibliotheque nationale,
entitled: Voyage au continent americain par un frangois en 1777 et Reflexions philosophiques sur ces
nouveaux republicains.
Guion, W. Bowling, and John C. Fremont. Early reports concerning the Des Moines
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Reports of topographical surveys of the Des Moines river by Captain W. Bowling Guion and Lieu-
tenant John C. Fremont in 1841, reprinted from the House executive documents, 3rd session, 27th
Congress, no. 38.
Le Conte, J. N., ed. Record of an early exploration of Tenaya caiion. Sierra club
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An account, taken from an old diary, of what was probably the first exploration of Tenaya canon,
made by Mr. Joseph L. Ferrell and Mr. Alfred Jessup, in 1866.
Lyman, William Denison. The Columbia river, its history, its myths, its scenery,
its commerce. 3d ed., rev. and enl. N. Y. and London, Putnam, xxi, 418 p.
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Nitze, William A. Chateaubriand in America. Dial, LXV (June 20) 16-18. [286
A review of "L'exotisme Americain dans I'oeuvre de Chateaubriand. By Gilbert Chinard." Paris,
Hachette, 1911.
Oussani, Gabriel. The earliest known Mesopotamian traveller in America. Cath.
hist, rev., Ill (Jan.) 446-447. [287
Describes a series of articles giving an account of a journey to America, in the years 1668-1683, by
the Rev. Elias Hanna, a Chaldean Catholic priest of the diocese of Mossoul, in Mesopotamia, found
in the Arabic monthly, "Al-Mashrig," published by the Jesuit fathers of the University of Beyrouth,
Syria.
19
20 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
PhUlips, Philip Lee. The first map and description of Ohio, 1787, by Manasseh
Cutler. A biblioi^raphical account, with reprint of the "Explanation." Washing-
ton, W. H. Lowdermilk and co. 41 p. map. 32J x 25cm. [288
"An pxplanation of the map which delineates that part of the federal lands, comprehended between
Pennsylvania west line, the rivers Ohio and Sioto, and Lake Erie; confirmed to the United States
by sundry tril^es of Indians, in the treaties of 1784 and 1786, and now ready for settlement. Salem:
Prmted by Dabney and Gushing, mdcclxxxvii": p. [25]-41.
Rait, Robert S. British writers on the United States. Quar. rev., no. 455 (Apr.)
357-371. [289
Concerned mainly with the English travellers and writers of the early 19th century, and with the
treatment of the war for independence by British historians.
Scharmann, Hermann B, Scharmann's overland journey to California, from the
pages of a pioneer's diary, tr. from the German of H. B. Scharmann, by Margaret
Hoff Zimmermann. [n. p.] 114 p. port., illus. [290
Reprinted from the New-Yorker Staats-Zeitimg, 1852.
Smith, William Loughton. Journal of William Loughton Smith, 1790-1791. Mass.
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Two journals of William Loughton Smith, Federalist congressman from Charleston, S. C, the first
describing a tour tlirough New England in August-September, 1790; the second a trip from Phila-
delphia to Charleston, April-May 1791. In his travels the writer was accustomed to keep a record of
events of the day.
Bibliography: p. 76-88.
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Account of a trip by a family intending to settle in what was then the far West.
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A letter written Dec. 9, 1837, describing the writer's journey from New Jersey to Illinois.
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Farrand, Max. The development of the United States from colonies to a world power.
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Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr. 1919) 478-479; Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Feb. 1919) 147-148;
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Lettered on cover: Revised. First edition, pub. in 1913.
"The central point of view has been the political, with the idea that the American people have
expressed themselves more fully in their political life than elsewhere."
The chief purpose of this book is to serve as a text for use in college classes.
Jusserand, Jean Jules. En Amerique jadis & maintenant. Paris, Hachette. xi,
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American edition (New York, C. Scribner's sons, 1916) has title: With Americans of past and present
days.
('oNTENTs.— Dddicace de I'^dition am^ricaine. Rochambeau en Amerique d'apres des documents
in6dits. Lo major L'Enfant et la cit6 f^d6rale. "Washington et les Frangais. Abraham Lincoln.
La m6daille de Franklin. Horace Howard Furness. De la guerre h la paix.
1918. 21
Lintum, C. te. De Geschiedenis van het Amerikaansche Volk. Zutphen, Thieme
and CO. iv, 306 p. . [300
McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham. Source problems in United States history, by
Andrew C. McLaughlin, William E, Dodd, Marcus W. Jernegan, Arthur P. Scott.
N. Y. and London, Harper, xii, 513 p. (Harper's parallel source problems) [301
The selection of sources has been made with a view to enabling the student to see and understand
the vital social and political controversies of American history.
Contents.— The battle of Lexington. The preliminaries of the Revolution. The power of a court
to declare a law unconstitutional. Religious toleration and freedom in Virginia, 1689-1786. Relation
of eastern states to the development of the West, 1785-1832. The slavery problem. Fort Sumter and
the outbreak of the Civil war.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr. 1919) 512-514.
Text-books, Outlines, etc.
Baldwin, James. Barnes's elementary history of the United States. Rev. and enl.
N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 399 p. illus. [302
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people, for grammar grades and junior high schools. N. Y., Macmillan. xv, 674 p.
illus., port., plates, maps. [303
Burnham, Smith. Our beginnings in Europe and America; how civilization grew
in the Old world and came to the New. Phila. and Chicago, Winston, xvi,
375 p. illus., maps. [304
A text-book for the sixth and seventh grades, based on recommendations made in the report of the
Committee of eight to the American historical association upon the study of history in the elementary
schools.
Evans, Lawton B. First lessons in American history. Chicago, N. Y, [etc.] B. H.
Sanborn and co. x, 298, 48 p. illus., maps. [305
First lessons in Kentvicky history, by Elvira M. Slaughter: 48 p. at end.
Forman, Samuel E. Advanced American history. N. Y., Century co. xiv, 644 p.
illus., maps. [306
Gordy, Wilbur F. A history of the United States for schools. New ed. N. Y.,
Chicago [etc.] Scribner. Ixi, 541 p. illus., plates, port., maps. [307
Guitteau, William Backus. Government and politics in the United States; problems
in American democracy. [Rev. ed.] Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Houghton Mifflin co.
xvii, 484, xxxvi p. illus., plates, maps, facsims. [308
Text-book for secondary schools. 1st ed., 1911.
Hart, Albert Bushnell. School history of the United States. N. Y., Cincinnati
[etc.] Am. bk. co. 505, xxxiv p. illus., maps. [309
Text-book for the upper grades. It has been the author's purpose to give "a broadly national-
point of view," and ''an adequate treatment of certain topics which hitherto have been too little stressed
in the study of American history."
Particular attention has been given to the European background of our history, the sectional aspect,
social and economic conditions, our method of government, and the period since the Civil war.
James, James Alton, and Albert Hart Sanford. American history. N. Y., Chicago
[etc.] Scribner. xvii, 599 p. illus., ports., maps. [310
1st ed., published in 1909. New ed. has been brought down to date.
Latane, John Holladay. A history of the United States. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Allyn
and Bacon, xiii, 589, 28 p. illus., port., maps. (Allyn and Bacon's series of
school histories) (311
Lawler, Thomas Bona venture. Essentials of American history. Rev. ed. Boston,
N. Y. [etc.] Ginn and co. vi, 461 p. illus., plates, maps. [312
McMaster, John Bach. A brief history of the United States. Rev. and enl. N. Y.,
Cincinnati [etc.] American book co. 466, xxx p. illus., ports., maps. [313
Montgomery, David Henry. An elementary American history. Boston, N. Y. [etc.]
Ginn and co. viii, 320, xlii p. illus., maps. (His Leading facts of history series)
[314
1st ed., 1904.
Skinner, Avery Warner, History and government of New York. A supplement to
Elementary American history and government, by James Albert Woodburn and
I'homas Francis Moran. N. Y. and Chicago, Longmans. 64 p. illus. [315
22 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOI^.
Smith, George W. Illinois history. School news, XXXI (May) 389-391. [316
"Intended to call attention to some of the more important national aspects of our state history,
especially that part which correlates with eighth year history."
Smith George W., and E. G. Lentz. United States history — eighth year. School
NEWS, XXXI (Jan.-Apr.) 205-208, 249-251, 298-300, 341-343. [317
CoNTENT.s.— Military movements in the Civil war. Political movements during the war. Recon-
struction. Siuumary of period— 1865-1917.
Tappan, Eva March. Our European ancestors; an introduction to United States
history. Boston and N. Y., Houghton Mifflin co. vi, 263 p. (The Tappan-
Kendall histories) [318
Tarkington, Grace A. My country, a textbook in civics and patriotism for young
Americans. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Ginn and co. vi, 394 p. illus., map. [313
Tex, Mamie Catherine. History, for eighth year, to harmonize with the Illinois
state course of study, sixth general revision. Treats all the work on eighth year
history. Taylorville, 111., MamieC. Tex. 136 p. [320
History of the United States from 1801 to 1918.
Tex, Mamie Catherine. History, for seventh year, to harmonize with the Illinois
state course of study — sixth general revision. Treats all the work on seventh year
history. Taylorville, 111., Mamie C. Tex. 130 p. [321
History of the United States to 1800.
Thwaites, Reuben Gold, and Calvin Noyes Kendall. A history of the United States
for grammar schools. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Houghton Mifflin co. xxvi, 511 p.
illus., plate, maps. [The Tappan-Kendall series of elementary histories] [322
" Revised August, 1918."
West, Willis Mason. History of the American people. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Allyn
and Bacon, xvi, 729, 44 p. illus., port., maps. [323
Intended for high school use. It is based upon the writer's "American history and government,"
pub. in 1913, but is essentially a new work, not a revision.
Wilson, Clair Byers. Outline of U. S. history. [Clearfield, Pa., Printed by Kurtz
bros.J 138 p. 324
National Characteristics and Ideals.
Andrews, Matthew Page. A heritage of freedom; or The political ideals of the English-
speaking peoples. N. Y., George H. Doran co. 110 p. [325
Contents.— Founding of democracy in America. Beginnings of Anglo-American democracy. The
progress of democracy in Britain and colonial America. Autocracy severs the bonds of political union.
Origin of political misunderstanding in historical misconceptions. The dawn of Anglo-American peace.
Anglo-American democracy confronts the forces of Pan-European autocracy. A century of Anglo-
American disa^'reements settled by discussion and arbitration. Bibliographical suggestions. Ap-
pendix.
Fulton, Maurice Garland, ed. National ideals and problems; essays for college
English. N. Y., Macmillan. xii, 415 p. [326
It has been the editor's purpose to "bring together a number of significant essays, addresses, and
state papers which should be helpful in showing students what others . . . have thought or novv
think about their country — its people, its ideals, and its significance both at home and abroad."
Gilles, Armand. L'ame americaine (avec un texte en anglais). Paris, Belisari et cie,
editeurs. 42 p. _ [326a
Hill, David Jayne. Americanism, what it is. N. Y. and London, Appleton. xiv
280 p. 19^^'°. [327
Contents.— The American conception of the state. The crisis in American constitutionalism.
Takingsoundings. The tests of American democracy. Americanism and world politics. The duty of
national defense. New perils for Americanism.
Monroe, Paul, and Irving E. Miller, eds. The American spirit; a basis for world
democracy. Yonkers-on-Hudson, N. Y., World book co. xv, 336 p. [328
A collection of addresses, poems, etc., which are illustrative of the American spirit. Intended for use
as a text-book.
North Carolina. University. Dept. of English. National ideals in British and Amer-
ican literature ; a syllablus prepared by members of the Department of English in the
University of North Carolina, ('hapel Hill, N. C, The University, ix, 85 p.
(University of North Carolina extension leaflets. War information series, no. 14)
[329
Amoricau ideals: p. 53-04.
1918. 23
Rodrigues, Gustave. The people of action, an essay on American idealism, by Gus-
tavo Rodrigues; tr. by Louise Seymour Houghton; with an introduction by J. Mark
Baldwin. N. Y., Scribner. lii, 251 p. [330
Swilt, Lucius B. America's debt to England. Hist, teach, mag., IX (Jan.) 6-9.
[331
Concerned with the development of the Anglo-Saxon foundations of liberty upon which our demo,
cratic government has been built.
Miscellaneous.
Balcli, Edwin Swift. American explorers of Africa. Geog. rev., V (Apr.) 274-281.
Brief record of American enterprise in the exploration of Africa.
Chester, French Ensor. The true story of the flag. Yale rev., VII (July) 702-711.
[333
Fallows, Samuel, ed. The story of the American flag, with patriotic selections and
incidents. Chicago, Jorgensen and Wallace, viii, 132 p. illus., ports. [334
Hodgins, George Sherwood. National flags of the United States. Jour. Am. hist.,
XII (Apr.) 292-306. [335
Maclay, Edgar Stanton. How it became plain "Mr. President"; many United States
senators favored monarchial forms. D. A. R. mag., LII (Jan.) 19-22. [336
Cont. from v. LI, 1917.
"Reprinted in part from the Journal of the American Irish historical society."
Phillips, P. Lee. Some old time city directories. D. A. R. mag., LII (Oct.) 597-
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Describes some early directories of New York, Philadelphia, Boston and Washington.
Phillips, P. Lee. Some peculiar maps. D. A. R. mag., LII (Aug.) 449-461. [338
a description of some peculiar maps which have "some historical, artistic or freakish characteris-
tics." They include maps of American regions, etc.
A rare old flag. Americana, XII (Apr.) 205-209. [339
An account of the flag at Fort McHenry, which inspired the writing of our national song, "The Star
Spangled Banner."
Roland, Mary J. Driver. Old Glory, the true story. N. Y., Printed for the author.
[16], 108 p. illus., plates, ports. " [340
"'Old Glory,' the popular name for the American flag, was first applied to the national emblem in
Nashville, Tenn., on February 25, 1862, by a Salem (Mass.) sea-captain, William Driver."
Williams, John L. B. America's Westminster Abbey. D. A. R. mag., LII (July)
414-^18. [341
Tho graveyard at Princeton university where many of the nation's illustrious dead are buried.
Colonial History to 1763.
General.
Carter, Clarence E. British policy towards the American Indians in the South.
Efg. KisT. rev., XXXIII (Jan.) 37-56. [342
Lavrll, Cecil Fairfield, and Charles Edward Payne. Imperial England. N. Y.,
Macmillan. 395 p. [343
It is the purpose of the writers to contribute to an understanding "of the forces, motives and aims
that have made the British empire possible and of the light that it throws on the problem of world
organization." Traces the development of the empire from the earliest times.
Contains chapters on "The great duel with France," dealing particularly with the struggle in
America, and on "The American revolution."
McLennan, J. S. Louisbourg, from its foundation to its fall, 1713-1758. London,
Macmillan. xi, 454 p. plates, maps. [344
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 65-68.
Rowland, Albert Lindsay. Heroes of early American history. Phila., Franklin pub.
CO. 241 p. illus., plate. [345
"A history reader for the fourth grade. Written primarily for Philadelphia school children, there
is an emphasis on ^hara^ters and incidents connected with the early history of Pennsylvania."
24 AMERTCAIT HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOlSr.
Vallette. Marc F. States of our Union settled by Catholics. Am. Cath. quar. rev.,
XLIII (July) 353-377. [346
Wrong, George McKinnon. The conquest of New France; a chronicle of the colonial
wars. New Haven, Yale university press [etc.] x, 246 p. ports., map. (The
chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. X) [347
" Abraham Lincoln edition."
Tells the storv of the English-French conflict in America from 1690 to 1760. Several chapters are
levoted to the conflicts between Boston and New France, and to the struggle in the Great "West and
the Ohio valley.
French and Indian War.
Fitch, Thomas. The Fitch papers. Correspondence and documents during Thomas
Fitch's governorship of the colony of Connecticut, 1754-1766. v. I: May 1754-
December 1758. Hartford, Connecticut historical society, xlix, 402 p. (Conn.
hist. soc. coll., V. XVII) [348
Albert C. Bates, editor.
Includes material of interest in relation to the French and Indian war.
Tricoche, George Nestler. Batailles oubliees: Bushy Run (5-6 aotit 1763). Rev.
HIST., XLIIIe ann. (Mar.) 281-296. [349
Regional Colonial.
[Arranged geographically]
Herrick, C.A. The early New-Englanders; what did they read? London, Alexander
Moring limited. 19 p. [350
Reprinted from "The Library," January 1918.
The writer's purpose is to show that, contrary to the opinion often expressed that the pre-Revolu-
tionary New Englander read little or nothing in laelles-lettres, in reality they had books in considerable
abundance, and among them books of general literature.
Jernegan, Marcus W. Compulsory education in the American colonies. School
REV., XXVI (Dec.) 731-749. [351
This article is limited to the New England colonies.
Jewell, Erastus P. The beginnings of New England. Granite mo., L (Jan.) 47-58.
[352
Wright, Thomas G. Colonial book peddlers. Nation, CVI (Jan. 3) 14-15. [353
"In connection with an attempt to ascertain the extent of colonial libraries and the facilities for the
purchase of books in New England during the first century of colonization," the writer has endeavored
"to find information in regard to the identity or sto3k in trade of book peddlers or hawkers."
Johnston, Mary. Pioneers of the old South; a chronicle of English colonial begin-
nings. New Haven, Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 260 p. pi., ports., map. (The
chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. V) [354
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Moses, J. M. John Mason's three great houses. Granite mo., L (Apr.) 116-119. [355
The term "great house" was applied by the settlers of New Hampshire to each of the three main
buildings of the three Masonian plantations on the Piscataqua, Odiorme's Point, Portsmouth, and
South Berwick.
Addison, Albert Christopher. The romantic story of the Mayflower Pilgrims and its
place in the life of to-day. New ed., with explantory notes. Boston, The Page
CO. xxii, 192 p. plates, ports. [356
"First impression, September, 1911; new revised edition, October, 1918."
Carpenter, Edmund Janes. The Mayflower Pilgrims. N. Y. and Cincinnati, The
Abingdon press. 255 p. port., plates. [357
Henry Jacob's church in New England; a tercentenary memorial. Congrega-
tional HIST. soc. TRANS., VII, uo. 3, May 1917, 167-179. [357a
Outline of the history of two evangelical churches in Massachusetts, at Scituate and at Barnstable,
both of which represent, by unbroken succession, the fellowship gathered by Henry Jacob in London
in 1616. The branc^h in America was established by John Lothrop and followers in 1634.
Morton, Nathaniel. Nathaniel Morton to Thomas Prence. Mass. hist, soc proc,
LI, 201-202. [358
Written from Plymouth, April 2, 1658.
Pope, Charles Henry, ed. The Plymouth scrap book; the oldest original documents
extant in Plymouth archives, printed verbatim, some reproduced, copied and ed.
by Charles Henry Pope . . . with a review of Bradford's History of Plimouth
plantation. Boston, Mass., C. E. Goodspeed and co. ix, 149 p. facsims. [359
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 25
Pory, John. John Pory's lost description of Plymouth colony in the earliest days of
the Pilgrim fathers, together with contemporary accounts of English colonization
elsewhere in New England and in the Bermudas; ed., with an introduction and
notes, by Champlin Burrage. Boston and N. Y., Houghton Mifflin co. xxiv, 65 p.
plate, fold, maps, facsims. [360
From a hitherto unpublished manuscript quarto in the John Carter Brown library. The first
section, relating to the discovery and early history of the Bermudas, is anonymous, but the editor has
been able to identify its author as Richard Norwood. The other two sections, copied from letters
written by John Pory, the first dated 1622, are descriptions of Plymouth and of the New England coast.
Maps: Facsimile of Capt. John Smith's Issue of Norwood's map of the Bermudas of 1622 as rearranged
and published in the Generall historie, 1624. Facsimile of Norwood's map of the Bermudas as first
published complete in 1626.
Skinner, Charlotte. John Alden, of the "Mayflower." Congregational hist,
soc. TRANS., VII, no. 4, Oct. 1917, 242-245. [360a
Offers evidence to show that John Alden came from Raleigh, in Essex, England.
Usher, Roland G. The Pilgrims and their history. N. Y., Macmillan. x, 310 p.
plate, ports., maps, facsim. ■ [361
Usher, Roland G. The story of the Pilgrims for children. N. Y., Macmillan. xiii,
142 p. illus., plates. [362
Andrews, Charles M, Current lawful money of New England. Am. hist, rev.,
XXIV (Oct.) 73-77. [363
The writer concludes "tha^ 'current lawful money of New England' migh^ be either Massachusetts
shillings, foreign silver a-^ proclamation rates, or bills of credit at their face value, but that the latter
was ^he commonly accepted meaning of the term."
A ^erm frequently found in laws, bonds, iiivenl^ories, and accounts, whose meaning is clearly not the
same in all cases.
Andrews, Charles M. "State of the trade," 1763. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XIX,
379-390. [364
Copy of a recently discovered document, containing the draft of a "state of trade," drawn up by
^he Society for encouraging trade and commerce, formed at Boston in April, 1763, for the immediate
purpose of preventing the renewal of the molasses act of 1733, which was due to expire' in 1764. It is
valuable for the light it throws on the fishery of the Province and the commercial relations with Great
Britain.
Dow, George Francis, ed. Essex county quarterly court records relating to Topsfield,
[1664-1668] Topsfield hist. soc. coll., XXIII, 56-80. [364a
Ford, Worthington Chauncey. Captain Wollaston, Humphrey Rasdell and Thomas
Weston. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LI, 219-232. [365
Prinl^s several extracts from early Virginia records which ^hrow ligh^ on the ques1;ion of ^he visit
of Captain Wollaston to the coast of New England in 1624.
Friedman, Lee M. Cotton Mather and the Jews. Am. Jew. hist. soc. pub., XXVI,
201-210. [368
List of captive Indian children, 1676. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XIX, 25-28. [367
A list of captive Indian children who, in 1676, were distributed among Massachusetts households
for service.
Massachusetts archives. Documents relating to Marblehead, Massachusetts [1643/4-
1693] Copied from the Massachusetts archives. Essex inst. hist, coll., LIV
(Jan.-Oct.) 22-32, 181-186, 276-288, 317-320. [368
Matthews, Albert. Note on the 1672 edition and the 1675 volume of the Massa-
chusetts general laws. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XIX, 10-21. [369
Matthews, Albert. Notes on early autopsies and anatomical lectures. Col. soc.
Mass. pub., XIX, 273-290. [370
An account of autopsies in early colonial times, mainly in Massachusetts, and of plans for estab-
lishing courses of meciical lectures, from 1736 ^o 1770, when provision was ma'de for a medical professor-
ship z.\ Harvard college.
Mauduit, Jasper. Jasper Mauduit, agent in London for the province of the
Massachusetts-Bay, 1762-1765. The Charles Grenfill Washburn collection [of
letters and papers. Boston] The Massachusetts historical society, xxxvii, 194 p.
(Mass. hist. soc. coll., v. LXXIV) [371
"These letters and papers, including military accounts for 1759 and 1761, cover a period beginning
July 14, 1760,' and ending on September 4, 1765 . . . They relate to the agency in London of the
province of Massachusetts Bay and concern two of the agents: William' Bollan, who was agent from
1746 to 1762, and Jasper Mauduit, who succeeded him and whose agency terminated in January, 1765."
Preface signed: Charles G. Washburn.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 134.
Merritt, Percival. The King's gift to Christ church, Boston, 1733. Col. soc. Mass.
PUB., XIX, 299-331. [372
26 AMEBIC AN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Morison, Samuel Eliot, ed. The humble request of the Massachusetts Puritans,
and A modell of Christian charity, by John Winthrop, 1630. [Boston, The Old
South association, 1917] 22 p. (Old South leaflets, no. 207) [372a
A reprint of two of the most important tracts on the founding of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay.
Newspaper items relating to Danvers [1754-1766] Danvers hist. soc. coll., VI,
92-95. [373
Nichols, Benjamin Ropes. Index to Cotton's ms. vocabulary of the Massachusetts
(Indian) language. By Benj. R. Nichols, esq., member of the Mass. histor. society.
Salem, Massachusetts, 1822. [Massachusetts historical society, Photostat, 1918]
facsim.: 221 (i. e. 232) numbered leaves. [373a
Facsimile of manuscript index to Josiah Cotton's "Vocabulary" which was compiled about 1707-08,
and published in the society's Collections, 3d ser., v. II (1830) p. 147-257. It included texts in English
and Indian.
Facsimile retains paging of ms., 11 blank pages being unnumbered.
Park, Charles Edwards. Friendship as a factor in the settlement of Massachusetts.
Am. antiq. soc. proc, XXVIII, pt. 1, 51-62. [374
Perley, Sidney. Center of Salem village in 1700. Essex inst. hist, coll., LIV
(July) 225-245. [375
Perley, Sidney. Hathorne: part of Salem village in 1700. Danvers hist. soc.
COLL., VI, 33-45, 115-137. [376
Also pub. in Essex inst. hist, coll., LIII (Oct. 1917) 332-344; and LIV (Apr. 1918) 115-137.
Perley, Sidney. The Plains: part of Salem in 1700. Essex inst. hist, coll., LIV
(Oct.) 289-316. [377
Prince, Thomas. Diary of the Rev. Thomas Prince, 1737. Col. soc. Mass. pub.,
XIX, 331-364. [378
Introduction and notes by Albert Matthews.
Printing bills, 1758-1768. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LI, 338-340. [379
Province of ^he Massachusetts Bay to Thos. and John Fleet, dr., 1758; to Edes and Gill, dr., 1768.
Reardon, Kenneth Norman. The life and times of John Eliot. Roxbury hist.
soc. YR.-BK., 1918, 47-53. [379a
Redstone, V. B., comp. Shipments to New England, 1636-1639. Mass. hist. soc.
PROC, LI, 282-284.
Records of supplies for the Massachusetts Bay colony found among the "port books" in the Public
record office, London.
Stoughton, Israel. Israel Stoughton to John Winthrop. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LI,
285-286. [381
A le^^er written ^o Governor Winthrop, in July 1637, while the writer was on ^he expedition agains^
^he Pequods.
Tuttle, Julius H. The Mathers and Sir Charles Hobby. Col. soc. Mass. pub.,
XIX, 149-156. [383
Letters of Increase Mather dated March 28, 1698, of Cotton Mather dated November 26, 1703, and of
Increase M ather dated December 8, 1703, communicated by Julius H. Tuttle. The first letter of Increase
Mather concerns his cfTorts to secure a new charter for Harvard college, the other two letters "shed
further interesting light on the efforts of the Mathers to displace Joseph Dudley, as governor of Massachu-
setts Bay and to procure a new charter for Harvard college."
Abstracts from volume I of the Rhode Island land evidences in the state archives.
R. I. hist. soc. coll., XI (Jan. -Apr.) 18-22, 58-61. [383
Consist of deeds, 1650-1671.
Bicknell, Thomas Williams. Rhode Island: Boston the preparatory school for
Aquidneck. Americana, XII (July) 319-342. [384
Account of the circumstances and events in the Massachusetts Bay Colony that brought about the
banishment of Roger Williams from Massachusetts and the founding of the colony of Rhode Island
on Aquidneck.
From advance sheets of the writer's "History of the state of Rhode Island and Providence plantations."
Chapin, Howard Millar. Pomham and his fort. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XI (Jan.)
31-36. [385
Erected for the Shawomet sachem in 1644 by his English allies as a defence against the Narragansetts.
Chapin, Howard Millar. Rhode Island in the colonial wars. A list of Rhode Island
soldiers & sailors in the old French & Indian war, 1755-1762. Providence, Printed
for the [Rhode Island historical] society. 155 p. [386
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 27
Isham, Norman M. Preliminary report to the Society of colonial wars of Rhode
Island on the excavations at the Jireh Bull garrison house on Tower Hill in South
Kingstown, R. I. hist. soc. coll., XI (Jan.) 3-11. [387
Stevens, Maud Lyman. Measures of defence in old Newport. Newport hist. soc.
BUL., no. 26 (July) 3-11. [388
Measures of defence against the Indians in colonial times.
Dexter, Franklin B., ed. A selection from the correspondence and miscellaneous
papers of Jared Ingersoll [1743-1781] New Haven colony hist. soc. pap., IX,
201-472. ^ [389
The letters given in the first two sections illustrate his early career and his service as agent for the
colony of Connecticut in London, 1758-1760.
Fitch, Thomas. The Fitch papers. Correspondence and documents during Thomas
Fitch's governorship of the colony of Connecticut, 1754-1766. v. I: May 1754-
December 1758. Hartford, Connecticut historical society, xlix, 402 p. (Conn.
hist. soc. coll., V. XVII) [390
Albert C. Bates, editor.
Welles, Lemuel A. The loss of the charter government in Connecticut. New
Haven colony hist. soc. pap., IX, 90-128. [391
Albany co., N. Y. Early records of the city and county of Albany and colony of
Rensselaerswyck. v. III. (Notarial papers 1 and 2, 1660-1696). Translated
from the original Dutch by Jonathan Pearson; revised and edited by A. J. F. Van
Laer, archivist. Albany, University of the state of New York. 644 p. [392
At head of title: The University of the state of New York. New York state library. History
bulletin 10.
Benham, W. Hamilton. The churches and clergy of colonial New York. N. Y.
state hist. ASSOC PROC, XVI, 1917, 82-102. [393
Buflinton, Arthur Howland. New York's place in intercolonial politics. N. Y.
STATE hist. ASSOC. PROC, XVI, 1917, 51-62. [394
The commission and instructions issued by Queen Anne to Lord Cornbury. N. Y.
HIST, soc BUL., II (Oct.) 99-102. [395
Includes facsimiles of these two documents of Dec. 5, 1702, and Jan. 29, 1702-3, of which the originals
are in the collection of the New York historical society.
Deed signed by "James" Duke of York. N. Y. hist, soc bul., II (Apr.) 24-26. [396
Includes a facsimile of the original document which is in the collection of the New- York historic a
society. It is a deed for a house on Stone street, bearing signature of "James" Duke of York, dated
July 5, 1669.
Finegan, Thomas E, Colonial schools and colleges in New York. N. Y. state
HIST. ASSOC PROC, XVI, 1917, 165-182. [397
Mathews, Catharine T. S,., contrib. An early colonial record. N. Y. geneal. and
BiOG. rec, xlix (Oct.) 369-374. [39)5
"A list of those present at the funeral of Mrs. Gertruyd (Schuyler) Van Cortlandt in August, 1723,
in New York city . . . with a few family notes."
Mitchell, Edward Page. Colonial journalism in New York. N. Y. state hist.
ASSOC. PROC, XVI, 1917, 120-136. [399
New York historical society. Collections for the year 1917. N. Y., Printed for the
Society, x, 322 p. (The John Watts de Peyster fund publication, L) [400
Contents.— The letters and papers of Cadwallader Golden, v. I, 1711-1729.
"He is most familiarly known as the Tory lieutenant-governor of New York at the outbreak of the
Revolutionary war." The letters are valuable material for the study of the history of the province.
O'Brien, Michael J. The Irish burghers of New Amsterdam and fraemen of New
Ycrk. Am. Irish HIST. soc. JOUR., XVII, 146-148. [401
Seybolt, R. F. The colonial citizen of New York city; a comparative study of certain
aspects of citizenship practice in fourteenth century England and colonial New York
city. Madison, Univ. of Wisconsin. 40 p. (Univ. of Wis. Studies in the social
sciences and history, no. 1) [402
Siegfried, Francis P. An old frontier of France. Am. Cath. hist, soc rec, XXIX
(June) 131-139. [403
A review of "An old frontier of France; the Niagara region and adjacent lakes under French control.
By Frank H. Severance." Pub. in 1917.
Spencer, Charles Worthen. The land system of colonial New York. N. Y. state
hist. ASSOC PROC, XVI, 1917, 150-164. [404
136908°— 21— VOL. 3 4
28 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Translation of an early Dutch Thanksgiving proclamation issued by Governor An-
thony Colve, dated June 30, 1674. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., I, no. 4 (Jan.) 106. [405
Van Laer, A. J. F. Minutes of the Amsterdam Chamber of the Dutch West India
company, 1635-1636. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, XLIX (July) 217-228. [406 j
Contains translations from a "hitherto practically unknown volume of minutes of the Amsterdam |
Chamber of-the Dutch West India company which on account of its early date is of unusual interest as a I
source for the history of New Netherland." !
The original record is deposited among the national archives at the Hague. j
Van Laer, A. J. F. Settlers of the colony of Rensselaerswyck, 1637. N. Y. geneal. j
AND BiOG. rec, XLIX (Oct.) 365-367. [407 !
Copy of a memorandum in the handwriting of Arent van Curler, giving a list of persons indebted to
the owners of the ship Rensselaerswyck for board beginning on the first of October 1636, and endingin
1637. The manuscript was salvaged from the fire in the state capitol at Albany in March 1911. \
Zwierlein, Frederick J. New Netherland intolerance. Cath. hist, rev., IV (July) j
186-216. [408 I
Abstracts of New Jersey commissions, civil and military, from liber a. a. a. of commis- '
sions in the secretary of state's office at Trenton [1708-1710] Pa. geneal. soc. pub.,
VII (Mar.) 62-69. [409 j
Cont. from v. VI, p. 294, pub. in 1917. [
Beekman, Katharine M. A colonial capital; Perth Amboy and its church warden, •
JamesParker. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. Ill, no. 1 (Jan.) 1-25. [410
First members of Six-Mile Run church [1711] Somerset go. hist, quar., VII (Apr.)
127-128. [411
Six-Mile Run church at what is now Franklin Park, N. J.
Eshleman, H, Frank. Items in the Pennsylvania Gazette concerning Lancaster
county. Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., XXII, no. 2 (Feb.) 21-26. [412
Items down to the close of the year 1750.
Lamberton, E. V. Colonial libraries of Pennsylvania. Pa. mag. hist., XLII (July)
193-234. [413
Logan, James. Letter of James Logan to William Penn, jr. [Phila. , July 25, 1700] Pa.
MAG. HIST., XLII (Jan.) 86-88. [414 |
Oppenheim, Samuel. Jewish owners of ships registered at the port of Philadelphia,
1730-1775. Am. Jew. hist. soc. pub., XXVI, 235-237. [415 j
Oppenheim, Samuel. A Philadelphia Jewish merchant's day-book, 1755-1761. Am. ,
Jew. hist. soc. pub., XXVI, 231-234. [416 ,
Gives "some account of the reception of William Penn when he arrived in Pennsylvania anno 1700." i
Maryland. General assembly; Acts of the General assembly of Maryland hitherto '
unprinted, 1694-1729. Pub. by authority of the state under the direction of the j
Maryland historical society. Bernard Christian Steiner, editor. Baltimore, Mary- j
land historical society, xiii, 476 p. (Archives of Maryland, XXXVIII) [417 (
Byrd, William. Letters of William Byrd, first. Va. mag. hist., XXVI (Jan.-Oct.) j
17-31, 124-134, 247-259, 388-392. [418 !
Letters from Virginia, Mar. 5, 1688-Aug. 8, 1090. i
Custis, John. Letters of John Custis, 1687. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XIX, 367-370.
[419
Five letters written by John Custis, of Virginia, to John Usher, merchant of Boston. They show a '
commercial connection between Virginia and Massachusetts in the 17th ce»tury, and also contain a j
personal interest.
Davies, Samuel. Samuel Davies to McCullock. Col. soc. Mass. pub.,
XIX, 22-25. [420
a letter from the Rev. Samuel Davies to Mr. McCullock, dated Hanover, Virginia, 11 August, 1758.
Jones, Lewis H. Some recently discovered data relating to Capt. Roger Jones who
came to the colony of Virginia with Lord Culpeperin 1680, including several letters
written by him while a captain in the British navy. Wm. and Mary quar.,
XXVII (July) 1-18. ' [421
Jones papers. Va. mag. hist., XXVI (Jan.-July) 70-80, 162-181, 283-289. [422
Papers of Capt. Roger Jones, who came to Virginia with Lord Culpeper. They extend over the period
from Feb. 17, 1724, to Oct. 18, 1725, and afford information in regard to many phases of colonial life.
Keith, Arthur Leslie. The German colony of 1717. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVI
(Jan.-Apr.) 178-195, 234-249. . [423
Cont. from v. XXVI, p. 96.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 29
Orange county tithe lists [1734, 1738, and 1739] Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII
(July) 19-27. ' [424
Papers from the Virginia state auditor's office, now in the state library. Va. mag
HIST., XXVI (Jan.-Apr.) 49-57, 151-161. [425
Includes a copy of the tobacco act, 1713, and a letter of Gov. Alexander Spotswood, Aug. 30, 1711, in
regard to the collection of the export duty on tobacco.
The pulpit cloth of Appomattox church. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII (July)
28-33. [426
Copy of a court record of "Westmoreland coiinty, June 3, 1715, giving the proceedings in the exami-
nation of Robert Alworthy, who was accused of having stolen the pulpit cloth out of the church in
Appomattox.
Virginia (Colony) Council. Legislative journals of the Council of colonial
Virginia. In three volumes. Edited by H. R. McUwaine. v. I. Richmond,
Va. [The Colonial press, Everett Waddey co.] viii, 591 p. [427
Edited and published by authoritv of the Library board, Virginia state library.
Contents.— Jime 9, 1680-Dec. 24, 1714.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Oct. 1919) 118-120.
Virginia (Colony) Council and General court. Minutes of the Council and
General court, 1622-1629. From the originals in the Library of Congress. Va.
MAG. HIST., XXVI (Jan.-Oct.) 1-16, 113-123, 235-246, 350-362. [428
Cont.from v. XXV, 1917.
Virginia in 1681-1682. (Abstracts by W. N. Sainsbury, and copies in the McDonald
and DeJarnette papers, Virginia state library) Va. mag. hist., XXVI (Jan.-Oct.)
41-48, 135-144, 260-266, 393-396. [429
Includes minutes and reports of the Committee of trade and plantations, commission to the Lord
Culpeper, governor of Virginia, 27th of Nov. 1682, and instructions from the King to Lord Culpeper,
Jan. 27, 1681/2.
Henderson, Archibald. The origin of the Regulation in North Carolina. N. C.
BOOKLET, XVII (Apr.) 171-18^. [430
Reprinted from the American historical review, v. XXI, January 1916.
Smith, Henry A. M. Sir John Yeamans, an historical error. S. C. hist, mag., XIX
(July) 152-156. [431
Corrects an error made in several historical works regarding the death of Sir John Yeamans, governor
of the province of Carolina.
Webber, Mabel L,, ed. An Indian land grant in 1734. S. C. hist, mag., XIX (Oct.)
157-161. [432
Grant of land from the chiefs and headmen of the Cherokee nation.
An early description of Georgia, from the Gentleman's magazine, January, 1756,
volume 26. Ga. hist, quar., II (Mar.) 37-42. ■ [433
Harden, William. Sir James Wright, governor of Georgia by royal commission, 1760-
1782. Ga. hist, quar., II (Mar.) 22-36. [434
Wright, Sir James. Protest and caveat of Sir James Wright against Governor Thomas
Boone, of South Carolina. Ga. hist, quar., II (Mar.) 43-46. [435
Taken from the Georgia Gazette, April 21, 1763.
Printed in connection with a statement made in the article on " Sir James Wright," in the Quarterly
(no. 434) on the attempt made by Gov. Thomas Boone to take, in the name of South Carolina, certain
lands lying south of the Altamaha river.
Abstracts of French and Spanish documents concerning the early history of Louisiana.
La. hist, quar., I (Jan.) 224-257. [436
Documents of the years 1723-1724.
Cruzat, Heloise Hulse. New Orleans under Bienville. La. hist, quar., I (Jan.)
55-86. [437
Qulemans, J. B. Catholic explorers and pioneers of Illinois. Cath. hist, rev., IV
(July) 141-169. [438
A study of the French influence in Illinois from the days of Marquette, Allouez, La Salle, Tonty and
Hennepin, to the time of Father Pierre Gibault, 1768-1788.
Dart, Henry Plauche. The legal institutions of Louisiana. So. law quar., Ill
(Nov.) 247-280. [439
Contents.— French period: I. 1699-1712. Iberville and Bienville. II. 1712-1717. Crozat's charter.
III. 1717-1732. The Company of the West. IV. 1731-1762. Crown colony.
Also pub. in the Louisiana historical quarterly, II (Jan.) 72-103.
Jones, A. E. Le pere Jesuite Michel Baudoin. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV
(Jan.) 30-32. [440
Missionary in Louisiana from 1728 to 1763.
30 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
King, Grace. Notes on the life and services of Bienville. La. hist, quar., I (Jan.)
39-51. [**1
Maas, Otto. Las ordenes Feligiosas de Espaila y la colonizacion de America en la
segunda parte del siglo xviii. Barcelona, Giro. 217 p. [442
" Extracto de los 'Estudios I'ranciscanos,' anos 1917 y 18."
Morrison A. J. The question of Fort Loudoun on river Tennessee. Va. mag. hist.,
XXVI (Api---Jiily) 203-204, 311-312. [443
In re-^ard to tlie question as to whether Virginia or South Carolina built Fort Loudoun in Tennessee
about r757. I'resents evidence to show that the fort built by Virginia was at the CheroJiee town of
I hota, a few miles abo\ e Fort Loudoun.
Richardson, Caroline Francis. To Monsieur de Bienville, debtor. Sewanee rev.,
XXVI (Apr.) 173-182. [444
Concerned with the coming of the Ursuline Sisters from France to New Orleans in 1727, to establish
hospitals and schools for girls m tne colony.
Sidelights on Louisiana history. La. hist, quar., I (Jan.) 87-153. [445
Extracts from papers and manuscripts in the collection of the Louisiana historical society, which
throw light on tne nistory of the colon^ m Bien\ file's time.
Thompson, Joseph J. Illinois missions. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (July-Oct.) 38-63,
185-197. [446
Thompson, T. P. Paper read by . . . La. hist. soc. pub., X, 7-11. [447
Brief aaoouni of the early history of Louisiana and the founding of New Orleans.
Twitchell, R. E. Spanish colonization and the founding of ciudades and villas in
the time of Juan de Oil ate. hi New Mexico bar association. Minutes of the
thirty-second annual session, Albuquerque, New Mexico, August 29, 30 and 31st,
1918. p. 27-43. [448
A study of Spanish colonial administration in America during the 16th and 17th centuries.
1763-1783.
Sources and Documents.
The commissions of Georgia to Benjamin Franklin to act as colonial agent [1768, 1770,
1773J Ga. hist, quar., II (Sept.) 150-164. [449
Dexter, Franklin B., ed. A selection from the correspondence and miscellaneous
papers of Jared Ingersoll. New Haven colony hist. soc. pap., IX, 201-472. [450
I. Nevv Haven 1743-1756. II. New Haven and London, 1758-1764. III. London and New Haven,
1765-1766. IV. New Haven, 1765-1769. V. Philadelphia and New Haven, 1770-1781.
The litters illustrata his early career, his serWce as a^ent for the colony of Connecticut in London,
the episode of his service as stamp distributor for Oonaecticut, and nis career as judge of the vice-
admiralty court in Philadelphia. The essential portions of his "Letters relating to the Stamp act,"
pub. in 1766, are nere reprinted.
Downer, Silas. Discourse, delivered in Providence, in the colony of Rhode Island,
on the 25th day of July, 1768. At the dedication of the tree of liberty, from the
summer house in the tree. By a Son of liberty (Silas Downer) Providence,
Printed and sold by John Waterman at his printing office, at the paper-mill, 1768.
Tarry town, N. Y., Reprinted, W. Abbatt, 1918. 16 p. (The Magazine of history
with notes and queries. Extra number 64 [pt. 3]) [451
Farwell, John W., ed. Opposition to state government in New Hampshire [1776]
Col. soc. Mass. pub., XIX, 295-297. [452
Copy of a letter to the selectmen and Committee of safety of Greenland, New Hampshire, January
10, 1776, and of the original minutes of the meeting at Greenland, January 12, 1776, to remonstrate
against ttie adoption Dy the Provincial congress of a form of go\^ernment for the colony, and opposing
the movement for independence.
Grimke, John Faucheraud. Order book of John Faucheraud Grimke (August 1778-
Mayl780j. S. C. hist, mag., XIX (Apr., Oct.) 101-104, 181-188. [453
Order book of South Carolina artillery. This installment covers the period from Mar. 11 to Mar. 22,
1780.
Cont.fromv. XVIII, 1917.
James, James Alton. The value of the memoir of George Rogers Clark as an historical
document. Miss. Valley hist, rev., extra number (Oct.) 249-270. [454
The original of the document is in the possession of the State historical society of Wisconsin. It
purports to give a detailed account of events with which Clark was connected in Virginia, Kentucky
and the Northwest from the close of the year 1773 to September, 1779. The writer concludes that the
memoir is essentially a trustworthy account and of value as an historical source for the Revolution
in the West,
L
a
WHITINGS OIT AMERICA]^ HISTORY, 1918. 31
Knox, William. William Knox on American taxation, 1769. Ed. by Samuel Eliot
Morison. [Boston, The Old South association, 1917] 24 p. (Old South leaflets,
no. 210) [454a
A selection of passages from th6 pamphlet of William Knox, entitled: The controversy between Great
Britain and her colonies reviewed.
Selected to represent the English side of the controversy.
Laurens, Henry. Henry Laurens, president of the Continental congress to Louis XVI,
king of France, October 21, 1778, commending the services of the Marquis de
Lafayette. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., I, no. 4 (Jan.) 108. [455
Reproduction of the original document which is in the collection of the New York historical society.
Le Moy, A. Correspondances bretonnes du xviiie siecle; extraits relatifs a la guerre
d'independance americaine. Revue de l'Anjou (Angers) Sept., 1918. [456
Letters colonial and Revolutionary. Pa. mag. hist., XLII (Jan.) 75-85. [457
Selected from the Dreer collection, Manuscript division, Historical society of Pennsylvania.
Includes a letter from Gen. Samuel Elbert to Col. Lachlan Mcintosh, Savannah, Ga., Sept. 23, 1776;
one from Brig. Gen. T. Conway to the Supreme executive council of Penna., Aug. 17, 1777; from Brig.
Gen. John Glover to General Washington, Jan. 28, 1781; and from Col. Mordecai Gist to Gov. R. H.
Lee, Charleston, S. C, Feb. 10, 1782.
The Preston papers relating to western Virginia. Va. mag. hist., XXVI (Oct.)
363-379. [458
Correspondence of William Preston, 1774-1781, from the papers in the Virginia state library. They
are concerned with Dunmore's war, the George Rogers Clark expedition, and the Revolution in the
West.
Robertson, James Alexander, ed. Spanish correspondence concerning the American
revolution. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Aug.) 299-316. [459
Copies of three documents in- the Archivo general de Indias, Seville. The first is from Governor
Luis de Unzaga y Amezaga of Louisiana to the minister Jose de Galvez, 1776, enclosing the copy of a
letter to Charles Lee; the second and third are from Governor Bernardo de Galvez of Louisiana, 1777
and 1778, in which are enclosed copies of letters to Colonel George Morgan and to Patrick Henry. They
show the intsrest that was being taken in the Amsrican revolution by Spain and especially by Spanish
officials in North America.
Sugar in the Revolutionary war. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. Ill (Jan.) 53-54. [460
Includes a reprint o'f a letter, dated November 11, 1777, which appeared in the Burlington Almanac
of 1777.
Swan, Jeiidiah. Jedidiah Swan's orderly book. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. Ill
(Jan.) 26-44. [461
September 1-23, 1776.
Concluded from v. II, no. 3, July 1917.
[Waifen, Ms. Msrcy (Otis)] The adulateur; a tragedy, as it is now acted in Upper
Servia . . . Boston: Printed and sold at the New printing-office, near Concert-
hall, 1773. Tarrytown, N. Y., Reprinted, W. Abbatt, 1918. 35 p. (The Maga-
zine of history with notes and queries. Extra number 63 [pt. 3]) [482
The writing of this pixy was suggested by the discovery of the Hutchinson and Oliver letters. The
characters were designed to represent some of the principal personages of Massachusetts politics at
that time.
Washington co., Md. Committee of observation. Proceedings of the Committee of
observation for Elizabeth Town district (Washington county) [Jan. 1-Apr. 24, 1777]
Md. hist, mag., XIII (Mar., Sept.) 28-53, 227-248. [463
General.
Aulard, A. La revolution americaine et la revolution fran^aise. Revolution PRANg . ,
LXXI (Jan., May, Sept.) 21-46, 193-228, 385-416. [464
Traces the influence which the Ametican revolution had upon the French revolution.
Contents. — I. Les origines: William Penn et Locke. II. Declarations d'independance, con-
stitutions. III. Franklin [concerned with his activities and influence in France during the American
revolution].
Becker, Carl. The eve of the Revolution; a chronicle of the breach with England.
New Haven, Yale univ. press; Toronto, Glasgow, Brook and co. ; London, Hum-
phrey Milford, Oxford univ. press, xiii, 267 p. plates, ports. (The chronicles of
America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XI) [465
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
The writer has endea-' ored "to convey to the reader, not a record of what men did, but a sense of
how thev thought and felt about what they did."
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July 1919) 734-735; Jour. pol. econ., XXVII (Mar. 1919) 221-224.
Bell, Hamilton. The American revolution a war against German despotism. Jour.
Am. hist., XII (Apr.) 215-222. [466
32 ' AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Carson, Hampton L. Heralds of a world democracy; the English and American revo-
lutions. Am. bar ASSOC, jour., IV (Oct.) 583-603. [467
Falconer Sir Robert A. 1776 and 1914, a contrast in British colonial action. Royal
soc. Canad. trans., 3d ser., XII, sec. 1 (Dec.) 241-250. [468
Pollard, A. F. "No taxation without representation." History, n. s. Ill (Oct.)
162-164. (Historical revisions, VIII) [469 j
It is the writer's theme that there is need for revision of the prevalent idea that the colonies revolted
because they were taxed without being represented in the Imperial Parliament, but that the "real
American objection was to the absolute sovereignty of Parliament."
Schlesinger, Arthur Meier. The colonial merchants and the American revolution, i,
17^-1776'. N. Y., Columbia university; [etc.]~ 647 p. (Columbia univ. stud., 1
V. LXXVIII) [470 I
Pub also as thesis (ph. d.)— Colvmibia university, 1918. I
Rev' in- Am. econ. rev., VIII (Sept.) 591-592; Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 104-105; Nation, CVII 1
(Sept. 14) 297-299. jj
Special.
Andrews Charles M. The Boston merchants and the non-importation movement. I,
Col. sic. Mass. pub., XIX, 159-259. [471 jj
" The non-importation movement began as a merchant's device wherewith to obtain a redress of trade i
grievances; it ended as an instrument in the hands of political agitators and radicals for the enforcement jl
of their claims of constitutional liberty and freedom." I
Bates, Albert Carlos. Fighting the Kevolution with printer's ink in Connecticut: [,
the'official printing of that colony from Lexington to the Declaration. New Haven jj
colony hist. soc. pap., IX, 129-160. [472 j
Bolton, Reginald Pelham. The military hut-camp of the war of the revolution on ji
the byckman farm, Manhattan, explored by members of the Committee on field
exploration, of the New York historical society. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., II (Oct.)
89-97. [473
Reginald Pelham Bolton, secretary to the committee.
Brennan, George A. De Linctot, guardian of the frontier. III. hist. soc. jour.,
X (Oct. 1917) 323-366. [474
Major Godfrey de Linctot, associate of George Rogers Clark in the Northwest during the Revolution.
Gives an account of his activities against theBritish and Indians.
Chester, Colby M. The United States marines in the Penobscot Bay expedition,
1779. Marine corps gazette, III (Dec.) 281-292. [475
Coburn, Frank Warren. Fiction and truth about the battle on Lexington common,
April 19, 1775; a paper read before the Lexington historical society, Tuesday
evening, December 12, 1916. Lexington, Mass., The author. 60 p. [476
Corwin, Charles E. Incidents of Reformed church life in New York city during the
Revolutionary war. Presbyterian hist. soc. jour., IX (Dec.) 355-367. [477
Regarding the Dutch Reformed church in New York.
Dexter, Franklin B. Notes on some of the New Haven loyalists, including those
graduated at Yale. New Haven colony hist. soc. pap., IX, 29-45. [478
Fitzpatrick, John C. A liberty loan of the Revolution. D. A. R. mag., LII (June)
327-331. [479
Fitzpatrick, John C. Washington's Valley Forge expenses. D. A. R. mag., LII
(Feb.) 59-65. ' [480
Foster, Herbert Darling. Stark's independent command at Bennington, by Herbert
D. Foster with the collaboration of Thomas W. Streeter; with Reminiscences of
General Stark [by] Eld. James Randall; Gen. John Stark [by] Robert R. Law; The
"battle of Bennington [by] Dr. William O. Stillman. Manchester, N. H., Standard
book CO. 173-228 p. illus., port. [481
Frledenberg, Albert M. Some New York Jewish patriots [1770] Am. Jew. hist. soc.
PUB., XXVI, 237-239. [482
Halsey, R. T. Haines. America's obligation to William Pitt, Earl of Chatham.
D. A. R. MAG., LII (Sept.) 511-517. [483
Henderson, Archibald. The Mecklenburg declaration of independence. Miss. Val-
ley HIST. REV., V (Sept.) 207-215. [484
Seeks to validate the declaration.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 33
Hennet de Goutel, 6aron. Vergennes and the American independence ; Vergennes and
Wilson. Tr. by L. Ensor. Paris, Editions de la Nouvelle revue nationale. 41 p.
port. [484a
Translated from the French. See no. 485
Hennet de Goutel,^ 6aron. Vergennes et I'ind^pendance americaine; Vergennes et
Wilson. Paris, Editions de "La Nouvelle revue nationale." 44 p. port. [485
The role played by Louis XVI and hiS minister Vergennes in the American revolution is the subject
of this work.
Honeyman, A, Van Doren. The great patriot, Kosciuszko, including his New
Brunswick visit. Somerset go. hist, quar., VII (Jan.) 1-16. [486
Honeyman, A. Van Doren. The Indian massacre of Jane McCrea in 1777. Somerset
co.HisT. QUAR., VII (Oct.) 250-258. [487
Hoss, E. E. The battle of King's Mountain. Meth. quar. rev., LXVII (Apr.)
327-354. [488
Hovelaque, Henri. Lafayette et I'Amerique. Gra^stde revue, XXIIe ann, (Sept.)
456-472. [489
Jackes, Lyman B. The strange adventures of Fleury Mesplet. Can ad, mag., LI
(July) 177-185. [490,
a Revolutionary printer, protege of Franklin, who was sent by the Continental congress with its
commission to Canada in 1776, to establish a press in that country to influence the French Canadians
in the Revolutionary cause. He remained in Montreal where he set up the first printing press in Mon-
treal in 1776.
Jusserand, Jean Jules. The French and American independence (from "With
Americans of past and present days"). N. Y., Scribner. vi, 212 p. [491
Contents.— Rochambeau and the French in America, from unpublished documents. "Washington
and the French.
Kelby, William. Site of the execution of Captain Nathan Hale. N. Y. hist. soc.
BUL., II (Apr.) 8-13. [492
A letter written by the late William Kelby and published in the New York Herald of Nov. 26, 1893.
Prints a facsimile of an extract from an orderly book kept by a British officer containing record of
the execution of Captain Nathan Hale, Sept. 22, 1776.
Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The Paul Revere print of the Boston massacre. Wis. mag.
HIST., I (June) 377-387. [493
Kite, Elizabeth S. Beaumarchais and the war of American independence. With a
foreword by James M. Beck. Boston, R. G. Badger. 2 v. plates, ports. [494
Lamb, F. W. The battle of Chelsea Creek. Granite mo., L (Apr.) 120-121. [495
An engagement at Chelsea Creek, near Boston, on May 27, 1775.
Lincoln, Natalie Sumner. Three rare engravings of historic scenes. D. A. R. mag.,
LII (July) 387-388. [496
Engravings showing the first ringing of the Liberty bell, the scene on the steps of Independence
halljust after the passage of the Declaration of independence, and Lieut. Col. Tench Tilghman, of Wash-
ington's staff, announcing from the steps of Independence hall the surrender of Cornwallis.
Lines, Edwin S. Jared IngersoU, stamp master, and the Stamp act. New Haven
COLONY HIST. SOC. PAP., IX, 174-200. [497
Maine Indians in the Revolution. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VI (Nov.) 105-112.
[498
Marguy, Henri. Lafayette et les ;^tats-Unis.' Paris, Figui^re. 64 p. plates. [499
Marion, M. Papier-monnaie am^ricain et papier-monnaie francais. Rev. sci. pol.,
XL (Dec. 15). [500
Paper money issued during the American revolution and during the French revolution, and the
means employed to avert depreciation.
Mead, Spencer P. Washington's personal Continental guard and army uniforms.
Somerset co. hist, quar., VII (July) 180-183. [601
Extracts from an article by Spencer P. Mead, in the Journal of American history, v. 1, 1907, p. 126-128.
Merlant, Joachim. La France et la guerre de I'independance americaine (1776-1783).
Paris, Alcan. [6], ii, 193 p. plates. (Bibliotheque France-Amerique) [502
Rev. in: Am. hist rev., XXIV (Apr. 1919) 517-518, '
Moireau, Auguste. Une page de la primitive histoire financiere des Etats-Unis. I.
Le papier-monnaie de la Revolution americaine. II. Hamilton, fondateur du
credit des Etats-Unis. Nancy-Paris, Impr. de Berger-Levrault. 24 p. [603
34 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOI^.
Nash, Frank. The Continental line of North Carolina. N, G. booklet, XVII (Jan.)
105-134. [504
A consideration of the part that the Continental line of North Carolina took in the Revolutionary
war.
Noble, Henry Harmon. A loyalist of the St. Lawrence. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVI,
29-36. [505
An address delivered on the occasion of the erection and unveiling of a boulder and tablet in comniem-
oration of the building,- in July, 1781, of Loyal Block house, and of its builder, Captain Justus Sherwood,
of the Queen's lo3^al rangers.
Nolhac, Pierre de. Le premier livre fran^ais sur les Etats-Unis. Les arts, no.
172, 15-16. [506
A brief summary of a volume entitled "Recuejl d'estampes representant les diflerents evenements
de la guerre qui a procure I'independance aux Etats-Unis de rAmerique," pub. at Paris, 1783. It
consists of a collection of 16 engravings, with descriptive text, engraved by Nicolas Ponce and Frangois
Godefroy. ^See no. 507 below.
Nolhac, Pierre de, ed. First French book on the United States of America; a series
of etchings representing scenes of the war of independence engraved by Frangois
Godefroy and Nicolas Ponce, 1783-1784. With notice, by Pierre de Nolhac.
Paris, Impr.-edit. Manzi, Joyant et cie. 9 p. 16 plates. [507
The cover of the album was designed by Guy Arnoux and executed by the "atelier de coloris Patria
des mutiles de la guerre."
O'Brien, Michael J. Some stray historical tidbits of the American revolution. Am.
Irish hist. soc. jour., XVII, 121-136. [508
O'Dwyer, George F. Captain John McDonnell and his British prisoners. Am. Irish
hist. soc. jour., XVII, 228-230. [509
Notes on a petition made in 1777 to the Massachusetts House of representatives, by one John McDon-
nell, a sea-captain, asking for provisions for a number of British prisoners.
Pennsylvania historical commission. Services of dedication of the markers placed
at BrandywLne battlefield. In the Second report of the Pennsylvania historical
commission. [Harrisburg, Pa.] p. 17-60. [510
The story of the battle of Brandy wine, by Smith Burnham: p. 33-14.
Phillips, P. Lee. A rare caricature of Bunker Hill. D. A. R. mag., LII (July)
391-394. ^ [511
A caricature entitled "Bunkers Hill or America's head dress." It is probably one of a series found
in Matthew Darly's book entitled "Darly's comic-prints of characters, caricatures, macaronies, etc.;
dedicated to David Garrick, esq., 1776."
Pierce, Grace M. Pension laws of the Revolution. D. A. R. mag., LII (Mar.^
135-141. [512
Pierce, Grace M. The true story of Enoch Crosby — Revolutionary spy, the original
"Harvey Birch." D. A. R. mag., LII (Feb.) 73-80. [513
Enoch Crosby of Dutchess county, N. Y., who was the original of the character of "Harvey Birch"
in James Fenimore Cooper's story, "The Spy, a tale of the neutral country."
Pilven, Theodore. La Bretagne a la guerre de Findependance americaine. Paris,
Beauchesne. 71 p. [513a
Gives a list of the Bretons who took part in the war.
Pons, Louis. La Fayette aux Etats-Unis. Paris, Tequi. [514
Saunier, Charles. Les medailles frangaises de I'independance americaine. Les
arts, no. 172, 2-6. [515
Sherman, Andrew M. The mutiny of Anthonv Wayne's Pennsylvania troops in
Morris county. New Jersey, winter of 1780-81. " Am. Irish hist. soc. jour., XVII,
93-98. f516
Smith, Fitz-Henry. The memorial to the Chevalier de Saint-Sauveur; the history
of the monument and of the votes to erect it, and an account of the ceremonies at
the dedication, May 24, 1917. [Boston, T. R. Marvin and son, printers] 31 p.
plates. [517
Reprinted from the Proceedings of the Bostonian society.
The Chevalier de Saint-Sauveur, an officer of d'Estauig's fleet, lost his life m a popular disturbance
while some of the French ships were lying in Boston harbor, in September 1778.
Smith, Jonathan. The Scotch Presbyterian in the American revolution. Granite
mo., L (.Jan.) 37-44. j518
Spencer, Richard Henry. Pulaski's legion. Md. hist, mag., XIII (Sept.) 214-226.
[619
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 35
Standing, Percy Cross. The Scottish buccaneer. Unit. ser. mag., n. s. LXVII
(Apr.) 66-69. . [520
Brief narrative of the exploits of John Paul Jones.
Thayer, Henry O. Loyalists of the Kennebec, and one of them— John Carleton.
Sprague's jour. Maine hist., V (Feb.) 241-262. [521
Thompson, Joseph J, Illinois' first citizen — Pierre Gibault. III. Cath. hist, rev.,
I (July-Oct.) 79-94, 234-248. [521a
Contents.— Gibault the patriot.
Describes the part he played in securing Ameri-^an supremacy in the Northwest, the capture of
Kaskaskia, July 4, 1778, and the winning of Vlncennes, 1778-1779.
Tomlinson, Everett T. The heroism of Richard Wallace; a true story of the American
revolution. D. A. R. mag., LII (May) 298-301. [522
Williams, John L. B. A revolutionary ciuartermaster-general. D. A. R. mag., LII
(Apr.) 206-208. [623
General Nathanael Greene. "^ A *2' ^ ^''^- ^ 'll
Revolutionary Soldiers: Names.
Ely, Selden Marvin. The District of Columbia in the American revolution and
patriots of the revolutionary period who are interred in the District or in Arlington.
Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXI, 129-154. [524
riagg, Charles A., comp. An alphabetical index of Revolutionary pensioners living
in Maine. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., V (Feb.) 263-266; VI (May, Nov.)
18-24, 118-125. [524a
Contents. — Allen-Cushman.
Gardner, Frank A. Colonel Edmund Phinney's 26th regiment. Mass. mag., XI
(Jan.) 12-36. [525
This regiment was composed almost entirely of men of Cumberland county, in the "Maine district."
25th in a series of monographs on Massachusetts regiments in the Revolutionary war.
Graves of soldiers of the American revolution located or marked by D. A. R. chapters
during the year ended October 11, 1917. D. A. R. rep., XX, 58-83. [526
Partial list of the officers and privates of the Continental army confined in the Walnut
street jail [Phila.] January-May, 1778. Pa. mag. hist., XLII (Apr.) 173-174. [527
Rogers, Mrs. Harry, and Mrs. A. H. Lane. Pennsylvania pensioners of the Revo-
lution. Pa. mag. hist., XLII (Jan.-Oct.) 29-45, 156-169, 259-277, 344-352. [528
Cont. from v. XLI, 1917.
Virginia state troops in the Revolution. Va. mag. hist., XXVI (Jan.-Oct.) 58-69,
182-189, 290-296, 397-400. [529
Copies of several loose sheets from an old account book found among the papers recently transferred
from the state auditor's office to the state library.
1783-1789.
Ingraham, Charles A. The Northwest territory and the Ordinance of 1787. Ameri-
cana, Xll (Jan.) 104-113. [530
Matthews, Thomas E. The Spanish "conspiracy" in Tennessee. Tenn. hist, mag.,
IV (Mar.) 69-72. [531
a protest against the statements made in an article with the above title, published in the Tennessee
historical magazine, December 1917, and a defense of the pioneers Sevier, Robertson, Bledsoe, and Daniel
, Smith of Tennessee against the charge of conspiracy against the United States government, which was
made in the article referred to.
Phillips, P. Lee. The Jeffersonian states. D. A. R. mag., LII (June) 343-344. [532
Describes a rare map, published in 1785, showing states in the Northwest Territory, to which
names have been given by Thomas Jefferson.
Reynolds, Louise Wilson. The commonwealth of Franklin. D, A. R. mag., LII
(Jan.) 23-28. ' [533
Swem, E. G., ed. A letter from New Madrid, 1789. Miss. Valley hist, rev., V
(Dec.) 343-346. [634
Prints a letter signed by David Rankin and others, written from New Madrid, Apr. 14, 17SJ, describing
the settlement. It is copied from the Virginia Gazette of Aug. 27, 1789.
36 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
1789-1829.
Miscellaneous.
Baldwin. Simeon E. The Hartford convention. New Haven colony hist. soc.
PAP., IX, 1-28. [535
[Blanchard, Jean Pierre] Journal of my forty-fifth ascension, being the first performed
in America, on the ninth of January, 1793 . . . Phila.: Printed by Charles Cist,
no. 104 North Second street, 1793. Tarrytown, N. Y., Reprinted, W. Abbatt,
1918. 22 p. (The Magazine of history with notes and queries. Extra number 64
[pt. 1]) [536
Describes his experiences in his first balloon ascension m America, made from Philadelphia in 1793.
Cox, Isaac Joslin. The West Florida controversy, 1798-1813; a study in American
diplomacy. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins press, xii, 699 p. maps. (The Albert
Shaw lectures on diplomatic history, 1912) [537
Rev. in: Am. hist. rev.. XXIV (Oct.) 105-107; Am. jour, internat. law, XIII, (Apr.) 377-379;
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Aug.) 327-329.
Cruzat, Heloise Hulse. General Collet's reconnoitering trip down the Mississippi
and his arrest in New Orleans in 1796, by order of the baron de Carondelet, governor
of Louisiana. La. hist, quae., I (Apr.) 303-320. [538
He was arrested under suspicion of being a secret agitator and a spy.
Elliott, T. C. An event of one hundred years ago. Ore. hist. soc. quar., XIX
(Sept.) 183-187. [539
Describes the visit of the U. S. S. Ontario, Captain James Biddle, to the Columbia river country in
August 1818, to take possession of the country in the name of the United States.
Elliott, T. C. The surrender of Astoria in 1818. Ore. hist. soc. quar., XIX (Dec.)
271-282. [540
Describes the visit in October, 1818, of John Bartow Prevost, one of the American commissioners on
the mission to publicly proclaim sovereignty over the Columbia river country.
Ford, Henry Jones. Washington and his colleagues; a chronicle of the rise and fall
of federalism. New Haven, Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 235 p. plates, ports.,
facsim. (The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XIV)
[541
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Concerned with the establishment of the new government and the framing of the Constitution, the
"tribute to the Algerines," " French designs on America," the Jay treaty, and the personal rule of John
Adams.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July 1919) 735-736.
Kent, Charles A. The treaty of Greenville, August 3, 1795; the story of a great treaty
whereby the site of Chicago was secured from the Indians by the U.S. government,
and the great Indian menace of the Northwest shattered. III. hist. soc. jour.,
X (Jan.) 568-584. [542
Lovett, Howard Meriwether. General Lafayette and the eighteenth Congress.
CoNFED. VET., XXVI (Sept.) 386-389. [543
Renaut, F. P. La politique des Etats-Unis dans I'Amerique du Nord espagnole sous
le regne de Joseph Bonaparte, 1808-1814. Rev. sci. pol., XXXIX (Feb. 15) 76-93.
[544
Regarding the West Florida controversy.
Renaut, F. P. La question de la Louisiana, 1796-1806. Paris, E. Champion [etc.,
1918?] 242 p. [545
At head of title: Soci6t6 de I'histoire des colonies frangsaises.
"Extrait de la Revue de I'histoire des colonies fran^aises, 2^, 3^, et 4e trimestres, 1918."
Stauffer, Vernon. New England and the Bavarian Illuminati. N. Y., Columbia
univ. press. 374 p. (Columbia univ. stud., v. LXXXII, no. 1) [546
A study of the religious and political agitation in New England during the last quarter of the 18th
century caused by the growing mfluence of radical opinions emanating from abroad.
Contents.— The imdermining of Puritan standards and institutions. Political entanglements and
hysteria. The European order of the Illuminati. The Illuminati agitation in New England.
Translation of some documents bearing on General Collet's arrest. La. hist, quar.,
I (Apr.) 321-326. [547
Published in connection with an article on Gen., CoUot's trip down the Mississippi in 1796. Set
no. 538 above. *^
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 87
Sources and Documents.
Hamlin, L. Belle, ed. Selections from the Torrence papers,- VIII. Hist, and phil.
soc. 0. PUB., XIII (July) 79-130. [548
Miscellaneous military papers, 1787-1812. They consist of orders, returns, certificates, lists, etc.,
relating to the U. S. army, and various orders, commissions, etc., pertaining to the Ohio militia.
Zimball, Marie G., ed. Unpublished correspondence of Mme. de Stael with Thomas
Jefferson. No. Am. rev., CCVIII (July) 63-71. [649
Letters scattered through the period 1807-1816. They discuss the Napoleonic wars, the struggle
for commercial supremacy on the ocean, the freedom of the seas, the intervention of America in
European affairs, and the efforts of the South American countries to attain independence.
Silva, J. Francisco V. Guerra de Espana contra Estados Unidos en 1804, por
almirante Macdonell. Texto, notas, estudio, documentos, facsimil y mapa . . .
Madrid, Libr. Beltran. xvi, 128 p. [550
Prints a copy of a manuscript of the Spanish admiral giving his "Plana de campafia ofensiva
combinada de mar y tierra contra los Estados Unidos de la America Septentrional."
Also published in Nuestro tiempo, ano XVIII (Jan.-Feb.) 41-69, 190-225.
War of 1812.
HUhner, Leon. Jews in the War of 1812. Am. Jew. hist. soc. pub., XXVI,
173-200. [551
Morison, Samuel Eliot, ed. John Quincy Adams and others on the peace of Ghent,
1814. [Boston, The Old South association] 27 p. (Old South leaflets, no. 211)
[551a
Selections from the dairy and writings of John Quincy Adams , the supplementary despatches of the
Duke of Wellington, the American state papers, and other source collections, in order to show how the
negotiation was conducted.
Morison, Samuel Eliot, ed. The treaty of Ghent, and negotiations that followed,
1814-1818. [Boston, The Old South association] 16 p. (Old South leaflets, no.
212) [551b
"Important precedents for the peaceful solution of international disputes."
Contents.— Treaty of amity and peace (treaty of Ghent). John Quincy Adams on war and peace,
from his letter of September 9, 1815, to Joseph Hall. Commissions and arbitrations provided for by
the treaty of Ghent. The commercial treaty of 1815. Disarmament on the Lakes; the Rush-Bagot
agreement of 1817. The convention of 1818 [respecting fisheries, boundaries, and the restoration of
slaves].
Paltsits, Victor Hugo. Gift of a naval manuscript. N. Y. pub. lib. bul., XXII
(Aug.) 463-464. [552
The original journal of Surgeon's Mate William M. Clarke, on board the ship of war President and
the brig Argus, 1812-1813, presented to the New York public library.
auUin, Charles Oscar, ed. The battle of Lake Erie; a collection of documents,
chiefly by Commodore Perry: including the court-martial of Commander Barclay
& the court of enquiry on Captain Elliott. Cleveland, The Rowfant club. 222 p.
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: .bin, Edwin L. Military and naval heroes of 1812. D. A. R. mag., LII (Jan.)
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Stahl John M. The battle of Plattsburg; a study in and of the War of 1812. To
remind our troops of the actions of their brave countrymen. — General Macomb,
in his report of the battle of Plattsburg. [Argos, Ind.] The Van Trump co.
166 p. [555
Stahl, John M. "The invasion of the city of Washington"; a disagreeable study in
and of military unpreparedness. [Argos, Ind.] The Van Trump co. 259 p. [566
Steele, J. Aulay. America on Dartmoor. Chamb, jour., 7th ser., VIII (July)
424-427. [557
Relates the experiences of American naval prisoners of the War of 1812 at Dartmoor, England
The War of 1812— some Florida episodes. La. hist, quae., I (Apr.) 330-332. [568
38 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
1829-1861.
Miscellaneous.
Ambler, Charles Henry, ed. Correspondence of Robert M. T. Hunter, 1826-1876.
Washington [Gov. print, off.] 383 p. (Am. hist, assoc. rep. for the year 1916,
V. II) ^ [559
Twelfth report of the Historical manuscripts commission, December 30, 1914.
Letters of value for the study of the political history of the period. Hxmter was a prominent state
rights democrat of Virginia, and United States senator from 1847 to 1861.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 727-729.
Ames, Herman V. John C. Calhoun and the secession movement of 1850. Am.
ANTiQ. soc. PROC, XXVIII, pt. 1 (Apr.) 19-50. [560
Also published in University of Pennsylvania. University lectures delivered by the members of
the faculty in the free public lecture course, 1917-1918. v. V. Phila., Pa., Pub. by the University.
p. 103-130.
Anderson, Robert. Robert Anderson to E. B. Washburne. III. hist, soc, jour.,
X (Oct. 1917) 422-428. [561
Letter from General Robert Anderson, written in 1870, and giving his recollections of the Black Hawk
war.
Bergen, Frank. Webster's work for the Union; a paper read before the Fortnightly
club, Newark, New Jersey. New Haven, Printed for the author under the direction
of the Yale university press. 52 p. port., facsim. [562
The purpose of the author is to bring out more distinctly than elsewhere "the plight from which
Daniel Webster rescued the Constitution," and to expound his attitude toward the slavery question.
Boucher, Chauncey Samuel. The secession and co-operation movements in South
Carolina, 1848 to 1852. Wash. univ. stud., V, no. 2 (Apr.) 65-138. [563
Cotterill, R. S. Memphis railroad convention, 1849. Tenn. hist, mag., IV (June)
83-94. [564
A convention to consider the question of a railroad from Memphis to the Pacific coast, as a weapon
in the struggle for the Pacific trade.
Dorris, Jonathan Truman. The Oregon trail. III. hist. soc. jour., X (Jan.)
473-547. [565
It has been the writer's endeavor "to give a fair account of one of the most interesting events in the
expansion of our great continent." The narrative is concerned largely with the period from 1842 to
1847.
Floyd, John. Diary of John Floyd. Branch hist, pap., V (June) 119-233. [566
Covers the period from March, 1831, to February, 1834. The parts here given throw light upon the
purposes and methods of the opposition to Jackson and upon the social life of Washington in the Jack-
son i an period.
Forster, Henry A. Did the decision in the Dred Scott case lead to the Civil war?
Am. law rev., LII (Nov.) 875-884. . [567
Greene, Evarts B. The interaction of European and American politics, 1823-1861.
Hist, teach, mag., IX (Mar.) 142-143. ' [568
Hamer, Philip May. The secession movement in South Carolina, 1847-1852. Allen-
town, Pa., H. R. Haas and co. v, 172 p. [569
Thesis (ph. d.) — University of Pennsylvania, 1918.
Hamlin, L. Belle, ed. Selections from the Follett papers, V. Hist, and phil. soc.
0. PUB., XIII (Apr.) 39-58. [570
The letters here given treat of the po'itical problems of the nation, and more especially of the political
movements in Ohio daring the period from 1830 to 1856. The principal writers are Salmon P. Chase,
Joseph Medill, Thomas Ewing, Millard Filimore, and Lewis D. Campbell.
Hamlin, L. Belle, ed. Selections from the William Greene papers, I. Hist, and
PHIL. soc. O. PUB., XIII (Jan.) 1-38. [571
Letters of Thomas Corwin to William Greene, an attorney of Cincinnati, 1841-1851. They are con-
cerned with various sul)jects of the day, including po.itics.
Lowrey, Lawrence Tyndale. Northern opinion of approaching secession, October,
1859-November, I860. Northampton, Mass., Pub. by the Dept. of history of
Smith college. 191-257 p. (Smith coll. stud, in hist., v. Ill, no. 4) [572
Published also as thesis (ph. d.) Columl^ia university, 1917.
Mickle, Jonathan. Letter of Jonathan Mickle to Thomas Shivers [Winnsborough ,
S. (;., Feb. 11, 1833] Pa. mag. hist., XLII (Apr.) 177-179. [673
Relates to Nullification in South Carolina.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 39
Shippee, Lester Burrell. The federal relations of Oregon. Ore. hist. soc. quar.,
XIX (June-Dec.) 89-133, 189-230, 283-333. [574
Contents.— I. The situation in 1819. II. Congress and Oregon, 1819-1829. III. Oregon and the dip-
lomacy of 1821-1827. IV. Oregon: 1827 to 1842. V. Linn and the Oregon territory. VI. Oregon and
the political game: 1843-4.
'Sioussat, St. George L. Andrew Johnson and the early phases of the homestead bill.
Miss. Valley hist, rev., V (Dec.) 253-287. [575
Sioussat, St. George L. Tennessee, the compromise of 1850, and the Nashville con-
vention. Tenn. hist, mag., IV (Dec.) 215-247. [576
Reprinted from the Mississippi Valley historical review, December 1915.
Trimble, William, A reconsideration of gold discoveries in the Northwest. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., V (June) 70-77. [677
A presentation of the historical perspective of the movement which opened up the mining regions of
the northwest (eastern Washington ani Oregon, southern British Cokimbia, Idaho and Montana) during
the period from 1855 to 1865.
Van der Zee, Jacob. The Black Hawk war. Iowa City, la.. State historical society
of Iowa, cover-title, 32 p. (Iowa and war. [no. 9]) [578
Mexican War.
Bailey, Thomas. Diary of the Mexican war. Ind. mag. hist., XIV (June) 134-147.
[579
The writer of the diary was a musician, company C, Fifth regiment, Indiana volunteers.
Meehan, Thomas F. Catholics in the war with Mexico, U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XII
(June) 39-65. [580
Shields, Elise Trigg. The storming of Chapultepec. Confed. vet., XXVI (Sept.)
399-401. [581
Smith, Justin H. American rule in Mexico. Am. hist, rev., XXIII (Jan.) 287-302.
[582
During the war of 1846-1848 portions of Mexico remained for different periods in American control.
The writer concludes that "on the whole, . . . the history of American rule in Mexico wasdistinctly
creditable to us."
Slavery,
Beasley, Delilah L. Slavery in California. Jour, negro hist., Ill (Jan.) 33-44.
[583
Cooley, Verna. Illinois and the underground railroad to Canada. III. hist. soc.
trans., for the year 1917, 76-98. [584
Dyson, Zita. Gerrit Smith's effort in behalf of the negroes in New York. Jour.
NEGRO hist.. Ill (Oct.) 354-359. [685
Hartgrove, W. B. The" story of Josiah Henson. Jour, negro hist., Ill (Jan.) 1-21.
[586
"Josiah Henson, the man who probably was present to Harriet Beecher Stowe's mind when she
graphically portrayed slavery in writing ' Uncle Tom's cabin.' "
Jennings, Arthur H. The South not responsible for slavery. Confed. vet., XXVI
(Jan.) 24-25. , [587
Landon, Fred. The Buxton settlement in Canada. Jour, negro hist., Ill (Oct.)
360-367. [588
The Buxton, or Elgin association settlement, in Kent cotmty, Ontario, one of the important attempts
made before the Civil war to found a negro refugee colony in Canada.
Landon, Fred. The Canadian anti-slavery group. Univ. mag., XVII (Dec.) 540-547.
Account of the service rendered to the abolition cause in the United States by the abolitionists of
Canada.
Letters of Governor Edward Coles bearing on the struggle of freedom and slavery in
Illinois. Jour, negro hist.. Ill (Apr.) 158-195. [590
Letters to and from Governor Coles, 1814-1824.
McDougle, Ivan E. Slavery in Kentucky, 1792-1865. [Lancaster, Pa., Press of the
New Era print, co.] [4], 125 p. [691
Reprinted from the Journal of negro history, v. Ill, no. 3, July 1918.
40 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Martin. Asa Earl. The anti-slavery movement in Kentucky, prior to 1850. [Louis-
ville. Ky.] Standard print co. of Louisville. 165 p. (Filson club pub., no. XXIX)
1 593
Published also as thesis (ph. d.) Cornell university, 1915.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 137-138.
Phillips, Ulrich Bonnell. American negro slavery; a survey of the supply, employ-
ment and control of negro labor as determined by the plantation regime. N. Y. and
London, Appleton. xi, 529 p. [593
Rev in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Oct. 1919) 117-118; Am. pol. sci. rev., XII (Nov.) 722-726; Pol. sci
quar., XXXIII (Sept.) 454-456.
Trabue, Charles C. The voluntary emancipation of slaves in Tennessee as reflected
in the state's legislation and judicial decisions. Tenn. hist, mag., IV (Mar.) 50-68.
[594
Wayne, James M. Georgia and the African slave trade; Justice James M. Wayne's
charge to the grand jury in 1859. Ga. hist, quar., II (June) 87-114. [695
Charge to the jury at the trial of the owners of the Georgia yacht " Wanderer," who were indicted for
participation in the slave trade.
1861-1865.
General.
Adams, Ephraim D. The American Civil war from the British view-point. Hist.
TEACH. MAG., IX (May) 257-258. [596
American caricatures pertaining to the Civil war; reproduced from the original litho-
graphs published from 1856-1872, with introduction. N. Y., Brentano. [8] p. 80
plates. [597
1st edition^N. Y., 1892.
Andrews, Matthew Page. The treatment of prisoners in the Confederacy. Confed.
VET., XXVI (Apr.) 147-150. [598
Ashmore, Otis. The story of the Confederate treasure. Ga. hist, quar., II (Sept.)
119-138. [599
Presents the facts connected with the final disposition of the Confederate and private funds taken
away from Richmond at the time of its evacuation by President Davis.
Ashmore, Otis. The story of the Virginia banks funds; a dramatic episode of the
war between the states. Ga. hist, quar., II (Dec.) 171-197. [600
At the approach of the Federal troops in 1865, the funds of certain Virginia banks were put on the
Confederate treasure train and hurried southward from Richmond to Georgia, April 2, 1865.
Bassett, John Spencer. How the Southerners supported the war for secession. Hist.
OUTLOOK, IX (Oct.) 373-375. [601
Deals with the means adopted for the finaneial support of the war as well as with the moral support
given to it.
Beale, George William. A lieutenant of cavalry in Lee's army. Boston, The Gorham
press. 231 p. [602
Benton, Elbert Jay. The movement for peace without victory during the Civil war.
Cleveland, 0. [Western Reserve historical society] [4], 80 p. facsim. (Publica-
tion no. 99. Collections, the Western Reserve historical society) [603
Contents.— Contending forces in the Civil war. The Peace democrats. The secret political
societies. The exile of Vallandigham. A northwest confederacy to enforce peace.
A study of the complex forces arrayed against the government durin;, the Civil war.
Bonham, Milledge L., jr. The expulsion of the British consuls by the Confederate
government. Americana, XII (Apr.) 224-226. [604
Bonham, Milledge L., jr. Louisiana's seizure of the federal arsenal at Baton Rouge,
January, 1861. East and West Baton Rouge hist. soc. proc, II, 47-55. [605
Bonham, Milledge L., jr. Man and nature at Port Hudson, 1863, 1917. [n. p.]
[33] p. map. [606
Reprinted from the Military historian and economist, v. II, no. 4, October 1917, and v. Ill, no. 1,
January 1918.
Burge, 'Mrs. Dolly Sumner (Lunt). A woman's wartime journal; an account of the
passage over a Georgia plantation of Sherman's army on the march to the sea, as
recorded in the diary of Dolly Sumner Lunt (Mrs. Thomas Burge); with an intro-
duction and notes by Julian Street. N. Y., Century co. xi, 54 p. [607
I I
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 41
Burgess, George W. The ram "Arkansas" and the battle of Baton Rouge. East
AND West Baton Rouge hist. soc. proc, II, 34-37. [608
Caffey, Thomas. Letters from the front. Confed. vet., XXVI (Feb. -Aug.) 64-65,
107-108, 157-158, 198-199, 246-247, 307, 353-355. [609
Letters written by a Confederate soldier to his family.
Clark, Victor S. Manufacturing development during the Civil war. Mil. hist, and
econ.. Ill (Apr.) 92-100. [610
Clark, Walter. The raising, organization, and equipment of North Carolina troops
during the Civil war. N. C. lit. and hist, assoc. proc, XVIII, 104-111. [611
Colby, Ebenezer T. Letters from Brashear's City: 1863. Mil. hist, and econ., Ill
(Apr.) 145-155. [612
Letters written by Lieut. -Col. Colby of the 4th Mass. militia, "here presented for the information
which they give in detail as to military happenings, for the reflections they give on the spirit of
evangelism which came so often out of New England, and for the interesting comments on army
discipline."
Cole, Arthur C. Lincoln and the presidential election of 1864. III. hist. soc.
trans., for the year 1917, 130-138. . [613
Cole, Arthur C. President Lincoln and his war-time critics. Hist, teach, mag., IX
(May) 245-249. [614
Cook, V. Y. Forrest's effort to save Selma. Confed. vet., XXVI (Apr.) 151-152.
[615
Denny, Bessie T. Some high prices in 1863. Outlook, CXX (Oct. 23) 303. [616
Doud, George W. The Doud diary. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 471-474. [617
A journal kept by George W. Doud, of Co. F, Eighth Minnesota volunteer infantry, which partici-
pated in the campaigns against the Sioux in 1862 and 1863.
Draper, Alonzo G. Alonzo G. Draper to Ben Perley Poore. Mass. hist. soc. proc,
LI, 107-108. [618
A letter written from headquarters near Petersburg, Va., April 29, 1865, in regard to a dispute as to
what troops first entered Richmond.
Earnhart, T. M. Surgical treatment in the Confederate army. Confed. vet,, XXVI
(Dec.) 528-529. [619
Ending the Outbreak. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 40Q-469. [620
History of the negotiation of the treaties with the Sioux Indians through the efTorts of Governor
Newton Edmunds of Dakota territory, in 1865, which ended the War of the outbreak, 1862-1865.
Fauntleroy, Cornelius H. The constitutional right of secession. Confed. vet.,
XXVI (Feb.-Mar.) 56-60, 109-112. [621
Fesler, Mayo. Secret political societies in the North during the Civil war. Ind.
MAG. HIST., XIV (Sept.) 183-286. [622
Contents.— Introduction. Origin of the Knights of the Golden Circle. Order of American Knights
and Sons of Liberty. The Northwest confederacy of 1864. Treason trials in Indiana. The Camp
Douglas conspiracy.
Fish, Carl Russell. Internal problems during the Civil war. Hist, t" ' ^h. mag.,
IX (Apr.) 199-200. [623
Fort, W. B. First submarine in the Confederate navy. Co^^'^.n. vet., XXVI (Oct.)
459-460. [624
A small craft known as the " Fish Boat."
Foster, John Watson. War stories for my grandchildren. Washington, D. C.
Printed for private circulation, the Riverside press, Cambridge. [8], 192 p. ports.,
plate. [625
The author served as major and colonel in the Indiana infantry.
CoNTEi^TTs —Introduction. The Missouri campaign. The battle of Fort Donelson. The battle of
Shiloh. On to Corinth and Memphis. Guerrilla warfare in Kentucky. The East Tennessee cam-
paign. With the himdred days men. Appendix.
Fullbrook, Earl S. Relief work in Iowa during the Civil war. Ia. jour, hist., XVI
"(Apr.) 155-274. [626
Account of the work of the United States sanitary commission, the United States Christian com-
mission, the Western sanitary commission, and other relief agencies.
Gipson, Lawrence Henry. The collapse of the Confederacy. Miss. Valley hist.
REV., IV (Mar.) 437-458. [627
"In this study an attempt has been made to point out certain vital weaknesses in the Confederate
defense which were not preeminently of a military character but which affected profoundly the military
fortunes of the South. The factors here to be analyzed are those which may be considered essentially
psychological in nature."
42 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION".
Gist, W. W. The ages of the soldiers in the Civil war. Ia. jour, hist., XVI (July)
387-399. [628
-* n in^•esti'Iation and tabulation of the ages of the soldiers in the Civil war, mainly of Iowa regiments.
Glasson, William H. The South's pension and relief provisions for the soldiers of
the Confederacy. N. C. lit. and hist, assoc. proc, IV, 61-71. [629
Hardy, John. The rise and fall of Selma, Ala. Confed. vet., XXVI (Nov.) 480-482.
[630
Extracts from Hardy's "History of .Selma," showing the accomplishments of the Confederate gov-
ernment in providin<j; materials for its army and navy.
Hazlitt, Henry. Old-time "government control." Nation, CVI (Jan. 24) 99-100.
[631 I
Government control of the railroads, Federal and Confederate, during the Civil war.
Hicks, John D. The organization of the volunteer army in 1861 with special refer-
ence to Minnesota. Minn. hist, bul., II (Feb.) 324-368. ~ [632
Hill, D. H. Historical parallels. N. C. lit. and hist, assoc. proc, XVIII, 44-51.
[633
Draws some parallels between conditions in the Civil war, particularly in the South, and those of
the present war.
Holladay, Florence Elizabeth. The powers of the commander of the Confederate
trans-Mississippi department, 1863-1865. Southw. hist, quar., XXI (Jan.-Apr.)
279-298, 333-359. [634
Howell, E. Vernon. Melical and pharmaceutical conditions in the Confederacy.
N. C. LIT. and hist. ASSOC. PROC, XVIII, 72-103. [635
Humphreys, Charles Alfred. Field, camp, hospital and prison in the Civil war,
1863-1865, Boston, Press of George H. Ellis co. xi, 428 p. plates, ports. [636 I
Personal narrative of ser^ace, -wTitten by a chaplain, Second Massachusetts cavalry volimteers. i
Hunter, J. T. At Yorktown in 1862 and what followed. Confed. vet., XXVI i
(Feb.-Mar.) 66-68, 112-115. (637 '
Johnston, R. M. Pope's campaign in Virginia [1862] Mil. hist, and econ.. Ill |
(Jan., July) 39-48, 182-194. [638 ;
Contents.— II. Tactics at Cedar Mountain. HI. Gainesville
Kemper, G. W. H. The surgeons of the Civil war. [Indianapolis] 12 p. illus. [639 j
Reprinted from the Journal of the Indiana state medical association, v. XI, October 191S. '
Kennon, L. W. V. The Valley campaign of 1864; a military study. Confed. vet., '
XXVI (Dec.) 517-523. [640 i
Kilmer, George Langdon. Parallels and contrasts in the fighting of the world war |
and the American civil war. Nation, service, IV (Oct.) 170-175. [641 !
Kitts, John Howard. The Civil war diary of John Howard Kitts. Kansas hist. '
soc COLL., XIV, 318-332. [642 j
At Fort Leaven.vorth, Aug. 23 to Dec. 7, 1861, and in Maj. Gen. S. R. Curtis' campaign after Gen.
Sterling Price, commencing Oct. 11, 1864. • ,
M'Neilly, James H. The retreat from Tennessee [December, 1864] Confed. vet., ;
XXVI (July) 303-307. [643 i
M'^Teilly, James H. With Hood before Nashville. Confed. vet., XXVI (June) i
251-254. [644
Maguire, T. Miller. Long-drawn battles: from days to weeks. Unit. ser. mag., '
n. s. LXVII (July) 263-273. [645 ' |
The American civil war, 1861-1865: p. 266-268. ;
Maguire, T. Miller. The principal wars, 1861 till 1905: their causes, costs, and i
consequences. Unit. ser. mag., n. s. LXVII (May) 103-111. [646 !
War of secession, 1861-65: p. 103-105. !
Matthews, Albert. A last word on " copperhead." Nation, CVI (June 29) 758. [647 !
Meehan, Thomas F. Catholic activities in our two great wars. Cath. world, CVII I
(July) 444-462. [648 j
liclates to the Civil war and the present war.
WRITINGS OlSr AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 43
Michigan. Michigan- Vicksburg military park commission. Michigan at Vicksburg;
pub. pursuant to a concurrent resolution of the Michigan Legislature, April 11th,
1917, by the Michigan- Vicksburg military park commission; comp. by Captain
Charles G. Hampton. ... Detroit, Printed by Moore print, co., 1917. 116 p. illus.,
port., plate. [648a
Military historical society of Massachusetts. Civil war and miscellaneous papers.
Boston, The Military historical society of Massachusetts, vi, [4], 474 p. illus.,
plates, ports., map, plans. (Mil. hist. soc. pap., v. XIV) [649
Partial contentts.— Report on the alleged, delay in concentration of the Army of the Potomac under
McClellan at Antietam, and the causes of the delay of the second army corps in entering into the battle
of Antiet^m, hy John C. Gray, jr. The Antietam campaign, by Samuel S. Sumner. The Twelfth corps
at Gettyyburg, by Charles F. Morse. The Mine Run campaign, November, 1833, by Thomas L. Liver-
more. The Mine Run affair, by Charles L. Peirson. The relief of Chattanooga, October, 1863, and
guerilla operations in Tennessee, by Charles F. Morse. Petersburg, Jime 15— Fort Harrison, September
29: a comparison, by George A. Bruce. Cedar Creek, October 19, 1864; extract from letter to Colonel
Benjamin W. Crowninshield from General W. H. Emory. The capture and occupation of Richmond,
by George A. Bruce. Military prisons: North and South, by John Chester White. The effect of Presi-
dent Lincoln's re-election upon the waning fortunes of the Confederate states, by Henry S. Burrage.
Millard, Flora J. The foreign policy of the Confederate states. Conped. vet., XXVI
(June) 241-246. [650
Montalembert, Charles de. Selections from The triumph of the Union (La victoire
du Nord aux ]^tats-Unis). Bv Charles de Montalembert. 1865. Ed. by Lawrence
V. Roth. [Boston] 19 p. (Old South leaflets, no. 213) [661
Murphey, Hermon King. The northern railroads and the Civil war. Miss. Valley
HIST. REV., V (Dec.) 324-338. [652
New York (State) Monuments commission for the battlefields of Gettysburg, Chat-
tanooga and Antietam. In memoriam, Abner Doubleday, 1819-1893, and John
Cleveland Robinson, 1817-1897. Pub. by authority of the state of New York,
under the supervision of the New York monuments commission. Albany, J. B.
Lyon CO. 141 p. plates, ports., maps. [653
Half-title: Dedication of monuments erected by the state of New York in commemoration of the
services of Major-General Abner Doubleday, u. s. v., and Brevet Major- General John Cleveland Robin-
son, u. s. A., and the New York troops in their commands on the battlefield of Gettysburg July 1, 2
and 3, 1863.
Packard, Joseph. The retreat from Petersburg to Appomattox — personal recollections.
Md. hist, mag., XIII (Mar.) 1-19. [654
Perrotin, Leo. Le haut commandement militaire et le pouvoir civil en temps de
, guerre. Grande rev., XXII (June) 694-704. ' [655
Lessons drawn from the experience of the American civil war.
Pierson, William Whatley, jr. The Committee on the conduct of the Civil war. Am.
hist, rev., XXIII (Apr.) 550-576. [656
Pike, J. A. Statement of Capt. J. A. Pike concerning the Quantrill raid. Kansas
HIST. soc. COLL., XIV, 311-318. [657
Pollock, Ivan L. State finances in Iowa during the Civil war. Ia. jour, hist.,
XVI (Jan.) 53-107. [658
Putnam, Elizabeth Whitney. The peace convention of 1861. Confed. vet., XXVI
'(Aug.) 345-350. [659
Quisenberry, A. C. The battle of Richmond, Kentucky, September, 1862; a reminis-
cence. Ky. hist. soc. REG., XVI (Sept.) 9-24. [660
Randall, James G. The newspaper problem in its bearing upon military secrecy
during the Civil war. Am. hist, rev., XXIII (Jan.) 303-323. [661
"Viewing the whole period of the war, ... it appears that the actual governmental interference
with the freedom of the press was comparatively sligfit, and that volimtary restraint or popular pressure
had far greater effect in keeping improper material out of newspapers than official repression."
Reed, D. W. The death of General Albert Sidney Johnston on the battlefield of
Shiloh. Ia. jour, hist., XVI (Apr.) 275-281. [662
. a letter from Maj. D. W. Reed, secretary and historian of the Shiloh national military park commis-
sion, describing the visit of Senator Harris of Tennessee, to the battlefield for the purpose of identifying
the spot where General Johnston fell.
Introductory note, by Joseph W. Rich.
Rich, Joseph W. A descriptive list of the Confederate flags in the possession of the
State historical society of Iowa. Iowa City, la., State historical society of Iowa.
6 p. plate. [663
Contents.— The flags of the Southern confederacy, 1861-1865. A descriptive list of the Confederate
flags in the possession of the State historical society of Iowa.
136908°— 21— VOL 3 5
44 AMEKICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Ryan, Frank T. The Kentucky campaign and battle of Richmond. Confed. vet., '|
XXVI (Apr.) 158-160. [664 j-
Schmidt, Louis Bernard. The influence of wheat and cotton on Anglo-American li
relations during the Civil war. Ia. jour, hist., XVI (July) 400-439. [665 li
Read before the American historical association in Philadelphia, Dec. 27, 1917. |i
SMppee, Lester Burrell. Social and economic effects of the Civil war with special ji
reference to Minnesota. Minn. hist, bul., II (May) 389-412. [666 I
Standing, Percy Cross. A woman's "Life" of Stonewall Jackson. Unit. ser. mag., !
n. s. LXVI (Jan.) 305-310. [667 !i
a summary of a volume printed at London in 1863, and recently purchased by the writer in a second {i
hand bookstore in Loudon. It is the work of a woman (anonymous), and of strongly Confederate li
proclivities. |j
Stephenson, Nathaniel Wright. Abraham Lincoln and the Union; a chronicle of the [j
embattled North. New Haven, Yale univ. press; [etc.] xiv, 272 p. plate, ports., jj
facsim. (The chronicles of American series, Allen Johnson, editor . . . v. XXIX) ]
[668 1
"Abraham Lincoln edition." ij
The main consideration in the selection of material for this volume has been to explain two ques- li
tions — "Why was there a war?" and "Why was the Lincoln government successful?" "The public ll
Lincoln, including the character of his mind, is here the essential matter." 1
Stone, James Madison. Personal recollections of the Civil war, by one who took part ];
in it as a private soldier in the 21st volunteer regiment of infantry from Massachu- \\
setts. Boston, Mass., The author. 193 p. port. [669 ij
Sykes, E. T. An incident of the battle of Munfordville, Ky., September 14th, 1862. !!
Miss. hist. soc. pub., centenary ser., II, 536-548. [670 ij
The writer was captain in the 10th Mississippi infantry, army of Tennessee,
Thompson, Eohert Means, and Richard Wainwright, eds. Confidential correspond-
ence of Gustavus Vasa Fox, assistant secretary of the navy, 1861-1865. v. I. N. Y.,
Printed for the Naval history society by the De Vinne press, xvi, 440 p. port.
(Naval hist. soc. pub., v. IX) [670a
Contents.— Attempted relief of Sumter; beginning of Gustavus V. Fox's service in the Navy
department, 1861. Correspondence between G. V. Fox and S. F. DuPont, South Atlantic blockade
and Charleston expedition, August 9, 1861, to April 2, 1863. Letters of L. M. Goldsborough to G. V.
Fox, organizing expedition against Roanoke Island and in the Sounds, November 8 to December 29,
1861. Correspondence between G. V. Fox and L. M. Goldsborough, January 23 to June 16, 1862.
Correspondence between G. V. Fox and D. G. Farragut, West Gulf blockade, January 18, 1862, to
October 19, 1864. Miscellaneous letters, 1861-1862.
Trescot, William Henry. The Confederacy and the Declaration of Paris. Am. hist.
REV., XXIII (July) 826-835. [671
Documents from the papers of the late William Henry Trescot, chiefly memoranda in his own hand-
writing, 1861.
Tucker, Philip C. The United States gunboat Harriet Lane. Southw. hist, quar
XXI (Apr.) 360-380. [672
One of the West Gulf blockading squadron for the reduction of Confederate ports in Louisiana and
Texas. Captured by the Confederates in Galveston Bay, Jan. 1, 1863.
Upham, Cyril B. Arms and equipment for Iowa troops in the Civil war. Ia, jour.
HIST., XVI (Jan.) 3-52. [673
Walker, George M. Eleventh Kansas cavalry, 1865, and battle of Platte Bridge.
Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 332-340. [674
Wall, Edward. The first assault at Petersburg. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. Ill (Oct )
193-204. [675
Written by a soldier of the 3rd N. Y. cavalry.
Wall, Edward. Pvaids in southeastern Virginia fifty years ago. N. J. hist. soc.
PROC, n. s. Ill (Apr.-July) 65-82, 147-161. [676
Wheaton, C. C. The secession of Louisiana, January 26, 1861. East and West
Baton Rouge hist. soc. proc, II, 55-60. [677
Whitman, Walt. Selections from Walt Whitman's Specimen days in the Civil
war, 1861-1865. [Ed. by Samuel Eliot Morison]. [Boston, The Old South
association] 16 p. (Old South leaflets, no. 217) [677a
Walt Whitman served during the greater part of the conflict as a volunteer army nurse.
Yust, William F. Soldiers' reading in the Civil war. Outlook, CXX (Oct. 23) 303.
[678
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 45
Regimental Histories.
Georgia cavalry. Minnich, J. W. The sixth Georgia cavalry. Confed. vet.,
XXVI (Apr.) 156-157. [679
Georgia INFANTRY. Hudgins, F. L. With the 38th Georgia regiment. Confed. vet.,
XXVI (Apr.) 161-163. [680
Kansas artillery. Gardner, Theodore. The first Kansas battery; an historical
sketch, with personal reminiscences of army life, 1861-'65. Kansas hist. soc.
COLL., XIV, 235-282. [681
Mississippi cavalry. Deupree, J. G. The Noxubee squadron of the first Mississippi
cavalry, c. s. a., 1861-1865. Miss. hist. soc. pub., centenary ser., II, 12-143. [682
Mississippi regiment. McFarland, Baxter. The eleventh Mississippi regiment at
Gettysburg. Miss. hist. soc. pub., centenary ser., II, 549-568. [683
Texas CAVALRY. Blackburn, J. K. P. Reminiscences of the Terry rangers. Southw.
hist, quar., XXII (July-Oct.) 38-77, 143-179. [684
Terry's Texas rangers, a regiment of cavalry from Texas for service in the Confederate army.
Texas infantry. Giles, V. C. The Tom Green rifles. Confed. vet., XXVI (Jan.)
20-23. [685
Company B, 4th Texas regiment, known as the Tom Green rifles.
Todhunter, R. Ector's Texas brigade at the battle of Allatoona. Confed. vet.
XXVI (Aug.) 340-341. [686
Ector's Texas brigade, Army of Tennessee.
1865-1918.
Griffith, Elmer Cummings. The purchase of Alaska. Jour. Am. hist., XII (July)
373-378. [687
Lonn, Ella. Reconstruction in Louisiana after 1868. N. Y. and London, Putnam,
vi, 538 p. maps. [688
The first four chapters of this work were published. (N. Y. and London, Putnam. 1918. 95 p.) as the
writer's thesis (ph. d.)— University of Pennsylvania, 1911.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 109-110.
McNeily, J. S. War and reconstruction in Mississippi, 1863-1890. Miss. hist. soc.
PUB., centenary ser., II, 165-535. [689
Ogg, Frederic Austin. National progress, 1907-1917. N. Y. and London, Harper,
xxii, 430 p. port., maps. (The American nation; a history . . . ed. by A. B.
Hart ... V. XXVII) [690
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIIT (Julv) 880-881: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Nov. 1919) 677-678: Dial,
LXIV (Feb. 28) 197-198; Nation, CVII (July 20) 72; Pol. sci. quar., XXXIII (Sept.) 456-459.
Wilson, Woodrow. President Wilson's state papers and addresses; introduction by
Albert Shaw . . . with editorial notes, a biographical sketch and an analytical
index. N. Y., George H. Doran co., The Review of reviews co. xiv, 484,
[10] p. [691
Spanish-American War.
Wildman, Edwin. What Dewey feared in Manila Bay; as revealed by his letters.
Forum, LIX (May) 513-535. [692
Concerned with German aggressions in the Philippines.
REGIONAL (LOCAL) HISTORY.
General.
Bashford, James Whitford. The Oregon missions; the story of how the line was run
between Canada and the United States. N. Y. and Cincinnati, The Abingdon '
press. 311 p. map. [693 !
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 126-128. |
Boyd, John P. Orderly book of Col. John P. Boyd and extracts, 1811-1812, Fort \
Independence and Wabash. Burton hist. coll. m8S., I, no. 5 (Oct. 1917)
145-187. [694 i
Col. Jolin P. Boyd, 4th regt. infantry, was m command of the U. S. troops in Indiana Territory, \
1811-1812. The orders here given cover the period of the Tippecanoe campaign. j
Davidson, Gordon Charles. The North West company. Berkeley, University of
California press, xi, 349 p. maps. (University of California publications in
history, v. VII) [695
A study of the origin, activities and end of this famous fur trading companv.
Rev. in: Am. hist^ rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 301-302; Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 71-74. 1
Dexter, Franklin Bowditch. A selection from the miscellaneous historical papers of i
fifty years. New Haven, Conn. [The Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor co.] viii, I
397 p. illus. [696 i
Contents.— Harvard-college monitor's bill. Memoranda respecting Edward Whal'.ey and William |
Goflfe. Sketch of the liie and writings of John Davenport. The foimding of Yale college. Governor
Elihu Yale. The influence of the English universities iii the development of New England. New 1
Haven in 1784. The history of Connecticut as ilhistrated in the names of her towns. Estimates of [
population in the American colonies. Thomas Clap and his writings. On some social distinctions t
at Harvard and Yale before the revolution. The first public library in New Haven. The manuscripts I
of Jonathan Edwards. Yale college in Saybrook. Abraham Bishop, of Connecticut, and his writings. j
Student life at Yale in the early days of Connecticut hall. Early private libraries in New England.
The benefactors of Yale college. " Reminiscences of the officers of Yale college in 1857. The New Haven
of two hundred years ago. Notes on some of the New Haven loyalists, including those graduated at
Yale. The Rev. Harry Croswell, D. d., and his diary. The removal of Yale college to New Haven in
October, 1716. Student life at Yale college under the first President Dwight. Index. List of historical
works. I
Documents on early Indiana history. Burton hist. coll. mss., I, nos. 5-8 (Oct. i
1917-July 1918) 196-208, 209-271, 333-336, 362-382. [697 1
Cont. from V. I, no. 4, July 1917.
Copies of letters and reports, 1811-1812, from the archives of the War department describing frontier i
conditions and relations with the Indians. They are largely concerned with the Tippecanoe campaign. |
Early Sandusky trade and some of its traders. Burton hist. coll. mss., I, no, 8 i
(July) 337-361. [698 |
A number of letters (1772-1783) written to Thomas Williams, a trader at Detroit between 1765 and !
1785, which furnish information as to the fur trade in early Ohio.
Esarey, Logan. The literary spirit among the early Ohio valley settlers. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., V (Sept.) 143-157. [699
Eyer, Marguerite. French expansion into the Pacific in the 17th, 18th and 19th
centuries. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, pt. 1, 5-23. [700
A study of the "contributions of France, with her numerous voyagers, travelers, explorers, scientists,
and traders, to the advancement of the West."
Haskell, Marion L. A review of Rubi's inspection of the frontier presidios of New
Spain, 1766-1768. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, pt. 1, 33-43. [701
In 1766 Don Cayetano Maria Pignatelly y de Rubi. Marques de Rubi, was commissioned to make
an inspection of the presidios of the northern frontier ov New Spain, and to make a report of this investi-
gation, with recommendations as to needed changes and reforms.
Haynes, Lyman S. The navigation of the Connecticut river. Vt. hist. soc. proc,
for 1915-1916, 51-86. [702
Historical account of the nayigation of this river.
Hough, Emerson. The passing of the frontier; a chronicle of the old West. New
Haven, Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 181 p. plates, ports., map. (The chronicles
of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXVI) [703
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
46
i
WRITINGS OlSr AMERICAIT HISTORY, 1918. 47
Kelley, Hall Jackson. A general circular to all persons of good character, who wish
to emigrate to the Oregon territory, embracing some account of the character and
advantages of the country . . . [By] Hall -T. Kelley, general agent, by order of the
American society for encouraging the settlement of the Oregon territory. Instituted
in Boston, a. d. 1829. Charlestown, Printed by W. W. Wheildon; Boston, R. P.
& Q. Williams, 1831. Tarr^^town, N. Y., Reprinted, W. Abbatt, 1918. 25 p. plan.
(The Magazine of history with notes and queries. Extra number 63 [pt. 1]) [704
Lewis, William S. Archibald McDonald: biography and genealogy. Wash. hist.
QUAR., IX (Apr.) 93-102. [705
Chief factor of the Hudson's Bay company and one of the pioneers of Oregon.
The Moravian Indians of Ohio and their wanderings, 1782-1809. Burton hist, coll,
Mss., I, no. 7 (Apr.) 273-332. [706
Letters from the Rev. John Heckewelder and Rev. Gottlieb Fenseman to John Askin, with other
Askin correspondence, concerning the Moravian Indians of Ohio and their wanderings. Inchides a
history of the massacre at Gnadenhuetten, Ohio, on March 8th, 1782.
Nicholson, Meredith. The Valley of democracy. N. Y., Scribner. x, 284 p.
plates. [707
A study of the life and customs of the Middle West.
O'Brien, Michael J. Irish mariners in New England. Am. Irish hist. soc. jour.,
XVII, 149-190. [708
Schafer, Joseph. A history of the Pacific Northwest. Rev. and rewritten. N. Y.,
Macmillan. [10], 323 p. plates, port., map. [709
First edition, N. Y., 1905.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIII (July) 907-908; Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 117-118.
Schultz, James Willard. Bird Woman (Sacajawea) the guide of Lewis and Clark;
her own story now first given to the world. Boston and N. Y., Houghton Mifflin
CO. [12], 234 p. plates. [710
Shepherd, Henry E. Studies in Southerji history. Confed. vet., XXVI (July^
292-294. [711
Stevens, Wayne E. Fur trading companies in the Northwest, 1760-1816. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., extra number (Oct.) 283-291. [712
"An effort has been made to sketch in biiefest outline the development of the great British trading
companies in the Northwest and to indicate certain phases of their history which have hitherto remr ined
obscure, notably the oii^in of the Michillimackinac company and the nature of its connection with the
American fur company."
Sweet, William W. The coming of the circuit rider across the mountains. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., extra number (Oct.) 271-282. [713
Based on the writers examination of the unpublished minutes of the first Methodist conference
organized west of the AlJeghanies. Deals with the period from the close of the Revolution to the
year 1811.
[Tyler, Lyon G.] Southern ante-bellum society. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVI
(Apr.) 282-284. [714
Wagner, Harr. Pacific history stories, arranged and retold for use in the public
schools, by Harr Wagner, assisted by Alice Rose Power. San Francisco, Harr
Wagner pub. co. 190 p. illus., plates. [715
First edition, San Francisco, 1895.
Alabama.
Edwards, William James. Twenty-five years in the Black belt. Boston, The
Cornhill co. xvii, 143 p. ports., plates. [716
Autobiographical narrative and history of the Snow Hill normal and industrial institute, Snow
Hill, Ala.
Alaska.
Andrews, Clarence L. Alaska whaling. Wash. hist, quae., IX (Jan.) 3-10. [717
Andrews, Clarence L. The salmon of Alaska. Wash. hist, quar., IX (Oct.)
243-254. [718
Jenness, Diamond. The Eskimos of northern Alaska: a study in the effect of civili-
zation. Geog. rev., V (Feb.) 89-101. [719
48 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION^.
Arkansas.
Reynolds, Jolin Hugh. Makers of Arkansas history. N. Y., Boston, [etc.] Silver,
Burdett and co, 365 p. illus., maps. (Stories of the states) [720
California.
Baker, C. C. The dispensing erf justice under the Mexican regime. So. Cal. hist.
soc. PUB., X, pt. 3, 1917, 36-40. [721
Baker, C. C. Don Enrique Dalton of the Azusa. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., X,
pt. 3, 1917, 17-35. [722
Henrj' Dalton, or Don Enricjue Dalton as he was called in pioneer days, was an Englishman who
came to California in 184.3.
Beasley, Delilah L. Slavery in California. Jour, negro hist., Ill (Jan.) 33-44.
[723
Bepler, Doris West. History of California periodicals to about 1880. Grizzly Bear,
XXII (Mar.) 10, 30^31. [724
Bepler, Doris West. Sketch of Nevada county's early history. Grizzly Bear,
XXIII (June) 1-2, 27. [725
Bonner, Gladys A. Education in California; a sketch of its interesting history.
Grizzly Bear, XXII (Jan.) 3^. [726
Browne, Clyde. Cloisters of California. Los Angeles, C. Browne. 133 p. illus.,
plates, port. [727
Brief story of the Franciscan missions in California.
California freedom papers. Jour, negro hist., Ill (Jan.) 45-54. [728
Reprtats of manumission papers from the state archives, 1851-1856.
California state division controversv; (Documents furnished by Mary M. Bowman).
So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., X, no. 3"', 1917, 75-78. [729
I. Petition to Confess against forcing statehood on southern California, March 3, 1850. II. Call for
a convention to divide the state of California, 1851.
Carroll, William. Glimpses of California, 1860-1861. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI,
no. 1, 102-107. [730
Letters written from California.
Cleland, Robert G. Larkin's description of California. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub,, X,
no. 3, 1917, 70-74. [731
The "Description of California," an official document, was %vTitten for the special benefit of President
Polk and addressed to the Secretary of state, James Buchanan.
Cleland, Robert G. Transportation in California before the railroads, with especial
reference to Los Angeles. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, no. 1, 60-67. [732
Clifton, A. R. History of the communistic colony Llano del Rio. So. Cal. hist.
soc. pub., XI, no. 1, 80-90. [733
Ewing, J. Andrew. Education in California during the pre-statehood period. So.
Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, no. 1, 51-59. [734
Farr, Finis C, ed. The history of Imperial county, California. Berkeley, Cal.,
Elms and Frank, vi, 526 p. plates, ports. [735
Foster, Mira M. Social life and customs in Spanish and Mexican California.
Grizzly Bear, XXIII (Aug.) 3-4, 20. [736
Gillespie, Archibald H, Deposition of Archibald H. Gillespie concerning mission
San Diego [Feb. 25, 1868] So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., X, no. 3, 1917, 79-81. [737
Grunsky, C. G. The Hudson's Bay company; history of its activities in California.
Grizzly Bear, XXII (Mar.) 7. [738
Guinn, J. M. Some early history of Owens river valley. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub.,
X, pt. 3, 1917, 41-47. [739
Jones, Thomas R., comp. Fifty years ago in California; resume of important hap-
penings. Grizzly Bear, XXII (Jan.) 5, (Feb.) 5, (Mar.) 5, 36, (Apr.) 6; XXIII
(May) 8-9, (June) 7, 22, (July) 5, 12, (Aug.) 7, 11, (Sept.) 8, 16-17, (Oct.) 6-7,
(Nov.) 3, 13, (Dec.) 9, 2L [740
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 49
Juda, Fanny. Santa Cruz; sketch of its early history. Grizzly Bear, XXIII
(June) 8, 25. . [741
La Clair, Olive R. The neglected missions of southern California. So. Cal. hist.
soc. PUB., XI, no. 1, 24-32. [742
Narrative of the establishment of the Spanish missions on the Colorado river, in 1780, and their
destruction by the Indians the following year.
Lovejoy, Ora A. A study of southern California place names. So. Cal. hist. soc.
PUB., XI, no. 1, 44-50. [743
Magnuson, Torstein A. History of the beet sugar industry in California. So. Cal.
HIST. soc. PUB., XI, no. 1, 68-79. [744
Mills, H. W. De Tal Palo Tal Astilla. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., X, no. 3, 1917,
86-172. [745
" Fra'^mentary notes in the life histories of the two George ]\tillers, father and son, the former of
whom started for California in 1846." '^De Tal Palo Tal Astilla" means a chip of the old block.
Pressley, Eva S. California's grain industry; its interestiag history since 1848.
Grizzly Bear, XXII (Feb.) 6-7. [746
Safford, E. K. The opening of the California trails. Grizzly Bear, XXIII (May)
3-4. [747
Describes the early routes of travel to California, from the Spanish countries to the south, and the
later overland trails.
Westergaard, Waldemar. Thomas R. Bard and the beginnings of the oil industry
in Southern California. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., X, no. 3, 1917, 57-69. [748
White, Stewart Edward. The forty-niners; a chronicle of the California trail and
El Dorado. New Haven, Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 273 p. plates, ports. (The
chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXV) [749
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Zorraquinos, Marina. University of California and Berkeley; historical sketch.
Grizzly Bear, XXIi (Mar.) 2-4, 38-39. [750
Colorado.
Baggs, Mae Lacy. Colorado, the queen jewel of the Rockies; a description of its
climate and of its mountains, rivers, forests and valleys; an account of its explorers;
a review of its Indians — past and present; . . . Boston; The Page co. xiv, 380 p.
plates, ports., map. (See America first series) [751
Larimer, William H. H. Reminiscences of General William Larimer and of his son
William H. H. Larimer, two of the founders of Denver city; comp. from letters:
and from notes written by the late William H. H. Larimer ... by Herman S.
Davis. Printed for private circulation under the auspices of William Larimer
Mellon. Lancaster, Pa., New Era print, co. 256 (i. e. 266) p. illus., plates,
ports., facsims. [752
Stone, Wilbur Fiske, ed. History of Colorado. Chicago, S. J. Clarke publishing co.
3 V. illus., ports. [753
Willard, James F., ed. The Union colony at Greeley, Colorado, 1869-1871. Bowlder,
Col. [University of Colorado] xxxii, 412 p. (University of Colorado historical
collections, J. F. Willard, editor, v. I. Colony series, v. 1) [754
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July 1919) 739.
Connecticut.
Baldwin, Simeon E. The citizenship of the author of the "quartre-lettres d'un bour-
geois de New-Heaven sur I'unit^ de la legislation." New Haven colony hist.
soc. pap., IX, 170-173. [755
These letters were published anonymously in Mazzel's "Recherches histofiques et politiques sur les
Etats-Unis de I'Am^rique Septentrionale." Their authorship is attributed to the Marquis de Condorcet,
upon whom the city of New Haven had conferred its citizenship, in 1785.
Hill, Everett G. A modern history of New Haven and eastern New Haven county.
N. Y. and Chicago, S.J. Clarke pub. co. 2 v. plates, ports. [766
Author's name on title-page of v. I only.
50 AMERICAN HI!3T0RICAL ASSOCIATION.
P',^ve, William J., cd. History of Waterbury and the Naugatuck Valley, Connecticut.
C:iicas2:o and N. Y., S. J. Clarke pub. CO. 3 v, plates, ports. [757
Purcell. Richard J. Connecticut in transition, 1775-1818. Washington, American
liistorical association; [etc.] x, 471 p. maps. [758
Awarded the Justin Winsor prize in American history for 1916.
Re\. in: Am. hisc. rev., XXIV (July 1919) 736-737.
District of Columbia-
Clark, Allen C. Richard Wallach [1816-1881] and the times of his mayoralty.
Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXI, 195-245. [759
Davis, Henry E. A celebrated case of an early District day: United States vs. Henry
Pittman. Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXI, 246-262. [760
Accoimt of the trial and acquittal of Henry Pittman for assault, with intent to kill, upon John Corse
of Alexandria on Dec. 17, 1827.
Downing, Margaret Brent. The earliest proprietors of Capitol Hill. Columbia hist.
soc. REC, XXI, 1-23. [761
The names of George Thompson and Thomas Gerrard appear on the records as the first owners of that
portion of Washington known as "Capitol Hill."
Ely, Selden Marvin. The District of Columbia in the American revolution and pa-
triots of the revolutionary period who are interred in the District or in Arlington.
Columbia hist, soc rec, XXI, 129-154. [762
Kimball, Fiske. The genesis of the White House. Century, XCV (Feb.) 523-528.
A study of the several designs prepared for the building of the White House. [763
Morris, Maud Burr. An old Washington mansion (2017 I street, northwest). Colum-
bia hist. soc. rec, XXI, 114-128. [764
Simon, Abram. Notes of Jewish interest in the District of Columbia. Am. Jew.
hist. soc. pub., XXVI, 211-218. [765
Smith, George Williamson. A critical moment for Washington, Columbia hist.
soc REC, XXI, 87-113. ' [766
Casts light upon the situation of the capital city in March and April, 1861.
Tindall, William. Beginnings of street railways in the national capital. Columbia
HIST, soc REC, XXI, 24-86. [767
Wartime Washington — past and present; a study in contrasts. D. A. R, mag LII
(Apr.) 180-200. [768
Florida.
Johnson, Clifton. Highways and byways of Florida; human interest information for
travellers in Florida; . . . N. Y., Macmillan. xi, 264 p. plates, (/fw American
highways & byways series, v. VIII) [769
Mainly descriptive.
Winter, Nevin Otto. Florida, the land of enchantment; including an account of its
romantic history from the days of Ponce de Leon and the other early explorers and
settlers, and the story of its native Indians; a survey of its climate, lakes and rivers
and a description of its scenic wonders and abundant animal and bird life; and a
comprehensive review of the Florida of to-day, . . . Boston, The Page co. xii,
880 p. plates, ports., map. (See America first series) [770
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Aug.) 329-330.
Georgia.
Harden, William. The Moravians of Georgia and Pennsylvania as educators. Ga.
HIST. QUAR., II (Mar.) 47-56. [771
Harden, William. A neglected period of Georgia history. Ga. hist, quar , II
(Dec.) 198-224. [772
Deals wi<vh the administration of Gov. Edward Telfair, 1786.
Mallard, John B. Liberty county, Georgia; an address delivered at Hinesville,
July 4, 1876. Ga. hist, quar., II (Mar.) 1-21. [773
I
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 51
Idaho.
Brosnan, Cornelius James. History of the state of Idaho. N. Y., Chicago [etc.]
Scribner. xiii, 237 p. illus., maps. [774
Rees, John E. Idaho chronology, nomenclature, bibliography. Chicago, W. B.
Conkey co. 125 p. [775
Contents.— Idaho: poem. Idaho chronology. Northwest coast. Oregon Territory. Washington
Territory. Idaho Territory. Sta^e of Idaho, Idaho,' i^s meaning, origin and application. Idalio
nomehclal^uxe. Idaho bibliography.
Illinois.
Bancroft, Edgar A. Illinois — the land of men. III. hist. soc. jour., XI (July)
101-117. [776
Illinois centennial address, April 18, 1918.
Bancroft, Horace H. Illinois. An historical resume. Pub. by Illinois Centennial
commission. [Springfield, 111., Schnepp and Barnes, state printers] 13 p. [777
Barge, William D. Early Lee county, being some chapters in the history of the early
days in Lee county, Illinois. Chicago [Barnard and Miller, printers] ii, 160 p.
illiis. (facsims.) [778
Barkdull, Mrs. E. S. History of the Episcopal church in Edwards county, Illinois.
III. hist. soc. jour., XI (July) 189-192. [779
Bateman, Newton, ed. Historical ency^clopedia of Illinois, ed. by Newton Bateman
[and] Paul Selby; and history of Christian county, ed. by Henry L. Fowkes. Chi-
cago, Munsell pub. co. 2 v. plates, ports., maps. [779a
Beuckman, Frederick. Civil and ecclesiastical jurisdiction in Illinois. III. Cath.
HIST. REV., I (July) 64-72. [780
Chicago historical society. The centennial of Illinois statehood, commemorated by
the Chicago historical society, Orchestra hall, April nineteenth, mdccccxviii.
Address: Illinois in historv, by the Right Reverend Charles P. Anderson, d. d.
Chicago, The University of Chicago press. 30 p. [781
Chicago historical society. Illinois through two hundred and forty-five years,
1673-1918. Catalogue of objects illustrating Illinois history, selected from the
collections of the Chicago historical society, exhilited in Orchestra hall in com-
memoration of the centennial of Illinois statehood, April nineteenth, mdccccxviii.
[Chicago] [44] p. [782
lark, Nancy Duffy. An old Mormon town, Nauvoo, Illinois. III. hist. soc. jour.
XI (Apr.) 38-47. [783
Cole, Arthur C. The passing of the frontier. Miss. Valley hist, rev., V (Dec.)
288-312. [784
Concerned particularly with, the transition of the social and economic conditions in Illinois from the
pioneer state to ^liat of a commonwealth, in the period just before the Civil war.
Cooley, Verna. Illinois and the underground railroad to Canada. III. hist. soc.
trans., for the year 1917, 76-98. [785
Curran, William Reid. Genesis of the courts of Tazewell county, Illinois. III.
hist. soc. jour., XI (July) 157-167. [786
Cuthbertson, Andrew Stuart. Centennial of Illinois. Americana, XII (Oct.)
359-380. [787
Daughters of the American revolution. Centennial annals of Knox county, Illinois,
1818-1918; arranged and presented to the Rebecca Parke chapter, Daughters of
the American revolution, Galesburg, Illinois, by Ella Park Lawrence (Mrs. Geo. A.).
[Galesburg?] 97 p. [787a
Contents.— Early settlements in Knox county, by Fannie W. Bliss. Cedar township, by Mary
B. Sargen^. Victoria township, by Mary F. Woolsey. Galesburg: ^he fulfillment of a dream, by
Martha F. Webster.
Dunne, Edward F. The Illinois centennial. III. hist. soc. jour., XI (Apr.)
33-37. [788
Ely, Salem. A centennial history of the villages cf Iroquois and Montgomery and
the township of Concord, 1818 to 1918. Chicago, 111., Regan printing house. [12],
142 p. ports. [789
52 AMERICAN HISTORICAI. ASSOCIATIOIsr. I
I
The fotir constitutional conventions of the state of Illinois. III. hist. soc. jour, XI '
(Jiily^ 221-235. ['^^^ |
Garraghan, Gilbert J. Early Catholicity in Chicago. III. Cath. hist, rev., I i
(July-Oct.) 8-28, 147-172. [791 ;
Oilman, Winthrop S. The Alton riot. Miss. Valley hist, rev., IV (Mar.) 491-494. j
[792 I
Copy of a letter wTitten bv one of the firm of Godfrey and Hilman, prominent traders of Alton, the j
day after the riot, Nov. '8, 1837. ' |
Hanley, Mrs. Sarah Bond. Historic monuments and memorials of Illinois. [Gales-
burg, 111., Wagoner print, co.] 15 p. [793
Harvey, B. A. Historical sketch of Wabash county, state of Illinois. III. hist. soc.
jour., XI (Apr.) 14-27. [794
Illinois. Centennial commission. The governors of Illinois, 1818-1918. Issued by ;
the Illinois Centennial commission. [Springfield, Illinois state journal co., state ;
printers] [56] p. ports. [795 i
Brief biographical sketches. {
Illinois. Centennial commission. The Press on the celebration of the Illinois |
centennial. Springfield, 111., Illinois centennial commission. 22 p. [796 I
Illinois. Centennial commission. Suggestions for county and local celebrations of
the one hundredth anniversary of the admission of Illinois into the federal Union. ;,
[Springfield, 111., Illinois centennial commission] 20 p. illus. [797 j
Johnson, Allen. Illinois in the democratic movement of the century. III. hist. i
soc. jour., XI (Apr.) 1-13. [798 |
Johnson, Charles Beneulyn. Illinois in the fifties; or, A decade of development, i
1851-1860. Illinois centennial ed. Champaign, 111., Flanigan-Pearson co. 175 p. |
plates, port. [799 i
Kirk, Margaret C. The first Presbyterian church of Belvidere, Illinois, 1839-1918. \
III. hist. soc. jour., XI (Apr.) 28-32. [800
Knowlton, Mrs. D. A. Presbyterianism in Stephenson county, Illinois. III. hist,
soc. jour., XI (July) 193-196. [801 j
Letters of Governor Edward Coles bearing on the struggle of freedom and slavery in '
Illinois. Jour, negro hist., Ill (Apr.) 158-195. [802 j
Letters to and from Governor Coles, 1814-1S24. j
Meade, Kate. A calendar of historical dates and events relating to the church in i
Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (July) 101-102. [803 \
Meese, William A. Illinois and Randolph county. III. hist. soc. jour., XI (July)
118-148. [804
Miller, Carl R. Journalism in Illinois before the thirties. III. hist. soc. jour.,
XI (July) 149-156. [805
Owen, Grace Arlington. Illinois — a brief history. School news, XXXI (July)
483-494. [806
Owen, Grace Arlington. The wonderful story of Illinois: a pageant. Issued by the
Illinois Centennial commission. Printed by authority of the state of Illinois. i
[Springfield, 111., Illinois state journal co., state printers] 48 p. [807 i
Paddock, Gains. The original automobile; recollections of the first automobile in '
Springfield, 111., over seventy years ago. III. hist. soc. jour., XI (Apr.) 57-58.
Pease, Theodore Calvin. The frontier state, 1818-1848. Springfield, Illinois cen-
tennial commission. [14], 475 p. plates, ports., maps. (Illinois centennial
publications, pub. by authority of the Illinois centennial commission. The cen-
tennial history of Illinois, C. W. Alvord, editor-in-chief, v. II) [809
Rev. in: Am. hist- rev., XXIV (July 1919) 708-709.
Porter, John L. History of Harmon township, Lee county, Illinois. III. hist. soc.
jour., X (Jan.) 593-638. [810
¥.
1918. 53
Quaife, Milo Milton, ed. Pictures of Illinois one hundred years ago. Chicago, R. R.
Donnelley and sons CO, xxiii, 186p. port. (The Lakeside classics [v. XVl]) [811
Contents.— Historical introduction. Observations of an English immigrant in 1817, by M. Birk-
beck. A tour in southern Illinois in 1822, by W. N. Blane. A journey up the Illinois river in 1821, by
H. R. Schoolcraft. Appendix. The Chicago treaty of 1821. Index.
Reynolds, John. The agricultural resources of southern Illinois. III. hist. soc.
TRANS., for the year 1917, 141-161. [812
Includes sections on— The first French settlements and the first French agriculture in southern
Illinois: The first American set;tlements and the firsl^ 'American agriculture in south Illinois; and The
improvement of agriculture in s6u1;herri Illinois since the War of 1812.
Rice, Wallace. Illinois centennial plays . . . Pub. by the Illinois Centennial
commisson. [Springfield, 111., Schnepp and Barnes, state printers] 6 v. [813
Content*?.— no. 1. Children of the Illini (about 1673). no. 2. Children of France (about 1778). no. 3.
Pioneer boys and girls (1814). no. 4. The Underground railroad (about 1840). no. 5. Children of the
civil war (February, 1862). no. 6. Children in the great war (1918).
[Rice, Wallace] The Masque of Illinois, presented by the Illinois Centennial com-
mission, October fourth and fifth, nineteen hundred and eighteen, eight-fifteen
p. M., Coliseum, Illinois State fair grounds, Springfield. [Springfield, 111., Jeffersons
printing co.] 17 p. illus., port. [813a
Rice, Wallace. The pageant of the Illinois country. . . . Intended for use through-
out the state in county and local celebrations. Issued by the Illinois Centennial
commission. [Springfield, 111., Illinois state journal co., state printers, 1918?]
57 p. [814
Roberts, Octavla. Lincoln in Illinois. Boston and N. Y., Houghton Mifflin co. xii,
118 p. illus., plates. [815
Rothensteiner, John, ed. Kaskaskia — Fr. Benedict Roux. III. Cath. hist, rev., I
(Oct.) 198-213. [816
Prints an unpublished account of the ancient town and Indian mission at Kaskaskia, 111., written by
the Rev. Benedict Roux, in 1838.'
Sandham, William R. The Isaac B. Essex family — pioneers in three counties. III.
hist. soc. jour., XI (July) 168-179. [817
Stewart, John Russell, ed. A standard history of Champaign county, Illinois; an
authentic narrative of the past, with particular attention to the modern era in the
commercial, industrial, civic and social development. A chronicle of the people,
with family lineage and memoirs. . . . Chicago and N. Y., Lewis pub. co. 2 v.
illus., plates, ports. [817a
Thompson, Joseph J. Illinois' first citizen — Pierre Gibault. III. Cath. hist, rev., I
(July-Oct.) 79-94, 234-248. [818
Trimmer, D. F. Early history of Pleasant Hill, McLean county, Illinois. III. hist.
soc. jour., X (Oct. 1917) 408-420. . [819
Waller, Elbert. Illinois pioneer days. Litchfield, 111., E. B. Lewis. 80 p. [820
White, Mary Tracy. Historical notes on Lawrence county, Illinois. III. hist. soc.
JOUR., X (Oct. 1917) 367-393. [821
Wilcox, DeLafayette. Chicago's first boom. Wis. mag. hist., II (Dec.) 216-218.
A letter written by Major DeLafayette Wilcox, from Fort Dearborn, June 6, 1835, describing Chicago's
first great real estate boom.
Indiana.
Barr, Arvil S. Warwick county prior to 1818. Ind. mag. hist., XIV (Dec.) 304-331.
[823
Esarey, Logan. A history of Indiana. Indianapolis, B. F. Bow en and co. 2 v.
illus (maps). . . [824
V. I, 2d edition.
Contents.— I. From its exploration to 1850. II. From 1850 to the present.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July 1919) 738-739.
Hadley, Almira Harvey. A brief historv of Mooresville and vicinity. Mooresville,
Ind. [The author] 24 p. " [825
Maurer, Will. A historical sketch of Tell City, Indiana. Ind. mag. hist., XIV
(June) 108-133. [826
Stewart, Ernest D. The populist party in Indiana. Ind. mag. hist., XIV (Dec.)
332-367. [827
54 ameiiica:^^ historical association. i
Iowa.
Aumer. Clarence Ray. Iowa stories. Book two. Iowa City, la., Printed by the j
Clio press. 174 p. illiis. [828 j
"This volumeis designed to . . . interest the young reader in the origin and organization of his own j
state.", i
Clark, Dan Elbert. Border defense in Iowa during the Civil war. Iowa City, la., '
State historical society of Iowa, cover-title, 24 p. (Iowa and war. [no. 10]) [829
Clark, Dan Elbert. Frontier defense in Iowa, 1850-1865. Ia. jour, hist., XVI (July) |
315-386. [830 [
Defense of the frontier against the Sioux Indians.
Clark. Dan Elbert. The Spirit Lake massacre. Iowa City, la.. The State historical
society, cover-title, 28 p. (Iowa and war. [no. 11]) [831
FuUbrook, Earl S. Relief work in Iowa during the Civil war. Ia. jour, hist., XVI
(Apr.) 155-274. [832
Gallaher, Ruth A. An Iowa flag; a brief account of recent efforts to secure the adop-
tion of a state emblem. Iowa Citv, la. , State historical society of Iowa, cover-title,
20 p. (Iowa and war. [no. 14])" [833
Gallaher, Ruth A. Legal and political status of women in Iowa; an historical account
of the rights of women in Iowa from 1838 to 1918. Iowa City, la. [State historical
society of Iowa] xii, 300 p. ' [834
Little Iowa. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 376-379. [835
Presents a memorial of the Iowa lei^islature to Congress in 1856, reiuesting the annexation of the ter-
ritory west of the state boundary as far as the Missouri river. This territory, which is now part of South
Dakota, was designated in the fifties as "Little Iowa."
Paddock, John D, A brief history of Malvern. Malvern, la., The Malvern leader,
1917. 134 p. port., plates. [836
Pollock, Ivan L. History of economic legislation in Iowa. Iowa City, la., State his-
torical society of Iowa, x, 386 p. (Iowa economic history series, ed. by B. F.
Shambaugh) [837
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Jan. 1919) 304-305.
Pollock, Ivan L. State finances in Iowa during the Civil war. Ia. jour, hist., XVI
(Jan.) 53-107. [838
Rich, Ellen M. The State university of Iowa and the Civil war. Iowa City, la.,
State historical society of Iowa, cover-title, 24 p. (Iowa and war. [no. 8]) [839
Reprinted from the Iowa historical record, January, 1899.
Shambaugh, Benjamin F. The State historical society of Iowa in war times. Iowa
City, la.. State historical society of Iowa, cover- title, 14 p. (Iowa and war.
[no. 18]) [840
Brief account of its work during the Civil war and the World war.
Teakle, Thomas. The Spirit Lake massacre. Iowa City, la.. State historical society
of Iowa, xii, 336 p. map. [841
Upham, Cyril B. Arms and equipment for Iowa troops in the Civil war. Ia. jour,
hist., XVI (Jan.) 3-52. [842
Upham, Cyril B. The Mexican war. Iowa City, la., State historical society of Iowa,
cover-title, 20 p. (Iowa and war. [no. 12]) [843
Summarizes the part played by Iowa men during the Mexican war.
Van der Zee, Jacob. Old Fort Madison [early wars on the eastern border of the Iowa
country] Iowa City, la.. The State historical society of Iowa, cover-title, 40 p.
(Iowa and war. [no. 7]) [844
Sketch of early Indian wars, ^he Revolution, and the War of 1812 in the upper Mississippi valley.
Kansas.
Connelley, William Elsey. Notes on the early Indian occupancy of the Great Plains.
Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 438-470. [845
Connelley, William Elsey. A standard history of Kansas and Kansans. Chicago and
N. Y., Lewis pub. co. 5 v. illus., plates, ports., maps. [846
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 55
Endaoott, John, comp. Addresses at the dedication of the monument at Turner to
mark the site of the first Methodist mission to the Shawnee Indians in Kansas.
Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 187-197. [847
Gable, Frank M. The Kansas penitentiary. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV,
379-437. [848
Ingalls, John James. Some Ingalls letters. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV,
94-122. [849
Letters written by John James Ingalls to his father, from Sumner, Kansas, 1858 to 1861.
Zeplinger, L. W. The first ascent of Long's Peak, made by an expedition under
Maj. J. W. Powell. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 340-353. [850
Lyman, William A. Origin of the name " Jayhawker," and how it came to be applied
to the people of Kansas. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 203-207. [851
Moody, Joel. The Marais des Cygnes massacre. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV,
208-223. [852
Sometimes known as the Hamelton massacre, from the leader of the raid at Marais des Cygnes,
May 19, 1858, when several of the free state settlers of Kansas were shot.
Morehouse, George Pierson. Diamond Springs, "The diamond of the Plain."
Kansas hist. soc. coll.. XIV, 794-804. [853
Diamond Springs in Morris county, Kansas, which was visited by the early overland travellers along
the Santa Fe trail.
Morrall, Albert. Dr. Albert Morrall: proslavery soldier in Kansas in 1856; statement
and autobiography. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 123-142. [854
Shields, Clara M. Fengel. The Lyon creek settlement. Kansas hist. soc. coll.,
XIV, 143-170. [855
Smith, W. R. The Kansas state printing plant. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV.
354-357. [856
Tannar, A. H. Early days in Kansas; the Marais des^Cygnes massacre andjihe rescue
of Ben Rice. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 224-234. [857
Vincent, Frank. History of salt discovery and production in Kansas, 1887-1915.
Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 358-378. [858
Kentucky.
[Gordon, William Alexander] The killing of Adam Caperton by Indians at " Estill's
defeat" near Mt. Sterling, Kentucky, 22 March 1782; sketch of the Caperton family,
will of Hugh Caperton of "Elmwood." Pub. September, 1918, for Mr. John Hays
Caperton and William Alexander Gordon, jr. [Louisville, Press of J. P. Morton
and CO.] 61 p. ports. [859
Introduction signed: William A. Gordon, jr.
Gronert, Theodore G. Trade in the Blue-Grass region, 1810-1820. Miss. Valley
HIST. REV., V (Dec.) 313-323. [860
Jones, L. H. More about Bathurst and the family that lived there and at Spring
Garden. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVI (Jan.-May) 17-23, 39-51. [861
Bathursl^ house, probahly built as early as 1692, later the home of the Jones family.
McDougle, Ivan Eugene. Slavery in Kentucky, 1792-1865. [Lancaster, Pa., Press
of the New Era print, co.] 125 p. [861a
Reprinted from the Journal of negro history, v. Ill, no. 3, July 1918.
Martin, Asa Earl. The anti-slavery movement in Kentucky prior to 1850. [Louis-
ville, Ky.] Standard print, co. of Louisville. 165 p. (Filson club pub., no. XXIX)
[862
Published also as ^he writer's thesis (ph. d.) Cornell university, 1916.
Rev. in: Am. his^. rev., XXIV (Oc^.) 137-138.
Louisiana.
Bi-centennial celebration in Paris of the founding of New Orleans. La. hist, quar.,
I (Jan.) 18-38. (863
Taken from ^he official municipal bulletin of ^he city of Paris, November 11, 1917.
Bonham, Milledge L., jr. Louisiana's seizure of the federal arsenal at Baton Rouge,
January, 1861. East and West Baton Rouge hist. soc. proc, II, 47-55. [864
56 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Bonham. Milledge L., jr. The Spanish flag in Louisiana. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., .
I (Nov.) 457-460. [865 i
Outlinesthe periods during which the Spanish flag was displaj^ed in Louisiana, and discusses "what it
symboHzcs in ^,he his1;ory and civilization of Louisiana."
Dart, William Kernan. Early episodes in Louisiana history. La. hist, quar., I|
(Jan.) 190-209. [866!
The first official flag of the city of New Orleans. La. hist, quar., I (Jan.) 210-211.
[867 ,
Goforth, Alys M. The constitutional convention of 1852. East and West Baton !
Rouge hist. soc. proc, II, 30-34. [868 •
Hanna, Annie. A sketch of local journalism. East and West Baton Rouge !
hist. soc. proc, II, 43-45. [869 i
Hanotaux, Gabriel. Commemoration du bicentenaire de la fondation de la \
Nouvelle-Orleans; I'union de la France et de I'Amerique. Paris [etc.] Bloud ''
et Gay. 32 p. {On cover: "L'hommage fran^ais." Publications du Comity '
''L'effort de la France et de ses allies") [870 |
Hanotaux, Gabriel. L'union des Etats-¥nis et de la France; discours prononce a
I'occasion du deuxieme centenaire de la fondation de la Nouvelle-Orleans. Paris,
Alcan. 40 p. (Bibliotheque France-Amerique) [871
Probably the same as no. 870, above.
Hart, W. O. New Orleans. La. hist, quar., I (Apr.) 353-366. [872
Lonn, Ella. Reconstruction in Louisiana after 1868. N. Y. and London, Putnam.
vi, 538 p. maps, [873 j
The first four chapters of ^his work were published (N. Y. and London, Putnam, 1918. 95 p.) as
the writer's thesis (ph.' d. )— U niversity of Pennsylvania, 1911. I
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (0^.) 109-110. '
McGrath, John. The Baton Rouge, Grosse Tete and Opelousas R. R. East and [
West Baton Rouge hist. soc. proc, II, 45-46. [874 |
Major, H. A. With the Spanish records of West Florida. East and West Baton \
Rouge hist. soc. proc, II, 60-64. [876 i
The old portage between Bayou St. John and the Mississippi river. La. hist, quar., 1
I (Apr.) 372-373. [876 !
Owen, Allison. History of the Washington artillery. La. hist. soc. pub., X, 46-59. |
Louisiana artillery, probably founded in 1838. \S77 i
Pilcher, Joe Mitchell. The story of Marksville, La. La. hist. soc. pub., X, 68-86. i
[878 I
Price, Nellie Warner. Le spectacle de la rue St. Pierre. La. hist, quae., I (Jan.)
215-223. [879
Presen-^s data to show ^hat the building firs^ designated as a ^hea^re in New Orleans was ^he same
building known subsequently as "Le spectacle de la rue' St. Pierre."
Renshaw, James. The city beautiful; a tale of changes in New Orleans during a
lifetime. La, hist, soc pub., X, 11-23. [880
Richardson, Lillie. The admission of Louisiana into the Union. La. hist, quar.,
I (Apr.) 333-352. [881
Thompson, T. P. Bi-centennial of New Orleans, October 24, 1917. La. hist, quar.,
I (Jan.) 13-17. [882
Trufant, S. A Review of banking in New Orleans, 1830-1840. La. hist. soc. pub.,
X, 25-40. [883
Wheaton, C. C. The secession of Louisiana, January 26, 1861. East and West
Baton Rouge hist. soc. proc, II, 55-60. [884
White, Melvin J. Populism in Louisiana during the nineties. Miss. Valley hist.
REV., V (June) 3-19. [885
Maine.
Oilman, Charles. Sketch of Bangor, Maine, in the early days. Sprague's jour.
Maine hist., VI (Aug.) 43-48. [886
Wilson, Granville P. Pioneers of the Magalloway from 1820 to 1904. Old Orchard,
Me., The author. 64 p. plates, ports. [887
I
1918. 57
Maryland.
Blair, Gist. Annals of Silver Spring. Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXI, 155-185.
[888
Includes a letter of Mrs. Jefferson Davis, to Francis Preston Blair, dated Savannah, Ga., June 6, 1865,
in wMcli she describes the capture of Jefferson Davis by the Federal forces.
Howard, McHenry. The Washington monument and squares. Md. hist, mag.,
XIII (June) 179-182. [889
Some historical facts regarding the Washington monument at Baltimore and the squares around it.
Marye, William B. Early settlers of the site of Havre de Grace. Md. hist, mag.,
XIII (Sept.) 197-214. [890
Massachusetts.
Allen, Clifton. A cannon foundry of the Revolution, D. A. R. mag., LII (May)
282-285. [891
The Uriah Atherton furnace in old Stoughton, Mass., now on the Foxboro-Sharon line, where accord-
ing to authenticated traditions, were cast the first cannon and cannon balls for Washington's army.
Baxter, Sylvester. Why Aberjona? Malden hist. soc. reg., V, 68-70; and Med-
FORD HIST. REG., XXI (July) 57-59. [892
The upper part of the Mystic river is known as the Aberjona.
Bradlee, Francis B. C. The Boston and Lowell railroad, the Nashua and Lowell
railroad, and the Salem and Lowell railroad. Essex inst. hist, coll., LIV (July-
Oct.) 193-224, 321-352. [893
Bradlee, Francis B. C. The Salem iron factory. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VI,
97-114; and Essex inst. hist, coll., LIV (Apr.) 97-114.
The Salem iron factory, for the manufacture of chain cables, anchors, and other materials of iron lor
ship building, erected by Nathan Read in 1796.
Chamberlain, George Walter. The early Baptists of Maiden. Malden hist. soc.
REG., V, 13-38. [895
Christie, Francis A. The diary of an old New England minister. Essex inst. hist,
coll., LIV (Jan.) 1-21. [896
"The diary of William Bentley, d. d., pastor of the East church, Salem, Mass." 4 vols. Pub. by
the Essex institute, 1905-1914. The diary covers the period from 1784-1819.
Cook, Louis A,, ed. History of Norfolk county, Massachusetts, 1622-1918. N. Y.
and Chicago, S. J. Clarke pub. co. 2 v. plates, ports. [896a
Dorgan, Maurice B. Lawrence yesterday and today (1854-1918) a concise history of
Lawrence, Massachusetts— her industries and institutions; municipal statistics and
a variety of information concerning the city. Lawrence [Press of Dick and
Trumpold] 263 p. [897
Dow, George Francis. Newspaper items relating to Topsfield, copied from Salem
newspapers [1869-1871] Topsfield hist. soc. coll., XXIII, 97-140. [897a
Dow, George Francis. The printing press in Topsfield. Topsfield hist. soc. coll.,
XXIII, 46-49. [897b
Eliot, Ephraim. Some account of my classmates in college who graduated in 1780.
Col. soc. Mass. pub., XIX, 290-295. [898
Report of the class of 1780, Harvard college, taken from the commonplace book of Ephraim Eliot.
Emerson, Edward Waldo. The early years of the Saturday club, 1855-1870. Boston
and N. Y., Houghton Mifflin co. xii, 515 p. plate, ports. [899
A club composed of men of letters, formed at Boston in 1855.
Farrington, Charles C. Historic Cambridge common. Bedford, Mass. [The Bed-
ford print shop] 32 p. plates. [900
Gannon, Frederick A. The ways of a worker of a century ago, as shown by the diary
of Joseph Lye, shoemaker. Salem, Mass., Printed by Newcomb and Gauss. 25 p.
[901
A shoemaker of Lynn, Mass., 1792-1834.
Gill, Eliza M. A Medford garden and the gardener's notes. Medford hist, reg.,
XXI (Oct.) 69-73. [902
Includes extracts from the "garden book, 1827," kept by the gardener on the Bigelow estate in
Medford.
MeDFORD hist. REG.,
XXI
(Apr.)
[910
MeDFORD niST. REG.,
XXI
(Apr.)
911
MeDFORD hist. REG.
XXI
(Jan.)
[912
53 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Gill Eliza M. WilHam Gray of Salem and Samuel Gray of Medford. Medford hist.
REG., XXI (Apr.) 25-32. [903
Greenough, Chester N. Algernon Sidney and the motto of the commonwealth of
Massachusetts. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LI, 259-282. [904
Henderson, Helen W. Salem of the witches. Bookman, XL VII (Aug.) 623-633.
[905
Hines Ezra D. An historical trip through Danvers. Danvers hist. soc. coll.,
VI, 1-10. [906
Con<;. from v. V, 1917.
Howe, M. A. De Wolfe. The Humane society of the commonwealth of Massa-
chusetts; an historical review, 1785-1916. Boston, Printed for the Humane society
at tiie Riverside press, Cambridge, xiv, 397 p. plates, ports., facsims. [907
Mann, Moses W. Connecting link in Medford church history. Medford hist.
REG., XXI (Oct.) 82-90. [908
Historical items regarding ^he West Medford Christian union.
[Mann, Moses W.] Historv told by names of streets. Medford hist, reg., XXI
(Jan.) 10-14. ' [909
Regarding the streets of Medfoxd.
[Mann, Moses W.] Medford on the map.
32-37.
Notes regarding maps of Medford.
Mann, Moses W. Medford 's town farm.
37-46.
[Mann, Moses W.] "Old shipping days.'
1-6.
Prints from a recent brochure of the State street trust company of Boston, entitled "Old shipping
days," abstracts giving the story of'l;he wreck' of the ship "Living age," which was built at Boston
in 1848.
Mann, Moses W. Why Mystic? Medford hist, reg., XXI (July) 49-56. [913
Regarding the origin of ^he name of the Mystic river.
Newspaper items relating to Essex county, Massachusetts [1768] Essex inst. hist.
COLL., LIV (Apr.-July) 188-192, 251-256. [914
Cont. from v. LIII, 1917.
O'Brien, Michael J. Cornelius and Matthew Clesson, pioneer Irishmen of Northamp-
ton, Mass. Am. Irish hist. soc. jour., XVII, 137-143. [915
Pease, Zephaniah W., ed. History of New Bedford. N. Y., Lewis hist. pub. co.
3 v. plates, ports. [916
Poore, Alfred. A genealogical -historical visitation of Andover, Mass., in the year
1863. Essex inst. hist', coll., LIV (Apr.-July) 138-144, 246-250. [917
Cont. from v. LIII, 1917.
Putnam, Archelaus. Diary of Archelaus Putnam of New Mills. Danvers hist.
soc. coll., VI, 11-29. [918
Cont. from v. V, 1917.
Covers the period from Feb. 7, 1809 ^o June 2, 1817.
Records of the proprietors of the Plains Meadows, Topsfield [1792-1808] Topsfield
hist. soc. coll., XXIII, 50-55. [918a
[Rothery, Agnes Edwards] Cape Cod, new & old, by Agnes Edwards [jpseud.']
Boston and N. Y., Houghton Mifflin CO. xvi, 239 p. illus., plates. [919
Sheldon, George, and J. M. A. Sheldon. The Rev. John Williams house [Deerfield]
Deerfield, Mass. [The authors] 32 p. plate. [920
Con^ins an account of ^he Williams family history.
Smith, Fitz-Henry. Storms and shipwrecks in Boston Bay and the record of the
life savers of Hull. Boston, Priv. print. 60 p. plates, port. [921
Reprinted from t^he Bos^onian society's publications, v. II, second series, 1917.
Stearns, Charles H. Address of the president commemorating the two-hundredth
anniversary of the First parish in Brookline. Brookline hist. soc. proc,
Jan. 24, 5-17.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. ^ 59
Tapley, Harriet S. Physicians of Danvers. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VI, 50-83.
[923
Brief biographical sketches.
Cont. from v. IV. 1916.
Tilton, George Henry. A history of Rehoboth, Massachusetts; its history for 275
years, 1643-1918, in which is incorporated the vital parts of the original history
of the town, published in 1836, and written by Leonard Bliss, jr. Boston, Mass.,
The author, x, 417 p. illus., plates, ports., maps, facsims. [924
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. The Bowdoin library. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LI,
362-368. [926
Prints a ca1;alogue of books left in thelibrary of James Bowdoin, when Gen. Burgoyne ^ook possession
of the Bowdoin mansion in May^ 1775.
Tyler, Lyon G. Aristocracy in Massachusetts and Virginia. Wm. and Mary quar.,
XXVI (Apr.) 277-281. " [926
A comparison of Massachusetts and Virginia in respec^ to ^he question of political aristocracy versus
democracy.
Waters, Thomas Franklin. Plum Island, Ipswich, Mass. Printed for the [Ipswich
historical] society. [Salem, Mass., Newcomb and Gauss] 64 p. pL, map.
(Ipswich hist. soc. pub., v. XXII) [927
Michigan.
Buttars, Archibald. Memories of northern Michigan. Mich. hist, mag., II (Apr.)
387-395. [928
Butterfleld, George Ernest, ed. Bay county past and present, comp. by the pupils
and teachers of the sixth grade geography classes. Bay City public schools. Bay
City, Mich., C. & J. Gregory. [8], 212 p. illus., ports., maps. [929
Fitzgibbon, John. King Alcohol: his rise, reign and fall in Michigan. Mich, hist,
MAG., II (Oct.) 737-780. [930
Fox, Karolena M. History of the equal suffrage movement in Michigan. Mich. hist.
MAG., II (Jan.) 90-109. [931
Gagnieur, William F. Indian place names in the Upper Peninsula, and their
interpretation. Mich. hist, mag., II (July) 526-555. [932
Hathaway, William H. County organization in Michigan. Mich. hist, mag., II
(July) 573-629. [933
Holton, F. J., D. H. Bedford, and Francis Cleary. History of the Windsor and Detroit
ferries. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVI, 40-51. [934
Jenks, William L. The creation of the Territory of Michigan. Mich. hist, mag., II
(Apr.) 270-288. [935
Kellogg, Louise P. The disputed Michigan- Wisconsin boundary. Wis. mag. hist., I
(Mar.) 304-307. [936
King, F. E. The pageant of Escanaba and correlated local history. Mich. hist, mag.,
II (Apr.) 341-380. [937
Linehan, Thomas. Early Catholic missions in Emmet county. Mich. hist, mag., II
(Apr.) 324-329. ' [938
Mills, James Cooke. History of Saginaw county, Michigan; historical, commercial,
biographical, profusely illustrated with portraits of early pioneers, rare pictures and
scenes of olden times. Saginaw, Mich., Seemann and Peters. 2 v. illus. (incl.
ports.) [939
Hunger, Edith C. The Michigan Audubon society. Mich. hist, mag., II (Apr.).
330-340. [940
Parkins, Almon Ernest. The historical geography of Detroit. Lansing, Michigan
historical commission, xix, 356 p. illus., maps. (Michigan historical publica-
tions. University series, III) [941
There has also been issued a private edition distributed by the University of Chicago libraries—
^he writer's thesis (ph. d.) University of Chicago, 1914.
Rev.'in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXl't (1919) 52-53.
Paton, Florence E. History of the schools of Portage .township in the copper country.
Mich. hist, mag., II (July) 556-572. [942
136908°— 21— VOL. 3 ^
60 AMEEICAl^ HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Saltonstall. Brayton. Reminiscences of the Mackinac country. Mich. hist, mag., II
(Apr.) 381 386. [943
Sanderson, John P. Congre2:ationalism as a factor in the making of Michigan. Mich.
HIST. MAG.. 11 (Jan.) 143-f53. [944
Soldiers at Detroit from 1797-1802. Burton hist. coll. mss., I, no. 5 (Oct. 1917)
1SS-19(). [945
A list of United States army ofRcers and soldiers stationed at Detroit and vicinity, 1797-1.S02.
Streeter, Floyd Beniamin. The factional character of early Michigan politics. Mich.
hist, mag., II (Ja/.i.) 165-191. [946
Streeter, Floyd Benjamin. History of prohibition legislation in Michigan. Mich.
hist, mag., II (Apr.) 289-308. [947
Streeter. Floyd Benjamin. Political parties in Michigan 1837-1860 ; an historical study
of political issues and parties in Michigan from the admission of the state to the Civil
war. Lansing, Michigan historical commission, xxiii, 401 p. ports., maps. [948
Vism^ra, John C. Coming of the Italians to Detroit. Mich. hist, mag., II (Jan.)
110-124. [949
Wait. Stephen Edwin, and W. S. Anderson, comps. Old settlers; a historical and chro-
nological record, together with personal experiences and reminiscencs of members
of the Old settlers'of the Grand Traverse region. Traverse City, Mich. [Ebner
brothers] 86 p. illus., ports. [950
Wood, Edwin O. Historic Mackinac; the historical, picturesque and legendary
features of the Mackinac country. N. Y., Macmillan. 2 v. plates, ports., plans,
facsims., maps. [951
Vol. I is mainly an historical account of the island from the time of the French explorations, the
coureurs de bois, the fur trade, etc. Vol'. II i's largely a collection' of extracts from books long since out
of print, which co'ntains descriptions of the country and its inhabitants.'
Rev! in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oc^.j 102-103;' tlist. piib. Canad., XXII (1919) 43 45.
Minnesota.
Cain, Gordon. Indian land titles in Minnesota. Minn, law rev., II (Feb.) 177-
191. [952
Carney, Mary Vance. Minnesota, the star of the north. Boston [etc.] D. C. Heath,
xvii, 249 p. illus., plates, maps, facsims. [953
a school history.
Hansen, Marcus L. Old Fort Snelling, 1819-1858. Iowa City, State historical
society of Iowa, x, 270 p. plan. [954
In 1917 a pamphlet of 30 pages entitled "Old Fort Snelling," by M. L. Hansen, was published by
the ^'tate historical society of Iowa.
V s! '1 Iv of the history"^and influence of old Fort Sncliinp ^.^ hich was pstablished in 1819 at the junc-
tion of the Minnesota arid Mississippi rivers. I^ is a t;5pe of ^he many remote military stations scat-
tered throughout the West.
' Rev. in: Am. hist. rev.,'XXIV (Oct.) 139-140.
Hicks, John D. The organization of the volunteer army in ]861 with special refer-
ence to Minnesota. Minn. hist, bul,, II (Feb.) 324-308. [955
Posey, Chessley J. The influence of geographic factors in the development of Min-
nesota. Minn. hist, bul., II (Aug.) 443-453. [956
Belf, Frances H. The removal of the Sioux Indians from Minnesota. Minn. hist.
BUL., II (May) 420-425. [957
Includes a letter, written May 13, 1863, by John P. Willia-^s">n, a Presbyterian missionary who
accompanied the'Sioux to Ijheir new home, giving an account of tl e journey.
Ryden, P. Svenska Baptisternas i Minnesota historia fran 1850-talet till 1918.
Minneapolis, Minn., Statskonferens. 275 p. illus. [958
Historical survey of ^he Swedish Baptist church in Minnesota from 1850 to 1918.
Shippee, Lester Burrell. Social and economic effects of the Civil war with special
reference to Minnesota. Minn. hist, bul., II (May) 389-412. [959
Turner, John, and C. K. Semling, eds. History of Clay and Norman counties, Min-
nesota; their people, industries, and institutions. Indianapolis, S. F. Bowen and
CO. 2 V. plates, ports. [960
Willis, Mrs. J. R. Souvenir and history of Rochester, Minnesota. 2d ed. [Roches-
ter, Minn,, The author] 63 p. illus. [961
!fc
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 61
Mississippi.
McNeily, J. S. War and reconstruction in Mississippi, 1863-1890. Miss. hist.
soc. PUB., centenary ser. , II, 165-535. [962
Winston, James E. The lost commission: a study in Mississippi history. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., V (Sept.) 158-189. [963
The senatorial commission of Jacob Thompson, which was sent to him by ^he governor of Missis-
sippi through Robert; T. Walker, in 1844, but was withheld by the latter.
Gives a survey of ^he political situation in Mississippi at 1^he close of ^he Tyler administration.
Missouri.
Bek, William G. Gottfried Duden's "report," 1824-1827. Translated by William
Cx. Bek. Mo. hist, rev., XII (Jan.-July) 81-89, 163-179, 258-270; XIII (Oct.)
44-56. [964
Cont. from v. XII, October 1917.
Sum'marv of a book published in German in 1829, giving an account of conditions in Missouri, "which
was the direct cause of German immigration into Missouri during the thirties and forties of ^helas^
cenljury."
Eaton, David W. How Missouri counties, towns and streams were named. Mo.
hist, rev., XIII (Oct.) 57-74. ' [965
Gentry, William R. The Missouri soldier one hundred years ago. Mo. hist, rev.,
XII (July) 216-223. [966
Missouri's first centennial day, Columbia, Missouri, January 8, 1918. Mo. hist.
REV., XII (Apr.) 136-144. [967
Shoemaker, Floyd Calvin. Missouri's hall of fame; lives of eminent Missourians.
Columbia, Mo., Missouri bk. co. viii, 269 p. illus., ports. [968
Violette, Eugene Morrow. A history of Missouri. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] D. C. Heath.
xxxiii, 473 p. illus., maps. [969
Nebraska.
Dobbs, Hugh Jackson. History of Gage county, Nebraska, a narrative of the past,
with special emphasis upon the pioneer period of the county's history, its social,
commercial, educational, religious, and civic development from the early days to
the present time. Lincoln, Neb., Western pub. and engr. co. 1100 p. illus.,
ports. [970
The first war on the Nebraska frontier. Neb. hist, and rec. pioneer days, I
(Feb.) 4. [971
Attack by a par^y of ^he Arikara upon General William H. Ashley's trappers, near Fori; Atkinson,
in 1823.
Letters concerning the Presbyterian mission in the Pawnee country, near Bellevue,
Neb., 1831-1849. Kansas hist. soc. coll., XIV, 570-784. [972
Morton, Julius Sterling, and Albert Watkins. History of Nebraska from the earliest
explorations of the trans-Mississippi region. Rev. ed. Edited and rev. by
Augustus 0. Thomas, James A. Beattie, Arthur C.Wakeley. Lincoln, Neb., Western
publishing and engraving co. xiii, 720 p. illus. , ports. [973
Nebraska in 1864-1867; time of the Sioux Indian war and building of Union Pacific.
Neb. hist, and rec. pioneer days, I (Apr.) 6-7. [974
The TJnion club — Civil war substitute for " Council of defense." Neb. hist, and rec.
pioneer days, I (Apr.) 2. [975
Notes from ^he original record book of the Union club, which was organized in Brownville, in 1863.
Nevada.
Adams, Romanzo. Taxation in Nevada, a history. Pub. at Reno, Nevada, in 1918,
by the Nevada historical society. Carson City, State printing office, xvi, 199 p.
(Nevada applied history series, [v. I]) [976
Reminiscenses of early Virginia City and the Comstock. Overland, LXXI (Jan.-
Feb.) 57-63, 146-150. [977
62 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
New Hampshire.
Bartlett, John Henry. New Hampshire's contribution to naval warfare. Granite
MO., L( Jan.) 13-16. [978
Brown, Ernest Vinton. Wilmot camp-meeting — ^historical sketch. Granite mo., L
(July) 153-162. [979
Brown, Warren. History of Hampton Falls, N. H. Concord, N. H., Rumford press,
1900-18. 2v. illus., plates, ports. [979a
V. I has imprint: Manchester, N. H., Printed by the J. B. Clarke co., 1900.
Felch, Albert D. Sunapee's anniversary; historical address delivered Monday, Sep-
tember 2, 1918. Granite mo., L (July) 173-178. [980
Hartford, Fernando Wood. Portsmouth, old and new. Granite mo., L (Jan.)
27-35. [981
Hill, Howard F. The Merrimack: sources, navigation and related matters. Granite
MO., L (Jan.) 17-25. [982
Pillsbury, Frank J. History of the First Baptist church, Concord, N. H. Granite
MO., L (Oct.) 207-221. [983
Thorne, John Calvin. One hundredth anniversary of the Sunday school of the First
Congregational church. Concord, N. H. Granite mo., L (July) 165-168. [984
New Jersey.
Auten, Aaron J., and John Garretson. Somerville in 1812; also Raritan. Somerset
CO. hist, quar., VII (Oct.) 241-250. [985
Supplementary notes by James J. Bergen.
Barnes, Harry Elmer. A history of the penal, reformatory and correctional institu-
tions of the state of New Jersey, analytical and documentary. Trenton, N. J.,
MacCrellish and Quigley co. 654 p. plates, plans. [986
Rev. in: Am. econ. rev., IX (Mar. 1919) 137-138; Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr. 1919) 515-517; Am.
pol. sci. rev., XIII (Nov. 1919) 686-687.
Benedict, William H. Early taverns in New Brunswick. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s.
Ill (July) 129-146. [987
De Mott, John J. Neshanic church and its builders. Somerset co. hist, quar.,
VII (July) 171-180, 263-272. [988
Folsom, Joseph F. Israel Crane, road builder [1773-1858] N. J. hist. soc. proc. n. s.
Ill (July) 162-172. [989
Identified with some of the most important enterprises of Essex county.
Franklin township inhabitants, 1825. Somerset co. hist, quar., VII (Jan.-Apr.)
47-50, 128-132. [990
Gouverneur, Isaac. An interesting document of 1727. Somerset co. hist, quar.,
VII (Jan-.) 61-64. [991
Relates to an investment by John Teunise, or Tunison, of Somerset; county. It is signed by Isaac
Gouverneur, merchant'of the city "of New York.
Hanover, New Jersey, deeds. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. Ill (Jan.) 60-64. [992
Abstracts of 11 deeds, ranging in date from 1725 to 1800.
Hopkins, Thomas. Journal of Thomas Hopkins of the Friendship salt company.
New Jersey, 1780. Pa. mag. hist., XLII (Jan.) 46-61. [993
James, Edmund J. Notes on the Baptist church at Mount Bethel. Somerset co.
hist, quar., VII (Apr.) 118-122. ■ [994
Landis, Charles K. Journal of Charles K. Landis, founder of Vineland [Mar. 12-
Apr. 18, 1868] Vineland hist, mag., Ill (Jan.-Oct.) 1-4, 21-25, 41-45, 61-64.
[995
Litle, John. Extracts from the docket of John Litle, justice of the peace of Gloucester
county, New Jersey, 1781-1783. Pa. mag. hist., XLII (Jan.) 69-74. [996
Maar, Charles. Causes of the Dutch migrations into and out of New Jersey. Somer-
set CO. hist, quar., VII (July) 168-171. [997
WRITIITGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 63
Mellick, Andrew D., jr. Memoranda concerning Somerset county persons and events,
Somerset co. hist, quar., VII (Jan.) 16-31. [998
Morristown in the Revolution; from "History of Morris county, New Jersey" [By
Henry C. Pitney] Lewis historical publishing co. [1915] Americana, XII (Apr.)
210-219. [993
Purvis, Wilson J. The old Cohansey road. Vineland hist, mag., Ill (Apr.) 27-29.
[1000
Some Bedminster inhabitants of about 1760. Somerset co. hist, quar., VII (Jan.)
51-53. [1001
Some unrecorded Somerset deeds. Somerset co. hist, quar., VII (July) 183-187.
[1002
Range in date from 1714 to 1822.
Somerset county Union league, 1863-'65. Somerset co. hist, quar., VII (Jan.)
41-46. [1003
Van Liew, Elizabeth. Jottings from an old journal. Somerset co. hist, quar.,
VII (Jan.-Apr.) 55-61, 123-127. [1004
Extracts from the diary of Elizabeth Van Liew, 1821-1859. They relate to events at Six-Mile Run,
Middlebush, and vicini1;y.
Vineland' s early settlers, 1861-1865. Vineland hist, mag.. Ill (Apr.-Oct.) 25-27,
46-48, 65-67. [1005
New Mexico.
Anza, Juan Bautista de. Colonel Juan Bautista de Anza, governor of New Mexico;
diary of his expedition to the Moquis in 1780. With an introduction and notes
by Ralph E. Twitchell. [Santa Fe, Historical society of New Mexico] 47 p. illus.
(New Mex. hist. soc. pub., no. XXI) [1006
New York.
Adams, James Truslow. History of the town of Southampton (east of Canoe place).
Bridgehampton, L. I., Hampton press, xx, 424 p. plates, ports., maps, facsims.
[1007
Rev. in: Am, hist, rev., XXIII (July) 904-905.
Armbruster, Eugene L. Bruijkleen colonie (Borough of Brooklyn) 1638-1918. N. Y.
[The author] 12 p. map. [1008
Beauchamp, William M. Champlain and the Oneidas in 1615; identification of the
site of the Indian fort at I'Jichols' Pond, about three miles east of Perryville, in
the town of Fenner, Madison county, N. Y., attacked by Champlain on October
11, 1615. Am. scenic and hist, preservation soc. rep., XXIII, 625-642. [1009
Bellot, Alfred H. History of the Rockaways from the year 1685 to 1917; being a com-
plete record and review of events of historical importance during that period in
the Rockaway Peninsula, comprising the villages of Hewlett, Woodmere, Cedar-
hurst, Lawrence, Inwood, Far Rockaway, Arverne, Rockaway Beach, Belle
Harbor, Neponsit and Rockaway Point. Far Rockaway, N. Y., Beliefs histories,
inc. 110 p. ports., maps. [1010
Buffalo historical society. Participation of the Buffalo historical society in the
Erie canal centenary, celebratfed at Rome, N. Y., July 4, 1917. Buffalo hist.
soc. PUB., XXII, 267-295. [1011
Evolution of the New York canal system, by George Clinton: p. 273-295.
Cutting, Robert Fulton, and Albert R. Ledoux. The Brick Presbyterian church
of New York; addresses delivered on the occasion of 150th anniversary, Thurs-
day, January 10, 1918. Am. scenic and hist, preservation soc. rep., XXIII
575-606. [1012
Felter, William L, Historic Green Point; a brief account of the beginning and
development of the northerly section of the borough of Brooklyn, city of New York,
locally known as Green Point. Issued in connection with the semicentennial
of the Green Point savings bank and by that institution. [Brooklyn, 1918?] 61 p.
lUus. [1013
64 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. |
i
Hall, Edward Hagaman. The Catskill aq^ueduct; a description of the Catskill aque- |
duct, an account of the celebration of its completion in 1917, and a brief history j
of the earlier water supplies of New York city. Am. scenic and hist, preserva- i
TiON soc. REP., XXIII, 645-910. [1014 i
The earlier water supplies of New York city: p. 655-751. I
HiU, Henry W. Historical sketch of Niagara ship canal projects. Buffalo hist. |
soc. PUB., XXII, 201-266. [1015 |
Prepared for the Canal committee of the Buffalo Chamber of commerce, and published separately j
by that committee in 1917, under title: Ship channel between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. Report. . .
Houghton, Gretchen M. History of Indian Lake. N. Y. state hist, assoc. proc, i
XVI, 268-275. • [1016 i
Kolff, Cornelius G. Early history of Staten Island. [Rosebank? N. Y.] [32] p. ',
[1017 !
Maurice, Arthur Bartlett. Fifth avenue. N. Y., Dodd, Mead and co. x, 331 p. I
plates. [1018 !
Moses, Lionel. Some houses of old New York. Art world, III (Feb.) 437-439. i
[1019 j
Houses of architectural interes^.
National savings bank of the city of Albany. Albany's historic street; a collection of I
some of the historic facts and interesting traditions relating to State street & its {
neighborhood; published in commemoration of its fiftieth anniversary, by the ]
National savings bank of the city of Albany. [Albany] xiv, [4], 43, [2] p. illus., I
ports. [1020 !
Opening of the Schuyler mansion at Albany, N. Y.. October 17, 1917. Am. scenic j
and hist, preservation soc. rep., XXlll, 607-624. [1021 {
Paulmier, Hilah. The oldest hotel in America. D. A. R. mag., LII (Feb.) 91-92.
[1022
The inn at Rhinebeck, N. Y.
Seaman, Augusta Huiell. A forgotten footprint of history. D. A. R. mag., LII
(Jan.) 8-17. [1023
Historical items connected with the site of Richmond Hill, New York city.
Seaman, Augusta Huiell. Some quaint reminders of history in New York city.
D. A. R. MAG., LII (May, July, Sept.) 295-297, 419-421, 523-525. [1024
Contents.— The last home of a president[President Monroe!. Concerning two historic prisons
[Rhinelander sugarhouse, British prison during the Revolution, and "The Barracks," where British
prisoners were confined during the War of 1812] When Greenwich was a village.
Seaver, Frederick J. Historical sketches of Franklin county an d its several towns,
with many short biographies. Albany, J. B. Lyon co., printers, xii, 819 p. [1025
Shepard, Mrs. Frederick, comp. The Women's educational and industrial union of
Buffalo. Buffalo hist. soc. pijb., XXII, 147-200. [1026
Thompson, Benjamin Franklin. History of Long Island from its discovery and
settlement to the present time, by Benjamin F. Thompson. The 3d ed., rev. and
greatly enl., with additions and a biography of the author by Charles J. Werner.
N. Y., R. H. Dodd. 4 v. plates, ports., maps, facsims. [1027
Of this work there have been printed 600 copies on Berkshire linen, in three volumes, and 135 copies
on French handmade paper, in four volumes.
First edition, New York, 1839.
Where is Buffalo? The determination of its latitude and longitude in 1861. Buffalo
hist. soc. pub., XXII, 335-342. [1028
Report of Dr. Peters, on the determination of the geographical position of the city of Buffalo, in
August, 1860: p. 336-340.
Wilcox, Arthur Russell. The bar of Rye township, Westchester county, New York;
an historical and biographical record, 1660-1918. N. Y,, Knickerbocker press.
XV, 347 p. plates, ports. [1029
Williams, Sherman. Our history and our schools. N. Y. state hist, assoc. proc,
XVI, 1917, 69-81. [1030
Regarding the attention given to the history of the state in the New York schools.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 65
North Carolina.
Allen, William C. History of Halifax county. Boston, The Cornhill co. xvi, 235 p.
plates, ports., map. [1031
Builders of the county: p. 147-231.
Barringer, Paul B. The influence of peculiar conditions in the early history of
North Carolina. N. C. lit. and hist, assoc. proc, XVIII, 13-25. [1032
Clark, Walter. History of the Superior and Supreme courts of North Carolina. N. C.
BOOKLET, XVIII (Oct.) 79-104. [1033
Hamilton, J. G. de Roulhac, ed. The papers of Thomas Ruffin [1787-1870] Raleigh,
Edwards and Broughton print, co. 2 v. port. (N. C. hist. com. pub.) [1034
The editor has selected for inclusion "all such letters as may throw light upon the history of the state
[North Carolina] and nation, or upon the personality and 'character either of Judge Ruffin or the
writers.''
Life and character of the Hon. Thomas Ruffin., by William A. Graham: v. I, p. 17-34. Chief Justice
Thomas Ruffin, by Francis Nash: v. I, p. 35-44.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Jan. 1919) 299-300; XXV (Oct. 1919) 122-123.
BInight, Edgar W. The influence of the Civil war on education in North Carolina.
N. 0. LIT. AND HIST. ASSOC. PROC, XVIII, 52-60. [1035
Lichtenstein, Gaston. For whom was Edgecombe county named? N. C. booklet,
XVIII (Oct.) 116-119. [1036
North Dakota.
Arnold, H. V. The early history of Grand Forks, North Dakota. Larimore, N. Dak ,
H. V. Arnold. 154 p. [1037
Ohio.
Avery, Elroy McKendree. A hiitory of Cleveland and its environs; the heart of new
Connecticut. Chicago and N. Y., Lewis pub. co. 3 v. illus., ports., maps.
facsims. [1038
The author's name is not given o^i the title-page of v. II-IIL
Contents.— V. I. Historical, v. II- 'li.' Biography.
Centennials of several Firelania churches. Firelands pioneers, n. s. XX, 2037-2058
[1039
The first trial for murder in the lire'ands. Firelands pioneer, n. s. XX, 2311-2015.
[1040
A trial in Huron county, in Mar 1817.
Hiilbert, Archer Butler, e4. O'i'd Li the time of the Confederation; ed., with intro-
duction and notes. Ma:''ett;i. 0., Marietta historical commission, xxxv, 220 p.
maps. (Marietta coll. hist, coll., v. Ill) [1041
Added half-title: Ohio compm- so'-ms, v. IIT.
Contents.— Introduction: A terntor" in ^' e making. I. The antecedents of the Ordinance of 1784.
II. Ohio in the Papers of the Coiitineiital congress. III. Journal of John Matthews [July 10, 1786-April
21,1787].
Miller, Edward A. The history of educational legislation in Ohio from 1803 to 1850.
Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVII (Jan. -Apr.) 1-142, 143-271. [1042
Paul, Hosea. Maps and atlases of the Firelands' counties and cities. Firelands
pioneer, n. s. XX, 2059-2062. [1043
Sandusky county pioneer and historical association. Yearbook . . . 1918. . . . Com-
piled by I. H. Burgoon, and Basil Meek. Fremont, Ohio, Published by the associ-
ation. [4], 73 p. illus. [1044
Courts and bar of pioneer days in Sandusky county, by Basil Meek: p. 57-68.
Shetrone, Henry C. The Indian in Ohio; with a map of the Ohio country. Ohio
archaeol, and hist, quar., CCVII (Jan.) 274-510. [1045
Oregon.
Fisher, Ezra. Correspondence of Reverend Ezra Fisher. Edited by Sarah Fisher
Henderson, Nellie Edith Latourette, Kenneth Scott Latourette. Ore. hist. soc.
quar., XIX (June-Dec.) 134-163, 235-261, 351-372. [1046
Letters written by the Rev. Ezra Fisher from Oregon City, Oregon territory, Jan. 6, 1853-Oct. 1, 1854.
He was the exploring agent of the American Baptist home missionary society for Oregon territory.
Cont. from V. XVm, 1916. i-. v j v.) s . . j
66 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Hermann, Binger. Early history of southern Oregon, Ore. hist. soc. quar., XIX
(Mar,) 53-68. [1047
Shippee, Lester Burrell. The federal relations of Oregon. Ore. hist. soc. quar., i
XIX (June-Dec.) 89-133, 189-230, 283-333. [1048 j
Contents.— I. The si^uat;ion in 1819. II. Congress and Oregon, 1819-1829. III. Oregon and the
diplomacy ol 1821-1827. iV. Oregon: 1827 ^o 1842. V. Linn and the Oregon territory. VI. Oreg6n
and the political game: 1843-4. |
Pennsylvania.
Baily, Joshua L. Address at the centennial celebration of the er^fection of Twelfth
street meetinghouse, tenth month 25, 1912. Friends' hist. soc. bul., VIII (May)
56-66. [1049
Early recollections of the Twelfth street meeting of Friends, Philadelphia.
Brackenridge, Henry. The trial of Mamachtaga, a Delaware Indian, the first person'
convicted of murder west of the Alleghany mountains, and hanged for his crime [1785]
Western Pa. hist, mag., I (Jan.) 27-36. [1050
Brinton, Walter. Thomas Holme and the first city plan of Philadelphia. Frankford
hist. soc. pap., II, no. 6, 295-298. [1051
Bryan, Samuel. Two interesting letters, political and commercial. Pa. mag. hist.,
XLII (July) 286-288. [1052
Two letters written by Samuel Bryan, of Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 3, 1785 and May 20, 1790, the first
discussing politicai'aflairs, and l^he second business conditions.
Burd, Edward. Letters of Edward Burd. [Ed.] by Thomas Lynch Montgomery. Pa.
MAG. HIST., XLII (Jan.-Apr.) 62-68, 141-155. [1053
Written from Philadelphia, Feb. 2, 1765-Aug. 11, 1786.
Campbell, Jane, comp. San Domingo refugees in Philadelphia. Comp. from the
original D'Oiiic-Rodrigue papers. Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXIX (Mar.-Sept.)
68-88, 140-152, 262-279. ' [1054
Papers of the years 1833-18.35 taken from a collection in the possession of the American Catholic
historical society, comprising the family papers of some of the refugees from San Domingo, who sought
safety in the United States from the negro insurrection at the end of the 18th century.
The papers deal chiefly with two families, the D'Orlics and the Rodrigues.
Cont. from v. XXVIII, 1917.
Craig, Neville B. History of Pittsburgh; with a brief notice of its communication
and other advantages for commercial and manufacturing purposes. New ed.,
with introd. and notes by George T. Fleming. Pittsburgh, J. R. Weld in co. xxiv,
310 p. [1055
Creighton, Thomas. Some reminiscences of Orescentville. Frankford hist. soc.
PAP., II, -no. 6, 302-306. [1056
Dahlinger, Charles W. The dawn of the woman's movement; an account of the
origin and history of the Pennsylvania married woman's property law of 1848.
Western Pa. hist, mag., I (Apr.) 68-84. [1057
Dahlinger, Charles W. Old Allegheny. Western Pa. hist, mag., I (Oct.)
161-223. [1058
Dahlinger, Charles W. Rev. John Taylor; the first rector of Trinity Episcopal
church of Pittsburgh and his commonplace book. Western Pa. hist, mag., I
(Jan.-Apr.) 3-25, 85-96. [1059
The commonplace book contains a registry of marriages, baptisms, and funerals, 1800-1832.
Dixon, William B. Recollections of the presidential campaign of 1844. Frankford
hist. soc. PAP., II, no. 6, 291-292. [1060
Donehoo, George P. A few facts in the history of Logstown. Western Pa. hist.
MAC!., I (Oct.) 259-264. [1061
Faris, John T. The romance of old Philadelphia. Phila. and London, Lippincott.
336 p. plates, ports., facsims. [1062
Kev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr. 1919) 516-517.
Gormly, Agnes M. Hays. Economy— a unique community. Western Pa. hist.
MAG., I (July) 113-131. [1063
Account of the communist settlement at Economy, Pa.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 67
Hager, Walter 0. Fulton Hall and its graven image. Lancaster co. hist. soc.
PAP., XXII, no. 9 (Dec.) 141-148. [1064
Fulton Hall (opera house) at Lancaster, and the wooden image of Robert Fulton on its fagade.
Hostetter, A. K. A newspaper relic. Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., XXII, no. 5
(May) 77-86. [1065
a bound volume eonsistinp; of the issues of the first four years of a German newspaper with the
title of the "Neue unpartheische Lancaster Zeitung und Anzeigs Nachrichten," 1787-179L
Jackson, Joseph. Market street, Philadelphia; the most historic highway in
America, its merchants and its story. Phila., Joseph Jackson. x\, 233 p. plates,
ports., plans, facsims. [1066
First published as a serial in the Sunday magazine of the Public Ledger, during 1914 and 1915.
Lancaster, Pa. Report of the centennial observance of Lancaster city. Lancaster
CO. HIST. soc. PAP., XXII, no. 4 (Apr.) 57-70. [1067
Landis, Charles I. City hall and its history [Lancaster] Lancaster co.hist. soc.
PAP., XXII, no. 7 (Sept.) 107-122. (1^68
Landis, Charles I. History of the Philadelphia and Lancaster turnpike; the first long
turnpike in the United States. Pa. mag. hist., XLII (Jan.-Oct.) 1-28, 127-140,
235-258, 358-360. [1069
Landis, Charles I. A list of the original Lancaster subscribers to the capital stock of
the Philadelphia and Lancaster turnpike [1792] Lancaster co. hist, soc, pap.,
XXII, no. 6 (June) 93-100. [1070
Lowe, William J. Donegal Reformed church at Milton Grove; Maytown Reformed
church at Maytown. Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., XXII, no. 3 (Mar.) 35-50.
[1071
Montgomery, Thomas L. List of historical markers in the state of Pennsylvania.
In Pennsylvania historical commission. Second report . , . [Harrisburg, Pa.]
p. 153-177. [1072
The patriotic year in Pennsylvania, 1917: anniversaries; memorials; foundations.
Pa. soc. yr. bk., 191-270. [1073
Pennsylvania historical commission. Second report . . . 1918. [Harrisburg, The
Pennsylvania historical commission] 177 p. [1074
Richards, H. M. M. Some reminiscences of noted men and times. [Lebanon, Pa.,
Lebanon county historical society] 275-302 p. plates. (Lebanon co. hist. soc.
pap., V. VII, no. 8) [1075
Schnure, William Marion, Selinsgrove, Penna., chronology, v. I. 1700-1850.
Middleburg, Pa., Middleburg Post. 151 p. plate, port., plans, facsims. [1076
Shackleton, Robert. The book of Philadelphia. Phila., The Penn pub. co. [10],
413 p. illus., plates. [1077
Smith, Percy Frazer. Memory's milestones; reminiscences, of seventy years of a
busy life in Pittsburgh. [Pittsburgh, Murdoch-Kerr press] 292 p. ports. [1078
Historical episodes: p. 1-58. Civil war incidents: p. 121-138.
Temple, Henry W. Logstown. Western Pa. hist, mag., I (Oct.) 248-258. [1079
Tower, Charlemagne. Joseph Bonaparte in Philadelphia and Bordentown. Pa.
MAG. hist., XLII (Oct.) 289-309. [1080
Rhode Island.
Baker, Darius. The Coddington portrait; a paper read before the society, February
25th, 1918. Newport, R. I. 28 p. illus. (Newport hist. soc. bul., no. 25)
[1081
Attempts to identify ^he portrait in the Ci^y Hall, at Newport, generally called the Governor
Coddington portrait. The writer concludes that ^he subject of the portrait is no^ Governor William
Coddington, thecolonist, nor isit the portrait of 'his son, but that if it be the portrait of a Coddington
i^ is probably that of a grandson of the firs^ governor of tha^ name— Colonel Willialra Coddington.
Merchants national bank of Providence. Old Providence; a collection of facts and
traditions relating to various buildings and sites of historic interest in Providence.
Providence, R. I., Printed for the Merchants national bank of Providence, xi,
65 p. illus., port. [108^
To commemorate ^he centenary of ^he bank.
68 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Munro, Wilfred H. More tales from Bristol. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XI (Oct.)
114-116. [1083
Items regarding old Bristol ships, the privateer Yankee, 1814, and Xhe sloop Prince Charles of
Lorraine, 1744.
Power Tyrone, Tyrone Power's impression of Rhode Island in 1833. R. I. hist.
soc.'coLL., XI (July) 86-88. [1084
Extract from "Impressions of America, during the years 1833, 1834, and 1835. By Tyrone Power."
Preston, Howard Willis. Notes on old Providence. The old County house in
Providence. Providence, Preston and Rounds co. 8 p. [1085
Also pub. in the Collections of the Rhode Island historical society, v. XI, April 1918.
Stevens, Maud Lyman. The romance of Newport, a paper read before the society,
November 19th, 1917. Newport, R. I. 36 p. illus. (Newport hist. soc. bul.,
no. 24) [1086
Postage stamp currency used during the Civil war [by Simon Newton]: p. 31-33. I
Terry, Roderick. The history of the Liberty tree of Newport, Rhode Island. New- !•.
port, R. I. [Newport historical society] 40 p. plate. (Newport hist. soc. bul., \[
no. 27) ' [1087 |f
View of Providence, 1777. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XI (July) 88-89. [1088 '
Describes a powder horn on which is carved a view of Providence, signed Stephen Avery, and h
dated 1777.
South Carolina.
Bacot, D. Huger, jr. South Carolina and the Whitney cotton gin. S. C
XIX (July) 151-152. [1089 I
Regarding Soul^h Carolina's purchase of the patent to Eli Whitney's cotton gin. j
Bacot, Thomas W. Orange Quarter (St. Denis). Huguenot soc. S. C. trans., [
XXIII, 37-60. [1090 I
Sketch of one of the seven original Hugueno^ centres in Sou^h Carolina, called the Orange Quarter
(St. Denis), or the Frencli quarter. ' i
Boucher, Chaimcey Samuel. The secession and co-operation movements in South
Carolina, 1848 to 1852. Wash. univ. stud., V, no. 2 (Apr.) 65-138. [1091 j
Hamer, Philip May. The secession movement in South Carolina, 1847-1852. Allen-
town, Pa., H. R. Haas and co. v, 152 p. [1092
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Pennsylvania, 1918.
[Hull, Edward Boltwood] Guide-book of Camden, containing description of points of
interest, together with an historical sketch, pioneer and Revolutionary scenes,
battle of Camden, battle of Hobkirk Hill. Camden, S. C, E. B. Hull. 48 p. j
plates. [1093
Slmms, William Gilmore. The history of South Carolina, by William Gilmore
Simms, rev. by Mary C. Simms Oliphant (with supplem.entary chapters) maps
and illustrations, adapted for use in the schools. Columbia, S, C, The State co.,
printers. 379 p. illus., ports. [1094
First edition, Charleston, 1849.
Smith, Henry A. M. Charleston and Charleston Neck; the original grantees and the
settlements along the Ashley and Cooper rivers. S. C. hist, mag., XIX (Jan.)
3-76. [1095
Smith, Henry A. M. Hog Island and Shute's Folly. S. C. hist, mag., XIX (Apr.)
87-94. [1096
Contents.— Hog Island: a vanished island in Charleston harbour. Shu1,e"s Folly island, and some
early Quakers.
South Dakota.
Camp, W. M. Discovery of the lost aite of the Slim Buttes battle. So. Dak. hist.
COLL., IX, 55-68. [1097
DeLand, Charles Edmund. Fort Tecumseh and Fort Pierre journal and letter books.
So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 93-239. [1098
Abstractofl by Charles Edr;und PeLand. No^es by Doane Robinson,
Aljslract of the journal kept at !''ort Tecumseh and For^ Pierre grading po3(,s, 1830-1S33, and o;
letl^er books lor intervals down to 1848. A valuable record of the history of the region of the Upper
Missouri country and of the activities of the American fur company.
WKITINGS OIT AMERICAIT HISTORY, 1918. 69
Ending the Outbreak. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 409-469. [1099
History of the negotiation of the treaties wi^h the Sioux Indians through the efior\s of Governor
Newton Edmunds of Dakota territory, in 1865, which ended the war of the Outbreak, 1862-1865.
English, A. M. Dakota's first soldiers; history of the first Dakota cavalry, 1862-1865.
So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 241-335. ^ [1100
Little Iowa. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 376-379. [1101
Presents a memorial of the Iowa legislature to Congress in 1856, requesting the annexation of the
territory west ol the state boundary as far as the Missouri, river. This territory, which is now part of
feouth Dakota, was designated in the fifties as "Little Iowa."
Robinson, Doane. Lewis and Clark in South Dakota. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX,
514-596. [1102
Robinson, Doane. Steamboat wrecks in South Dakota. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX,
393-402. [1103
Account of the loss of 20 steamboats on the Missouri river within the boundaries of the present state
of South Dakota since the beginning of steam navigation.
The Slim Buttes battlefield. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 47-54. [1104
State historical society of South Dakota. Colonial genealogical material in the De-
partment of history. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 36^6. [1105
List of genealogical material of use in tracing the family history of the pioneers of the state of South
Dakota.
Steel, M. F. Buffalo Bill's bluff. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, 475-485. [1106
Givesan account of thearrest and killing of Sitting Bull in South Dakota in 1890 and of the connection
of William F. Codj^ (Buffalo Bill) with the affair.
Stevenson, G. Stanley. Buffalo east of the Missouri in South Dakota. So. Dak. firt.
COLL., IX, 386-392. [1107
Concerned with the causes of the disappearance of the buffalo in this region.
Stevenson, C. Stanley. Expeditions into Dakota. So. Dak. hist, coll., IX, ;)47-n'"5.
[1103
Account of two exploring parties in South Dakota in 1844 and 1845: the expeditio^^ u^nder Captain
James Allen, I'st Dragoons, and that commanded by Captain E. V. Sumner, 1st Lrajoois.
Visher, Stephen Sargent. The boundaries of South Dakota. So. Dak. eist. cotj,.,
IX, 380-385. 11IC9
Tennessee.
Heiskell, Samuel Gordon. Andrew Jackson and early T.^nne^^-^-^lil-torv. NashviHe,
Tenn., Ambrose print, co. [4], 687 p. plates, ports., map, plans, faceim. [1110
Reynolds, Louise Wilson. The commonwealth of Franklin. D. A. R. mag., LII
(Jan.) 23-28. ^ [1111
Sioussat, St. George L. Tennessee, the compromise of 1850, and the Nashville con-
vention. Tenn. hist, mag., IV (Dec.) 215-247. [1112
Reprinted from the Mississippi Valley historical review, December 1915.
Trabue, Charles C. The voluntary emancipation of slaves in Tennessee as reflected
in state's legislation and judicial decisions. Tenn. hist, mag., IV (Mar.) 50-68.
[1113
Te5fas.
Adams, Ephraim Douglass, ed. British diplomatic correspondence concerning the
Republic of Texas, 1838-1846. Austin, Tex., The Texas state historical associa-
tion [1918?] xii, 636 p. [1113a
"Reprinted from the Quarterly of the Texas state historical association, XV, nos. 3 and 4, and from
the Southwestern historical quarterly, XVI, no. 1-XXI, no. 2, January, 1912-October, 1917."
Barker, Eugene C. The government of Austin's colony, 1821-1831. Southw. hist,
quar., XXI (Jan.) 223-252. [1114
Barker, Eugene C. Source readings in Texas history. Texas hist, teach, bul., VI,
no. 2 (Feb. 15) 43-60. [1115
Contents.— IX. Letters from prospective Immigrants and others (1S22-1825).
These letters show the wiJespread interest In Austin's colony in the United States and the motives
and difficulties of those who wished to emigrate.
70 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT. |,
I
Barker Eugene C, ed. Minutes of the ayuntamiento of San Felipe de Austin, 1828-
1832.' SouTHW. HIST. QUAR., XXI (Jau.-Apr.) 299-326, 395-423; XXII (July-Oct.)
78-95, 180-196. [^^
The minutes are preserved in the Spanish department of the Generalland office at Austin.
Bates, Edmund F. History and reminiscences of Denton county. Denton, Tex.,
McNitzky print. CO. xi, 412 p. illus., plate, ports. [1117 ,
Utah. !
Bird, George Robert, Tenderfoot days in territorial Utah. Boston, The Gorham press.
221 p. plates. [1118
Jenson, Andrew. The "Mormons" as pioneers. Utah geneal. and hist, mag., IX
(Jan.) 1-14. [1119
Kinney, John F. An early defense of Utah and her people. Utah geneal. and hist.
MAG., IX (Oct.) 145-153. [1120 ,
" From a speech of Hon John F. Kinney, of Utah, delivered in the House of representatives, Washing-
ton, D. C, March 17, 1864."
Vermont. L
Eno, Joel N. The founding of Vermont: the controversy over the New Hampshire II
grant. Americana, XII (Apr.) 147-183. [1121 j
Journal of an excursion to Manchester, Vermont, by a party of Norwich cadets, 1823. i
Vt. hist. soc. proc, for 1915-1916, 93-107. [1122 f
From a manuscript in the Vermont historical society. |
Vermont. Secretary of state. Index to the papers of the surveyors-general, pub. [
by authority of number 221, acts of 1906. Rutland, Vt., The Tuttle co. 170 p. ,
map. (State papers of Vermont, v. 1) [1123 '
The papers indexed include over 40 volumes and contain besides the land records many other official j
and unofficial papers of historical value. i
Vermont. Secretary of state. A list of the principal civil officers of Vermont from
1777 to 1918. Being a revision and enlargement of "Deming's Vermont officers." |
Ed. by John M. Comstock under the direction of the secretary of state. St. Albans,
Vt., St. Albans messenger co., publishers. 411 p*. [1124
Virginia.
Cabell, N. F. Some fragments of an intended report on the post Revolutionary
history of agriculture in Virginia. With notes by E. G. Swem. Wm. and Mary
QUAR., XXVI (Jan.) 145-168. [1125
Dinwiddle co., Va. Personal property list, Dinwiddle county, 1782. Wm. and
Mary quar., XXVI (Jan.-Apr.) 196-201, 250-258. [1126
Cont. from v. XXVI, 1917, p. 106.
Dunlap, Boutwell. Augusta county, Virginia, in the history of the United States.
Frankfort, The Kentucky state historical society. 73 p. port. [1127
Unexplored Kentucky was in the early days a part of Augusta county, Va.
Reprinted from the Register of the Kentucky state historical society, v. XVI, Sept. 1918.
Fredericksburg in Revolutionary days. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII (Oct.)
73-95. [1128
Goodwyn, Mrs. W. Samuel. Officers recommended and qualified for the militia
of Greensville county, Virginia, 1782-1815. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII
(Oct.) 96-103. [1129
Maddox, William Arthur. The free school idea in Virginia before the flivil war; a
phase of political and social evolution. New York city, Teachers college, Colum-
l>ia university, vi, 225 p. (Teachers college, Colurnbia university. Contribu-
tions to education, no. 93) [1130
Pub. also as thesis (ph. d.) Columbia university, 1918.
Morrison, A. J. Note on the organization of Virginia agriculture. Wm. and Mary
QUAR., XXVI (Jan.) 169-173. [1131
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 71
Sims, Annie Noble. Three early landowners of the county of Isle of Wight, Virginia:
Jeremiah Exum, Michael Mackquinney, and William Pope, with notes on some
of their descendants. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII (July-Oct.) 57-64, 104-112.
[1132
Swem, Earl G., and John W. ^Williams. A register of the General assembly of Vir-
ginia, 1776-1918, and of the constitutional conventions. Richmond, Davis Bot-
tom, superintendent of public printing. 450 p. [1133
Bound with the Fourteenth annual report of the Library board of the Virginia state library, 1916-1917.
Tyler, Lyon G. Aristocracy in Massachusetts and Virginia. Wm. and Mary quar.,
XXVI (Apr.) 277-281. [1134
A comparison of Massachusetts and Virginia in respect to the question of political aristocracy versus
democracy.
Washington.
Boening, Rose M. History of irrigation in the state of Washington. Wash. hist.
QUAR., IX (Oct.) 259-276. , [1135
Farrar, Victor J. Pioneer and historical societies of the state of Washington. Wash.
HIST. QUAR., IX (Jan.) 17-22. [1136
Lyman, William Denison. Lyman's history of old Walla Walla county, embracing
Walla Walla, Columbia, Garfield and Asotin counties. Chicago, S. J. Clarke pub.
CO. 2 V. plates, ports. [1137
Meany, Edmond S. Origin of Washington geographic names. Wash. hist, quar.,
IX (Jan.-Oct.) 26-62,107-128, 197-207, 288-295. [1138
Cont. from v. VIII, 1917.
Puget's Sound agricultural company. Puget's Sound agricultural company; pros-
pectus [1840] Ore. hist. soc. quar., XIX (Dec.) 345-349. [1139
Stevens, Isaac I. Beginning of government surveys. Wash. hist, quar., IX (Jan.)
63-64. [1140
Letter written by Gov. Stevens to the U. S. Commissioner of the General land office, Dec. 28, 1853,
relative to government land surveys in Washington territory.
Washington's first constitution, 1878. Wash. hist, quar., IX (Apr.-Oct.) 129-
152, 208-229, 296-307. [1141
Reprints a synopsis of the daily proceedings of the convention talcen from the issues of the Walla-
Walla Union from June 15 to August 3, 1878.
¥
West Virginia.
Chilton, William E. The claim of West Virginia against the Federal government on
account of the Northwest Territory. West Va. law quar., XXV (Apr.) 171-197.
[1142
Wisconsin.
Bottomley, Edwin. An English settler in pioneer Wisconsin; the letters of Edwin
Bottomley, 1842-1850; ed. with introduction and notes by Milo M. Quaife.
Madison, The Society. 250 p. illus., plates, ports., plan. (Wis. hist. soc. pub.
Collections, v. XXV) [1143
The story here given is of importance as being 1;ypicai of ^he life of the pioneer English settlements
in Wisconsin.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr. 191.9) 519.
Brunson, Ella C. Alfred Brunson, pioneer of Wisconsin Methodism [1793-1882]
Wis. mag/ hist., II (Dec.) 129-148. [1144
The Chippewa river during the French and British regimes. Wis. mag. hist., I
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Cole, Harry Ellsworth, ed. A standard history of Sauk county, Wisconsin. Chicago
and N. Y., Lewis pub. co. 2 v. illus., ports. [1146
The first settler of Baraboo. Wis. mag. hist., I (Mar.) 319-321. [1147
Fisher, Lucius G. Pioneer recollections of Beloit and southern Wisconsin. Wis.
MAG. HIST., I (Mar.) 266-286. [1148
Edited by Milo M. Quaife.
72 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Historic trees in Wisconsin. Wis. mag. hist., II (Sept.) 92-98. [1149
Hooper, Moses. Some early lawyers and some early practice in Wisconsin. In the
Report of the proceedings of the meeting of the State bar association of Wisconsin,
June 27, 28 and 29, 1917. Milwaukee, Wis., The Evening Wisconsin print, co.
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Jenison, Marguerite. Two early electric plants in Wisconsin. Wis. mag. hist., II
(Sept.) 79-81. [1151
Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The beginnings of Milwaukee. Wis. mag. hist., I (June)
417-418. [1152
Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The Bennett law in Wisconsin. Wis. mag. hist., II (Sept.)
3-25. [1153
Deals with 1;.he social significance of the agination of the Germans in Wisconsin against ^he law. The
Benne^^ law was a compulsory education law passed in 1889.
Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The disputed Michigan- Wisconsin boundary. Wis. mag.
hist., I (Mar.) 304-307. [1154
Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The senatorial election of 1869. Wis. mag. hist., I (June)
418-420. [1155
Merk, Frederick. The story of Old Abe. Wis. mag. hist., II (Sept.) 82-84. [1156
Wisconsin's famous Civil war eagle, mascot of 1;he Si;h Wisconsin infantry.
Oliver, John W. Wisconsin home guards during the Civil war. Wis. mag. hist., II
(Dec.) 212-214. [1157 1;
Pernin, P. The finger of God is there. Wis. mag. hist., II (Dec.) 158-180. [1158 j:
An account of 1;he ^errible fores^ fire which swep^ over l^he counties of nor1;heas1^ern Wisconsin in i
October, 1S71.' i
Quaife, Milo Milton. A Pantheon of Wisconsin history. Wis. mag. hist., II (Dec.) |
206-211. [1159 j
a brief summary of ^he collection ofhistorical manuscripts in the S1;atehis1^orical society of Wisconsin. |
Quaife, Milo Milton, ed. The movement for statehood, 1845-1846. Madison, The j
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Contents.— 1. Historical introduction. II. Official proceedings and debate. III. Popular pro-
ceedings and debate. Index.
Part III consists of selections from newspaper files showing ^he political developments of ^he period
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Rev. in: Am", hisi- rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 322-323.
Eederus, Sipko F. The Dutch settlements in Sheboygan county. Wis. mag. hist.,
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Rouillard, Eugene. Les lies des Douze Apotres. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XII
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Noce regarding the origin of ^he name of l^he Apostle Islands in Lake Superior.
Emith, i/r.s. Lathrop E. My recollections of Civil war days. Wis. mag. hist., II
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Tilton, As"^ Currier. Daniel Webster's Wisconsin investments. Wis. mag. hist., I
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Treaty Hall and old La Pointe. Wis. mag. hist., I (Mar.) 325-326. [1165
InrormatJon concerning tho building on Madeline Island now called "Treaty Hall."
Wyoming.
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BIOGRAPHY •
Comprehensive.
American biography; a new cyclopedia. Comp. under the editorial supervision of a
notable advisory board, v. III-IV. N. Y., Pub. under the direction of the Amer-
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Eliot, Samuel Atkins, ed.-in-cJiief. Biographical history of Massachusetts; biogra-
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V. IX: With opening chapters on What Massachusetts has done for higher technical education, by-
Richard Cockbum Maclaurin. v. X. With opening chapters on Co-education in Massachusetts, by
William Edwards Huntington.
Gordy, Wilbur Fisk. Our patriots. Chicago, N. Y. [etc.] Scribner. x, 188 p. plates.
[1169
A collection of chapters upon some of our great men and women, beginning with the Pilgrims and
coming down to Abraham Lincoln. Written for young people.
Greene, Evarts Boutell. Lieber and Schurz, two loyal Americans of German birth.
Issued by the Committee on public information, Washington, D. C. [Washington]
24 p. ([U, S.] Committee on public information. War information series, no. 19,
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Griffiths, John Lewis. The greater patriotism; public addresses, by John Lewis
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Abraham Lincoln: p. 3-16. Benjamin Harrison: p. 17-34. Nathaniel Hawthorne: p. 35-61.
Hampton, William Judson. Our presidents and their mothers. Introduction by
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Jones, E. Alfred. Two professors of William and Mary college. Wm. and Mary quae.
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Items relating to the Rev. Thomas Gwatkin and Rev. Dr. Samuel Henley obtained from the un-
published manuscripts and other material on the American loyalists in the Public record office, London.
Jordan, John W. Encyclopedia of Pennsylvania biography, v. IX. N. Y., Lewis*
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Sanford, Chester M., and Grace A. Owen. Modern Americans, a biographical school
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Slattery Charles Lewis. Certain American facas; sketches from life. N. Y., Button,
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Contents.— PhiUips Brooks. Andrew Preston Peabody. William James. JosiahRoyce. Alexander
Viets Griswold AUen. Henry Sylvester Nash. Bishop Whipple. Two cousins by marriage [Mary
Joanna Whipple, Mary Webster Whipple]. A boy I knew. A Minnesota doctor [Charles Nathaniel
Hewitt]. Samuel Hart. Henry Vaughan. A Pennsylvania home [Brunot family] Bishop Hare.
William Reed Huntington.
Standing, Per^v Cross. Two Confederate colonels. Unit. ser. mag., n. s. LXVI
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Turner Ashby and Richard Ashby.
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Wolf, Simon. The presidents I have known from 1860-1918. Washington, D. C.
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73
74 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Individual.
[Arranged alphabetically by subject!
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Ford, Worthington Chauncey. Henry Adams, historian. Nation, CVI
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Lovett, Robert Morss. The betrayal of Henry Adams. Dial, LXV (Nov,
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Taylor, Henry Osbom. "The education of Henry Adams." Atlantic,
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Park, Lawrence. Mather Brown's portrait of John Adams. Mass. hist.
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Allen. Butler, Howard Russell. Lieutenant William Howard Allen, u. s. n. 1
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Ames. Tuttle, Julius Herbert, ed. The two Nathaniel Ameses. Col. soc. Mass.
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Letters of Nathaniel Ames, senior and junior, 1758, and of W. Hook, 1760. They relate mainly to
incidents at Harvard college where the younger Ames was a student.
Anneke. Faust, A. B., ed. Mathilde Franziska Giesler-Anneke: "Memoiren einer
Frau aus dem badishpfalzischen Feldzug," and a sketch of her career. Ger.
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Austin. Barker, Eugene C. Stephen F. Austin. Miss. Valley hist, rev., V
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Also published in the Southwestern historical quarterly, XXII (July) 1-17.
Banneker. Baker, Henry E. Benjamin Banneker, the negro mathematician and
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Bartholomew. Pence, George. General Joseph Bartholomew [1766-1840] Ind.
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Barton. Bacon-Foster, Mrs. Corra. Clara Barton [1821-1912] humanitarian, from
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Reprinted from the Columbia historical society records, v. XXI, 1918.
Beall. Jackson, Cordelia. In memoriam — Mary Stevens Beall, 1854-1917. Co-
lumbia hist. soc. rec, XXI, 372-378. [1195
Beard. Croll, P. C. Thomas Beard [1794-1849] the pioneer and founder of Beards-
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Beauregard. La Vergne, H. J. de. General Beauregard before the Civil war. |
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Benson. Lee, Thomas Amory. Alfred Washburn Benson, ll. d. [1843-1916]
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Bidwell. Hunt, Rockwell D. John Bidwell [1819-1900] a prince among pioneers.
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Bowne. Thomas, Allen C. Samuel and Mary Bowne, of Flushing, and their
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Beeckinridgb. Cole, J. R. John Cabell Breckinridge. Confed. vet., XXVI
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Brewer. Maclay, Edgar Stanton. A sailor heroine. D. A. R. mag., LIT (Feb.)
83-90. [1202
The story of Lucy Brewer, alias Louis Baker, and afterwards Mrs. Lucy West, who in disguise served
as a.marine on the U. S. frigate Constitution throughout the War of 1812.
Brown. Wilson, Hill Peebles. John Brown, soldier of fortune, a critique. Boston,
The Cornhill co. 450 p. ports. [1203
Bryan. HoUistei, William. William Bryan of Craven county, brigadier general
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Button. Starbird, Charles M. Captain Benjamin Burton [1715-1763] Sprague's
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Bushnell. [Bushnell, Emma Helen] Daniel Edwin Bushnell, a memorial. Chat-
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A genealogical account of the family of Daniel Edwin Bushnell: p. 133-143.
Butler. Orcutt, William Dana. Ben Butler and the "stolen spoons"; the docu-
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Correspondence between Charles Carroll of Carrollton and his'son Charles, Aug. 27, 1770, to Aug.
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"His history is the history of the Maryland of his day."
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Carter. Woods, John Carter Brown. John Carter, of Providence, Rhode Island,
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John Carter, printer, publisher, journalist, 1745-1814.
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Choate. Century association. New York. Joseph Hodges Choate; memorial
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Osborn, Henry Fairfield. Joseph Hodges Choate, a founder of the American
museum of natural history; a tribute from the trustees of the American museum.
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Pumpelly, Josiah C. Hon. Joseph Hodges Choate, ll. d. N. Y. geneal.
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Purrington, William Archer. Memorial of Joseph Hodges Choate; read
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[1218
Clark. Patton, John S. George Rogers Clark of Albemarle. Univ. op Va. alumni
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Cleveland. Lingley, Charles Ramsdell. Official characteristics of President
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136908°— 21— VOL.. 3 7
76 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Clyde Colonel Samuel Clyde [1732-1790] a brief biography. N. Y. state hist. |
ASSOC. PROC, XVI. 1917, 184-186. [1222 |
Cooper Bennett, William H. Francis Cooper: New York's first Catholic legislator.
U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XII (June) 29-38. [1223
The first Catholic elected to the state legislature (1806).
Himes, Charles F. Life and times of Judge Thomas Cooper [1759-1840]
jurist, scientist, educator, author, publicist. Carlisle, Pa., Dickinson school of law.
70 p. ports. [1224
The subject of this sketch was at one time professor of chemistry at Dickinson college, Carlisle, Pa.
Davis. Gordon, Armistead Churchill. Jefferson Davis. N. Y., Scribner. viii,
329 p. (Figures from American history) [1225
Houston, MoUie H. The misrepresentation of Jefferson Davis in history
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Deane. Smith, Edgar Crosby. John Gilmore Deane [1785-1839] Sprague's jour.
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Decatur. Holmes, Charles Nevons. Stephen Decatur — a brave American. Jour.
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Dow. Keyes, Frances Parkinson. Moses Dow, citizen of Haverhill [d. 1811]
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DuLANY. Spencer, Richard Henry. Hon. Daniel Dulaiiy, 1685-1753 (the elder).
Md. hist. MAG., XIII (Mar.) 20-28. [1230
Spencer, Richard Henry. Hon. Daniel Dulany, 1722-1797 (the younger).
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Ellsworth. Ingraham, Charles A. Colonel Elmer E. Ellsworth; first hero of the
the Civil war. Wis. mag. hist., I (June) 349-374. [1232
Fish. Corning, A. Elwood. Hamilton Fish [1808-1893] N. Y., Laninere pub. co.
108 p. [1233
Secretary of state under Grant.
Floyd. Ambler, Charles H. The life and diary of John Floyd [1783-1837] governor
of Virginia, an apostle of secession, and the father of the Oregon country. Rich-
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Also pub. in: Branch hist, pap., V (June) 5-118.
The diarj^ covers the period from 1831 to 1834.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr. 1919) 518-519.
Forrest. Eckenrode, Hamilton James. Life of Nathan Forrest [1821-1877] Rich-
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Fort. John Porter Fort, a memorial, and personal reminiscences. N. Y., Knicker-
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The foreword signed: Martha Fannin Fort.
Experiences as a Confederate soldier: p. 13-37.
Foster. Hon. John W. Foster; veteran diplomat and authority on international law.
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Le6n Stiarez, Jose. Mr. John W. Forster. Con una introduccion del Dr.
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Franklin. Le blason de Benjamin Franklin. Chronique med., XXVe ann (Apr
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Hanson, Burton. Benjamin Franklin. Case and comment, XXIV (Feb )
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Folsom, Joseph F. Governor Franklin in Litchfield jail. N. J. hist. soc.
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Includes a letter written by William Franklin, New Jersey's last colonial governor, while a political
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England, James H. William Buel Franklin [1823-1903] In Professional
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Franks. Oppenheim, Samuel. David Franks as an insurance broker, 1757 and
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Based on the study of " The life and times of Stephen Girard, mariner and merchant. By John Bach
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Free use has been made in writing this Mography of the more than 50,000 pieces o f Girard manuscripts,
containing his corresponden.cc \4-ith his cemmercial agents in San Domingo and in Europe, and papers
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abroad and of the effects of these conditioms on the markets of the world.
Rev in: Am.hist.rev.,XXIV(July 1919) 70f>-707; Nation, CVJI (Oct. 5) 375; Pol.sci. quar., XXXIV
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Greene. Bates, Louise Prosser. John Greene of Newport and Narragansett.
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Early settler in Rhode Island.
Hancock. Lovett, H. M. "Hancock, the superb"; the civil record of Maj. Gen.
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Heeney. Bennett, William Harper. Cornelius Heeney [1754-1848] Am. Irish
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An educator of the pioneer days of Oregon.
Herndon. Barker, Harry E. Unveiling of the William H. Herndon monument
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Hooker. Wiswall, Clarence Augustus. An account of the life and military ser^'ices
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Hopkins. Ma clay, Edgar Stanton. A neglected hero of the Revolution. D. A. R.
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Captain Esek Hopkins, who conducted an expedition as;ainst Nassau, the capital of the Bahama
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Brigham, Clarence S. A portrait of Stephen Hopkins. R. I. hist. soc.
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Hutchinson. Colonial society of Massachusetts. Exercises at the presentation of
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■ Mellen, George F. Sidelights on Andrew Jackson. Meth. quar. rev.,
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Reader for the 3d and 4th grades.
78 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Jefferson. Harrison, Mary Louise. The sage of Monticello. D, A. II . mag., LII
(Jan.) 32-36. [1263
Muzzey, David Saville. Thomas Jefferson. N. Y., Scribner. viii. 319 p.
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Page, Thomas Nelson. Tommaso Jefferson, apostolo della liherta (1743-
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Lee. McKim, Randolph H. The soul of Lee, by one of his soldiers. N. Y. [etc.]
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■ Whipple, Wayne. The heart of Lee. Phila., Jacobs. 224 p. port. [1275
Williamson, Mary A. Life of Robert E. Lee. Richmond, Atlanta [etc.]
B. F. Johnson pub. co. 172 p. illus., ports. [Biographical readers] [1276
Header for the .3d and 4th grades.
Lieber. Phinney, Chester Squire. Francis Lieber's influence on American
thought and some of his unpublished letters. Phila., International print, co.
85 p. [1277
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Pennsylvania.
Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln today; a war-time tribute, being the Lincoln day
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■ Gay, H. Nelson. Abramo Lincoln (1809-1865). Firenze [etc.] R. Bem-
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Noble thoughts and extracts from the speeches and letters of Abraham lancoln: p. 49-122.
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84 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
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Cromwell. Culver, Francis B. Cromwell family; a possible Cromwell clue. Md.
HIST. MAG., XIII (Dec.) 386-403. " [1416
Crook. Leavitt, Charles. Genealogy of the Crook family in America, including
other related families. [Manila, P. I., Times press] 13 p. [1417
CusHMAN. Cushman, James Thomas. A grandson of Elder Thomas Cushman and
some of his descendants. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXII (,lan.)
10-16. [1418
Delano. Bowman, George Ernest. The wife of Dr. Benoni Delano of Duxbury
and the settlement of his estate [1738] Mayfl. desc, XX (Jan.) 31-34. [1419
Denise. Fairchild, Helen Lincklaen. Tunis Denise of Freehold, New Jersey,
1704-1797. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, XLIX (Oct.) 353-363. [1420
Traces the descent of Tunis Denise, of Freehold, New Jersey.
Doe. Doe, Elmer Ellsworth. The descendants of Nicholas Doe. Orleans, Vt.
[The compiler?] 375 p. illus., plate, ports., coats of arms. [1421
Doten. The wills of John Doten [1747] and his widow [1754] Mayfl. desc, XX
(Jan.) 27-31. [1422
Elliot. Kimball, Henry Ames. The John Elliot family of Boscawen, New Hamp-
shire. Concord, N. H., The Rumford press. 124 p. ports. [1423
Farabee. Farabee, Louis Thomas. Genealogy of the Farabees in America.
[Washington, D. C] v, 345 p. port. [1424
Finney. Lieutenant Josiah Finney's will [1723] Mayfl. desc, XX (July)
97-100. [1425
Franks. Oppenheim, Samuel. Supplemental notes on the Jacob Franks gen
ealogy. Am. Jew. hist. soc. pub., XXVI, 260-266. [1426
Gary. Brainerd, Lawrence. Gary genealogy. The descendants of Arthur Gary
of Roxbury, Massachusetts, with an account of the posterity of Stephen Gary of
Charlestown, Massachusetts, and also of a South Carolina family of this name.
Boston, Mass. [T. R. Marvin and son, printers] 235 p. [1427
86 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOK.
George, George, Jasper P. History of one branch of the George family in America,
together with a history of some of the families connected with it by marriage. With
additions and corrections made and brought to the end of the year 1918, by Hiram
M. George. 41 p. [1428
Address: Hiram M. George, Master of the Roger Wolcott school, Boston, Mass.
GiFFORD, Gifford family record. Vineland hist, mag., Ill (Apr.) 32-34. [1429
GiLLMORE. Tucker, Sidvin Frank. A partial list of the descendants of the Rev.
George Gillmore, a., m., loyalist of Horton and Windsor, Nova Scotia. Boston,
Mass", Priv. print, by H. C. Gillmore, at the press of C. B. Hogg. 20 p. [1430
GooDRiDGE. Goodridge, Edwin Alonzo. The Goodridge_ genealogy, a history of
the descendants of William Goodridge, who came to America from Bury St. Edmunds,
England, in 1636 and settled in Watertown, Massachusetts, with some inquiry
into the history of the family in England and the origin of the same. N. Y., Priv,
print. 313 p. port., plate, coats of arms. [1431
Revised and edited and gupervised in the printing by Lyman Horace Weeks.
Gordon. Gordon, Armistead Churchill. Gordons in Virginia, with notes on Gor-
dons of Scotland and Ireland. Limited ed. Hackensack, N. J., W. M. Clemens.
ISS p. [1432
Green. AUaben, Frank. Green of Greens-Norton; roydkl and baronial ancestry
of Secretary Mathias Nicolls of New York through an old Northamptonshire
family. Jour. Am. hist., XII (Apr.) 239-260. [1433
Griffin. Griff en, Z. T. Sergeant John Griffin of Simsbury, Conn. N. Y. geneal.
AND BioG. rec, XLIX (Jan.) 23-26. [1434
A genealogical account of the Griffin family, descenled from Sergeant John Griffin.
Grosvenor. Kent, Daniel. The English home and ancestry of John Grosvenor
of Roxbury, Mass. Boston. 13 p. [1435
Reprinted from the New En?, hist, and geneal. reg., LXXII (Apr.) 131-141.
Address: Daniel Kent, Worcester, Mass.
Guilford. Guilford, Helen Morrill. Guilford genealogy. Minneapolis, Minn.
[The compiler] 21-68 p. [1436
Address: Mrs. H. M. Guilford, 1820 Hawthorne ave., Minneapolis.
Hardin. Kelly, Faustina. The Hardins in the footsteps of the Boone trail. Ky.
HIST. soc. REG., XVI (May) 27-31. [1437
Harlow. The will of Samuel Harlow of Plymouth, Mass. [1724/51 Mayfl desc
XX (Oct.) 163-165. [1438
Hart. Ennis, Mrs. C. C. The Hart family. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VII
(July) 18-25. [1439
Ha WES. The will of Capt. John Hawes of Yarmouth, Mass. [17011 M\yfl desc
XX (Apr.) 73-75. [1440
HiGGiNBOTHAM. Sweeney, William Montgomery. Higginbotham family of Vir-
ginia. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVI (Jan.-Apr.) 205-213, 265-274* XXVII
(July-Oct.) 45-56, 123-129. [1441
HiGGiNS. Higgins, Mrs. Katharine Chapin. Richard Higgins, a resident and
pioneer settler at Plymouth and Eastham, Massachusetts, and at Piscataway, New
Jersey, and his descendants. Worcester, Mass. [The compiler] [6], 792 p.
illus., plates, ports. [1442
Holman. Holman, Alfred Lyman. John Holman of Dorchester, Mass., and his
descendants. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXII (July-Oct.) 185-203,
286-311. [1443
Holmes. Bowman, George Ernest. The estates of William Holmes [d. 1760] and
his widow Bathsheba. Mayfl. desc, XX (Oct.) 166-168. [1444
— The will of Joseph Holmes, sr., of Kingston, Mass. [1733] Mayfl. desc
XX (Oct.) 168-169. -* [1445
Hopkins. The will of Joshua Hopkins [1775] Mayfl. desc. , XX (Apr.) 67-69. [1446
How. Howe, Gilman Bigelow. Abraham How, of Watertown and Marlborouo-h
Mass. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VII (Apr.) 12-14. [1447
Brief genealogical notes of the How family.
;
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 87
Howe. Perley, M. V. B. Additional notes to the James Howe branch. Essex
INST. HIST. COLL., LIV (Oct.) 353-359. [X448
Perley, M. V. B. James Howe of Ipswich and some of his descendants.
Essex inst. hist, coll., LIV (Jan.-July) 33-48, 145-176, 257-275; and Topsfield
HIST. soc. COLL., XXIII, 81-96. [1449
HowLAND. The Howland family. Americana, XII (July) 265-271. [1450
Hubbard. [Hubbard, Frank Allison] Descendants of George Hubbard of Middle-
town, Conn. [Sandusky, 0.] 10 p. [1451
"Compiled by Frank Allison Hubbard, Sandusky, Ohio, December, 1918."
HuNNicuTT. Cabell, Jaiues Branch. The Hunnicutts of Prince George. Wm. and
Mary quar., XXVII (July-Oct.) 34-44, 113-122. [1452
Jackson. Brainerd, Lawrence. Ancestry of Joseph Riggs Jackson, jr., born Febru-
ary 4, 1876, Brownsville, Pa. Boston, Mass. [The compiler] chart. [1453
James. The will of Capt. John James of Scituate, Mass. [1744] Mayfl. desc, XX
(Oct.) 153-155. [1454
Johnson. Johnson of King and Queen, Louisa [counties] &c. Va. mag. hist.,
XXVI (Jan.-Apr.) 103-105, 205-207. [1455
Leggett, Edward H. Sir William Johnson; memoranda as to brothers and
sisters of Sir William Johnson and their descendants. N. Y. geneal. and biog.
REC, XLIX (Oct.) 389-390. [1456
Kane. O'Brien, Michael J. The Kane family in America. Am. Irish hist. soc.
jour., XVII, 194-197. [1457
Kent. Boyal ancestry of Daniel Kent, of Worcester, Mass., showing also his descent
from the Magna Charta sureties. Blue print chart. [1458
Address: Daniel Kent, Register of deeds, Worcester, Mass.
Lambert. Belknap, Henry Wyckoff. The Lambert family of Salem, Massachusetts.
Salem, Mass., Essex institute. 45 p. ports. [1459
Reprinted from the Historical collections of the Essex institute, v. LIV, Jan. 1918.
Lord. Belknap, Henry Wyckoff. The wife of Thomas Lord of Hartford. Essex
INST. HIST, coll., LIV (Jan.) 94-96. [1460
McOullough. [McCuUough, George Grant] Fragmentary records of the McGullough
and connected families. [Kearny, N. J.] 54 leaves. [1461
Autographed from type-written copy.
McDowell. McDowell, John Hugh. History of the McDowells and connections
(being a compilation from various sources). Memphis, 0. B. Johnston and co.
680 p. illus., ports., coats of arms. [1462
Mead. Weaver, Lucius Egbert. Genealogy of a branch of the Mead family, with a
history of the familv in England and in America and appendixes of the Rogers and
Denton families. Rochester, N. Y., 1917. 63 p. [1463
Mitchell. Edward Mitchell's will [1716/17] Mayfl. desc, XX (July) 140-142.
[1464
The Mitchell family. Americana, XII (Oct.) 443-448. [1465
Moor. Moore, Howard P. The descendants of Ensign John Moor of Canterbury,
N. H., born 1696-died 1786. Rutland, Vt., The Tuttle co. 370 p. pi., port.,
facsim., map. [1466
Morrill. Morrill, Charles Henry. The Morrills and reminiscences. Chicago and
Lincoln, University pub. co. [4], 160 p. plates, ports. [1467
Morton. Bowman, George Ernest. The will of John Morton of Middleborough
[1717/18] and the marriages of his children. Mayfl. desc, XX (Apr.) 89-93. [1468
MuDGE. Mudge, James, The Mudges of Maiden. Malden hist, soc reg., V,
39-54. ^ [1469
Nicoll. AUaben, Frank. America's cousinships of British blood; some deductions
from the royal ancestry of Colonel Mathias Nicoll and George Washington. Jour.
Am. hist., XX (Jan.) 120-168. [1470
Traces the Nicoll pedigree in England.
88 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Norton. Bamford, Eleanor M. PossiV)le clue to English ancestry of the Norton
family. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, XLIX (Jan.) 63. [1471
Otis. The wills of Job Otis, of Scituate, Mass. [1752] and his daughter Priscilla Otis
[1750] Mayfl. desc. XX (July) 103-107. [1472
Paul. [Taylor, Herman E.] The descendants of Henry and Susannah Paul.
[Huntington, Ind., 1917] 68 p. [1473
Introductory remarks signed: Herman Taylor.
Pawling. Leach, Josiah Granville. Some account of the Pawling family of New
York and Pennsylvania. Pa. geneal. soc. pub., VII (Mar.) 1-25. [1474
Peery. The Peery genealogy. Arranged bv Annie Lynch. Utah geneal. and
HIST. MAG., IX (Jan. -Oct.) 31-42, 65-74, 106-112, 169-177. [1475
Phinney. The wills of John Phinney and his son [1718, 1785] Mayfl. desc, XX
(July) 142-144. [1476
Post. Neafie, John. The Post family of Central New Jersey. Somerset go.
HIST, quar., VII (Jan.) 64-68. * [1477
Presbrey. Presby, Joseph Waite. William Presl rey, of London, England, and
Taunton, Mass., and his descendants, 1690-1918. [Rutland, Vt., The Tuttle co.]
151 p. port. [1478
Randolph. Railey, William Edward. Brief sketches of the Randolphs and their
connections. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVI (May) 61-76. [1479
Richeson. Records of the Richeson family. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVI (Apr.)
259-264. [1480
Rogers. Bowman, George Ernest. The estates of John Rogers [d. 1732] and his
second and third wives. Mayfl. desc, XX (Jan.) 1-11. [1481
Bowman, George Ernest. John Rogers to his four daughters and the
estate of his only son. Mayfl. desc, XX (Jan.) 19-23. [1482
Abstracts of deeds relating to the settlement of the estate of the son of John ■' Rogers of Duxbtiry.
Semmes. Semmes, Raphael Thomas. The Semmes and allied families. Balti-
more, The Sun book and job print, off. 381 p. plates, ports. [1483
Seymour. Morris, Seymour. Richard Seymour of Hartford and NorwalK, Conn.,
and some of his descendants. [Boston] 15 p. [1484
Reprinted from the New England historical and genealogical register, v. LXXII, July-October, 1918.
Sherman. The Sherman family. Americana, XII (July) 255-264. [1485
SiGGiNS. White, Emma Siggins. Genealogical gleanings of Siggins and other '
Pennsylvania families; a volume of history, biography, and colonial, revolutionary, \
civil and other war records including names of many other Warren county pioneers' [
comp. l)y Emma Siggins- White, assisted by Martha Humphreys Maltby. Kansas '■'
(Uty, Mo., Tiernan-Dart print. CO. xii, 714 p. ill us., plates, ports., coats-of -arms. 1
[1486 [
Slade. The Slade family in England and America. Americana, XII (Apr ) 119- j
127. [1487 !
SouLE. The will of Joseph Soule of Duxbury [1794] and the estate of his son James I
Mayfl. desc, XX (Oct.) 145^150. [1488
Sprague. The will of Jeremiah Sprague of Hingham, Mass. [1754] Mayfl desc i
XX (July) 100-103. ■ [1489 i
Stan DISH. Bowman, George Ernest. The estate of Zachariah * Standish of Plymp- ,
ton, Mass. Mayfl. desc, XX (Jan.) 16-18. [1490 '
Stone. Bartlett, J. Gardner. Gregory Stone genealogy; ancestry and descendants '
of Dea. Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass., 1320-1917. Boston, The Stone family '
association, vi, 905 p. plates. [1491 I
Stratton. Lea, J. Henry. The English ancestry of the Stratton family. Essex
INST. hist. coi,l., LIV (Apr.) 177-180. [1492 I
Stratton, Harriet Russell. A book of Strattons; a collection of records of '
the early colonial Strattons in America from the fifth generation to the present !
day. V. II. N. Y., Frederick H. Hitchcock, genealogical publisher, xviii, 528 '
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Address the author: 321 Poplar st., Chattanooga, Tenn.
V. I, pub. in 1908.
WRITINGS OIT AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 89
Strothers. Railey, William E.- The Strothers. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVI (Jan.)
91-106. [1494
Sutherland. Merritt, Douglas. Sutherland records. N. Y., T. A. Wright. 76 p.
[1495
Tabb. Tahb family. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVI (Jan.) 202-204. [1496
Talmage. Talmage, Robert Swartwout. The Major Thomas Talmage family narra-
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Thatcher. Totten, John R. Thacher-Thatcher genealogy. N. Y. geneal. and
BiOG. REG., XLIX (Jan.-July) 27-50, 124-147, 229-261. [1498
Cont. from v. XLVIII, 1917.
Thomas. Thomas, John Lilhurn. Descendants of James Wilton Thomas and Eliza
Ann Johnson, also the 1 iography of John Lill urn Thomas, also containing an
account of the migration of the Thomas and Johnson families and others to
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Orignal edition, pub. in 1917.
Thomas family records. Vineland hist, mag., Ill (July) 53-56. [1500
The will of Jeremiah Thomas of Middle!: orough, Mass. [1735] Mayfl. desc,
XX (July) 131-133. [1501
Thorn. Moody, Katharine Twining. Incidents in the history of the Thorn family.
N. Y. GENEAL. and BIOG. REC, XLIX (Apr.) 148-150. [1502
Tichenor. [Teachenor, Richard Bennington] A partial history of the Tichenor
family in America, descendants of Martin Tichenor of Connecticut and New
Jersey, and a complete genealogy of the branch of the family descending from
Isaac Tichenor, of Ohio, spelling the name Teachenor, with some references to
the prota' le collateral lineage descended from William Ticknor of Massachusetts.
Kansas City, Mo. 32 p. illus., coat of arms. [1503
Todd. [Pleasants, J. Hall] The English descent of Thomas Todd of Gloucester
county, Virginia, and Baltimore county, Maryland. Va. mag. hist., XXVI
(Jan.) 95-103. [1504
ToMSON. The will of John Tomson of Middle] orough, Mass. [1724] Mayfl. desc.,
XX (Oct.) 159-163. [1505
Turner. The will of Jonathan Turner of Scituate, Mass. [1723] Mayfl. desc, XX
(Apr.) 84-88. [1506
Utter. Drowne, Henry Russell. Utter family. N. Y. geneal. and biqg. rec.,
*XLIX (Oct.) 379-380. [1507
Vail. [Vail, Merle De Witt] Ancestors and descendants of Edwin Bishop Vail.
Privately pullished. [Binghamton, N. Y.] 31 p. [1508
Van der Heyden. The Van der Heyden family. Americana, XII (Oct.) 455-492.
[1509
Vaughan. Hodgdon, George Enos. Reminiscences and genealogical record of the
Vaughan family of New Hampshire, by George E. Hodgdon. Supplemerted by
an account of the Vaughans of south Wales, together with copies of official papers
relating to the Vaughan's of New Hampshire, taken out of the English colonial
records in London. By Thomas W. Hancock. Rochester, N. Y. x, 169 p.
port., plate, facsim., fold, geneal. talles. [1510
Prefatory note signed: R. C. Shannon.
Vredenburgh. Vredenburgh, La Rue. The Vredenburgh family of Somerset.
Somerset co. hist, quar., VII (Jan.) 69-76. [1511
Ward. Hutchinson, J. R. Ward of Connecticut. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec ,
XLIX (July) 262-264. [1512
Wardwell. The Wardwell family. Americana, XII (Apr.) 128-131. [1513
Washington. Descendants of two John Washingtons. Va. mag. hist., XXVI
(Oct.) 417-421. [1614
Wellman. Wellman, Joshua Wyman. Descendants of Thomas Wellman of Lynn,
Massachusetts. Boston, Mass., A. H. Wellman. xv, 581 p. plate, ports.. fa?sim.,
coat of arms. [1516
Edited by George Walter Chamberlain. •
90 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
White. The wills of Daniel and Cornelius White [1724, 1754] and widow Hannah
(Randall) White [1768] Mayfl. desc, XX (Apr.) 61-67. [1516
WniTELOCK. Mendenhall, John Cooper. A memoir of the Whitelock family.
Frankford hist. soc. pap., it, no. 6, 269-282. [1517
Wilcox. The will of Edward Wilcox [1718] Mayfl. desc, XX (Oct.) 150-152.
[1518
Wilson. Wilson, Edward. Wilson family history. Bloomington, 111. [The com-
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Wise. Wise, Jennings Cropper. Col. John Wise of England and Virginia (1617-
1695); his ancestors and descendants. [Richmond, Bell hook and stationery co.]
352 p. ports., geneal. tables. [1520
WisNER. Wisner, George Franklin. The Wisners in America and their kindred;
a genealogical and biographical history. Baltimore, Md. [The compiler] 270,
xviii p. illus., ports., facsim., geneal. tables. [1521
Wragg. Smith, Henry A. M. Wragg of South Carolina. S. C. hist, mag., XIX
(July) 121-123. [1522
Regarding ^he Wragg family of South Carolina.
Regional Genealogy, Vital Records, etc.
Adams, Mass. Browne, William Bradford. Records of the Society of Friends at
East Hoosuck (Adams), Mass. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXII (Jan.-
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Records of births and deaths, certificates of removals, and marriage certificates, 18th and early IQ^b
centuries.
Allegheny co., Pa. Abstracts of wills and administrations of Allegheny county,
registered at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Contributed by Mary Ellison Wood.
Pa. GPINEAL. soc. pub., VII (Mar.) 44-61. [1524
Barnstable, Mass. Barnstable, Mass., vital records. Mayfl. desc, XX (Jan.-
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Coni;. from v. XIX, 1917.
Barnstable co., Mass. Bowman, George Ernest. Unrecorded Barnstable county
deeds [1814-1827] Mayfl. desc, XX (Jan.) 46-48. [1526
Con^. from v. XIX, 1917.
Berne, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church of the Beaver Dam in the
town of Berne, Albany county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical
and biographical society; ed. by Hoyden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city.
172 numbered leaves, map. 36 x 28^ cm. [1527
Autographed from type-writ1^en copy. 4
Berwick, Me. Records of the Society of Friends at Berwick (North Berwick), I
Me. New Eng. HIST. AND GENEAL. REG., LXXII (Oct.) 253-273. [1528
Record of membership.
Bloomfield, Conn. Records of the church in Wintonbury parish (now Bloomfield),
Conn. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXII (Jan.-July) 29-51, 87-107,
166-185. [1529
Contents.— Baptisms, 1738-1786. Members, baptisms, marriages, and deaths, 1791-1863.
Cont. from v. LXXI, 1917.
Boston, Mass. [Codman, Ogden] Gravestone inscriptions and records of tomb
burials in the Granary burying ground, Boston, Mass. Salem, Mass., The Essex
institute. 255 p. [1530
Based upon a compilation made by Thomas B. Wyman, jr., for "William H. Whitmore about 1878.
Brookline, Mass. Cummings, Harriet Alma, comp. Burials and inscriptions in
the Walnut street cemetery of Brookline, Massachusetts, with historical sketches
of some of the persons buried there. Brookline hist. soc. proc, Jan 24, 19-36.
[1531
Burlington go., N. J. Burlington county birth records [1770-1780] N. J. hist. sog.
proc, n. s. Ill (Jan.-Oct.) 55-59, 108-122, 173-178, 205-210. [1632
Carlisle. Mass. Vital records of Carlisle, Massachusetts, to the end of the year
1849. Salem, Mass., The Essex institute. 100 p. [1533
Alp^boUcal indexes ^o the manuscript records of 1^he ^own, supplemen-^ed by information from
church registers, cemetery inscripl^ions and o^her sources.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 91
Charleston, S. C. Webber, Mabel L., comp. The register of Christ Church parish.
S. C HIST. MAG., XIX (Jan.-July) 80-82, 114-118, 124-129. [1634
Register ol' baptisms, 1717-1757.
Cont.'fromv. X! VIII, 1917.
Cornish, N. H. Church records and marriage records at Cornish, N. H., 1768-1805.
New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXII (Oct.) 279-286. [1535
Cumberland co., Pa. Cumberland county. Pa., petitioners, 1760, 1761, 1770.
Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VII (Apr.) 1-4. [1536
District of Columbia. Brumbaugh, Gaius M., comp. Marriage licenses of the
District of Columbia [1801-1820] Nation, geneal, soc. quar.,' VII (Oct.) 33-39.
[1537
Eastham, Mass. Eastham and Orleans, Mass.,. vital records. Mayfl. desc.,XX
(Apr., Oct.) 94-96, 155-158. • [1638
Cont. from v. XIX, 1917.
Easton, N. Y. Graveyard inscriptions from the towns of Easton and Greenwich,
N. Y. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, XLIX (Jan.-July) 22, 120-123, 177-181.
[1539
Cont- from v. XLVIII, 1917.
Franklin co., Ky. Baker, Mrs. George, comp. Old farm and church burying
grounds of Franklin county, Kentucky. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVI (Sept.) 39-44.
[1640
Tombstone inscriptions.
Downing, George C. Early marriage bonds of Franklin county, Kentucky.
Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVI (Jan.) 57-62. [1541
German Flats, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church of Ger-
man Flatts in Fort Herkimer, town of German Flats, Herkimer county, N. Y.
Transcribed bv the New York genealogical and biographical society; ed. by Hoyden
Woodward Vosburgh. N. Y. 2 v. '' [1542
Autographed from ^ype-written copy.
Glen, N. Y. Records of the First Reformed Protestant Dutch church at Glen in
the town of Glen, Montgomery county, N. Y., formerly the First Reformed Pro-
testant Dutch church at Charleston. Transcribed by the New York genealogical
and biographical society; ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city,
iv, 121 numbered leaves. [1643
Autographed from type-written copy.
Contents.— Births and baptisms, 1805-1882. Marriages, 1805-1882. Documents.
Gloucester co., N. J. Stewart, Frank H. Stewart's genealogical and historical
miscellany. [Phila., The compiler] 2 pamphlets. [1644
Genealogical records of Gloucester co., N. J.
Harwich, Mass. Harwich, Mass., vital records. Maytl. desc, XX (Jan.) 24-27.
[1646
Head of the River, N. J. The Head of the River cemetery records, taken from
headstones and monuments, [n. p., 1917?] 14 p. [1645a
"The Head of the River cemetery is situated in Atlantic county, about four miles above the modern
town of Tuckahoe, on the headwaters of the Tuckahoe river, and suiTounds the old building of the
Methodist church which was founded as early as 1780."
Herkimer, N. Y. Herkimer, N. Y. Reformed Protestant Dutch Church. Records
of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church of Herkimer in the town of Herkimer,
Herkimer county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogieal and bio-
graphical society; ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. N. Y. [The Society] 2 v.
facsims. [1646
Autographed from type-written copy.
Hillsborough, N. J. Hillsborough (Millstone) Reformed church baptisms. Somer-
set CO. HIST. QUAR., VII (July-Oct.) 199-210, 306-309. [1647
Baptisms, 1767-1807.
Hunterdon co., N. J. Deats, Hiram Edmund, comp. Marriage records of Hunter-
don county, New Jersey, 1795-1875. v. I. Flemington, N. J., Hiram E. Deats.
337 p. [1548
Originally published in the Hunterdon County Democrat, Flemington, N. J., beginning November
24, 1915, ending March 6, 1918.
136908°— 21— VOL 3 8
■ Early death itsms from Zenger's New York weekly journal [1739-1744] N. Y.
GENEAL. AND BIOG. EEC., XLIX (Oct.) 343-345. [1668
— Mott, Hopper Striker, comj). Vital statistics from the New York weekly
museum, published by J. Harrison, 3 Peck slip, and The Telescope published bv
William Burnet & co., 201 Bowery [1801-1824] N. Y. geneal. and biog rec
XLIX (Oct.) 345-352. ' [155^
Ohio. Cheney, Ruth. Massachusetts pioneers; Ohio series. Mass mag- XI (Jan )
37-39. •' ^fi560
Orange co., Va. Scott, W. W., comp. A list of marriages recorded in the back part
of deed-book no. 17, Orange county [] 77 2-1795] Va". mag. hist., XXVI CAnr-
Oct.) 190-200, 297-302, 401-404. ^ [fsgl
Philadelphia, Pa. Friends, Society of. Early minutes of Philadelphia monthly
meeting of Friends [1711-1715] Pa. geneal. soc. pub., VII (Mar.) 70-87. [1662
Cont. from v. VI, no. 3, Mar. 1917.
Plymouth colony, Mass. Plymouth colony vital records [1657-1675] Mayfl
desc, XX (Apr.) 51-54. [1663
Princess Anne, Md. Maryland court records on file at Princess Anne Somerset
county. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VI (Jan.) 74-76. ' [i664
Records of the last quarter of the 17th century.
Providence, N. Y. Closson, William Gideon. Record of Peter Chapman cemetery
town of Providence, Saratoga co., N. Y. [Providence, N. Y., 1917J 7 p. [1865
Typewritten copy in the New York public library.
92 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Jefferson co., Ky. Abstracts from the first 131 wills of Jefferson county, Kentucky
(then Viroinia\ September, 1783, to June, 1813. Nation, geneal. soc. quae.,
VI (Jan.) 65-72. [1649
Cont. from p. 55.
Knowlton, N. J. Knowlton, Warren county, N. J., records of the first German and
English congregation. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. Ill (Apr.-July) 123-128,
179-192. [1660 j
Records of christenings, 1766-1785.
Leesburg, Va. Woodward, Eula K., comp. "Genius of Liberty" clippings,
1820-1821, Leesburg, Va. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VII (July) 31-32. [1661
Mayfield, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church of Mayfield, formerly in 1
the town of Mayfield, Montgomery county, N. Y.; the First Presbyterian church of 1
Broadalbin in the village and town of Broadalbin, Fulton county, N. Y. ; the United
Presbyterian church of Broadalbin in the town of Perth, Fulton county, N. Y.
Transcribed by the New York genealogical and biographical society; ed. by Royden ■
Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, viii, 197 numbered leaves. [1652 !
Autographed from type-written copy. I
Middleborough, Mass. Middleborough, Mass., vital records [1744-1758] Mayfl. 1
desc, XX (Jan.) 34-38. [1663 j
Cent, from v. XIX, 1917.
Middleburgh, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church in the town of Middle- •
burgh, Schoharie county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and !;
biographical society; ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, ii, !
150 numbered leaves, facsims. [1654 j
Autographed from type- written copy. |>
Montgomery co., N. Y. Mohawk valley householders in 1800. N. Y. geneal
and biog. rec, XLIX (Jan.-Oct.) 51-62, 107-116, 280-291, 330-343. [1665 v
Transcript from the original census return for the county of Montgomery.
New Jersey. Documents relating to the colonial history of the state of New Jersey, j'
First series— V. XXX. Calendar of New Jersey wills, administrations, etc., v. II \-
1730-1750. Edited by A. Van Doren Honeyman. Somerville, N. J., Unionist- j
Gazette association, printers. 708 p. (Archives of the state of New Jersey, 1st
ser., V. XXX) [1556 j]
V. I of the Calendar of wills, forming v. XXIII of the Archives of New Jersey, was published in 1901. 1 1
New York, N. Y. Baptisms of the First Presbyterian church, N. Y. city, 1804-1809. !
N. Y. HIST, soc BUL., II (July) 54-62. " [I557 h
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 93
Putnam co., N. Y. Graveyard inscriptions, Putnam co., N Y. N. Y. geneal.
AND BiOG. EEC, XLIX (Jan., July-Oct.) 76-82, 303-307, 363-365. [1566
Raritan, N. J. First Reformed church, Raritan (Somerville) baptisms [1828-1839]
Somerset co, hist, quar., VII (Jan.) 76-77. [1567
Readington, N. J. Readington church baptisms from 1720. Somerset co. hist.
QUAR., VII (Apr.-Oct.) 141-145, 210-224, 310-312. [1568
Cont. from v. VI, 1917.
Rye, N. Y. Bristol, Theresa Hall. Genealogical gleanings from land and probate
records at White Plains and Rye, N. Y. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, XLIX
(Apr.-Oct.) 170-176, 292-303', 381-389. [1569
White Plains was originally a part of Rye.
Salem, Mass. Vital records of Salem, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849.
V. II — Births. Salem, Mass., Pub. by the Essex institute. 454 p. " [1570
Contents. — Maber-Younpes.
V. I (Abbot-Lyons), pub. in 1916.
Schoharie co., N. Y. Records, of the Reformed church in the village of Gilboa,
Schoharie county, N. Y., formerly the Reformed Dutch church in Dyse's Manor,
in the town of Broome. And records of the Reformed Dutch church in Blenheim
in the old village of Blenheim, Schoharie county, N. Y. Transcribed by the
New York genealogical and biographical society; ed. by Royden Woodward
Vosburgh. New York city, xx, 179 numb, leaves. 36 x 38^^^=^. [1571
Autographed from type-written copy.
Shirley, Mass. Vital records of Shirley, Massachusetts, to the year 1850. Boston,
Mass., Pub. by the New England historic genealogical society. 211 p. [1572
Alphabetical indexes to the manuscript records of the town, supplemented by information from
church registers, cemetery inscriptions, and other sources.
Somerset co., N. J. Early recorded wills in Somerset — from 1804. Somerset co,
hist, quar., VII (Apr.-Oct.) 135-141, 187-191, 298-300. [1573
I rom the records in the Surrogate's office.
Cont. from v. VI, 1917.
Somerset county marriages — 1795-1879. Somerset co. hist, quar., VII
(Apr.-Oct.) 146-149, 191-198, 301-306. [1574
Recorded in the County clerk's office. Contains letters M-Q.
Cont. from v. VI, 1917.
South Carolina. Salley, Alexander Samuel, jr., comp. Death notices in the
South Carolina gazette, 1732-1775. From the files in the library of Xhe Charleston
library society, Charleston, S. C. Columbia, S. C, Printed for the Historical
commission of South Carolina by the State co., 1917. 42 p. [1575
Webber, Mabel L., comp. Abstracts from marriage bonds of South Carolina,
December 1743-November 1744. S. C. hist, mag., XIX (Apr.-Oct.) 95-100.
130-135, 162-169. [1575a
Webber, Mabel L., comp. Marriage and death notices from the South
Carolina Weekly gazette and Public advertizer [1784-1785] S. C. hist. mag.
XIX (Jan.-Oct.) 77-79, 105-113, 136-145, 170-180. [1676
Cont.f rom v. XVIII, 1917.
South East, N. Y. Inscriptions from Clift or Drew cemetery about two miles south
of Brewsters, in town of South East, Putnam county, N. Y. N. Y. geneal. and
biog. rec, XLIX (Oct.) 326-329. [1577
SouTHOLD, N. Y. Salmon, William. The Salmon records; a private register of
marriages and deaths of the residents of the town of Southold. Suffolk county,
N. Y., and of persons more or less closely associated with that place, 1696-1811.
Ed. by William A. Robbins. [N. Y.] New York genealogical and biographical
society. 115 p. [1578
Reprinted from the New York genealogical and biographical record.
Stoneham, Mass. Vital records of Stoneham, Massachusetts, to the end of the year
1849. Salem, Mass., Essex institute. 191 p. [1579
Alphabetical indexes to the manuscript records of the town, supplemented by information from
church registers, cemetery inscriptions and other sources.
94 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Tolland, Conn. Connecticut cemetery inscriptions. New Eng. hist, and geneal. (
REG., LXXII (Jan.-Jiily) 63-75, 114-131, 204-208. [1580 i
This installment contains inscriptions from the cemetery at Tolland, Conn. i
Cont. from v. LXXI, 1917. I
Tryon CO.. N. Y. The Rev. James Dempster's record of marriages and baptisms in i
vicinity of Tryon county, 1778-1803. [Albany? 1918?] 35 numbered leaves.
[1581 I
Tvpe-writtcn copv.
Contents.— "A register of marriages beginning the first of July 1778, Tryon county." "A register
of baptisms, state of N. York, county of Montgomery 1778 [-1803]. "
ViNELAND, N. J. Inscriptions, Oak Hill cemetery, Vineland, N. J. Vineland
HIST. MAG., Ill (Jan.-Apr.) 17-20, 39-40. [1582
Siloam cemetery inscriptions. Vineland hist, mag., Ill (July-Oct.) 60,
76-80. [1583
Vital records of Vineland, N. J. [1863-1864] Vineland hist, mag.. Ill
(Oct.) 72-73. [1584
Virginia. Culleton, Leo. Virginia gleanings in England. Va. mag. hist., XXVI
(Jan.-Oct.) 32-40, 145-150, 267-282, 380-387. * [1585
West Newbury, Mass. Vital records of West Newbury, Massachusetts, to the end
of the year 1849. Salem, Mass., The Essex institute. 122 p. [1586
Alphabetical indexes to the manuscript records of the town, supplemented by information from
church registers, cemetery inscriptions and other sources.
Westport, Mass. Vital records of Westport, Massachusetts, to the year 1850.
Soston, Mass., Pub. by the New England historic genealogical society, at the
charge of the Eddy town record fund. 296 p. [1587
Windham co., Vt. Wyer, James Ingersoll, jr., and Charlotte B. Ward. Cemetery
inscriptions from the towns of Wardsboro, Stratton, Jamaica and Dover, all in Wind-
ham county, Vermont. Albany, New York state library. 108 numbered leaves,
map. [1588
Autographed from type-written copy. Of this book but 4 copies have been made. They are placed
with the Vermont historical society, Library of Congress, New York state library, and Charlotte B.
Ward, Urbana, 111.
Wiscasset, Me. Inscriptions in the ancient cemetery, Wiscasset, Me. New Eng.
hist, and GENEAL. REG., LXXII (July-Oct.) 240-245, 273-279. [1689
WoBURN, Mass. Woburn records of births, deaths, marriages. Part IX. Marriages,
January 1, 1891, to December 31, 1900. Alphabetically and chronologically
arranged by Edward F. Johnson. With appendix of marriages published in
Wo; urn newspapers, before 1891, and not found in the city records. Woburn, Mass.
193 p. [1690
MILITARY AND NAVAL HISTORY.
Abbot, Willis J. Soldiers of the sea; the story of the United States marine corps.
N. Y., Dodd, Mead and co. x, 315 p. plates. [1591
The battle of Slim Buttes. U. S. cavalry assoc. jour., XXVIII (Jan.) 399-408.
[1592
Indian battle at Slim Buttes, South Dakota, Sept. 9, 1876.
Chester, Colby M. The United States marines in the Penobscot Bay expedition,
1779. Marine CORPS GAZETTE, III (Dec.) 281-292. [1593
Clark, Walter. Negro soldiers. N. C. booklet, XVIII (July) 57-62. [1594
Notes the part that they have taken as soldiers in our previous wars.
Cluverius, W. T. A midshipman on the Maine. U. S. N. inst. proc, XLIX
(Feb.) 237-248. [1595
The story of the Maine at Havana, written a few months after its destruction.
Feipel, Louis N. The Navy and filibustering in the fifties. U. S. N. inst. proc,
XLIV(Apr.-Sept.) 767-780, 1009-1029. 1219-1240, 1527-1545, 1837-1848, 2063-2085.
[1596
Contents. — Lopez' flrst expedition against Cuba. Lopez' second expedition against Cuba. The
bombardment of Greytown, Nicaragua, 1854. Walker's surrender to Davis in 1857. Walker's sur-
render to Paulding in 1857. The Walker-Paulding imbroglio.
Foster, C. H. The requirements for admission to the Naval academy — an historical
review. U. S. N. inst. proc, XLIV (Feb.) 339-353. [1597
Frost, HoUoway H. Our heritage from Paul Jones. U. S. N. inst. proc, XLIV
(Oct.) 2275-2296. [1598
Glasson, William H. Federal military pensions in the United States. Ed. by
David Kinley. N. Y., [etc.] Oxford univ. press, Am. branch, xii, 305 p. maps.
(Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of economics and history
... [publications]) [1599
Contents.— Pensions based on military service prior to March 4, 1861, Pensions basedon military
service after March 4, 1861. Appendix.
Rev.in: Am. hist. rev., XXIV (July 1919) 709-710.
Goodrich, Caspar F. "Alvarado Hunter," a biographical sketch. U. S. N. inst.
proc, XLIX (Mar.) 495-514. [1600
Gives an account, drawn from the official records of the capture of the town of Alvarado, Mexico
March 31, 1847, by the U. S. S. Scourge, Charles G. Hunter, Lt. commanding, and of his subsequent
court martial.
Kilmer, George Langdon. Parallels and contrasts in the fighting of the world war
and the American civil war. Nation, service, IV (Oct.) 170-175. [1601
Lincoln, Jeanie Gould. Historic names borne by United States destroyers. D. A . R.
MAG., LII (Nov.) 646-651. [1602
Mahan, Alfred Thayer. Mahan on naval warfare; selections from the writings of
Rear Admiral Alfred T. Mahan, ed. by Allan Westcott. Boston, Little, Brown
and CO. xxiii, 372 p. port., maps, diagrs. [1603
Sea power in the American revolution; Graves and De Grasse off the Chesapeake: p. 164-170. Gen-
eral strategy of the War of 1812: p. 229-240. Lessons of the Vl^ar with Spain: p. 241-249. The San-
tiago blockade: p. 250-255.
Military historical society of Massachusetts. Civil war and miscellaneous papers.
Boston, Military historical society of Massachusetts, vi, [4], 474 p. plates, ports.,
map, plans. (Mil. hist. soc. Mass. pap., v. XIV) [1604
Contents.— Report on the alleged delay in concentration of the Army of the Potomac . . . atAn-
tietam, by J. C. Gray, jr. The Antietam campaign, by Samuel S. Sumner. The 1 welfth corps at
, Gettysburg, by Charles F. Morse. The Mine Run campaign, November, 1863, by Thomas L. Liver-
more. The Mine Run affair, by Charles L. Peirson. The relief of Chattanooga, October, 1863, and
guerilla operations in Tennessee, by Charles F. Morse. Petersburg, June 15— Fort Harrison, Sep-
tember 29: a comparison, by George A. Bruce. Cedar Creek, October 19, 1864; extract from letter
to Colonel Benjamin W. Crowinshield from General W. H. Emory. The capture and occupation of
Richmond, by George A. Bruce. Military prisons: North and South, by John Chester White. The
effectof President Lincoln's reelection upon the waning fortunes of the Confederate states, by Henry S.
Burrage. The occupation of Manila in 1898, by Charles A. Whittier. Filipino characteristics as mani-
fested in diplomacy and war, by E. S. Otis . The visit of the allies to C hina in 1900 , by Henry Leonard.
The necessity of a broader system of military instruction in this country, and our military policy, by
Leonard Wood. The Naval war college, by F. E. Chadwick. . . . A judicial versus a military settle-
ment of some international disputes, by William Crozier. American tactics in the present m ar, by
Thomas G. Frothingham.
The last article is concerned with the use in the great war of tactics and weapons which had their
orlglnin America, developed in our three great wars, the Revolution, the War of 1813, and the Civil war,
05
96 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Newman, Samuel. A picture of the first United States army: the journal of Captain
Samuel Newman. With introduction and notes by Milo M. Quaife. Wis. mag.
HIST., II (Sept.) 40-73. [1605
Journal of St. Clair's campaign against the Indians in 1791.
Nicolay, Helen. The book of American wars. N. Y., The Century co. 492 p.
ports. [1606
"This volume does not pretend to go into details ... It is an attempt to tell in a few words and
in broad outline why our principal wars were fought, and how . . ."
Owen, Allison. History of the Washington artillery. La. hist. soc. pub., X, 46-59.
[1607
Louisiana artillery, probably founded in 1838. This article is devoted largely to its service in the
Civil war.
Post, Charles A. A diarv on the blockade in 1863. U. S. iN". inst. proc, XLIV
(Oct.-Nov.) 2333-2350, 2567-2594. [1608
Describes his experiences in the blockade off Wilmington in 1863, on board the "Florida."
Randall, James G. The newspaper problem in its bearing upon military secrecy
during the Civil war. Am. hist, rev., XXIII (Jan.) 303-323. [1609
Stanley, D. S. Personal memoir of Major-General D. S. Stanley, u. s. a. Mil.
HIST. AND ECON., Ill (Jan.) (supplement) 233-271. [1610
This installment describes the Yellowstone expedition of 1873.
Cont. from v. 11, 1917.
Stevens, William O. The story of our navy. New ed. N. Y. and London, Harper,
vi, [8], 333 p. illus., plates, maps. [1611
U. S. Adjutant General's office. Regimental history of the United States regular
army. Chronological outline, 1866-1918. Prepared by the Adjutant General's
office. Issued by the Committee on public information, Washington, D. C. Wash-
ington, Gov. print, off. 48 p. (War information series, no. 18) [1612
POLITICS, GOVERNMENT, AND LAW.
Diplomatic History and Foreign Relations.
Andrews, Matthew Page. A heritage of freedom; or, The political ideals of the
English-speaking peoples. N. Y., George H. Doran co. 110 p. [1613
The dawn of Anglo-American peace: p. 58-61. A century of Anglo-American disagreements settled
by discussion and arbitration: p. 70-96.
Barclay, Sir Thomas. Le president Wilson et revolution de la politique etrang^re
des Etats-Unis. Preface de M. Paul Painleve. Paris, Colin, vii, 289 p. [1613a
Rev. in: Am. hist. re\^, XXIV (Oct.) 112-113.
Barnes, H. E. Anglo-American relations reconsidered. No. Am. rev., CCVII
(May) 681-694. [1614
vVn attempt to reconsider the evolution of Anglo- American relations, from the early colonial days.
Beer, George Louis. The English-speaking peoples; their future relations and joint
international obligations. N. Y., Macmillan. xi, 322 p. [1615
Contents.— International anarchy. Nationalism and sovereignty. American foreign policy before
1914. The background of the war. Ameri'^a's reaction to the war. The unity of English-speaking
peoples. Economic interdependence, i ommunity of policy. Notes.
The object of this book is to explain "the advisability and necessity of a co-operative democratic
alliance of all the English-speaking peoples."
Bemis, Samuel Flagg. The United States and the abortive armed neutrality of
1794. Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 26-47. [1616
A study of the diplomatic situation leading up to Jay's treaty and expressly of Hamilton's part in
this diplomacy.
Berenguer, Fernando. El hispano-americanismo estudiado desde el punto de vista
del derecho internacional y el pro]:)lema territorial de America. Habana, Impr.
"El siglo XX" de la Sociedad editorial Cuba contemporanea. 221 p. [1616a
Blegen, Theodore C. A plan for the union of British North America and the United
States, 1866. Miss. Valley hist, rev., IV (Mar.) 470-483. [1617
"The movement of 1866 and the years immediately following is of considerable interest in connec-
tion with the question of reciprocity, and our relations with Great Britain, but more especially because
of its bearing upon the relations of the American and Canadian Northwest.''
Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of international law. The
treaties of 1785, 1799 and 1828 between the United States and Prussia, as inter-
preted in opinions of attorneys general, decisions of courts, and diplomatic corre-
spondence, ed. by James Browne Scott, director. N. Y. [etc.] Oxford university
press, viii, 207 p. [1618
A reissue in a revised and enlarged form of Pamphlet no. 26 of the Carnegie endowment for inter-
national peace. Division of international law, first published in 1917 imder title "Opinions of attorneys
general, decisions of federal courts and diplomatic correspondence respecting the treaties of 1785, 1799
and 1828, between the United States and Prussia."
Contents.— Texts of the treaties. Decisions of federal courts. Opinions of attorneys general of
the United States. Proclamation by the President of the United States, August 22, 1870 (extract).
Diplomatic correspondence: Claims relative to tonnage dues. *.^se of William P. Frye. Case of the
Appam. Proposal of the German government for an addition to the Treaty of 1799:" The minister of
Smtzerland to the secretary of state, February 10, 1917. The secretary of state to the minister of Switzer-
land, March 20, 1917.
Rev. in: Am. hist rev., XXV (Oct. 1919) 95-97.
Clement, Ernest Wilson. A cycle of American diplomats in Japan (Harris and
Morris in Japan in 1857 and 1917) Nation, CVI (Jan. 3) 110-111. [1619
Townsend Harris, first American consul-general to Japan, and Roland Morris, American ambassador
to Japan in 1917.
Colquhoun, A. H. IT. The first Lord Lansdowne; a solemn warning against a pre-
mature and disastrous peace. Canad. mag., LII (Nov.) 527-531. [1620
Points out the respoasibility of the first Lord LansdoA^ne, at that time Lord Shelbourne, for the
unfavourable terms to the British embodied in the treaty of peace of 1783, and shows the evils that follow
a badly negotiated peace.
Cook, Theodore A. English and Americans: the end of a long misunderstanding.
19th cent., LXXXIII (Feb.) 287-300. [1621
97"
98 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Cox, Isaac Joslin. The West Florida controversy, 1798-1813; a study in American
diplomacy. Baltimore, Johns Hopkins press, xii, 699 p. maps. (The All)ert
Shaw lectures on diplomatic history, 1912) [1622
Amons: the headings under which the subjeet is diseassed are.— The Louisiana purchase and the
Floridas; The failure "of Monroe's special mission; The Burr conspiracy and the Embargo; American
bickering and French bargaining; The shadow of the Corsican; and American intervention in West
Florida.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 105-107; Am. jour, internat. law, XIII (Apr.) 377-379; Hispanic.
Am. hist, rev., I (Aug.) 327-329.
Fried, Alfr. H. Pan-Amerika; Entwicklung, Umfang und Bedeutung der zwischen,
staatlichen Organisation in Amerika (1810-1916). Zurich, Orell Fiissli. xx
293 p. [1623
Gerard, A. Les Etats-Unis et I'Extreme Orient. Rev. deux mondes, 6e ser.,
XLIII (Feb. 15) 912-934. [1624
Gerard, A. The United States and the Far East. Royal unit. seii. inst. jour.,
LXIII (May) 301-317. [1625
"Translated, by permission, from an article by Mons. A. Gerard, in the Revue des deux mondes of
February loth, 1918."
Greene, Evarts B. The interaction of European and American politics, 1823-1861.
Hist, teach, mag., IX (Mar.) 142-143. [1620
Hanotaux, Gabriel. Commemoration du bicentenaire de la fondation de la Nouvelle-
Orleans; I'union de la Franc3 et de I'Amerique. Paris [etc.] Bloud et Gay. 32 p.
(On cover: "L'hommage frangais." Publications du Comite "L'effort de la France
et de ses allies") [1627
Begins with an account of the aiscoveries of La Salle in the Mississippi valley and of the beginnings
of the Louisiana colony. Celebrates the union of the two peoples and hopes that a closer union will
be brought about.
Hanotaux, Gabriel. L'union des Etats-Unis et de la France; discours prononce a
I'occasion du deuxieme centenaire de la fondation de la Nouvelle-Orlea.ns. Paris,
Alcan. 40 p. (Bibliotheque France-Amerique) [1628
Probably the same as no. 1627, above. !
Heller, C. N, American and Russian relations. Reformed ch. rev., 4th ser.,
XXIII (July) 357-380. [1629
Contents.— Catherine II and the American revolution. Alexander I and the War of 1812. Alex-
ander I and the Monroe doctrine: Russian America and the Alaska purchase. Russia and the American
civil war. A new phase of Russian American relations [since the Spanish American war].
The History circle. British- American discords and concords; a record of three
centuries. N. Y. and London, Putnam, viii, 85 p. map, facsims. [1630
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Feb. 1919) 14.'^-146.
Hyde, James H. Les Etats-Unis aux cotes de la France; impressions americaines.
Soc. GEOG. COMM. Paris bul., XXXIX (July 1917) 205-216. [1631
Outlines the progress of the friendly relations between the two countries.
Labouchere, G. Bonaparte et la Louisiane. Nouv. rev., 4e ser., XXXV (May 15-
June K) 148-157, 255-264, 340-351. [1632
Latane, John Holladay. Anglo-American relations. Johns Hopkins alumni mag
VI (June) 319-347-. [1633
" The aim of this paper is to present a brief histoi'ical reviev/ of Anglo-American relations "
Address before the Phi Beta Kappa society, May 4, 1918.
Latane, John Holladay. From isolation to leadership, a review of American foreign
policy. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, Page and co. 215 p. [1634
Contents.— Origin of the policy of isolation. Formulation of the Monroe doctrme The Monroe
doctrine and the European balance of power. International cooperation without the sanction of force
The open-door policy. Anglo-American relations. Imnerialistic tendencies of the Monroe doctrine
Tho new 1 an- Americanism. Tho end of neutrality and isolation. The war aims of the United States
Rev. in: Am. jour, internat. law, XIII (Jan. 1919) 140-142; .\m. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Nov 1919)
148-1.50; Jour. pol. econ., XXVII (Feb. 1919) 143-144. > \ ^
Laughlin, Harry H. Seven constructive Pan American statesmen. So. American
VII (Dec.) 21. [1635
The statesmen referred to are ■\\ ashington, Hamilton, Bolivar, Moravian, Rivadavia Lincoln and
Blaine. ■ '
Longevialle, Louis de. Les fondateurs de I'amitie entre la France et les Etats-Unis
Rev. cath. inst. et droit, 2e ser., LV (Oct.) [1636
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 99
McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham. America and Britain. N. Y., Dutton. ix,
221 p. [1637
Contents.— America's entry into the war. British and American relations, pts. i-n. The Monroe
doci-rine. The hnckgronnd of American federalism.
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (May 1919) 314-316.
Manning, William R. An early diplomatic controversy between the United States
and Brazil. Am. jour, internat. law, XII (Apr.) 291-311; and Hispanic Am.
HIST. REV., I (May) 123-145. [1638
Account of the difficulties with the Brazilian government in which the American charge d'affaires
at Rio de Janeiro, Condy Raguet, became involved by his acrimonious remonstrances asrainst the inter-
ference with American commerce wrought by the Brazilian blockade of Argentine ports during the
war of 1825-1828.
Martin, Percy Alvin. The influence of the United States on the opening of the
Amazon to the world's commerce. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (May) 146-162.
[1639
It is the purpose of this paper to point out briefly the influence of the United States in inducing the
Imperial government of Brazil to abandon its policy of seclusion and unlock the door of the Amazon
to the world's commerce.
Mills, Dudley. The English-speaking peoples. Queen's quar., XXVI (Oct.)
135-149. [1640
Reviews briefly those sections of the hook by Professor George I^ouis Beer entitled "The English-
speaking peoples (N. Y., 1917)", which deal with American foreign policy before 1911, and with
America's roaction'to the war.
Moore, John Bassett. The principlef? of American diplomacy. N. Y. and London,
Harper, xiv, 476 p. (Harper's citizen series) [1641
"Incorporates substantially the entire text, with few alterations or amendments, of the volume
published by the author in 1905 ander the title, American diplomacy: its spirit and achievtments . .
The present work brings the history of that policy down to date."
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 131-132; Nation, CVI (lune 15) 714-715.
Munro, Dana Gardner. The five republics of Central America; their political and
economic development and their relations with the United States, by Dana G.
Munro, ed. by David Kinley. N. Y. [etc.] Oxford univ. press, xvi, 322 p.
map. (Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of economics and
history. [Publications]) [1642
Published also as thesis (ph. d.) University of Pennsylvania, 1917.
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Aug. 1919) 507-508; Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 441-444.
Our diplomatic relations with the Holy See. U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XII (June)
115-117. [1643
"Note concerning the abolition of the former diplomatic representation of the United States at the
Vatican."
Page, Ralph W. Dramatic moments in American diplomacy. Garden City, N. Y.,
Doubleday, Page and co. xi, 284 p. port. [1644
A narrative, in popular style, of the most striking tncidents of our diplomatic history.
"It is hoped that it may bring some appreciation of the mutual interdependence between Great
Britain and America.
Powers, Harry Huntington. America and Britain; the story of the relations between
the two peoples. N. Y., Macmillan. iv, 76 p. [1646
It is to answer the question t' what has been the underlying instinct in Anglo-A merican relations
in the past?" that this book has been written.
Renaut, F, P. La politique des Etats-Unis dans I'Amerique du Nord espagnole sous
le regno de Joseph Bonaparte, 1808-1814. Rev. sci. pol., XXXIX (Feb. 15) 76-93.
[1646
Regarding the West Florida controversy.
Renaut, F. P. La question de la Louisiane, 1796-1806. Paris, E. Champion [1918?]
242 p. ^ [1647
Reprinted from the Revue de I'histoire des colonies frangaises. Vie ann., 1918.
Contents.— La Louisiane au xviiie siecle. La politique directoriale et 1' alliance avec I'Espagne:
le premier trait e de San-Ildefonso ( 19 aoUt 1796) . La politiq ue consulaire et la retrocession de la Louisiane
k la France: le second traite de San Ildefonso (ler octobre 1800). L' execution du traite de San Ildefonso
de 1800 et la politique coloniale de la France. Le traite de Paris, 30 avril 1803. La mission Laussat k
la Nouvelle-Orleans. L' application du traite de Paris et la delimitation de la Louisiane. Le conflit
hispano-americain et la politique de la France (1804-1806).
Shows the role which the question of Louisiana played in the relations of France with Spain, and
with the United States, from 1796 to 1806. Publishes the instructions given by the Directoire to Gen.
Pengnon, and other diplomatic documents.
Robertson, William Spence. The recognition of the Hispanic American nations by the
United States. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Aug.) 239-269. [1648
Schmidt, Louis Bernard. The influence of wheat and cotton on Anglo-American
relations during the Civil war. Ia. jour, hist., XVI (July) 400-439. [1649
Read before the American historical association in Philadelphia, Dec. 27, 1917.
100 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Scott, James Brown, ed. Diplomatic correspondence between the United States and i
Germany, August 1, 1914-April 6, 1917, ed., with introduction and analytical index. ( I ,
N. Y. [etc.] dxford university press, American branch. 1, 378 p. [1660 ' * ^
Scott, James Brown, ed. President Wilson's foreign policy; messages, addresses,
papers. N. Y. [etc.] Oxford university press, American branch, xiv, 424 p.
[1651
Shepherd, William R. Bolivar and the United States. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I
(Aug.) 270-298. [1652
Shippee, Lester Burrell. Oregon and the diplomacy of 1821-1827. Ore. hist. soc.
QUAR., XXVII (Sept.) 189-230. [1653
An account of the negotiations with Russia in regard to Russian interests on the Northwest coast,
and of the diplomatic controversy with Great Britain over the Oregon country.
Smith, Theodore C. The United States and world politics, 1793-1815. Hist, teach.
MAG., IX (Jan.) 20-21. [1654
Squier, E. George. Letters of E. George Squier to John M. Clayton, 1849-1850.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 426-434. [1655
Contributed, with introduction, by Mary Wilhelmine Williams.
Letters written to the Secretary of State by the American charge d'affaires to Central America.
They relate mainly to difficulties with Great Britain over conflicting interests in Central America.
Tai, En-Sai. Treaty ports in China (a study in diplomacy). N. Y. [University
printing office, Columbia university] x, 202 p. [1656
Thesis (ph. d.)— Columbia university, 1918.
Published also without thesis note.
Contains sections dealing with American-Chinese relations m regard to these ports.
Rev. jn: Am. jour, internat. law, XII (July) 697-699.
Treat, Payson Jackson. The foundations of American policy in the Far East. Jour,
race develop., IX (Oct.) 198-209. [1657
TJrrutia, Francisco Jose. Los Estados Unidos de America y las republicas hispano-
americanas de 1810 a 1830; paginas de historia diplomatica. Madrid, Imp. de Juan
Pueyo. [Editorial-America] 485 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho) [1658
Published at Bogota, Imp. nacional, in 1917.
Van Dyke, Henry. The tradition of letters in American diplomacy. Bookman,
XLVIII (Sept.) 3-8. [1659
An account of American men of letters who have filled diplomatic posts.
Walker, Sw Edmund, and Sir Charles Fitzpatrick. Addresses delivered before the
Lawyers club of New York on the subject of the centennial of the Rush-Bagot
agreement of 1817. N. Y., 1917. 31 p. [1660
Westengard, Jens I. American influence upon international law. Jour. soc.
coMP. LEGI8., n. s. XVIII, pt. 1 (Apr.) 2-14. [1661
Wheelwright, John T. President Cleveland's foresight; the Venezuela message.
Univ. mag., XVII (Dec.) 506-512. [1662
Monroe Doctrine.
Alvarez, Alejandro. The new Monroe doctrine and American public law. Minn.
LAW rev., II (Apr.) 357-366. [1663
Discusses the Monroe doctrine from the Latin-American point of view.
Andara, J. L. La doctrina de Monroe. Cultura Venezolana, I (Aug.) [1663a
Becker, Carl. The Monroe doctrine and the war. Hist, teach, mag., IX (Feb.)
87-90. [1664
Brito, Octavio N. O Monroismo e a sua nova phase. Rio de Janeiro [Typ. do Jornal
de commercio de Rodrigues & c] 91 p. [1665
McChesney, Mark. Latin America and the Monroe doctrine. Unpopular rev.,
IX (Jan.) 97-111. [1666
Plum, Harry Grant. The Monroe doctrine and the war. Iowa City, la., The Uni-
versity. [23] p. (The State university of Iowa, Iowa City. Extension division
bulletin, no. 3]) [1667
Reyes, Cesar. Panamericanismo; Monroe y Alberdi. Rev. derecho, LIX (Apr.)
496-512. [1668
WRITIN^GS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 101
Constitutional Law and History.
Carson, Hampton L. Heralds of a world democracy: the English and American
revolutions. Central law jour., LXXXVII (Dec. 20) 437-448. [1669
Carson, Hampton L. The phases of our constitutional growth as guarded by the
Supreme court of the United States. Case and comment, XXV (June) 3-13. [1670
Curtis, Eugene Newton. The French assembly of 1848 and American constitutional
doctrines. N. Y., Columbia university; [etc.] 357 p. (Columbia univ. stud.,
V. LXXIX, no. 2) [1671
Pub. also as thesis (ph. d.)— Columbia university, 1917.
Traces the influence of American institutions and political ideas upon the French between 1789 and
1850.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 126-127; Am. pol. sci. rev., XII (Nov.) 731-732.
An early American bill of rights. Const, rev., II (July) 178-182, [1672
Quotes extensively from the Bill of rights of Virginia, 1776.
Hoar, Roger Sherman. The invention of constitutional conventions. Const, rev.,
II (Apr.) 97-100. [1673
Shows that whereas the invention is usually credited to a mass meeting in Hanover, N. H., in June,
1777, it should in reality be ascribed to Concord, Mass., in 1776.
Klein, H. M. J. The Constitution of the United States. Reformed ch. rev., 4th
ser., XXIII (July) 381-414. [1674
McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham. The background of American federalism.
In his America and Britain. N. Y., Button, p. 177-221. . [1675
"By federalism is meant, of course, that system of political order in which powers of government
are separated and distinguished and in which these powers are distributed among governments, each
government having its quota of authority and each its distinct sphere of activity."
The writer points out that the essential qualities of American federal organization were largely the
product of the practises of the old British empire as it existed before 1764.
MuUan, Charles W. Allegiance to the Constitution. Am. law rev., LII (Nov.)
801-822. [1676
Porter, Kirk Harold. A history of suffrage in the United States. Chicago, 111.,
The University of Chicago press, xi, 260 p. [1677
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Chicago, 1918. Pub. also without thesis note.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July 1919) 730-731; Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Feb. 1919) 151-152; Pol.
sci. quar., XXXIII (Dec.) 593.
Powell, Thomas B-eed. Decisions of the Supreme court of the United States on
constitutional questions, 1914-1917. Am. pol. sci. rev., XII (Feb., Aug., Nov.)
17-49, 427-457, 640-666. [1678
Scott, James Brown. James Madison's notes of debates in the Federal convention
of 1787 and their relation to a more perfect society of nations. N. Y. [etc.] Oxford
university press, American branch, xviii, 149 p. port., facsims. [1679
It is the conviction of the writer that the proceedings of the Convention are ''of interest in this day
of international conferences, as showing the steps by which the thirteen st ates of this western world,
claiming to be sovereign, free and independent, were able to form the one lar ge, successful and enduring
union of states to be found in the annals of history."
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Oct. 1919) 141-142; Am. jour, internat. law, XIII (Oct. 1919) 837-840.
Scott, James Brown, ed. Judicial settlement of controversies between states of the
American union; cases decided in the Supreme court of the United States. In
2 V. V. I. N. Y., London [etc.] Oxford univ. press, xlii, 873 p. (Publications
of the Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of international law)
[1680
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 192n) 509-510; Am. pol. sci. rev., XIV (Feb. 1920) 167-168.
West, Henry Litchfield. Federal power; its growth and necessity. N. Y., George
H. Doran co. xi, [2], 15-216 p. [1681
The writer points out that contrary to the prevalent idea, "the belief in the necessity of nationaliza-
tion had its beginning nearly three centuries ago and its persistent progress can be clearly traced through
all the succeeding years."
Rev. in: Pol. sci. quar., XXIV (Mar. 1919) 170-172.
What the framers of the federal Constitution thought of the negro. Jour, negro
HIST., Ill (Oct.) 381-434. [1682
A review of the discussions in the Convention of 1787 which reflect the attitude of the framers of the
Constitution toward the negro.
Williams, George Washington. The power of courts to declare a statute void which
conflicts with the Constitution. Am. law rev., LII (July) 497-516. [1683
An inquiry into the understanding and intent of the framers of the Constitution in regard to this
question, in which the writer concludes that this power is of the "warp and woof" of the Constitution.
102 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Politics.
Bassett, John Spencer. The significance of the administration of Rutherford B.
Hayes. So. Atlan. quae., XVII (July) 198-206. [1684
Cole, Arthur C. Lincoln and the presidential election of 1864. III. hist. soc.
TRANS., for the year 1917, 130-138. [1685 ,|
Cole, Arthur C. President Lincoln and the Illinois radical Republicans. Miss. j
Valley hist, rev., IV (Mar.) 417-426. [1686 |
Fox, Dixon Ryan. The economic status of the New York Whigs. Pol. sci. quar., i
XXXIII (Dec.) 501-518. [1687 |
An economic interpretation of the Whig party in New York state, as it was constituted in the early j
forties . I
Harrison, William Henry. Letter from William Henry Harrison to Harmar Denny j
of Pittsburgh, accepting the nomination to the office of president of the United
States, by the convention of the anti-Masonic party, held at Philadelphia, in the !
fall of 1838. Western Pa. hist. MAG., I (July) 144-151. [1688 [
Hockett, Homer C. The influence of the West on the rise and fall of political parties. |
Miss. Valley hist, rev., IV (Mar.) 459-469. [1689 I
Deals with the period from 1790 to 1830. |
Johns, Jane Martin. A momentous incident in the history of Illinois. III. hist.
soc. JOUR., X (Jan.) 548-560. [1690
An incident in the election of U. S. senator from Illinois in 1855, which resulted in Lincoln 's sudden I
withdrawal from the contest and the election of Lyman Trumbull, the anti-Nebraska democratic can- i
didate.
Johns, Jane Martin. The nomination of Abraham Lincoln to the presidency, an
unsolved psychological problem. III. hist. soc. jour., X (Jan.) 561-567. [1691
Procter, Addison Gilbert. Lincoln and the convention of 1860; an address before
the Chicago historical society, April 4, 1918. [Chicago] Chicago historical society.
29 p. port. [1692
The writer was a delegate from Kansas to the convention that nominated Lincoln.
Rulliere, H. Le Jeffersonisme et les Jeffersoniens. La Revue, CXXIX (Nov.-Dec.)
213-224, 478-490. [1693
Stewart, Ernest D. The populist party in Indiana. Ind. mag. hist., XIV (Dec.)
332-367. [1694
Streeter, Floyd Benjamin. The factional character of early Michigan politics. Mich,
hist, mag., II (Jan.) 165-191. [1695
Streeter, Floyd Benjamin. Political parties in Michigan 1837-1860; an historical
study of political issues and parties m Michigan from the admission of the state to
the Civil war. Lansing, Michigan historical commission, xxxiii, 401 p. ports.,
maps. [1696
CoNTEHT?'.— state politics, 1835-1843. Antislavery movement and the organization of the liberty
party. ElTect of territorial extension and the tariff issues. Political controversy over the Mexican
war. Compromise of 1850. Tendency of the Free soil and Whig parties to unite, 1848-1852. Foreign
element in Michigan politics. Organization of the Know-nothing and Republican parties. The churches
in Michigan politics. River and harbor improvement issue. Growth of dissatisfaction in the Repub-
lican party, 1857-1858. Democratic decline and Republican advance, 1858-1860.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr. 1919) 490-491.
White, Melvin J. Populism in Louisiana during the nineties. Miss. Valley hist.
REV., V (June) 3-19. [1697
Law.
Balch, Thomas Willing. A world court in the light of the United States Supreme
court. Phila., Allen, Lane and Scott. 165 p. [1698
In order to test through concrete experience what may be expected from a supreme court of the
world if once set up, the writer has taken an analagous example in the United States Supreme court,
and has collected and discussed the more important cases in which the Supreme court and its predeces-
sors in colonial and revolutionary days have exercised jurisdiction in controversies between the states.
Baldwin, Simeon E. The United States law journal of 1822. Am. bar assoc. jour.,
IV (Jan.) 37-53. [1698a
The first legal periodical published in New England, called the United States law journal and
civilian's magazine, published at New Haven, in 1822.
WRITINGS ON- AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 103
Carpenter, William S. Judicial tenure in the United States, with especial reference
to the tenure of federal judges. New Haven, Yale univ. press; [etc.] vii,
234 p. [1699
"Designed to present the historical development of two phases of the American judicial system: the
influence of the exercise of the doctrine of judicial review upon the position of the courts, and the political
reactions aflecting the tenure of judges."
Clark, Walter. History of the Superior and Supreme court of North Carolina. N. C.
BOOKLET, XVIII (Oct.) 79-104. [1700
Dahlinger, Charles W. The dawn of the woman's movement; an account of the
origin and history of the Pennsylvania married woman's property law of 1848.
Western Pa. hist, mag., I (Apr.) 68-84. [1701
Dart, Henry Plauche. The legal institutions of Louisiana. So. law quae., Ill
(Nov.) 247-280. . [1702
a study of the French period, *'^
Also pub. in the Louisiana historical quarterly, II (Jan.) 72-103.
Eckman, Richard B. Some curious early laws of New Jersey. Case and comment,
XXIV (May) 965-971. [1703
Edelin, T. L. Some great lawyers of Kentucky. In Kentucky state bar association.
Proceedings of the seventeenth annual meeting . . . July 2 and 3, 1918. Louis-
ville, Ky., Press of Westerfield-Bonte co. p. 49-64. [1704
Hooper, Moses. Some early lawyers and some early practice in Wisconsin. In
State bar association of Wisconsin. Report of the proceedings of the 'meetings . . .
June 27, 28, 29, 1917. Milwaukee, Wis., The Evening Wisconsin print, co.
p. 251-263. [1705
Long, Joseph R. The freedom of the press. Va. law rev., V (Jan.) 223-246. [1706
Reviews the history of the struggle for the freedom of the press from the earliest times in Europe
and outlines its progress in America from the beginning of the colonies.
McDermott, Edward J. Some reminiscences of the Louisville bar. Am. law rev.,
LII (Sept.) 721-742. ' [1707
McKinney, Hayes. Treason under the Constitution of the IJnited States. III.
law rev., XII (Jan.) 381-402; and Va. law reg., n. s. Ill (Mar.) 801-826. [1708
Examines briefly cases of treason since the adoption of the Constitution.
New Hampshire. Laws of New Hampshire including public and private acta,
resolves, votes, etc. Ed. and pub. under the direction of the secretary of state.
V. VI-VII. Concord, N. H., Evans print, co., 1917-1918. 2 v. [1708a
Edwin C. Bean, secretary of state.
Contents. — v. VI: Second constitutional period, 1792-1801. v. VII: Second constitutional period,
1801-1811.
Putnam, Harrington. The early administration of equity in this country. In
New Jersey state bar association. Year book, 1918-1919. [Trenton, The Associa-
tion] p. 59-80. [1709
Squire, Andrew. A brief vista of the American bar. Am. legal news, XXIX
(Oct.) 11-14. [1710
National Government and Administration,
Hunt, Gaillard. Reminiscences of the secretaries of state. N. C. lit. and hist.
ASSOC. PROC, XVIII, 26-43. [1711
Leslie, Shane. The legend of the American presidency. Dublin rev., CLXII
(Jan.) 112-128. [1712
McLaughlin, Andrew C. The background of American federalism. Am. pol. sci.
REV., XII (May) 215-240. [1713
"The purpose of this paper is to make plain two facts: first, that the essential qualities of American
federal organization were largely the product of the practices of the old British empire as it existed
before 1764; second, that the discussions of the generation from the French and Indian war to the adop-
tion of the federal Constitution, . . . were over the problem of imperial organization."
104 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
State and Local Government and Administration, i
[Arranged alphabetically by states]
Chang, Tso-Shuen. History and analysis of the commission and city manager plans
of municipal government in the United States. Iowa City, pub. by the Uni-
versity. 290 p. (University of Iowa monographs. Studies in the social sciences,
V. VI) [1714
Development of American municipal organization: p. 20-48. Origin of the commission plan of city
government: p. 49-74.
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIV (Feb. 1920) 179-180.
Jenks, William L. Territorial legislation by governor and judges. Miss. Valley
HIST. REV., V (June) 36-50. [1715
Regarding a provision of the Ordinance of 1787 for legislation in the Northwest Territory.
Kettleborough, Charles, ed. The state constitutions and the federal Constitution and
organic laws of the territories and other colonial dependencies of the United States
of America. Indianapolis, B. F. Bowen and co. 1645 p. [1716
Story, Russell McCulloch. The American municipal executive. Urbana, The Uni-
versity of Illinois. 23] p. (University of Illinois studies in the social sciences, v.
VII, no. 3) [1717
The historical development of the mayoralty: p. 16-36.
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIV (Feb. 1920) 170-179.
Sargent, Noel. The California constitutional convention of 1878-1879. Cal. law
REV., VI (Jan.) 114-123. [1718
Cont. from v. VI, no. 1, Nov. 1917.
Bruce, Helm. The constitution [of Kentucky] and constitutional convenj^ion of 1849.
In Kentucky state bar association. Proceedings of the seventeenth annual meet-
ing . . . July 2 and 3, 1918. Louisville, Ky., Press of Westerfield-Bonte co.
p. 131-160. [1719
Grinnell, Frank W. Note on the position and influence of Thomas Allen and the
"Berkshire constitutionalists" from 1774 to 1780 in connection with the Massachu-
setts constitution. Mass. law quar., Ill (May) 332-341. [1720
Massachusetts. The acts and resolves, public and private, of the province of the
Massachusetts Bay: to which are prefixed the charters of the province; with histori-
cal and explanatory notes and an appendix, v. XIX. being volume xiv. of the
appendix, containing Resolves, etc., 1775-1776. Boston, Wright and Potter print
CO., state printers. 1062 p. [1721
McLain, Chester A., ed. The Massachusetts draft constitution submitted to the
people and rejected in 1778; wdth an appendix giving a list of all amendments sub-
mitted to the people of Massachusetts (1778-1917) and a note on the rejected con-
stitution of 1853. [Boston, The Old South association, 1917] 21 p. (Old South
leaflets, no. 209) [1721a
New Hampshire. Constitutional convention, 1918. Manual of the Constitutional con-
vention of 1918 ... Prepared and published under authority of the governor and
council, by Edwin C. Bean, secretary of state [and] Hobart Pillsbury, deputy sec-
retary. [Concord, Evans printing co.] 299 p. [1722
History of the constitution of New Hampshire and the constitutional conventions: p. 53-181.
Fox, Dixon Ryan. The decline of aristocracy in the politics of New York. N. Y.
xiii, 460 p. illus. (maps), ports. [1723
Thesis (ph. n.)^ — Columbia university, 1917.
Published also as Columbia univ. stud., v. LXXXVI, in 1919.
Mercer, James K. Ohio legislative historv, 1913-1917. Administrations of governors
James M. Cox, 1913-1914, Frank B. Willis, 1915-1916, James M. Cox, 1917-1918.
Columbus, O., Y. J. Heer print, co. [1918?] 712 p. ports., tables. [1724
Forms v. II of " Ohio legislative history."
Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The alien suffrage provision in the constitution of Wiscon-
sin. Wis. mag. hist., I (June) 422-425. [1725
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC HISTORY.
General.
Dodd, William E. The social philosophy of the old South. Am. jour, sociol.,
XXIV (May) 735-746. [1726
Concerned with the social and economic system of the South before the Civil war.
Koren, John, ed. The history of statistics, their development and progress in many
countries; in memoirs to commemorate the seventy- fifth anniversary of the
American statistical association. [N. Y.] Pub. for the American statistical associa-
tion by the Macmillan co. xii, 773 p. [1727
The American statistical association, 1839-1914, by John Koren: p. 3-14. Statistical work of the
Federal government of the United States; by John Cummings: p. 573-689. The work of the several
states of the United States in the field of statistics, by Charles F. Gettemy: p. 690-739.
Pollock, Ivan L. History of economic legislation in Iowa. Iowa City, la., State his-
torical society of Iowa, x, 386 p. (Iowa economic history series, ed. by B. F.
Shambaugh) [1728
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Jan. 1919) 304-305.
Streeter, Floyd B. History of prohibition legislation in Michigan. Mich. hist, mag.,
II (Apr.) 289-308. [1729
Agriculture; Forestry; Land.
Cabell, N. F. Some fragments of an intended report on the post Revolutionary history
of agriculture in Virginia. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVI (Jan.) 145-168. [1730
With notes by E. G. Swem.
Morrison, A. J. The historical farmer in America. So. Atlan. quar., XVII (July)
222-230. [1731
A study of agricultural conditions in America from the time of the Revolution.
Morrison, A. J. Note on the organization of Virginia agriculture. Wm. and Mary
QUAR., XXVI (Jan.) 169-173. [1732
Beynolds, John. The agricultural resources of southern Illinois. III. hist. sog.
TRANS., for the year 1917, 141-161. [1733
Spencer, Charles Worthen. The land system of colonial New York. N. Y. state
hist. ASSOC. PROC, XVI, 1917, 150-164. [1734
Commerce and Industry.
Bishop, Avard Longley, and Albert Galloway Keller. Industry and trade; historical
and descriptive account of their development in the United States, Boston, N. Y.
[etc.] Ginn and co. 426 p. ill us., plates. [1735
A text-book.
Bishop, Joseph Bucklin. A chronicle of one hundred & fifty years; the Chamber of
commerce of the state of New York, 1768-1918. N. Y.,' Scribner. xvi, 311 p.
plates, ports., facsim. [1736
Chandler, Charles Lyon. The River Plate voyages, 1798-1800. Am. hist, rev.,
XXIII (July) 816-826. [1737
Deals with a phase of our relations with South America, the inauguration of our trade with the countries
on the Rio de la Plata. Quotes from contemporary records items bearing on the voyages of American
vessels engaged in neaitral trade with South America, and of captures by French ships during the naval
war with France.
Clark, Victor S. Manufacturing development during the Civil war. Mil. hist, and
ECON., Ill (Apr.) 92-100. [1738
Gronert, Theodore G. Trade in the Blue-Grass region, 1810-1820. Miss. Valley
hist, rev., V (Dec.) 313-323. [1739
105
106 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Henderson, Gerard Carl. The position of foreign corporations in American constitu-
tional law; a contri])iition to the history and theory of juristic persons in Anglo-
American law. Cambridge, Harvard univ. press [etc.] xix, 199 p. (Harvard
studies in jurisprudence, v. II) [1740
Chapter II. entitled "The beginnings of American law of foreign corporations" is concerned with the
status of corporations in the colonial and early national periods.
Hull, Artlxur M., td. Coal men of America, a biographical and historical review of
the world's greatest industry. Arthur M. Hull, editor-in-chief, Sydney A. Hale,
associate editor. Chicago, The Retail coalman. 506 p. illus., ports. [1740a
The Indian trade of Rock river valley. Wis. mag. hist., II (Sept.) 98-100. [1741
Notes regarding the fur trade along the Rock river, prior to 1822.
Keir, Malcolm. Some economic facts in the development of manufacturing in the
United States. Education, XXXVIII (Mar .-Apr.) 493-503, 581-592. [1742
Keir, Malcolm. . Some influences of the sea upon the industries of New England.
Geog. rev., V (May) 399-404. [1743
Shows how, from New England's earliest industries, fishing, commerce, and shipbuilding, down to
the present leadership in cotton and shoe manufacture- the sea has exercised a potent influence upon
New England industrial life.
Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The fur trade in Wisconsin. Wis. archeol., XVII (Sept.)
55-60. [1744
Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The Hudson Bay company tokens. Wis. mag. hist., II
(Dec.) 214-216. [1745
a series of tokens or brass coins used in the fur trade prior to 1865. A collection of them has recently
been presented to the State historical society of Wisconsin.
Magnuson, Torstein A. History of the beet sugar industry in California. So. Cal.
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Sketches shov/ing the development of the principal branches of science since 1818, giving special
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Content?.— The American journal of science from 1818 to 1918, by Edward S. Dana. A century
of geology: ilie progress of historical geology in North America, by Charles Schuchert. A century of
geologv; steps of progress in the uiterpreta'tion of land forms, by Herbert E. Gregory. The growth
of knowledge of earth structure, by Joseph Barrell. A century of government geological surveys, by
George Otis Smith. On the development of vertebrate paleontology, by Richard Swann Lull. The
rise of petrology as a science by Louis V. Pirsson. The gro-wi^h of mineralogy from 1818 to 1918, by
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and Harry W. Foote. A century's progress in physics, by Leigh Page. A century of zoology in
America, by Wesley R. Coe. The development of botany as shown in this Journal, by George L.
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science, 1818-1918, by Edward Salisbury Dana, Charles Schuchert [and others]
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status in America. Am. jour, physical anthrop., I (Apr. -Oct.) 133-182, 267-304,
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1837-8, The Upper Canadianrebellion, 1837-8, Fenian and other raids, The Red River rebellion, 1869-70,
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L'homme merveilleux [Jean Nicollet] Un traite viole [treaty of St-Germain-en-Laye, 1632, which ceded
to France the territory called New France] La d^couverte du NordOuest. Decouverte de la bale
d'Hudson par terre [Radisson and GroseilliersJ La patrie canadienne. Impressions de Quebec.
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Heeney, W. Bertal, ed. Leaders of the Canadian church. With a Preface by the
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Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 80-81.
Huard, V. A. Notes biographiques sur I'abbe Provancher. Naturaliste canad.,
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Study ol the life of the celebrated Canadian naturalist.
127
128 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Hunt, John D. The dawn of a new patriotism, Toronto, Macmillan. xx, 410 p.
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"A traiuiiiE; course in citizenship."
The last part of the book outUnes the history of constitutional development in England and in Canada.
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Keith, Arthur Berriedale, ed. Selected speeches and documents on British colonial
policy, 1763-1917. London, N. Y. [etc.] Humphrey Milford, Oxford univ. press.
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The main object of these volumes is to trace by a series of speeches and documents the growth of the
system of responsible government in the British colonies, the gradual formation of powerful federations
from groups ofseparate and rival colonies, and the development of their local autonomy. The documents
extend from the royal proclamation of 1763, dealing with the constitution of Canada, to the decisions of
the imperial war cabinet in 1917.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 111-112.
Kellogg, Louise P. The Hudson Bay company tokens. Wis. mag. hist., II (Dec.)
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A series of tokens or brass coins used in the fur trade prior to 1865. A collection of them has recently
been presented to the State historical society of Wisconsin.
Kennedy, W. P. M., ed. Documents of the Canadian constitution, 1759-1915.
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Intended primaril y for students of Canadian constitutional development.
Rev. in: Am. pol.'sci. rev., XIII (Feb. 1919) 142-143; Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 173-174; Pol.
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Klotz, Otto. Observatories in Canada. Royal astronomical soc. Canada jour.,
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A study of the party system in English and Canadian politics.
Lavell, Cecil Fairfield, and Charles Edward Payne. Imperial England. N. Y.,
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It is the purpose of the writers to contribute to an understanding "of the forces, motives and aims
that have made the British empire possible and of the light that it throws on the problem of world
organization." Traces the development of the empire from the earliest times.
Contains a chapter on " The Dominion of Canada," dealing with the period since 1763.
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LeVasseur, L. Drames de la mer. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XII (Jan.) 15-34.
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A chronicle of shipwrecks in the Saint Lawrence and along the Atlantic coast of Canada, beginning
with that of the Chameau in August 1725.
Macbeth, Madge. Historical churches of Canada. Canad. mag., LI (Aug.) 265-276.
[2060
Merritt, W. Hamilton. Canada and national service. Toronto, Macmillan, 1917.
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Includes a survey of the history of the Canadian militia.
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 66-67.
Montpetit, Edouard. Considerations sur la politique commerciale du Canada. Rev.
trimestrielle canad., 1917. ■ [2062
"Contains a sketch of the history of Canadian trade relations, with special reference to the problems
connected with the revival of Canadian trade after the war."— Rev. hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 77.
Moore, William Henry. The clash I A study in nationalities. Toronto, J. M. Dent
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Deals with the French-Canadian problem.
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 67-6a
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Newton,' Arthur Percival. The old Empire and the new. With an introduction Ly
Sir Charles Lucas. Toronto, J. M. Dent and sons, 1917. xi, 140 p. (The Imperial
studies series) [2064
Consists of six lectures given at the University of London in 1917.
"Dr. Newton traces in masterly style the changes that have taken place in the original feudal juris-
diction of the Crown, through the Boards of trade and plantations, the Secretaries of s-tate for the
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Contains a section on the early years of the western grain trade.
Porritt, Edward. Evolution of the Dominion of Canada; its government and its
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Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev , XIII (Feb. 1919) 140-142.
Eeview of historical publications relating to Canada. Index, vols. XI-XX. By
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Canadian poet, 1837-1918.
Scott, Walter S. The Canadian constitution historically explained by annotated
statutes, original documents and leading cases. Toronto, The Carswell co., limited;
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Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 172-173.
Sissons, C. B. Bi-lingual schools in Canada. Toronto, J. M. Dent and sons, 1917.
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Traces the "historical evolution of the language question in the schools of Ontario, Alberta, and
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A study of the intellectual life and culture of the early settlers in Canada, with particular reference
to the Province of Quebec. The writer points out that the early Frehch colonists were not unedu-
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Surveyer, Arthur. L'ingenieur et le developpement du Canada. Rev, trimes-
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"Traces the influence of engineering on the history of Canada up to the present day." — Hist. pub.
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Toronto. Ontario Provincial museum. Thirtieth annual archpeological report, 1918.
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Contents. — The Chippewa Indians. Wood and wood products; their uses by the prehistoric
Indians of Ontario. Indian fort and village site: Whitchurch township. The mystery of a land that
disappeared [the Atlantis of the ancients] by W. R. Harris Ojibwa myths and tales, by George E.
Laidlaw. New accessions to the Museum.
Viator, C. S., pseud. Histoire du Canada, par C. S. Viator; approuvee par le Conseil
de I'instruction publique, dans sa stance du 9 mai 1917. Montreal, Les clercs de
Saint- Viateur. 139 p. illus., ports., maps. [2076
At head of title: Cours elementaire.
The name of C. S. Viator is used to designate a committee of teachers of the order Clercs de St. Viateur.
Weaver, Emily P. "What art has done for Canadian historv." Canad. mag., LI
(June) 127-138. " [2077
Describes some of the historical pictures in the J. Ross Robertson Canadian historical collection in
the Public library at Toronto.
Wilson, C. Effect of repeal of Dominion legislation upon pre-confederation provincial
legislation in eadem materia. Canad. law times, XXXVIII (Mar.) 163-168.
[2078
Wrong, E. M. The constitutional development of Canada. Royal hist. soc.
trans., 4th ser., I, 236-253. [2079-80
130 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Discovery to 1763.
Caron, Ivanhoe. Une expMition a la bale d'Hudson, a travers le Temiscamingue et :
I'Abitibi, en 1G8G. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XII (May) 129-138. [2081
Account of the expedition against the English posts on Hudson Bay, under command of the chevalier
Pierre de Tro\e^ ,
Caron, Ivanlioe, ed. Journal de 1' expedition du chevalier de Troves a la baie
d'Hudson, en 1686. Beauceville, La Compagnie de L'Eclaireur." ix, 136 p.
map. [2082 :
French expedition against the EngUsh posts on Hudson Bay in 1G86, an episode in the struggle [
between England and France in North America.
The journal, which has never before been printed, is contained in the BibUotheque nationale, Paris. '
Couillard-Despres, A. Critique de I'histoire de I'Acadie fran^oise de M. Moreau,
Paris, 1873. Rev. canad., n. s. XXII (Aug.-Dec.) 131-136, 191-208, 269-275,
362-374, 422-431. [2083 '
"L'histoire de I'Acadie frangoise" was published at Paris, in 1873. Deals with the period from
1598 to 1775.
La famine Du Gue de Boisbriand. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV (June- July) .
161-173, 193-209. [2084
Fronsac, vicomte de. The last royal governor of Gaspasia; from the manuscripts of '.
the Forsyth collection, Dumbarton, Scotland. Canad. mag., LI (Aug.) 283-290.
Mathieu Forsyth, last royal governor of Gaspasia, born in Scotland in 1699. [2085
Girault, Arthur. The colonial tariff policy of France, by Arthur Girault. Edited ;
by Charles Gide. Oxford, Clarendon press; London [etc.] Humphrey Milford, \
1916. viii, 305 p. (Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of |
economics and history) [2085a i
a study of the evolution of the colonial tariff policy of France.
Chap. I. The ancient regime: exclusion (p. 11-41) deals with the period anterior to 1789, which is the j
stage of privileged companies of colonization and of exclusion. The commercial regime in the Antilles
and other French colonies in America is considered. |
Gosselin, A. E. A Chicoutimi et au Lac St-Jean a la fin du xvneme si^cle. Royal |
soc. Canada trans., 3d ser., XI (Mar.) 113-135. [2086 j
Describes an old document containing the register of the baptisms, marriages and burials at the mis- 1
sion of Tadoussac, between 1672 and 1696, and gives an account of the missionaries at Saguenay from i
1671 to 1700. }
Gosselin, A. E. Fran^ais et Canadiens-Frangais au pays du Saguenay a la fin du i
xviieme siecle. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XII (July) 202-206. [2087 i
Contents.— Le privilege de la traite a Tadoussac; les compagnies et leurs principaux officiers. i
Nicolas Peltier et sa famille. i
Gosselin, Amedee. Le fief de Lothainville. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV (July) |
212-214. ^' [2088 |
The fief of Lothainville was situated in the parish of I'Ange-Gardien, seigniory of Beaupre. I
Lanctot, Gustave. Le dernier effort de la France au Canada. Royal soc. Canada 1
trans., 3d ser., XII (June) 41-54. [2089 I
After the fall of Quebec in September, 1759, the French cabinet decided to make one supreme effort I
to save Canada, and accordingly in the spruig of 1760 an expedition of reenforcements was sent from i
France. This squadron was defeated by the English in July, 1760.
Lapalice, O. H. A. Le sieur de Bourgchemin. Bul. recherches hist. XXIV j
(Sept.) 273-274. [2090 j
Jacques-Frangois, chevalier du Bourgchemin.
Lejeune, P. L. Tableaux synoptiques de l'histoire de I'Acadie. Fascicule special
(1500-17G0), avec supplements concernant Terre-Neuve et la Nouvelle-Angleterre,
faisant suite aux Tableaux de l'histoire du Canada. Ottawa, v, 97, vi p. [2091
Lenhart, John M. The latest history of Acadia— II. The doom of the Acadians.
Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXIX (Sept.) 219-230. [2092
A review of the second volume of " Acadie; reconstitution d'lm chapitre perdu de I'histoire d'Ameri-
que . . . par Hcnnd'Arles[pse?id., Edouard Richard]." 5'ee no. 2105 below.
Lorimier, Louis-Raoul de. Reception de M. le gouverneur d'Argenson au college des
Jesuites a Quebec (1658). Rev. canad., n. e. XXI (June) 401-416. [2093
Louis Hebert et les pionniers de la terre canadienne. Soc. geog. Quebec bul. XII
(Sept) 265-271. [2094
Consists mainly of a list of the companions, 1608-1635, of Louis Hebert, who founded the first agri-
cultural colony in Canada.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 131
McLennan, John Stewart. Louisbourg, from its foundation to its fall, 1713-1758.
London, MacMillan. xi, 454 p. plates, maps. [2095
"Intended to present in detail the economic and administrative history of the colony."
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 65-68.
Massicotte, E. Z. L'abbe Etienne Montgolfier et I'^vSche de Quebec. Bul. re-
CHERCHES HIST., XXIV (Feb.) 49-50. [2096
Massicotte, E. Z. Les arpenteurs de Montreal sous le regime frangais. Bul. re-
CHERCHES HIST., XXIV (Oct.) 303-307. [2097
Massicotte, E. Z. Arrets, edits, ordonnances, mandements et reglements conserves
dans les archives du palais du justice de Montreal. Royal soc. Canad. trans., 3d
ser., XI (Mar.) 147-174; XII (Dec.) 209-223. [2098
Contents.— Ire partie: 1653-1700. 2me partie: 1701-1725.
Massicotte, E. Z. La communaute des cordonniers a Montreal [1728] Bul. recher-
CHES hist., XXIV (Apr.) 126-127. [2099
Massicotte, E. Z. La Compagnie du Nord. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV (Sept.)
275-276. [2100
A rival of the Hudson's Bay company, founded about 1682.
Massicotte, E. Z. Des loteries a Montreal en 1701. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV
(June) 180-181. [2101
Massicotte, E. Z. Le premier Decarris en Canada. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV
(Mar.) 83-84. [2102
Fixes the exact date of the arrival of the first member of the family in Canada, Jean Decarris, in 1643.
Munro, William Bennett. Crusaders of New France; a chronicle of the fleur-de-lis in
the wilderness. New Haven, Yale univ. press, xii, 237 p. pi., ports., map.
(The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. IV) [2103
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
An account of the discovery and exploration, and the settlement of New France.
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1:19) 35-36.
Notice sur M. Jean Menage, premier cure de Deschambault. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXIV (June) 182-184. [2104
Richard, Edouard. Acadie; reconstitution d'un chapitre perdu de I'histoire d'Amer-
ique . . . Ouvrage pub. d'apres le ms. original, entierementrefondu, cor., annot^,
mis au point des recherches les plus r^centes, avec une introduction et des appen-
dices par Henri d' Aries [pseud.] Quebec, Typ. J. -A. K.-Laflamme; Boston,
Marlier pub. CO., 1916-1918. 2 v. port. [2105
Contents. — I. Depuis les origines jusqu'a la paix d'Aix-la-Chapelle. II. Depuis la palx d'Aix-la-
Chapelle jusqu'a la deportation.
t. II, rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 82-84.
Richard, Edouard. La deportation des Acadiens. Par Henri d'Arles [pseud.]
Canada franc, I (Nov.-Dec.) 160-180, 252-260. [2105a
Roy, Pierre Georges. Barthelemy-Frangois de la Bourgonniere de Hauteville. Bul.
RECHERCHES HIST., XXIV (Jan.) 3-5. [2106
Roy, Pierre Georges. Charles Denys de Vitre, conseiller au conseil souverain. Bijl.
RECHERCHES HIST., XXIV (Aug.) 225-242. [21G7
Roy, Pierre Georges. Les commissaires ordinaires de la marine en la Nouvelle-
France. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV (Feb.) 51-54. [2108
Prints a list of the commissaries.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Un corsaire canadien: Jean Leger de la Grange. Bul. re-
cherches hist., XXIV (Feb. -Apr.) 32-48, 65-76, 97-104. [2109
Roy, Pierre Georges. D'ou vient le nom de "Nouvelle France"? Soc. geog.
Quebec bul., XII (Mar.) 79-80. [2110
Roy, Pierre Georges. La marechaussee de Quebec sous le regime fran^ais. Royal
soc. Canad. trans., 3d ser., XII, sec. 1 (Dec.) 189-192. [2111
Consists mainly of a list, with brief biographical notes, of the prevots and the greffiers de la mare-
chaussee de Quebec, 1681-1758.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Les ofhciers d'etat-major des gouvernements de Quebec,
Montreal et Trois-Rivieres sous le regime frangais; notes biographiques. Rev.
CANAD., n. s. XXI (Jan., Mar., Apr.) 75-79, 210-220, 276-295: XXII (Sept.-Dec.)
214-221, 290-300, 375-381, 432-446. [2112
Cont. from v. XX, Nov. 1917.
132 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Le passeur de la riviere Saint-Charles pres Quebec. Bul.
RECHERCHES HIST., XXIV (May) 129-132. [2113
From 1667 tintil the end of the French regime the Jesuits controlled the right of passage over the
Saint Charles river.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Le projet de conquete de la Nouvelle-York de M. de Callieres
en 1689. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV(Oct.-Dec.) 289-301, 321-339, 353-367.
[2114
Gives the texts of original documents containing the recommendations of M. de Callieres, governor
of Montreal, for the project.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Le siege de Tamiraute de Quebec sous le regime frangais.
KoYAL soc. Canad. TRANS., 3d ser., XII, sec. 1 (Dec.) 193-200. [2115
Roy, Regis. M. de Bourgmont, officier au Detroit. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV
(Aug.) 254-256. [2116
Etienne de Veniard, sieur de Bourgmont, commandant of the territory along the Missouri river
and of Louisiana.
Siegfried, Francis P. An old frontier of France. Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXIX
(June) 131-139. [2117
A review of "An old frontier of France; the Niagara region and adjacent lakes under French control.
By Frank FI. Severance." N. Y., Dodd, Mead and co., 1917.
Smith, G. C. Moore. Robert Hayman and the plantation of Newfoundland. Eng.
HIST. REV., XXXIII (Jan.) 21-36. [2117a
Concerned with the efforts made by Hayman to induce King Charles I. to take an active hand in the
colonization of Newfoundland.
Suite, Benjamin. Au lac Superieur en 1660. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XII (Mar.)
74-77. [2118
Suite, Benjamin. Les Frangais dans 1' Quest en 1671. Royal soc. Oanad, trans.,
3d ser., XII (June) 1-31. [2119
A description of the conditions in the Lake region and of the Indians there in 1671, when formal pos-
session of the territory was taken by the Intendant Talon.
Suite, Benjamin. Melanges historiques; etudes eparses et in^dites de Benjamin
Suite. Comp., annotees et pub. par Gerard Malchelosse. v. I. Montreal: G.
Ducharme, libraire-editeur. 162 p. [2120
Contents.— Decouverte de I'Amerique. Quebec en 1629-31. Beauport vs. Qu6bec. La Com-
pagnie des habitants. Nicolas Perrot a Becancour. Chouart et Radisson a Londres. Ce qu'ils buvaient.
Le systeme seigneurial. KiSet vainqueur de la Chaudiere-Noire. Pierre Bisaillon en Pennsylvanie.
Les notaires Adh6mar. Titres de noblesse de d' Amours. The early history of the militia, 1636-1700.
Canadian militia imder the French regime.
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 38-39.
Suite, Benjamin, Les missionaires au Canada aux debuts de la colonie. Rev.
canad., n. s. XXI (Jan.) 41-57. [2121
Fourth In a series of articles.
Suite, Benjamin. Le Pere Menard. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XII (July) 195-199.
2122
The first missionary to the Canadian Northwest. He accompanied Chouart and Radisson to Lake
Superior in 1660.
Wrong, George M. The conquest of New France; a chronicle of the colonial wars.
New Haven, Yale univ. press [etc.] x, 246 p. ports., fold. map. (The chronicles
of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. X) [2123
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Tells the story of the English-French conflict in America from 1690 to 1760.
Contents,— The conflict opens: Frontenac and Phips. Quebec and Boston. France loses Acadia.
Louisbom-g and Boston. The great West. The valley of the Ohio. The expulsion of the Acaaians.
The victories of Montcalm, Montcalm at Quebec. The strategy of Pitt. The fall of Canada. Bib-
liographical note. Index.
1763-1867.
Bamett, J. Davis. The books of the political prisoners and exiles of 1838. Ont.
HIST. soc. PAP., XVI, 10-18. [2124
Brief abstracts from, and a bibliographical list of the now scarce books written by these prisoners
describing their experiences.
Canada. Archives. Documents relating to the constitutional history of Canada,
1759-1791. Selected and edited by Adam Shortt and Arthur G. Doughty. Second
and revised edition by the Historical documents publication board. Parts I and II.
Ottawa, The King's printer, xvi, 1084 p. [2124a
I'he first edition was published in 1907.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept. 1920) 317.
WBITII^GS OK AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 133
Caron, Ivanhoe, Colonization in the Province of Quebec under English domina-
tion, 1760-1791. Quebec, 1917. 28 p. [2125
"The first chapter of a work which will embrace a complete history of colonization in the Province
of Quebec, since the cession of the country to England."
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 42-43.
Chapais, Thomas. Les debuts du regime parlementaire; la question de langue.
Canada franp., I (Sept.-Oct.) 11-29, 95-111. [2126
Account of the debates in the first legislature of Lower Canada over the question of the official status
of the French language.
Chartier, Emile. Au berceau de la Confederation. Rev. canad., n. s. XXII (Sept.)
166-179. [2127
A review of "La confederation canadienne, par I'abbe Lionel Groulx." See no. 2129.
Froidevaux, Henri. Desint^ressement de la France a I'egard du Canada entre 1775
et 1782. Rev. hist, colonies pranp., Vie ann., 485-491. [2128
Gosnell, R. E. The story of confederation, with postscript on Quebec situation. [Vic-
toria? B.C.] 156 p. ports. [2128a
Groulx, Lionel. La confederation canadienne: ses origines. Montreal, Imprim^
au Devoir. 264 p. [2129
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 61-62.
Jackes, Lyman B. The strange adventures of Fleury Mesplet. Canad. mag., LI
(July) 177-185. [2130
A Revolutionary printer, protd?e of Franklin, who was sent by the Continental congress with its
commission to Canada in 1776, to establish a press in that country to influence the French Canadians
in the Revolutionary cause. He remained in Montreal where he set up the first printing press in that
city, in 1776.
Lea, Alice. Some unpublished letters of Sir John Franklin, Sir John Richardson and
others, written during the expeditions to North-west Canada for the purpose of
explorations, 1819-22; and 1825-27. Women's Canad. hist. soc. Toronto
TRANS., XVII, 12-36. [2131
Lenhart, J. M. Fifteen years of Canadian church history (1775-1789). Am. Cath.
HIST. soc. rec, XXIX (Dec.) 345-359. [2132
a review of "L'6?lise du Canada apres la conqufite. He partie: 1775-1789. Par l'abb6 Auguste
Gosselin. Quebec, 1917."
Lindsay, Lionel. Un pr^curseur de la Trappe de Canada; Dom Urbain Guillet et sa
correspondance avec Mgr. Plessis. Nouv. -France, XVII (Apr.-May) 184-189,
219-228. [2133
Prints two letters written from Cahokia, 111., Nov, 9, 1811 and Mar. 14, 1812. These letters are con-
tained in the archives of the archbishopric of Quebec.
Cont. from v. XVI, 1917.
Massicotte, E. Z. L'esclavage au Canada sous le regime anglais. Bul. recherches
HIST., XXIV (Nov.) 344-347. [2134
Le "nomme Charland" de 1775. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV (Jan.) 10-16. [2135
Identifies the Canadian soldier named Charland , who took a distinguished part in the defense of
Quebec against the Americans in 1775, as Charles Charland of Quebec.
Sellar, Robert. George Brown and confederation. Toronto, Albert Britnell. 32 p.
[2136
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 63-64.
Suite, Benjamin. France et Canada, 1775-1782. Royal soc. Canada trans., 3d
ser., XI, sec. 1, 1-16. [2137
a study of the attitude of the French government toward Canada during the years of the American
revolution.
Walker, Sir Edmund, and Sir Charles Fitzpatrick. Addresses delivered before the
Lawyers club of New York on the subject of the centennial of the Rush-Bagot
agreement of 1817. N. Y., 1917. 31 p. [2138
War of 1812.
Carnochan, Janet, ed. Letters of 1812. Niagara hist. soc. pub., XXXI, 6-10. [2139
Extract of aletter from Fort George, dated Oct. 14,1812, and of aletter dated Brown's Point, Niagara,
Oct. 15, 1812, both giving accounts of the battle of Queenston Heights.
Eayrs, Hugh S. Sir Isaac Brock. Toronto, The Macmillan co. of Canada, xii, 108
p. (Canadian men of action) [2139a
"It is not too much to say that Brock's part in the War of 1812-14 made fast and sure what is now the
Dominion of Canada for the British empire. "
134 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
1867-1918.
Godfrey, John Milton, The second phase of confederation; an address ... at the
Ottawa forum, February the 10th, 1918. Toronto, T. H. Best print, co. 16 p.
[2140
Lewis, John. Fifty years of confederation. In the Addresses delivered before the
Canadian chib of Toronto, season of 1916-17. Toronto, Warwick bros. and Rutter,
1917. p. 204-211. [2140a
Palmer, Howard. Early explorations in British Columbia for the Canadian-Pacific
railway. Phila. geog. soc. bul., XVI (July) 75-91. [2141
Mainly an account of the explorations of Walter Moberley, c. e., during 1871-1872.
Pelletier, Georges. Le partage de rimmigration canadienne depuis 1900. Royal
soc. Canada trans., 3d ser., XII (June) 33-39. [2141a
Willison, Sir John. Reminiscences, political and personal. Canad. mag., LI
(May-Oct.) 3-17, 95-104, 229-240, 321-332, 387-397, 491-501; LII (Nov.-Dec.)
589-587, 665-675. [2142
Contents.— Early days in journalism. Mr. John Cameron and the Blake wing. Church and state
in Ontario. The press and the press gallery. Blake and Thompson in Parhament. When Laurier
became leader.
Wrong, George M. Fifty years of confederation in Canada. In the Addresses deliv-
ered before the (Canadian club of Ottawa, 1916-1917. Ottawa, 1917. [2143
Regional History.
Flaherty, Robert J. The Belcher Islands of Hudson Bay: their discovery and
exploration. Geog. rev., V (June) 433-458. [2144
Froidevaux, Henri. A propos de Tracadie. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XII (May)
159. [2145
Suggests a possible derivation of the name. There are villages of the name in New Brunswick, Nova j
Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. '
Gauvain, D., comp. Almanach du centenaire, 1816-1916, Saint-Pierre-et Miquelon.
Paris, Benaudie. 359 p. [2146
French colony off the coast of Newfoundland, finally restored to France in 1816. I
New Brunswick.
Baymond, W. O. The genesis of the University of New Brunswick; with a sketch
of the life of William Brydone-Jack, a. m., d. c. l., president from 1861-1885. Royal
soc. Canada trans., 3d ser., XII (June) 95-108. [2147
Newfoundland.
Longley, Justice. Difficulties with Newfoundland. Royal soc. Canada trans., 3d
ser., XI (Mar.) 253-266. [2148
An account of complications which have arisen at various times between Newfoundland and the
Dominion duo to the fact that Newfoundland has remained out of the Dominion.
Nova Scotia.
Aucoin, Edmond D. Le pays d'Evangeline; depuis son origine jusqu'a nos jours.
Montreal, Le Pays Laurentien, 1917. 46 p. [2149
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 87-88.
Eaton, Arthur Wentworth Hamilton. Chapters in the history of Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Americana, XII (Jan.-Oct.) 32-69, 184-204, 272-301, 419-433. [2150
Contents.— IX. Royal governors and Government house. X. Halifax and the American revolution.
XI. Halifax and the New York tories. XII. The Halifax garrison and social life in the town.
Cont.from V. XI, 1916.
L'hymne national des Acadiens. Bul. recherches hist., XXIV (Oct.) 308-310.
[2161
Irvin, John. History of Bridgetown. Nova Scotia hist. soc. coll., XIX, 31-51.
[2162
Includes a "Biographical sketch of Lieut.-Colonel James Poyntz, 1799-1889.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 135-
Patterson, Frank H. A history of Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia. Halifax, 1917, viii,
143 p. illus. [2153
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 88-89.
Payne, Abraham Martin. The life of Sir Samuel Cunard, founder of the Cunard
Eteamship line, 1787-1865. Nova Scotia hist. soc. coll., XIX, 75-91. [2154
Pollok, Allan. Recollections of sixty years ago. Nova Scotia hist, soc. coll., XIX,
17-30. [2165
Power, Lawrence G. Our first president, the Honorable John William Ritchie, 1808-
1890. Nova Scotia hist, soc. coll., XIX, 1-15. [2156
Began, John W. The inception of the Associated press; the Pony express that in 1849
forwarded European news from Halifax to Digby, to be conveyed by vessel to St.
John, and thence telegraphed to New York, Nova Scotia hist. soc. coll., XIX,
93-114. [2157
Smith, William. The early post office in Nova Scotia, 1755-1867. Nova Scotia
hist. soc. coll., XIX, 53-73. [2158
Province of Quebec.
Ahern, M. J., and George Ahern. Notes pour servir a I'histoire de la m^decine dans
le Bas-Canada depuis la fondation de Quebec jusqu'au commencement du xxe
siecle. Bul. med. Quebec, XIX (Jan.-Sept.), 125-128, 154-168,186-200, 229-232,
241-264, 279-296, 307-328, 340-360, 382-392; XX (Sept.-Dec.) 17-32, 58-64, 92-96.
[2159
B iogr aphi cal sket ches .
Cont. from the 1917 volume.
Archamhault, A. S. Les registres de I'etat civil de la province de Quebec. Rev.
trimestrielle canad., 1918. [2160
"Will be found useful by students carrying out research work in French-Canadianhistory." — Hist,
pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 78.
Bechard, Auguste. La Gasp^sie en 1888. Deuxieme serie des pages canadiennes.
Quebec, L'Im.primerie nationale. 130 p. [2161
Bellemare, J. E. Les vieilles forges Saint-Maurice et les Forges Radnor. Bul.
RECHERCHES HIST., XXIV (Sept.) 257-270. [2162
Boucher de la Bruere, Pierre, Le conseil de I'instruction publique et le comite
catholique. Montreal, Le Devoir. 270 p. [2163
A contribution to the history of education in the province of Quebec.
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 181-182.
Couillard-Despres, Azarie. Dictionnaire genealogique et historique de la famille
Couillard et de ses diverses branches, 1613-1918. Bul. recherches hist,, XXIV
(Mar.) 88-96. [2164
Couillard-Despres, Azarie. Histoire de la famille de la seigneurie de Saint-Ours,
11™^ partie: La famille et la paroisse de Saint-Ours, 1785-1916, Montreal, 1917.
473 p, ' [2165
Ire partie, 1915,
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad. , XXII (1919) 91-92.
Duguay, Louis Eugene. Gen^alogie de la famille de Pierre Duguay. Three Rivers,
La Cie. "Le Bien public," 1916. 273 p, [2166
Fauteux, Aegldius, La famille d'Aillebout, Montreal, Ducharme, 1917. 196 p.
[216?
Gosselin, Amedee. Un anniversaire; ouverture du Petit s^minaire de Quebec.
Canada fran?., I (Nov.) 183-191. [2168
Le Petit seminaire de Quebec was opened in October, 1668.
Histoire de Saint-Gabriel de Brandon, — A travers les registres et en marge. Preface
par Casimir Hebert, Lettre-preface par Benjamin Suite. Montreal, Ducharme,
1917, 238 p, [2169
Rev, in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 92-93.
L'imprimeur Louis Roy, Bul, recherches hist,, XXIV (Mar,) 77-78. [2170
Publisher of the Upper Canada Gazette, 1793-1796, and of the Gazette de Montreal, 1796-1797.
136 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Magnan, Hormisdas. La paroisse de Saint-Nicolas. La famille Paquet et les families
alliees. Qu6bec. viii, 334 p. [2171 i
History of the parish and of the Pfi,quet family. j
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Ire serie, 1915.
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 95.
Maurault, Olivier. Le Petit seminaire de Montreal. Montreal, Librairie Derome.
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A study of the influence of geography on the history ol this region.
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Roy, Pierre Georges. La Trinity-House ou Maison de la Trinite a Quebec. Bul.
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[2180
Savard, A., and W. E. Playfair. Quebec and confederation. Quebec. 136 p. [2181
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Contents.— Preface. Ire partie. Compte-rendu des fStes; Montreal, 1642-1917. Livre terrier de la
seigneurie de Montreal, mentionnant les concessions et mutations de terrains compris dans les limites
des anciennes fortifications. Index des noms du livre-terrier.
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Province of Ontario.
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Traces the growth of the public secondary school in Ontario from the act of 1807, which established
the first district public schools.
Burt, A. Blanche. The Rev. John Barclay, m. a., the first Presbyterian minister
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Campbell, C. T. The village of London. London and Middlesex hist. soc.
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I'rints extracts from the claims of a number of loyalists of Niagara, as presented before the British
commission appointed to adjust the claims.
WRITINGS OIT AMERICAIT HISTORY, 1918. 137
Elliott, William. Reminiscences by Judge William Elliott [of London] London
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Emigrants in Niagara, 1847. Niagara hist. soc. pub., XXXI, 34-41. [21-^
Extracts from the town records of 1847, relating to activities in behalf of the refugees from Ireland
during the famine year of 1847.
Holton, F. J., D. H. Bedford, and Francis Cleary. History of the Windsor and
Detroit ferries. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVI, 40-51. [2191
Hunter, A. F. The founding of Kirkfield, Ont. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVI, 52-53.
[2192
Landon, Fred. The Buxton settlement in Canada. Jour, negro hist., Ill (Oct.)
360-367. [2193
The Buxton, or Elgin association settlement, in Kent county, Ontario, which was one oi the important
attempts made before the Civil war to found a negro refugee colony in Canada.
landon, Fred. The history of the Wilberforce refugee colony in Middlesex county.
London and Middlesex hist. soc. trans., IX, 30-44. *[2194
a settlement of refugee negroes from the United States, established in 1829-1830.
MacMurchy, Angus, Sketch of the life and times of Joseph Curran Morrison and
Angus Morrison, presidents of St. Andrew's society, 1850-54. [Toronto, The au-
thor] 20 p. [2193a
Two prominent citizens of Toronto in the fifties.
Ontario. Bureau of archives. Fourteenth report pi the Bureau of archives for the
Province of Ontario. By Alexander Fraser, provincial archivist. Toronto, Printed
and published by A. T. Wilgress. vi, 478 p. [2195
Contents.— Kecords of the early courts of Upper Canada [1789-1794] [Introduction and notes, by
William Renwick Riddell]
Records of the courts of the districts of Hesse, Mecklenburg (Kingston), and Luneberg.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1929) 74-77.
Riddell, William Renwick. Criminal courts and law in early (Upper) Canada.
Jour, criminal law, IX (Aug.) 173-186. [2196
Riddell, William Renwick. Marriage in early Upper Canada. Canad. mag., LI
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Sage, Walter. Sir George Arthur and his administration of Upper Canada. Kings-
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Also pub. in Queen's quarterly, XXVI (July) 22-53.
Sir George Arthur was the last lieutenant-governor of Upper Canada before the Union of 1841.
Simcoe county pioneer and historical society. Pioneer papers. No. 6. Barrie,
Pub. by the Society, 1917. 300 p. [2199
Partial contents. — Old Penetanguishene; sketches of its pioneer, naval and military days, by
A. C. Osborne. Memories of a pioneer, by Thomas Williams [Methodist missionary] Recollections of
Moses Hayter, by S. L. Soules. Memories of the rebellion of '37, by Gilbert Robinson. Justices of the
peace, by Judge Ardagh. Notes of Barrie's first residents before 1837, by various contributors.
Snider, E. W. B. Waterloo county forests and primitive economics. Waterloo
hist. soc. rep., VI, 14-36. [2200
/ Western Provinces and Territories.
General.
Bashford, James Whitford. The Oregon missions; the story of how the line was run
between Canada and the United States. N. Y., Cincinnati, The Abingdon press.
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Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 126-128.
Cawcroft, Ernest. Donald Mackenzie: king of the Northwest. Canad. mag., L
(Feb.) 342-349. [2202
Governor of the Hudson's Bay company, from 1825 to 1833.
Davidson, Gordon Charles. The North West company. Berkeley, University of
California press, xi, 349 p. maps. (Univ. of Cal. pub. in hist., v. VII) [2203
Contents.— Preface. The early fur trade and the formation of the North West company. Early
expeditions to the West. Mackenzie's explorations. The X Y company. Further advance westward.
The struggle with the Hudson's Bay company. Last days of the North West company. The trade
and trading methods of the North West company. ...
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (.Tan. 1920) 301-302; Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 71-74.
138 AMERICAIT HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. j
I
Haydon, Arthur Lincoln. The riders of the plains; a record of the Royal North-West |
mounted police of Canada, 1873-1918. London, A. Melrose, xx, 417 p. illus.
[2203a
Original edition, covering the period 1873-1910, M'as published at London in 1910. xvi, 385 p.
Lewis, William S. Archibald McDonald: biography . and genealogy. Wash. hist.
QUAR., IX (Apr.) 93-102. [2204
Chief factor of the Hudson's Bay company and one of the pioneers of the Oregon country.
MacBeth, R. G. The romance of western Canada. Toronto, William Briggs. xii,
309 p. ports. [2205
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 108-110.
Morice, A. G. Les droits historiques du fran^ais dans I'Ouest canadien. Winnipeg,
Manitoba. [2206
Le Pere Lacombe; un apotre du Nord-Ouest Canadien, d'apr^s ses memoires et
souvenirs. Par une Soeur de la Providence. Montreal, 1916. xv, 547 p. [2207
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 183-186.
Prud'homme, L. A. Notes sur le conseil d'Assiniboia et des Terres de Rupert.
Royal soc. Canada trans., 3d ser., XI (Mar.) 137-145. [2208.
Sketches the history of the Council of Assiniboia from 1812 to 1869.
Schafer, Joseph. A history of the Pacific Northwest. Rev. and rewritten. N. Y.
Macmillan. [10], 323 p. plates, port., map. [2209
First edition, N. Y., 1905.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIII (July) 907-908; Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 117-118.
Woodsworth, James. Thirty years in the Canadian Northwest. Toronto, McClelland,
Goodchild and Stewart, 1917. xix, 259 p. [2210
Records the history of Methodist missionary work in the Northwest during the thirty years which
followed 1883. The writer was superintendent" of the Northwest missions of the Methodist church.
Rev. in: Hist. pub. Canad., XXII (1919) 111.
Manitoba.
Bryce, George. The pre-Selkirk settlers of Old Assiniboia. Royal soc. Canada
TRANS., 3d ser., XII (June) 155-163. • [2211
The junction of the Red and Assiniboine rivers was the center of "Old Assiniboia."
Prud'homme, L. A. L'engagement des Sept Chenes. Royal soc. Canada trans.,
3d ser., XII, sec. 1 (Dec.) 165-188. [2212
Battle 01 ^^'even Oaks, Red River settlement, June 19, 1816, between the colonists of the Hudson's Bay
company and the followers of the Northwest company, in which Gov. Semple of the Hudson's Bay coni-
pany was killed and the settlement destroyed.
Alberta.
Bowling, D. B. The pioneers of Jasper Park. Royal soc. Canada trans., 3d ser.,
XI (Mar.) 241-252. [2213
British Columbia.
Bell, Archie. Sunset Canada, British Columbia and beyond; an account of its settle-
ment, its progress from the early_ days to the present, including a review of the
Hudson's Bay company, its amazing varietj^ of climate, its charm of landscape, its
unique cities and attractive towns and their industries, a survey of the different
peoples to be found there, including the Japanese and Doukhobors, an analysis of
what it offers in opportunity to the home seeker, the agriculturist, the business man,
the sportsman, and the traveller. Boston, The Page co. xii, 320 p. plates, ports.,
map. ("See America first" series) [2214
Lockley, Fred. Early trails of British Columbia. Overland, LXXII (July) 71-74.
[2215
MacBeth, R. G. A famous frontier judge. Canad. mag., LII (Dec.) 658-662.
[2216
Sketch of the first chief justice of British Columbia, Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie.
Reid, R. L. The gold coinage of British Columbia. Canad. bankers' assoc. jour.,
XXV, 279-283. [2217
story of the attempt to issue gold coins in British Columbia in 1862-4.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 139
Vancouver Island. House of assembly. House of assembly correspondence book,
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Victoria, B. C, Printed by W. H. Cullin. 62 p. ([British Columbia. Provincial
archives dept.] Archives of British Columbia. Memoir no. IV) [2218
Edited by E. O. S. Scholefield, provincial librarian and archivist.
Vancouver Island. House of assembly. Minutes of the House of assembly of Van-
couver Island. August 12th, 1856, to September 25th, 1858. Printed by order of
the Legislative assembl}^. Victoria, B. C, Printed by W. H. Cullin. 78 p. ([Brit-
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no. Ill) [2218a
Edited by E. O. S. Scholefield, provincial librarian and archivist.
Vancouver Island. Legislative council. Minutes of the Council of Vancouver Island.
Commencing August 30th, 1851, and terminating with the prorogation of the House
of assembly, February 6th, 1861. Printed by authority of the Legislative assembly.
Victoria, B. C, Printed by William H. Cullin. 93 p. ([British Columbia. Pro-
vincial archives dept.] Archives of British Columbia. Memoir no. II) [2219
Edited by E. O. S. Scholefield, provincial librarian and archivist.
136908°— 21— VOL. 3 11
LATIN AMERICA.
General.
Antliouard, baron d'. La politique frangaise en Amerique latine; discours prononc^
a la "Troisieme semaine de I'Anieriq^ue latine," en qualite de delegue du comite
France-Amerique. Paris, Impr. nationale France-Amerique. 26 p. (Petite col-
lection France- Amerique III) [2220
Barcelona, A. M. de. Tres capucMnos martirizados en las misiones de la Guayana en
1699. EsTUDios FRANCiscANOS (Seville) Nov. 1918. [2220a
Berenguer, Fernando. El hispano-americanismo estudiado desde el punto de vista
del derecho internacional y el problema territorial de America. Madrid, R. Veloso.
221 p. [2221
Cebrian, J. C. Letter protesting against the use of the term "Latin America."
HisPANiA, I (Sept.). [2222
Protests against the use of the term "Latin America" in place of "Spanish America."
Cejador y Frauca, Julio. Historia de la lengua y literatura castellana, comprendidos
los autores hispano-americanos (primer periodo de la ^poca realista, 1850-1869).
Tomo VIII. Madrid, Tip. de la "Revista de archivos, bibliotecas y museos."
xii, 524 p. [2223
Chapman, Charles E. A history of Spain, founded on the Historia de Espaiia y de la
civilizacion espahola of Rafael Altamira. N. Y., Macmillan. xv, 559 p. maps.
[2224
An attempt to give in one volume the main features of Spanish history from the standpoint of America.
It is concerned with the growth of that Spanish civilization which was transmitted to the new world.
Chapman, Charles E. A producing class in Hispanic- American history. Hist.
TEACH. MAG., IX (Feb.) 84-86. [2224a
0 utlines the plans and progress of a bibliography of periodical articles about Hispanic America imder-
taken by an undergraduate class in history at the University oiCalifornia.
Cieza de Le6n, Pedro de. Civil wars of Peru, by Pedro Cieza de Leon (part IV:
book ii). The war of Chupas, tr. and ed., with notes and an introduction, by Sir
Clements R. Markham. London, Printed for the Hakluyt society, xlvii, 386 p.
maps, plans. (Works issued by the Hakluyt society ... 2d ser., no. XLII)
Cunningham, Charles H. The institutional background of Spanish American history.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Feb.) 24-39.
A study of the social, cultural and political contributions which Spain made to Hispanic America
during the three centuries of her colonial administration.
Cunningham, Charles H. The residencia in the Spanish colonies. Southw. hist.
QUAR., XXI (Jan.) 253-278. [2227
The residencia was a judicial examination held, or an account given, of the official acts of an executive
or judicial functionary during the term of his incumbency. It is the purpose of this paper to illustrate
the general features of the residencia in the Spanish colonies by concrete cases drawn from the history
of the Philippines.
Espinosa, Aurelio M. The term "Latin America." Hispania, I (Sept.) 135-143.
[2228
Protests against the use of the term "Latin America" in place of "Spanish America/' as contrary
to historical truth .
Fried, Alfr. H. Pan-Amerika; Entwicklung, Umfang und Bedeutung der zwischen-
staatlichen Organisation in Amerika (1810-1916). Zurich, Orell Fussli. xx,
293 p. [2229
Gaillard, Gaston. Amerique latine et Europe occidentale: 1' Amerique latine et la
guerre. Paris, Berger-Levrault. 308 p. [2230
Garcilaso de la Vega, Inca. El reino de los Incas del Peru, arranged from the text
of "Los comentarios reales de los Incas" of the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, ed., with
vocabulary and notes, t)y James Bardin. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Allyn and Bacon,
xiv, 116, 66 p. plates, map. [2233
140
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 141
Hackett, Charles W. The delimitation of political jurisdictions in Spanish North
America to 1535. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Feb.) 40-68. [2232
Contents.— I. Espafiola and the founding of Castilla del Oro, 1492-1524. II. Florida, Amichel, and
Rio de las Palmas, 1512-1528. III. The founding of New Spain, 1519-1525. IV. Political readjustments
on the mainland, 1525-1535.
Hannay, David. Spanish trade with the Indies. Edinburgh rev., no. 466 (Oct.)
247-264. [2233
A review of several recent books.
Haling, Clarence Henry. The early Spanish colonial exchequer. Am. hist, rev.,
XXIII (July) 779-796. [2234
Haring, Clarence Henry. La real hacienda en los primeros tiempos del coloniaje
espanol. Inter-America (Spanish number) II, no. 4 (Nov.) 220-232. [2235
Reprinted, in translation, from the American historical review, v. XXIII, July 1918. See no, 2234,
above.
Haring, Clarence Henry. Trade and navigation between Spain and the Indies in the
time of the Hapsburgs. Cambridge, Harvard univ. press [etc.] xxviii, 371 p. map.
(Harvard economic studies ... v. XIX) [2236
"A description of the trade and navigation between Spain and the New World, of the commerce
which made possible the creation of this Spanish- American civilization." The period covered extends
from the time of Columbus to the end of the 17th century.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 229-301; Eng. hist, rev., XXXIII (Oct.) 539-542; Hispanic-
Am. hist, rev., I (Aug.) 324-326.
IspizHa, Segundo de. Los Vascos en America; historia de America, v. IV. Vene-
zuela, t. I. Descubrimiento. Madrid, Imp. de V. Rico, xvi, 382 p. [2237
V. I, 1914. V. II, 1915. V. Ill, 1917.
Ispizlia, Segundo de. Los Vascos en America; historia de America, v. V. Vene-
zuela, t. II. Lope de Aguirre. Madrid, Artes graficas Mateu. 428 p. [2238
Zunz, George F. El platino y su relacion con la America latina. Pan Am. union
BOL., XL VI (Feb.) 186-200. [2239
Laughlin, Harry H. The consummation of Pan American independence. So.
American, VI (July) 5-12. [2240
Laughlin, Harry H. Seven constructive Pan American statesmen. So. American,
VII (Dec.) 21. [2241
The statesmen referred to are Washington, Hamilton, Bolivar, Morayan, Rivadavia, Lincoln, and
Blaine.
Levillier, Roberto, ed. Audiencia de Charcas; correspondencia de presidentes y
oidores; documentos del Archive de Indias. t. I (1561-1579). Madrid, Fe. Ixiii,
715 p. (Coleccion de publicaciones historicas de la Biblioteca del Congreso
argentine) [2241a
Maas, Otto. Las ordenes religiosas de Espana y la colonizacion de America en la
segunda parte del siglo xviii. Barcelona, Giro. 217 p. [2242
"Extracto de las 'Estudios franciscanos,' anos de 1917 y 18."
McChesney, Mark. Latin America and the Monroe doctrine. Unpopular rev.,
IX (Jan.) 97-111. [2243
Manjarres, Ram6n de. En el Mar del Sur; expediciones espanolas de siglo xviii.
BoL. centro estudios am. Sevilla, aiio V, num. 21 (Dec.) 1-17. [2244
Cont. from no. 18 of the Boletin, February 1916.
Menendez Pidal, Ramon. The term "Latin America." Inter-America, I (Apr.)
195-196. [2245
The writer contends that the term is unsatisfactory.
Merriman, Roger Bigelow. The rise of the Spanish empire in the Old world and the
New. N. Y., Macmillan. 2 v. maps, tables. [2246
It is the writer's purpose to give, in 4 volumes, the history of Spain from the standpoint of the great
empire which sprang from her, down to the death of Philip II, under whose rule the Spanish empire
attained its greatest t erritorial extent.
V.I. The middle ages. v. II. The Catholic kings.
The Indies: v. II, p. 192-239.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Oct.) 83-85; Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 435-441.
O'Hara, John F. Readings in Latin American church history. Cath. hist, rev.,
Ill (Jan.) 488-492. [2247
Bibliographical guide made by the compiler in connection with his prospective volume to be entitled
"Readings in Latin American church history."
Deals with the periods of discovery and conquest.
142 AMERICAlsr HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. ]
I
Opisso, Alfredo. Historia de Espana y de las republicas latino-americanas. Con un |
Er,olo2:o de D. Miguel S. Oliver, y otro prologo, referente a la parte de America, de t
>. Federico Rahola. Barcelona, Casa editorial "Gall ach." 23 v. [2248
Ots Capdequi, Jose M. Cuestiones de historia del derecho, alcance que debe darse
al estudio hist6rico de nuestra legislaci6n de Indias, en un programa universitario
de historia general del derecho espanol. Madrid, Imp. clasica espaiiola. (Asocia- !
ci6n espaiiola para el progreso de las ciencias. Congreso de Sevilla. t. VIII. '
Seccion 6^. Ciencias hist6ricas, filos6fica8 y filol6gicas) [2249
Rev. in: Bol. centre estud. Am. Sevilla, ano VI, ni5in. 22 (Jan. 1919) 47-48.
Peck, Paul E. Latin- American history as a field of study for Mississippi valley ■
students. Miss. Valley hist, rev., extra number (Oct.) 292-300. [2250 '
Planas Suarez, Simon. Notas historicas y diplomaticas; Portugal y la independencia
americana. Lisboa, Centre tipogr^fico colonial. 127 p. [2250a
Contains documents.
Contents.— EI reconocimiento de las nuevas republicas; la gran Colombia. El ideal internacional
de Bolivar y el proyecto portugu^s de confederacion de la indej tndencia de las naciones.
Klonegro, Froilan de. Relaciones de las misiones de los padres capuchinos en las ,
antiguas provincias espanoles, hoy Republica de Venezuela, 1650-1817. Tomo I.
Documentos ineditos de los siglos xvii y xviii. Sevilla, Tip. La Exposicion.
175, 122 p. [2251 |
Robertson, William Spence. Francisco de Miranda y la revolucion de la America
espaiiola. Traduccion directa del ingles, con autorizacion del autor, por Diego
Mendoza. Bogotd, Imp. nacional. vi, 436 p. (Biblioteca de historia nacional,
V. XXI) [2252 i
Robertson, William Spence. The recognition of the Hispanic American nations by
the United States. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Aug.) 239-269. [2253
Robertson, William Spence. The recognition of the Spanish colonies by the mother- •
land. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Feb.) 70-91. [2254 1
Robertson, William Spence. Rise of the Spanish-American republics as told in the !
lives of their liberators. N. Y. and London, Appleton. xv, 380 p. ports., maps, j
plan. [2255 j
Deals with the transitional epoch from 1808 to 1831.
Contents.— The historical background. Francisco de Miranda. Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla. Agustin I
de Iturbide. Mariano Moreno. Joso de San Martin. Simon de Bolivar. Antonio Jose de Sucre. I
Conclusion. !
Kev. in: Hispanic-Am. hist, rev., II (Aug. 1919) 454-455.
Ryan, Edwin. Diocesan organization in Spanish colonies. Cath. hist, rev., IV j
(July) 170-185. [2256 |
Gives a summary of the relations that were maintained between the parish of St. Augustine and its
bishops to the year 1S19, when Florida's becoming a part of the American union severed the connection i
with the Spanish- American hierarchy.
Contents.— I. Episcopal visitations of the first period (1565-1783). II. Episcopal visitations of
the second period (1783-1819). III. Synodal and episcopal legislation specially affecting Plorida. \
Salaverria, Jose M. Los conquistadores; el origen heroico de America. Madrid, j
Editor: Caro Raggio. 220 p. [2257 '
Santibaflez, Enrique. Historia de la America latina, compendiada desde los tiempos [
mas remotos hasta nuestros dias. Nueva York, D. Appleton and co. 257 p. !
plates, ports., maps. - [2258 i
Saville, Marshall H. The discovery of Yucatan in 1517 by Francisco Hernandez de
Cordoba. Geog. rev., VI (Nov.) 436-448. [2259 i
Saville, Marshall H. Some unpublished letters of Pedro de la Gasca relating to the ;
conquest of Peru. Worcester, Mass., The Society. 24 p. facsims. [2260 j
Reprinted from the Proceedings of the American antiquarian society for Octofcer 1917. ■
The final episode in the conquest of Peru was the subjugation of the rebellion under the leadership i
of Gonzalo Pizarro by the Licentiate Pedro de la Gasca between the years 154(j and 1550.
Schurz, William Lytle. Mexico, Peru, and the Manila galleon. Hispanic Am.
hist, rev., I (Nov.) 389-402. [2261 :
Serrano y Sanz, Manuel. Origenes de la dominacion espaiiola en America; estudios i
historicos. Tomo primero. Madrid, Bailly-Bailliere. dcxvii p. facsims. (Nuevo
biblioteca de autores espanoles . . . XXV) [2262
Content^.— Los amigos y protectores aragoneses de Crist6bal Colon. Preliminares del gobierno de
Pedrarias Davila en Castilla del Ore. El gobierno de las Indias por frailes jeronimos, anos 1516 a 1518
Apdndices.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 143
Silva, J. Francisco V. Reparto de America espanola y pan-hispanismo. Intro-
diicci6n de Adolfo Bonilla y San Martin. Madrid, F. Beltran. xv, 511 p.
map. [2263
Contents.— Introduccidn. Prefacio. I, La desmeiiibraci6n del virreinato argentine. II. La
desnacionalizacWn en Arui^rica esjanola. III. L"a nacionalidad en America espafiola. IV. La his-
panizaci6n de los pueblos hisp^nicos.
The term "Latin America." Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 464-467. [2264
Includes a translation of a letter written by "the distinguished Hispanist, Mr. J. C. Cebrian," which
appeared in Hispania, for September, 1918, protesting against the use of the term "Latin America"
in place of "Spanish America."
Torres Lanzas, Pedro, and German Latorre. Archive general de Indias. Catalogo;
cuadro general de la documentacion. Sevilla, Centre oficial de estudios ameri-
canistas. 165 p. (Biblioteca colonial americana, t. I) [2265
Originally published in the Boletin del Centro de estudios americanistas de Sevilla.
Twitchell, R. E. Spanish colonization and the founding of ciudades and villas in
the time of Don Juan de Ofiate. In New Mexico bar association. Minutes of the
thirty-second annual session, Albuquerque, New Mexico, August 29, 30 and 31st,
1918. p. 27-43. [2266
A study of Spanish colonial administration in America during the 16th and 17th centuries.
Urrutia, Francisco Jose. Los Estados Unidos de America y las republicas hispano-
americanas de 1810 a 1830; paginas de historia diplomdtica. Madrid, Imp. de
Juan Pueyo [Editorial- America] 485 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho) [2267
Published at Bogota, Imp. nacional, in 1917.
Vallette, Marc F. Work of the Spanish friars on the American continent in the
sixteenth century. Am. Cath. quar. rev., XLIII (Jan.) 133-150. [2268
Deals with early Hispano-American education on the American continent, referring in particular
to the University of Mexico.
Villanueva, Carlos A. French diplomacy in Latin America. Inter-America, I
(Feb.) 157-168. [2269
Contents.— I. Napoleon. II. Louis XVIII. Charles X. IV. Louis Philippe.
Wagner, Emile R. L'Allemagne et I'Am^rique latine. Preface de M. Edmond
Perrier. Paris, F. Alcan. [6], xx, 322 p. map. (Bibliotheque France-
Amerique) [2270
Eeveals the imperialistic designs of Germany in southern South America, as observed by the writer
during a journey in South America nearly 20 years ago.
Mexico.
Bolton, Herbert E. General James Wilkinson as advisor to Emperor Iturbide.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (May) 163-180. [2271
Two letters of Wilkinson to Iturbide, in 1822, the first consisting of recommendations concerning
the improvement of commercial regulations, particularly tariffs; the second, describing conditions in
Texas and making suggestions for its improvement.
Butler, John Wesley. A history of the Methodist Episcopal church in Mexico;
personal reminiscences, present conditions, and future outlook. N. Y. and
Cincinnati, Methodist book concern. 156 p. plates, ports., map. [2272
Esquivel Obregon, Toribio. Influencia de Espaiia y los Estados Unidos sobre
Mexico (ensayos de sociologia hispano-americana). Madrid, Casa editorial Calleja.
396 p. [2273
In 5 parts. T)t. IV: Datos hist6ricos sobre la propriedad territorial de Mexico, pt. V: Interpre-
tacion econdmica de la historia de Mexico.
Garcia, Esteban. Cronica de la provincia agustiniana del Santisimo Nombre de
Jesds de Mexico. Libro V, . . . publicado por la provincia del Santisimo Nombre
de Jesus de Filipinas en su Archivo historico hispano-agustiniano. Madrid,
Impr. de G. Lopez del Horno. xxi, 404 p. [2274
Introduction, by Gregorio de Santiago Vela.
Narrative of the Augustlnians in Mexico during the period from 1602 to 1638.
A continuation of "Cronica de la orden de N. P. S. Augustin en las proaincias de la Nueua Espafla,
en quatro edades desde el afio de 1533 hasta el de 1592. Por el P. M. F. loan de Griialua," pub.i«'.bed in
1624.
Gay6n, Boberto. El general Blanquet, datos biogrdficos. Nueva York [De Laisne
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Hasbrouck, Louise Seymour. Mexico, from Cortes to Carranza. N. Y. and London,
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Haskell, Marion L. A review of Rubi's inspection of the frontier presidios of New
Spain, 1766-1768. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, pt. 1, 33-43. [2277
In 1766 Don Cayetano Maria Pignatelly y de Rubi, Marques de Rubi, was commissioned to make
an inspection of the presidios of the northern frontier of New Spain, and to make a report of this
investigation, with recommendations as to needed changes and reforms.
144 a:^ierican historical association.
Hernandez, Carlos. Mujeres celebres de Mexico. San Antonio, Tex., Lozano.
188 p. ports. [2278
Contents.— Antes de la conquista espafiola. Durante el dominio peninsular. Durante la guerra
independencia. En el periodo independiente.
Jones, C. K. Recent acquisitions of the Library of Congress mainly treating of
Mexico in revolution. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 480-481. [2279
Musser, John. The establishment of Maximilian's empire in Mexico. Menasha,
Wis., George Banta pub. co. [4], 100 p. [2280
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Pennsylvania, 1912.
Sanchez-Arjona, Eduardo. Relaci6n de las personas que pasaron a esta Nueva
Espaiia, y se hallaron en el descubrimiento, toma e conquista della, asi con el
Marques del Valle Don Hernando Cortes, como con el Capitan Pdnfilo de Narvaez,
como despues, y las mujeres e hijos de los conquistadores e pobladores desta
Nueva Espaiia e otras prouincias, que an dado peticiones e memorias a vuestra
sefioria ilustrisima sobre lo tocante al repartimiento general desta tierra, son las
siguientes, asi vezinos desta ciudad de Mexico, como de otras ciudades desta
Nueva Espaiia. Rev. archivos, XXII (July) 89-99. [2281
Schurz, William Lytle. Acapulco and the Manila galleon. Southw. hist, quar.,
XXII (July) 18-37. 2282
Acapulco on the coast of Mexico was the terminal port for the trade with the Philippines under the
Spanish colonial regime.
Torrente, Mariano. Historia de la independencia de Mexico. Madrid, Imp. de
Juan Pueyo [Editorial America] 352 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho) [2283
"Don Mariano Torrente . . . publico en 1829 su Historia de la revolucion hispano-americana. De
ella sacamos lo que se refiere a la revolucion de Mexico." — Note, p. 7.
Winter, Nevin O. Mexico and her people of to-day; an account of the customs,
characteristics, amusements, history and advancement of the Mexicans, and the
development and resources of their country. New rev. ed. Boston, The Page
CO. xvi, 526 p. plates, ports., maps. [2284
Central America.
General.
Munro, Dana Gardner. The five republics of Central America; their political and
economic development and their relations with the United States, by Dana G.
Munro, ed. by David Kinley. N. Y. [etc.] Oxford univ. press, xvi, 332 p. map. I
(Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of economics and history. I
[Publications]) [2285 |
Pub. also as thesis (ph. d.) University of Pennsylvania, 1917. I
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Aug. 1919) 507-508; Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 441-444. |
Turcios B,., Salvador. Jose Matias Delgado. Inter-America, I (Feb.) 186-192.
[2286
"A study of the Central American pioneer and leader in the struggle for independence . . ."
Honduras.
Hopkins, Frederick C. The Catholic church in British Honduras (1851-1918) Cath.
hist, rev., IV (Oct.) 304-314. [2287
Nicaragua.
Squier, E. George. Letters of E. George Squier to John M. Clayton, 1849-1850.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 426-434. [2288
Contributed, with introduction, by Mary Wilhelmine Williams.
Letters written from Nicaragua by the American charge d'alf aires to Central America, to the Secretary
of state. They relate mainly to difficulties wiih Great Britain over conflicting interests in Central
America.
Panama.
Lewis, Samuel. The cathedral of old Panama. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.)
447-453. [2289
Historical sketch of the cathedral, drawn from original sources.
WHITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 145
Panama Canal.
Basterra, Jose R. El canal de Panama desde el punto de vista politico interna-
cional. Rev. nueva, III (Oct. 1917) 305-321. [2290
West Indies.
Doughty, Katharine F. "The minister's jest." 1738-1740. Unit. ser. mag.,
n. s. LXVI (Jan.) 284-296. [2291
Concerned with the dissensions between Great Britain and Spain over the West Indian trade, cul-
minating in a declaration of war in 1739. Quotes from the newspapers of the day chronicles of the
exploits of privateers and prints a letter of 1740 describing the capture of a town onthe Spanish main
called Porto de la Plata.
British West Indies.
Daniels, Edward S. Extracts from various records of the early settlement of the
Jews in the Island of Barbados, W. I. Am. Jew. hist, soc. pub., XXVI, 250-256.
[2292
Documents in the public library, St. John's town, Antigua. Caribbeana, V (Jan.)
169-171. [2293
Copy of a "Humble address and petition" of members of the assembly and other inhabitants of
Antigua, Jan. 8, 1708/9, together with Queen Anne's reply.
Egerton, H. E. The system of British colonial administration of the crown colonies
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries compared with the system prevailing
in the nineteenth century. Royal hist. soc. trans., 4th ser., I, 190-217. [2294
Concerned with the government of the West Indies. The writer has, for the most part, confined
himself to the case of Jamaica ' ' because the history of that island best illustrates the tendency [of change
from representative to Crown colony government]."
List of wills recorded in Barbados down to the year 1800. Caribbeana, V (Jan. -Oct.)
177-184, 235-240, 269-275, 293-297. [2295
Cont. from V. V, 1917, p. 151.
Mackinnen, William. Letter from the Hon. W. Mackinnen of Antigua [Sept. 3,
1782] Caribbeana, V (Jan.) 200-201. [2296
Relates to the suspension of a member of the council of Antigua.
Pitman, F. W. The development of the British West Indies, 1700-1763. London,
Milford. 510 p. (Yale historical publications. Studies, IV) [2297
American edition— New Haven, Yale univ. press [etc.] 1917.
Spencer, Alfred, ed. Memoirs of William Hickey. Caribbeana, V (Oct.) 325-327.
[2298
Abstract of that part of the memoirs which describes his voyage to Jamaica, in 1775, and gives a
picture of the sociallife of the period.
Cuba.
Mitjans, Aurelio. Historia de la literatura cubana. Prologo de Rafael Montoro.
Madrid, Editorial America. 389 p. (Biblioteca Andres Bello) |2299
First edition, Havana, 1890, has title: Estudio sobre el movimiento cientifico y literario de Cuba.
Wright, Irene A. Santiago de Cuba and its district (1607-1640) Villaverde. Sanchez
de Moya. Garcia Nabia. Velasco. Fonseca Betancur. Azevedo. Amezqueta
Quijano. Roca de Borja. Written from documents in the Archive of the Indies,
at Seville, Spain. Madrid, Estab. tip. de F. Pena Cruz. 207 p. [2300
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July 1919) 742-743; Hispanic-Am. hist, rev., II (Feb. 1918) 76-79.
Curasao.
Pool, D. de Sola. "Shemah Israel," a magazine of the reform movement in Curasao,
1864-1865. Am. Jew. hist. soc. pub., XXVI, 239-241. [2301
French West Indies.
Barrey, Philippe. Les origines de la colonisation aux Antilles; la Compagnie des
Indes occidentales. Le Havre, H. Micaux. 224 p. (Societe havraise d' etudes
diverses) [2301a
Barrey, Philippe. Origines de la colonisation frangaise aux Antilles (a la memoire
venerea de Mgr Vesque). Bayeux, Typ. Colas. 31 p. [2301b
146 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Girault, Arthur. The colonial tariff policy of France, by Arthur Girault. Edited by |
Charles Gide. Oxford, Clarendon press; London [etc.] Humphrey Milford, 1916. j
viii, 305 p. (Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of economics I
and history) [2302 \
A studj' of the evolution of the colonial tarifE policy of France. i
Chap. I. The ancient regime: exclusion (p. 11-41) deals with the period anterior to 1789, which is the I
stage of privileged companies of colonization and of exclusion. The commercial regime in the Antilles \
and other colonies is considered.
Hayem, Julien, ed. Memoires et documents pour servir a I'histoire du commerce et f
de rindustrie en France. Paris, Hachette, 1917. xiii, 277 p. [2302a [
Consists of three "memoires" by the same author, M. Philippe Barrey. In the second one, "Le Havre *
transatlantique de 1571 a 1610, " p. 47-209, the writer sliows that there was a considerable transatlantic
navigation during the period from 1571 to 1610. The last "memoire, " p. 211-276, is entitled "Havre et |
la navigation aux Antilles sous I'ancien regime; la question coloniale en 1789-1791." It treats of the j
colonial commerce of Havre and includes a discussion of the revolt of San Domingo.
Guadeloupe. !
Belmont, Leon. Louis Mathieu, surnomme Louisy, premier representant noir de la '
Guadeloupe a I'Assemblee coiistituante de 1848. Bulletin mensuel pour servir I
A l'histoire de la Martinique, Ille ann. (Jan. 1917) 1-32. (2302b \
!
Haiti. ]
Adher, J. Les colons refugies d'Amerique pendant la Revolution. Soc. geog. |
Toulouse bul., XXXIVe ann., no. 2, 1915, 152-168. [2303. |
A study of the fate of the refugees from Santo Domingo at Toulouse in 1794-1795, as seen from the \
evidence given in documents in the archives of the Department of Haute-Garonne.
Binsse, Henry. Pierre Toussaint, a Catholic Uncle Tom. U. S. Cath. hist, rec, |
XII (June) 90-101 . [2304
A negro who died at New York, June 30, 1853. In his youth he was a slave belonging to the Berard
family of Haiti and New York.
The centenary of the death of Petion. Pan Am. union bul., XV (May) 570-573.
[2305
Alexander Petion, one of the founders of the independence of Haiti, and one of its presidents.
Condon, Peter. The church in the island of San Domingo. U. S. Cath. hist, rec,
XII (June) 7-28. [2306
Dorsainvil, J. B. Petite histoire d'Haiti h I'usage des ecoles primaires. Cours
elementaire. 9® Edition. Vannes, Lafolye freres, 1917. 79 p. [2307
Schoenrich, Otto. Santo Domingo; a country with a future. N. Y., Macmillan.
xiv, 418 p. illus., plates, ports., map. [2308
The first six chapters, p. 1-96, are devoted to the history of the country.
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 444-446.
Porto Rico.
Doyle, Henry Grattan. Borinqu^n; early days of the church in Porto Rico. Cath.
HIST. REV., IV (Oct.) 345-347. [2309
"The Indian name of the island was Borinqu^n, and the aborigines, who soon disappeared under
the Spanish system of colonization, were called by the-Spaniards 'Borinquenos.' "
Paniagua Oiler, Angel. Episcopology of Porto Rico; a catalogue of the bishops who
have occupied this see, including bishops-elect who did not take possession. Cath.
hist. REV., IV (Oct.) 348-364. [2310
Compiled by Angel Paniagus Oiler for the volume "Sinodo dibcesano del obispado de Puerto
Rico," published in Porto Rico, 1917. The translation is by Henry Grattan Doyle.
Virgin Islands.
Booy, Theodoor de, and JohnT. Faris. The Virgin Islands, our new possessions, and
the British Islands. Phila. and London, Lippincott. 292 p. illus., plates, maps.
[2311
"The authors of this volume have tried to put into concise form the facts concerning the storv, the
presentconditionsand possibilities of the Virgin Islands of the United States for the tourist and the
business man, as well as those who must be content ... to make their journeys to the West Indies in
imagination." c/. Pref.
Rev. in: Nation, CVll (July 20) 73.
[Monro, J. D.] The Virgin Islands of the United States. Scott, geog. mag., XXXIV
(Dec.) 461-464. [2312
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 147
Zabriskie, Luther K. The Virgin Islands of the United States of America; historical
and descriptive, commercial and industrial facts, figures, and resources. N. Y. and
London, Putnam, xvii, 339p. plates, ports., maps, facsim. [2313
Rev. in: Hispanic-Am. hist, rev., I (May) 190-191.
South America.
General.
Aguilar, Juan Maria. Aportaciones a la biografla del precursor de la independencia
sud-americana, D. Francisco de Miranda. Bol. centro estud. Am. Se villa, aiio V,
num. 19 (Oct.) 3-25; num. 20 (Nov.) 1-26. [2314
"Trabajo de investigacidn histdrica a base de documentos inMitos existentes en el Archive general
de Indias de Sevilla."
Contents.— Labor de Miranda en Inglaterra (1798-1805).
Arias, Harmodio. The international policy of Bolivar. Inter-America, II, no. 1
(Oct.) 7-13. [2315
Calle, Manuel J. Leyendas del tiempo heroico; episodios de la guerra de la inde-
pendencia americana. Madrid, Editorial-America. 306 p. (Biblioteca de la
juventud hispano-americana. [X ]) 2315a
First edition. Quito (?) 1905.
Desdevises du Dezert, G. L<es missions des Mojos et des Chiquitos de 1767 a 1808.
Rev. hispanique, XLIII (Aug.) 365-430. [2316
Account of the missions of the Society of Jesus to the Mojos and the Chiquitos, the expulsion of the
Jesuits in 1767, and of the new government set up by the Council of the Indies for the region occupied
by these Indians in Peru and Bolivia.
Destruge, Camilo. The beginning of steam navigation in South America. Inter-
America, I (Apr.) 214-220. [2317
A history of the first steamship built in South America, and of the first European steamship company
operating in South American waters.
Ispiztia, Segundo de. Bibliografia historica sudamericana; ensayo. Bilbao [The
compiler] 1915. 19 p. 2317a
Larrazabal, Felipe. Vida del libertador Simon Bolivar. Edici6n modernizada. Con
prologo y notas de R. Blanco-Fombona. Tomo I. Madrid, Imp. de Juan Pueyo.
Ixv, 486 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho) [2318
Means, Philip Ainsworth. Race and society in the Andean countries. Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 415-425. [2319
'This study is of primary interest from the anthropological side, but it is given placehereas being of
value to historians and general students of Hispanic America." — Ed.
Ottsen, Hendrik. Journael van de reis naar Zuid-Amerika (1598-1601) door Hendrik
Ottsen; met inleiding en bijlagen uitgegeven door J. W. Ijzerman. 's-GravenhagQ,
M. Nijhoff. xxiv, cxlv, 253 p. plates, maps, facsim. (Werken uitgegeven door de
Linschoten-vereeniging, XVI) [2320
Originally pub. at Amsterdam by C. Claesz, 1603.
Parra Perez, C. Quelques pages sur Bolivar. Paris, Collection du Groupement
[1918?] 50 p. [2320a
At head of title: Groupement des universities et grandes 6coles de France pour les relations avec
I'Amerique latin e ...
Contents.— Bolivar et ses amis de Fetranger. Les idees philosophiques et religieuses de Bolivar.
BolJvar et la paix universelle.
Pastells, Pablo. Historia de la Compaiiia de Jesus en la provincia del Paraguay
(Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, Peru, Bolivia y Brasil), segun los documentos
originales del Archivo general de Indias. Tomo III. Madrid, Imp. de la viuda de
Prudencio Perez. 544 p. [2321
Shepherd, William R. Bolivar and the United States. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I
(Aug.) 270-298. [2322
Zaldumbide, Gonzalo. Jose Enrique Rodo. Inter-America, II, no. 1 (Oct.) 44-54.
[2323
Argentine Republic.
Levillier, Roberto, ed. Correspondencia de la ciudad de Buenos Ayres con los reyes
de Espaiia; documentos del Archivo de Indias. Cartas del cabildo; memoriales
presentados en la Corte por las procuradores, apoderados y enviados especiales de la
ciudad. t. II-III. Madrid. 2 v. (Coleccion de publicaciones historical de la
Biblioteca del Congreso argentino) [2324
t. T, published at Buenos Aires in 1915.
Contents.— t. II: 1615-1635. t. Ill: 1660-1700.
148 AMERICAIT HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Melida, Jose B,am6n. Los numismaticos argentinos. Real acad. hist, bol., LXXIII
(Aug.) 203-205. [2325
Otero, Jose Pacifico. Les litterateurs argentins. Revue, CXXII (Feb.) 377-389.
[2326
Otero, Jose Pacifico. Mitre dans I'histoire et dans la litterature argentine. Revue,
CXXVII (Oct.) 24-40. [2327
A study of Bartolome Mitre.
Otero, Jose Pacifico. Sarmiento. Inter-America, I (June) 308-315. [2328
Sketch of the Argentine author, Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, with an analysis of some of his
works.
Rodriguez del Bento, A. Fray Fernando Trejo, fundador de la Universidad de
Cordoba (Argentina). Madrid. 16 p. [2329
Sibelius, Marco. The beginnings of Argentine painting. Inter-America, II, no. 2
(Dec.) 82-87. [2330
Vedia y Mitre, Mariano de. Centenary of Jose Marmol, December 2, 1817 — Decem-
ber 2, 1917. Inter-America, I, no. 3 (Feb.) 131-134. [2331
"A glimpse at a personality and a period of intense interest in the literary development and the
political history of Argentina, in the brief, incisive style of the journalist." — The editor.
Vedia y Mitre, Mariano de. Mariano Moreno, Inter- America, I (Aug.) 355-356.
• [2332
One of the leaders in the movement for Argentine independence.
Weill, Georges. Un educateur frangais en Argentine. Rev. universitaire, XXVII
(Jan.) 24-33. [2333
Life and work of Amedee Jacques (1813-1865) at one time rector of the National college at Buenos
Aires.
Bolivia.
Crampton, Ethel M., and Laura F. Ullrick. Administration of Jose Ballivian in
Bolivia. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (Nov.) 403-414. [2334
Deals with the period from 1841 to 1847.
Vicuna Mackenna, Benjamin. El Washington del Sur; cuadros de la vida del
mariscal Antonio Jose de Sucre. Introduccion de Victor L. Vivar. Madrid,
Editorial-America. 284 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud hispano-americana.
[IX]) [2335
1st ed., Santiago de Chile, 1893.
Brazil.
Anthouard, haron A. d'. La politique fran^aise au Bresil. Corresp., n. s.
CCXXXVI (July 25) 193-228. [2336
I. Les resultats de la decade 1904-1914. II. Les reformes necessaires.
Arni, W. Das Eindringen des niederlaendischen Elementes in die Kolonisation
Brasiliens unter spezieiler Beleuchtung der niederlaendischen Kolonisation in
Guyana (1600-1674). Biel, Moser. viii, 124 p. [2337
Chapman, Charles E. Palmares: the negro Numantia. Jour, negro hist., Ill
(Jan.) 29-32. [2338
History of Palmares, the negro village in the forests of Brazil, which was destroyed by the Portuguese
in 109G.
Delgado de Carvalho, C. The geography of Brazil in relation to its political and
economic development. Scottish geog. mag., XXIV (Feb.) 41-55. [2339
Elliott, L. E. A page of Brazilian history; the campaign of Canudos. Pan-American
MAG., XXVII (June) 61-74. [2340
Expedition against the religious fanatic Antonio Conselheiro and his followers at Canudos in 1897.
Manning, William R. An early diplomatic controversy between the United States
and Brazil. Am. jour, internat. law, XII (Apr.) 291-311; and Hispanic Am.
hist, rev., I (May) 123-145. [2341
Account of the difficulties with the Brazilian government in which the American charge d'affaires
at Rio de Janeiro, Condy Raguet, became involved by his acrimonious remonstrances against the
interference with American commerce wrought by the Brazilian blockade of Argentine ports during
the war of 1825-1828.
WRITINGS OIT AMERICAN HISTORY, 1918. 149
Martin, Percy Alvin. The influence of the United States on the opening of the
Amazon to the world's commerce. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., I (May) 146-162.
[2342
It is the purpose of this paper to point out briefly the influence of the United States in inducing the
Imperial government of Brazil to abandon its policy of seclusion and unlock the door of the Amazon
to the world's commerce, with the subsequent reaction on Brazilian politics, which led to this con-
summation,
Oliveira Lima, Manuel de. Formacion historica de la nacionalidad brasileiia.
Traduccion y prologo de Carlos Pereyra. Madrid, Editorial- America. 278 p.
(Biblioteca Ayacucho . . . [XXXV]) [2343
A series of lectures, delivered at the Sorbonne, in 1911; originally published in French, Paris, 1911.
Renaut, F. P. L' emancipation du Bresil (1821-1823). Rev. hist, dipl., XXXIIe
ann., no. 4, 541-599. [2344
Renaut, F. P. Le gouvernement portugais a Rio-de-Janeiro (1808-1821). Rev,
HIST. DIPL., XXXIIe ann., no. 3, 371-419. [2345
Sommer, Federico. Die Deutschen in Sao Paulo und in den brasilianischen
Mittelstaaten. Ger. Am. ann., n. s. XVI (Sept.) 143-175. [2346
Vascolcellos, R. Smith de. Archive nobiliarchico Brasileiro. Lausanne, Imp. de la
Concorde. 622 p, plates. [2347
Chile.
Benavente, J. Etude critique de la constitution de la Republique de Chili. Paris,
L. Tenin, 1916. 192 p. [2348
At head of title: University de Paris. Faculte de droit.
Doctoral dissertation.
Centenario de la batalla de Maipo, Pan Am, union bol., XLVI (June) 701-708.
[2349
The centenary of the battle of Maipo. Pan Am, union bul., XV (May) 561-569. [2350
Eichelbaum, Samuel. The oldest daily of South America. Inter-America, II, no.
1 (Oct.) 77-78. [2351
"A sketch of the history of El Mercuric, which has played so important a part in the political and
intellectual life of Chile and of the neighboring countries of South America."
A great South American newspaper; the Mercurio of Chile, Pan-American mag.,
XXVII (June) 81-85. [2352
Translated and condensed from "La vida de un gran diario," in El Pacifico, Chile, of March 1918.
Medina, J. T. Dos obras de viajeros Norte-Americanos traducidas al castellano.
Hispanic Am, hist, rev., I (Feb.) 106-114. [2353
Review of two early books relating to Chile, published in the United States. They are— "Letters
written during a residence of three years in Chili ... By Samuel B. Johnston. Erie, Pa., R. I. Custis,
1816," and "Journal of a residence in Chili. By a young American, detained in the country, during
the revolutionary scenes of 1817-18-19. [By Isaac F, Coffin) Boston, Wells and Lilly, 1823."
Mitre, Bartolome. Maipii, 1818-1918. Inter-America, I (Aug.) 363-379. [2354
The battle of Maipii, Apr. 5, 181S.
O'Dwyer, George F. Don Bernardo O'Higgins — a centenary. Am. Irish hist.
soc. JOUR., XVII, 224-227. [2355
Vicuna Mackenna, Benjamin. El almirante Don Manuel Blanco Encalada. Corre-
spondencia de Blanco Encalada y otros chilenos eminentes con el Libertador.
Madrid, Editorial- America. 222 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud Mspano-americana.
[XII]) [2356
The "correspondencia" does not include letters written by Bolivar.
Colombia.
G6mez Restrepo, Antonio. La literatura colombiana. Rev. hispanique, XLIII
(June) 79-204. [2357
Libre azul de Colombia. Blue book of Colombia. Bosquejos biograficos de los per-
sonajes mas eminentes. Biographical sketches of the most prominent personages.-
Historia condensada de la republica. Abridged history of the republic. Articulos
especiales sobre el comercio, agricultura y riqueza mineral, basados en las esta-
disticas oficiales. Special articles . relative to commerce, agriculture, and mineral
wealth, based on official statistics. [N. Y., Printed by the J. J. Little and Ives co.]
[8], 725 p. illus., ports., music, map. [2357a
Dedication signed: Jorge Posada Callejas.
Includes advertising matter.
150 AMEEICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Montalvo, Francisco, and Juan Samano. Los ultimos virreyes de Nueva Granada;
relacion de mando del virrey don Francisco Montalvo, y noticias del virrey Samano
sobre la perdida del reino (1803-1819). Madrid, Editorial-America. 226 p. (Biblio-
teca de la juventud hispano-americana) [2358
Montalvo's report is dated January 30, 1818; that of Samano is dated August 12, 1819.
Posada, Eduardo. Apostillas a la historia colombiana. Madrid, Editorial-America.
261 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud hispano-americana. [VIII]) [2359
Dutch Guiana.
Versterre, Peter. Een brief van den waarn. gouverneur Versterre van Suriname,
aan de Stat en van Zeeland, tijdens den oorlog van 1672/74 geschreven. Medegedeeld,
door F. E. Baron Mulert. Navorscher, LXVII, 332-335. [2360
Ecuador.
Saville, Marshall Howard. A letter of Pedro de Alvarado relating to his expedition
to Ecuador. N. Y., Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation, 1917.
6 p. facsim. (Contributions from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye,
foundation, v. V, no. 1) [2360a
Peru.
Alfau, Jesusa. A brief account of the conquest of Peru. So. American, VI (Aug.)
19-21. [2361
Juan, Jorge, and Antonio de XJlloa. Noticias secretas de America, sobre el estado
naval, militar, y politico de los reynos del Peru y provincias de Quito, costas de
Nueva Granada y Ohila . . . (Siglo xviii). Madrid, Editorial America [Imp. de
Juan Pueyo] 2 v. (Biblioteca Ayacucho) [2362
Originally pub. at London, in 1826.
Means, P. A. Inca institutions: yesterday and to-day. Pan Am. union bul.,
XLVII (Nov.) 663-679. [2363
Miller, John. Memorias del general Miller, al servicio de la Republica del Peru.
Escritas en ingles por Mr. John Miller, y tr. al castellano por el general Torrijos.
Madrid, Editorial-America [1918?] 2 v. (Biblioteca Ayacucho . . . [XXVI-
XXVII]) [2364
First edition of this translation published London, 1829.
Venezuela.
Aguado, Pedro de. Historia de Venezuela, por fray Pedro de Aguado; con prologo,
notas y apendices por Jeronimo Becker, t. I. Madrid, Est. tip. de J. Rates.
812 p. " [2365
At head of title: Publicaciones de la Real academia de la historia.
Half title: Segimda parte de la istoria que conpuso fray Pedro de Aguado ... En el cual se trata el
descubrimiento y fundacion de la gouernacion y provincia de Uenencuela, con el descubrimiento de
laisla Trenidad, y fundazion de la ciudad de Cartagena . . .
The first part of Aguado's historical work, the original ms. of which has title "Primera parte de la
recopilacion historial resolutoria de Santa Marta y Nuebo Reyno de Granada de la ludias ... v. as
published at Bogota, 1906, with title "Recopilacion historial; escrita en el siglo xvi," and at Madrid,
1916-17, with title "Historia de Santa Marta y Nuevo Reino de Granada."
The second part ends with the death of Lope de Aguirre in 1561.
Gonzalez, Juan Vicente. Biografia del general Jose Felix Ribas, primer teniente
de Bolivar en 1813 y 1814 (epoca de la guerra 4 muerte). Madrid, Editorial-
America. 302 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho ... [XXIV]) [2366
Bolivar en Casacoima: p. 299-302.
Eionegro, Froilan de, ed. Relaciones de las misiones de los PP. Capuchinos en
las antiguas provincias espaholas hoy Republica de Venezuela, 1650-1817 . . .
Documentos ineditos. Sevilla, Tip. La Exposicion. 2 v. plate. [2367
PACIFIC ISLANDS.
MacGregor, William. The settlement of the Pacific. Scottish geog. mag., XXIV
(May) 161-177. [2368
The United States in the Pacific: p. 169-171.
Hawaiian Islands.
Boardof commissioners of public archives. Archives of Hawaii. Honolulu. [Board
of commissioners of public archives] 301 p. (Its Publication no. 1) [2368a
Contents. — Roster legislatures of Hawaii, 1841-1918. Constitutions of monarchy and republic,
speeches of sovereigns and president. Comp. from the official records by R. C. Lydecker.
Brigham, William T. Additional notes on Hawaiian feather work; second supple-
ment. Honolulu, H. I., Bishop museum press. 69 p. plates. (Memoirs of
the Bernice Pauahi Bishop museum of Polynesian ethnology and natural history,
V. VII, no. 1) • [2369
MacCaughey, Vaughan. The one hundred most important books and files relating
to the Hawaiian Islands. Bul. of bibliog., X (Oct.) 71-73. [2370
Philippine Islands.
Compania general de tabacos de Filipinas. Coleccion general de documentos rela-
tives a las Islas Filipinas existentes en el Archive de Indias de Sevilla. Publicada
por la Compania general de tabacos de Filipinas. Tomo I. (1493-1518). Barce-
lona, Imp. de viuda de Luis Tasso. xix, 365 p. [2371
Contains 47 documents mostly relating to the demarcation disputes of Spain and Portugal and to
the voyage of Magellan .
Rev. in: Hispanic- Am. hist, rev., II (Nov. 1919) 628-631.
Cunningham, Charles H. The ecclesiastical influence in the Philippines (1565-
1850). Am. jour, theol., XXII (Apr.) 161-186. [2372
Cunningham, Charles H. The Inquisition in the Philippines: the Salcedo affair.
Cath. hist, rev., Ill (Jan.) 417-445. [2373
"Although it may be said that the Inquisition contributed to the strengthening of the ecclesiastical
power as opposed to the civil, it sometimes created dissensions within the Church, and especially between
and even within the religious orders, and this considerably impaired the otherwise solid front of eccle-
siastical unity. It is to these phases of the Inquisition's activities in the most isolated of Spain's col-
onies that this inquiry is directed."
Cunningham, Charles H. The residencia in the Spanish colonies. Southw. hist,
QUAR., XXI (Jan.) 253-278. [2374
The residencia was a judicial examination held, or an account given of the official acts of an executive
or judicial functionary during the term of his incumbency. It is the purpose of this paper to illustrate
the general features of the residencia in Spanish colonies by concrete cases drawn from the history of
the Philippines.
Kroeber, Alfred Louis. The history of Philippine civilization as reflected in religious
nomenclature. N. Y., Pub. by order of the Trustees [of the American museum of
natural history] 35-67 p. (Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XIX, pt. 2)
[2375
P'rez, Lorenzo. Relacion del P. Antonio de Santo Domingo; su viaje a las islas de
Nicobar y su regreso a las islas filipinas, Manila, 21 de junio de 1691. Archiv.
FRANCisc. HIST., ann. XI (Jan.) 80-96. [2376
Consists mainly of a copy of the "Relacion," the original of which is found in the archives of Pastrana,
Spain.
Robertson, James Alexander. The Aglipay schism in the Philippine Islands.
Cath. hist, rev., IV (Oct.) 315-344. [2377
Robertson, James Alexander. Catholicism in the Philippine Islands. Oath. hist.
REV., Ill (Jan.) 375-391. [2378
Schurz, William Lytle. The Philippine situado. Hispanic-Am. hist, rev., I
(Nov.) 461-464. [2379
"The bulk of the duties collected at Acapulco on the cargoes of the Manila galleons was ordinarily
remitted to Manila as the annual situado." This subsidy was used for the expenses of the Philippine
government.
151
1
I
INDEX.
Abbot, W. J., 1591.
Abbott, C. C, 119.
Lyman, 2002.
W. C, 1339.
Aberjona river, Mass., 892.
Abolition, 589; in Kentucky, prior to 1850, 592.
Aboriginal America, antiquities, 119-161; Indians;
162-208; Mexico, Central America, West Indies,
and South America, 209-228.
Aborigines, origin of, 131. See also Indians, and
Man, prehistoric.
Absolutism, 469. See also Autocracy, and Des-
potism.
Acadia, 2149; France loses, 2123; history of, 2083,
2091, 2092, 2105.
Acadians, deportation of, 2105a, 2123; nationalhymn
of, 2151.
Acapulco, Mex., 2282.
Achagua Indians, 254.
Actors, prior to 1870, 1989.
Adams, E.D., 596, 1113a.
G. B.,46.
Henry, 1180.
J. T., 1007.
J. W., 1861.
John, 541, 1185.
John Quincy, 551a, 551b.
Ecv. John Quincy, 1874,
• Romanzo, 976.
Adams, Mass.^ 1523.
Addison, A. C, 356.
"Adelantado" of Florida, 241.
Adhemar, Antoine, 2120.
Jean Baptiste, 2120.
Adher, J., 2303.
Admiralty of Quebec under the French regime,
2115.
Aery, W. A., 1947a.
Africa, American explorers of, 332.
African slave trade, 595.
Agent, colonial, commissions of Georgia to Benja-
min Franklin to act as, 449; for the colony of
Connecticut in London, 450; of the province of
Massachusetts Bay, 1746-1765, 371.
Ages of Civil war soldiers, 628.
Aglipay schism, 2377.
Agricultural colony in Canada, first, 2094.
Agricultural company, Puget's Sound, 1139.
Agricultural periodical, an early, 27.
Agriculture, 1730-1733; in Virginia, bibliography of,
27, 28; resources of southern Illinois, 812. See
also Beet sugar industry, and Grain industry.
Aguado, Pedro de, 2365.
Aguilar>J. M.,2314.
Aguirre, Lope de, 2238.
Agurto, Pedro de, 13.
Ahern, George, 2159,
Aiken genealogy, 1386.
Ailleboust family, 2180.
Aillebout family, 2167.
Aitken, R. T., 209.
Alabama, local history, 716.
Alaska, 717-719; purchase of, 687, 1629; voyage o.
Franciscan missionary to, in 1779, 271.
Albany, N. Y., 392, 1020, 1021.
Albany co., N. Y., 392.
Albeniz de la Cerrada, Diego, 254.
Alberdi,J. B., 1668.
Alberta, Can., 2213.
Alden, John, 360a.
Alden genealogy, 1390-1392.
Aldrich, W. T., 1951.
Alexander I, of Russia, 1629.
Alfau, Jesusa, 2361. '
Algebra, early colonial, 1905.
Algerines, tribute to, 1796, 541.
Algonquian Indians, 165a, 191, 200.
Alien suffrage in Wisconsin, 1725. See also Foreign
element.
Aliens, enlistment of, 29.
Allaben, Frank, 1433, 1470.
Allatoona, Ga., battle of, 1864, 686.
Alleghany Evangelical Lutheran synod of Penn-
sylvania, 1851.
Allegheny City, Pa., 1058.
Allegiance to the Constitution, 1676.
Allen, A. V. G., 1176.
Clifton, 891.
H. I., 1814.
James, 274.
K. G., 1814.
Thomas, 1720.
W. C, 1031.
W. H.,1186.
Allen genealogy, 1393.
Allied expedition to China in 1900, 1604.
Ailing, Brudden, 276.
Allouez, C. J., 1878.
Altamira, Rafael, 2224.
Altemont lodge no. 26, 1781.
Alter, David, 1187.
Altolaguirre y Duvale, Angel de, 229, 230.
Alton, 111., 792.
Alvarado, Pedro de, 259a.
Alvarado, Mex., 1600.
Alvarez, Alejandro, 1663.
Alvord, C. W., 46a, 809.
Alworthy, Robert, 426.
Amazon river, 1638.
Ambler, C. H., 559, 1234.
153
154
INDEX.
"America," the name, 231.
America in general, 119-274.
American antiquarian society, 1779.
American fur companj'-, 712, 1098.
American geographical society of New York, bulle-
tin of, 31.
American historical association, 52; index to Papers
and Annual reports of, 1884-1914, 32; meeting at
Philadelphia, Dec. 1917, 47.
American historical society, 1167.
"American Horse," Indian chief, 174.
"American journal of science,'/ 2033.
American museum of natural historj'. New York,
1215.
American philosophical society, 1776.
American rule in Mexico, 682.
American statistical association, 1727.
Americana, early, in the New York historical so-
ciety, 19.
Americanism, education in, 1-14; influence of Euro-
pean radicalism on, in the 18th century, 546; of
William Dean Howells, 2013; true type of, 1297,
what it is, 327. See also Civilization, Institu-
tions, and National characteristics and ideals.
Ames, PI. v., 51, 560.
■ Nathaniel, 1188.
Amezago. Sec Unzaga y Amezago.
Amezqueta Quijano, Juan de, 2300.
Amichei, province of , settlement, 15S1, 242.
d'Amours family, 2120.
Anatomical lectures in colonial times, 370.
Anatomy, Indian. See Hands and feet.
Andara,J.L., 1663a.
Anderson, C. P., 781.
Robert, 561.
W. S., 950.
Andover, Mass., 917.
Andrews, A. I., 48.
B. F., 1898.
C. L., 717, 718.
• C. M., 363, 364, 471.
F. D., 1395.
H. L., 1393a.
J. B., 1768.
M. P., 49, 325, 59§, 1613.
Andrews genealogy, 1393a.
TAnge-Gardien, Que., 2088,
Angell, J. B., 1946.
Angers, David d', 1351.
Angers, Quo. See Ange-Gardien.
Anglo-American democracy, 325.
Anglo-American literary relationships, 1976.
Anglo-American peace, 1613.
Anglo-American relations, 96, 32.5, 1621, 1633, 1634;
disagreements settled by discussion and arbitra-
tion, 1613; during the Civil war, 665, 164y; irom
colonial days, 1614. See also England, American
attitude toward, and Great Britain, relations
with, 1861-1865.
Anglo-Celtic ideals, 49.
Anglo-Saxon foundations of liberty, 331.
Anneke, M. F. G., 1189.
Anniversaries, American, 295; Pennsylvania, 1073.
See also Centenary, and Historical celebrations.
"Annual magazine subject-index, 1917," 1.
Ansa, Juan Bautista de, 1006.
Anthouard, A. d', 2220, 233a.
Anthropology, early American, 164; history and
present status, 2035; South American, 2319.
Anti-Catholie demonstration, in 1834, 1823.
Antietam, battle of, 1862, 649.
Antigua, West Indies, 2293; suspension of a mem-
ber of the Council in 1782, 2296.
Antilles, French colonization in, 2301a, 2301b;
French commerce with, to 1791, 2302.
Anti-Masonic party, 1688.
Antiqmties, 119-161; of Kansas, 208; of Mexico,
Central America, West Indies, and South Amer-
ica, 209-228.
Antislavery movement in Michigan, 1696.
Anza, J. B. de, 1006.
Apostle Islands, Lake Superior, 1162.
Appomattox, Va., 426; retreat from Petersburg to,
1864-1865, 654.
Aqueduct, Catskill, 1014.
Aquidncck island, founding of the colony on, 384.
Araucana, the first American poem, 222.
Arawak Indians, 213; culture of, 219.
Arbitration, international, 1613; Anglo-American
disagreements settled by, 325; provided for by
the treaty of Ghent, 551b.
Arce, E. J., 231.
Archaeology, American, manual of, 119a; Cana-
dian, 2075; Florida, 158; Kansas, 208; New Jer-
sey, 150a; of the Polar Eskimo, 160; of the Sus-
quehanna, 157; of the Wiyot territory, 140; of
Trinidad, 120; Wisconsin, 123, 129, 151. See also
Antiquities.
Archambault, A. S., 2160.
Archer, William, 1366.
Archery, Yahi, 194.
Architecture, early American, 1951, 1952, 1963;
early New York state, 1960; of New Mexico mis-
sions, 1961; of old New York, 1019.
Archives, administration of, 34; French and Span-
ish, concerning the early history of Louisiana,
436; Massachusetts, 368; of British Columbia,
2218-2219; of Canada, 2124a; of Hawaii, 2368a;
of Ontario, 2195; of the French regime in Canada,
2098; of the state of New Jersey, 1556; printed
material on the archives question, 34; relating to
the Philippine Islands, U9S-1518, 237; Vermont
state papers, 1123. See also Archivo general de
Indias.
Archives and manuscript collections, 34-45.
'Archives of Maryland," 417.
Archivo general de Indias, Seville, 35, 36; docu-
ments of, 43; documents relating to the Philip-
pines, 237.
Arctic explorations, 268. See also Polar explora-
tions.
Argenson, Pierre de Vozcr, vkomtt d', 2093.
Argentine Republic, 2324-2333; archaeology of,
211-212a.
Argillite culture, Trenton, 155.
"Argus," brig, 552.
Arias, Harmodio, 2315.
Arikara Indians, 971.
Aristocracy in Massachusetts and Virginia, 926;
in the politics of New York, 1723.
Arizona, prehistoric rums m, 124, 125, 153, 154;
public school education in, 1924.
Arkansas, 720; De Soto's route in, 252;
INDEX.
155
'Arkansas," Confederate ram, 608.
Aries, Henri d', 2105, 2105a.
Arlington cemetery, Revolutionary patriots in-
terred in, 524.
Armament, limitation of, on the Great Lakes.
See Rush-Bagot agreement.
Armbruster, E. L., 162, 1008.
Armed neutrality of 1794, 1616.
Armorial of French Canada, 2175.
Armoury, American, 1383.
Arms, for Iowa troops m the Civil "War, 073. See
also Ordnance.
Armstrong, S. C, 1941.
Zella, 1376.
Army, Confederate. See Confederate army.
Army, Revolutionary, of North Carolina, 504;
uniforms of, 501.
Army, U. S., at Detroit from 1797 to 1802, 945; in
Indiana territory, 1811-1812, 694,697; in Ohio,
1787-1812, 548; regimental history, 1866 to 1918
1612; the first, 1605; volunteer, organization m
1861, 955; Yellowstone expedition of 1873, 1610.
See also Continental army, and Regimental his-
tories, Civil war.
Army life in the West, early 19th century, 954.
Army of Tennessee, 686.
Army of the Potomac, 649.
Arni, W., 2337.
Arnold, H. V., 1037.
Arnold family, 1394.
Art, aboriginal, 152, 179, 226; decorative, 213a; In-
dian, 182, 189, 213a; negro in, 1975; Peruvian, 226;
prehistoric, as a source of design, 2072; prehistoric
Pajaritan, 159; primitive, of the north Pacific
coast, 180. See also Fine arts.
Arthur, C. A., 1179.
Sir George, 2198.
Artifacts. See Banner stones, and Wood products*
prehistoric.
Artihery, Civil v/ar, 681; in the Revolution, South
Carolina, 453; Washington artillery, 877.
Artists, pioneer Texas, 1964. See also Fine arts,
biography, and Portraitists.
-Arverne,N. Y., 1010.
Ashby, Richard, 1177.
Turner, 1177.
Ashe, S. A., 1269.
Ashley, W, H.,267.
Ashley-Smith explorations, 267.
Ashluslay Indians, 218.
Ashmore, Otis, 599.
Askin, John, 706.
Asotin CO. , Wash. , 1137.
Aspinwall, W. B., 50.
Assiniboia, Council of, 2208.
Assiniboia, " Old," 2208, 2211.
Association of history teachers of the middle states
and Maryland, 51, 52.
Astoria, surrender of, in 1818, 540.
Astronomical observatories in Canada, 2054.
Astronomy, prehistoric, 223a.
Atherton, Uriah, 891.
Atlantic blockade, Civil war, 670a.
Atlanticislands, prehistoric, 163. See also Atlantis.
Atlantic states, travel in, in 1709, 278; in 1790-1791,
291; in 1831-1832, 293a; in 1833, 279.
"Atlantis," of the ancients, 131, 2075.
136908 °--21— VOL 3 12
Atlases of the Firelands. Ohio, 1043.
Auburn theological seminary, Auburn, N. Y,, 1861.
Aucoin,E. D.,2149.
Audubon, J. J.. 1190.
Audubon society, 940.
Augusta CO., Va., 1127.
Augustinians, in Mexico, 1602-1638, 2274.
Aulard, A.,464.
Aurner,C. R.,828.
Austin, S. F.,1191.
Austin, Tex., 1116.
Austin's colonj' in Texas, 1114. 11113.
Auten, A, J., 985.
Authors, Argentine, 2326-2328, 2331; Iowa, bibliog-
raphy of, 18; Nebraska, list of, 16; Spanish
American, 1850 to 1869, 2223; Virginia, 1995a.
See also Literature, biographical.
Authorship, American, since 1890, 1988; of first
American book, 13.
Autocracy, British, 325; Pan-European, 325.
Automobile, first in Springfield, 111., 808.
Autopsies in colonial times, 370.
"Avanyu," 159.
Avery, E. McK., 1038.
Stephen, 1088.
Avila, Pedro Arias de, known as Pcdrarias D4vila,
260.
Aviles, Mendndez de. See Men^ndez de Aviles.
Axes, aboriginal, 121.
Ayars genealogy, 1395.
Ayer genealogy, 1395.
Ayres,P. W.,1279.
Azevedo, Juan de, 2300.
Aztec ruin, 143, 148.
Aztecs, education among the prehistoric, 227.
Azusa ranch, Calif., 722.
Babcock, W. H., 163, 164.
Bacon-Foster, Corra, 1194.
Bacot, D. H., jr., 1089.
T. W.,1090.
Badger, Joseph, 1965.
Baggs,M. L.,751.
Bagley, W. C.,303.
Bagot. See Rush-Bagot agreement of 1817.
Bahama Islands, expedition against, 1776, 1256.
Bailey, Thomas, 579.
Bailey family, 1388.
Baily,J. L.,1049.
Bainbridge, L. S., 1289.
Baird, G. M. P.,1925.
Baird family, 1396, 1397.
Baker, C. C, 721, 722.
Darius, 1081.
H. E.,1192.
Mrs. George, 1540.
Balance of power, European, 1634.
Balch, E. S., 332, 1968.
T. W., 1698.
Baldwin, J. M., 330.
James, 302.
S. E., 277, 535, 755, 1698a.
William,' 27&.
Ball, Mary, 1350.
Ballivian, Jose, 2334.
Balloon ascension, 536.
Baltimore, Md., 889; Catholic bibliography, 5;
Savings banks of Baltimore, 1766.
156
INDEX.
Bamford, E. M., 1471.
Bancroft, E. A., 776.
H. H.,777.
Bangor, Me., 886.
Banking in New Orleans, 1S30-1840, 1767. See also
Banks.
Bankruptcy clause of the Constitution, 1764a.
Banks, Albany, N. Y., 1020; Brooklyn, N. Y., 1013;
Providence, R. I., 1082; Salem savings bank, 1765;
Savings bank of Baltimore, 1766. See also Bank-
ing.
Banneker, Benjamin, 1192.
Baimer stones, Indian, 145.
Baptist church, at Mount Bethel, N. J., 994; Con-
cord, N. H., 983; in Minnesota, 958.
Baptist triennial convention, founder of, 1894.
Baptists, 1817-1819; Free, founder of,1893; missionary
in Oregon, 1853-1854, 1046; negro preachers, 1817;
of Maiden, Mass., 895.
Bar, American, brief vista of, 1710; Louisville, Ky.,
1707; Rye, N. Y., 1029; Sandusky co., O., pioneer,
1044.
Baraboo, Wis., 1147.
Barbados, Island of, Jewish settlement in, 2292;
wills, down to the year 1800, 2295.
Barce, Elmore, 165.
Barcelona, A. M. de, 2220a.
Barclay, John, 2186.
R. H.,553.
Thomas, 1613a.
Bard, T. R., 748.
Bardin, James, 2231.
Barge, W. D., 778.
Barkdull, E. S., 779.
Barker, E. C, 1114-1116, 1191.
Barker, H. E., 1253.
Barnard, Henry, 279.
J.L.,53.
Barnes, H. E., 986, 1614.
"Barnes's elementary history of the United States,"
302.
Barnett, J. D., 2124.
Barnstable, Mass., 357a, 1524.
Barnstable co., Mass., 1526.
Barr, A. S., 823.
Barrel!, Joseph, 2033.
Barrey^ Philippe, 2301a, 2301b, 2302a.
Barrie, Ont., 2199.
Barringer, P. B., 1032.
Bartholomew, Joseph, 1193.
Bartlett, I. S., 1166.
J. G., 1491.
J. H.,978.
Bartlett genealogy, 1398, 1399.
Barton, Clara, 1194.
Bashford, J. W., 693.
Basque discovery in America, 244.
Basques in America, 2237, 2238.
Bassett, J. S., 601,4684, 1977.
Basterra, J. R., 2290.
Bateman, Newton, 779a.
Bates, A. C, 390, 472.
E. F., 1117.
L. P., 1247.
Bathurst family, 861.
Baton Rouge, La., 605; battle of, 1862, 608.
Baton Rouge, Grosse Tete and Opelousas railroad,
874.
Battles of the Civil war, long-drawn, 645.
Baudoin, Michel, 440.
Bavarian Illuminati, 546.
Baxter, Sylvester, 892.
Bay CO., Mich., 929.
Bayley, F. W., 1955.
Baytop geneaology, 1387.
Beale, G. W., 602.
Beall, M. S., 1195.
Bean, E. C, 1708a, 1722.
Beard, C. A., 303.
Thomas, 1196.
Beard family, 1396.
Beardstown, 111., 1196.
Beasley, D. H., 583.
D. L., 723.
Beatley, C. B., 1814.
Beatman, A. S., 51.
Beattie, J. A., 973.
Beauchamp, W. M., 1009.
Beaufreton, Maurice, 231a.
Beaumarchais, P. A. C. de, and the war of American
independence, 494.
Beauport vs. Quebec, 2120.
Beauregard, P. G. T., 1197.
Bechard, Auguste, 2162.
Beck, J. M., 494.
Becker, Carl, 465, 1664.
Becker, Jerdnimo, 2365.
Bedford, D. H., 934.
Bedminster, N. J., 1001, 1381.
Beekman, K. M., 410.
Beeler biography and genealogy, 1400.
Beer, G. L., 1615.
Beet sugar industry in California, 1746.
Begbie, Sir M. B., 2216.
Bek, W. G., 964.
Belcher Islands of Hudson Bay, 2144.
Belknap, H. W., 1459, 1460.
Bell, Archie, 2214.
Hamilton, 466,
W. N., 2185.
Belle Harbor, N. Y., 1010.
Bellemare, J. E., 2162.
Bellot, A. H., 1010.
Belmont, Leon, 2302b.
Beloit, Wis., 1148.
Beltran y Rozpide, Ricardo, 232, 233.
Belvidere, 111., 800.
Bemis, S. F., 1616.
Benavente, J., 2348.
Benbridge, Henry, 1966, 1967.
Benedetti, Anna, 2005.
Benedict, W. H., 987.
Benham, W. H., 393.
Benjamin, G. G., 54.
Marcus, 1784.
Bennett, W. H., 1223, 1250.
Bennett law in Wisconsin, 1153.
Bennington, Vt., battle of, 1777, 481.
Bennington pottery, 1957.
Benson, A. W., 1198.
Bentley, WilUam, 896.
Benton, E. J., 603.
INDEX.
157
Beplcr, D. W., 724, 725.
Berenguer, Fernando, 1616a.
Bergen, Frank, 562.
J. J., 985.
Berkeley, George, 1812.
Berkeley f anally, 1401.
Berkeley, Cal., 750.
Berkley, H. J., 1401.
"Berkshire constitutionalists," 1720.
Bermudas, English colonization in, 360; Norwood's
maps of, 1622, 360.
Berne, N. Y., 1527.
Berwick, Me., 1528.
"Best seUer" of 1689, 1980.
Beuchat, Henri, 119a.
Beuckman, Frederick, 1820.
Bibliogr apical association, a Pan American, pro-
posed, 25.
Bibliographical society of America, 2004.
Bibliography, 1-30; Georgia, 1774; Hawaiian Islands,
2370; Hispanic American history, 63; Idaho, 775;
South American history, 2317a; Spanish America,
2224a.
Bicknell, T. W., 384.
Biddle, Clement, 1356.
Ca'pt. James, 539.
BidweU, John, 1199.
BienviUe, Jean Baptiste Le Moyne de, 444; life and
services of, 441; Louisiana under, 439; New
Orleans under, 437.
Bierstadt, A. T., 1814.
Bigelow estate, Medford, Mass., 902.
BiU of rights, Virginia, 1776, 1672.
Binsse, Henry, 1348a, 1820a, 2304.
Biography, comprehensive, 1167-1179; educational,
1947-1950; fine arts, 1964-1972; Halifax co., N. C,
1031; Indian chieftains, 174; individual, 1180-1370;
literary, 1996-2031; medical, 1927; Mexico, 2278;
Missouri, 968; of Cleveland, O., 1038; reUgious,
1878-1897.
"Birch, Harvey," the original, 513.
Bird, G. R., 1118.
Birdsall, Ralph, 1998.
Birkbeck, Morris, 811.
Birket-Smith, Kay, 165a, 234.
Birth records. See Regional genealogy, vital rec-
ords, etc.
Bisaillon, Pierre, 2120. .
Biscuit-ware, prehistoric, 159.
Bishop, A. L., 1735.
Abraham, 696.
J. B., 1736.
Bishops, Roman Catholic, in America, 1822, 1829;
in Porto Rico, 2310.
Bispham, C. W., 1821.
Bjurman, Gunnar, 2019a.
Black and White society. New York, 1958.
Black Hawk war, 561, 578.
Blackburn, J. K. P., 684.
Blackfoot Indians, 206.
Blaine, J. G., 1635.
Blau:, Gist, 888.
Blair genealogy, 1402. '
Blake, Edward, 2142.
Blanchard, J. P., 536.
W. H., 1403.
Blanchard genealogy, 1403.
Blanco Encalada, Manuel, 2356.
Blanco-Fombona, R., 2318.
Blane, W. N., 811.
Blankets, Indian, 184.
Blanquet, Aurelio, 2275.
Bla^velt, William, 1879.
Bledsoe, Anthony, 531.
Blegen, T. C, 34, 55, 1617, 2038.
Blenheim, N. Y., 1571.
Blenk, J. H., 1887.
Bliss, F. W., 787a.
Leonard, 924.
Blockhouse, loyalist, 505. See also Garrison house.
Blockade, Brazilian, of Argentine ports, 1825-1828,
1638; civil war, 670a, 672, 1608; of Santiago, Cuba,
1898, 1603.
Bloomfield, Conn., 1529.
Blue, C. S., 2037.
Boddie, J. B., 1404.
J. T., 1404.
Boddie family, 1404.
Boening, R. M., 2, 1135.
Bogart, E, L., 1794.
Bolivar, Simon, 1635, 2255, 2318, 2320a, 2356; and
the United States, 1652; international policy of,
2250a, 2315.
Bolivia, 2334, 2335; aborigines of, 210a; Indians in,
from 1767 to 1808, 2316; sun temple at Tiahuanaeu,
223a.
BoUan, William, 371.
Bolton, H. E., 2271.
R. P.. 473.
Bonaparte, Joseph, 1080.
Napoleon. See Napoleon.
Bonham, M. L., jr., 604-606, 864, 865.
Bonner, G. A., 726.
Bonnifield family, 1405.
Book, first written by an American, 13.
Book peddlers, colonial, 353.
Books, for children, 1977; gift, 1783-1850, 1977; in
early New England, 350, 353. See also "Best
sellers."
Boone, Gov. Thomas, 435.
Booth, R. A., 1926.
Booy, Theodoor de, 120, 2311.
Borden, Sir Robert, 2042.
Bordentown, N. J., 1080.
Bortnquen, island of, 2309.
Boston, Mass., and the conquest of New France,
2123; and the Louisbourg expedition in 1745,
^123; Arlington street church, 1814; battle near,
on May 27, 1775, 495; Bowdoin library in
1775,925; Catholic bibliography, 5; conflicts with
New France, 347; first church, 1814; first church,
Thomas Hutchinson memorial doorway, 1259;
Granary burying ground, 1530; gravestone rec-
ords, 1530; historic churches of, 1814; King's gift
to€hrist church, 1733, 372; merchants of, and the
non-importation movement, 471; old time direc-
tory of, 337; popular disturbance in, in 1778, 517;
Saint-Sauveur monument, 517; Saturday club,
1855 to 1870, 899.
Boston and Lowell railroad, 1752.
Boston Bay, storms and shipwrecks in, 921.
Boston massacre, 493.
Boston medical Ubrary, 1772.
Botany, from 1818 to 1918, 2033.
158
IKDEX.
f
Bottomley, Ed^\dn, 1143.
Boucher, C. S., 563, 1091.
J. N., 1333.
Boucher de la Bruere, Pierre, 2163.
Boudinot family, 1388.
Bouffard, J., 2038.
Boundaries. See Demarcation hne of Alexander
VI.
Boundary, between the United States and Canada,
693, 2201; convention of 1818 with Great Britain
respecting, 551 b; Michigan- Wisconsin, disputed,
936; northwest, 693, 2201; of South Dakota, 1109.
Bourgchemin, J. F., sieur de, 2090.
Bourgmont, sieur de, 2116.
Bourne, H. E., 91.
Bow and arrow. See Archery.
Bowditch genealogy, 1384.
Bowdoin, James, library of, 925.
Bowen, E. W., 1888, 2015.
Bowers, C. G., 1272.
Bowman, G. E., 1377, 1390, 1398, 1399, 1408, 1410,
1419, 1444, 1468, 1481, 1482, 1490, 1526.
M. M., 729.
Bowne, Mary, 1200.
Samuel, 1200.
Boycott. See Non-importation movement.
Boyd, J. P., 694.
W. K., 3.
Boyer, C. C, 1406.
Boyer family, 1406.
Brackenridge, Henry, 1050.
Bradford, GamaUel, 1325, 1949.
Bradford, John, 1407.
T. L., 1927.
Bradford's "History of Plimouth plantation," 359.
Bradlee, F. B. C, 893, 894, 1752.
Bradsher, E. L., 1973.
Brainerd, Ezra, 1361.
Lawrence, 1427, 1453.
Braithwaite, W. S., 1975.
Brancour, Rene, 1974.
Brandywine, battle of, 510.
Brandywine battlefield, 510.
Brassac, Hercule, 1822, 1829.
Brawley, Benjamin, 1975.
Brazil, 2338-2347; blockade of Argentine ports,
1825-1828, 1638; diplomatic controversy with the
United States, an early, 1638; discovery of, 244;
Dutch settlers in, 1637, 1864; Indians of, decora-
tive art, 213a; influence of the United States in
the opening of the Amazon to commerce, 1638.
Breckinridge, J. C, 1201.
Brede, C. F., 1993.
Brennan, G. A., 474.
Breton, A. C, 210.
Bretons, and the American revolution, 456, 513a.
Brewer, Lucy, 1202.
Brewster genealogy, 1379, 1408.
Brick Presbyterian church, N. Y., 1012.
Bridgetown, N. S., 2152.
Brigham, C. S., 4, 1257.
W. T., 2369.
Brinton, Walter, 1051.
Brissot de Warville, J. P., 1846.
Bristol, T. H., 1569.
Bristol, Rhode Island, 1083.
British, criticisms of American writings, 1788-1815,
1976; fur trading companies in the Northwest,
1760-1816, 712; military camp during the Revolu-
tion, 473; prisoners in the American revolution,
509; view-point of the American civil war, 596;
writers on the United States, 289. See also Anglo-
American, England, English, and Great Britain.
British America, discovery to 1763, 2081-2123; from
1763 to 1867, 2124-2139; from 1867 to 1918, 2140-
2143; general, 2036-2079; plan for union mth the
United States, in 1866, 1617; regional history,
2144-2219.
British- American discords and concords, 1630.
British Columbia, 2214-2219; early explorations for
the Canadian Pacific railway, 2141.
British empire, and Canada, since 1763, 2056; colo-
nial action in 1776 and 1914, contrast in 168; colo-
nial policy, 2064; colonial policy, in Canada, 2054;
colonial policy from 1763 to 1917, 20.50a; develop-
ment of, 343; influences of the practices of, upon
American federal organization, 1713; pillars of,
2042. See also Great Britain.
British Honduras, Catholic church in, 2287; Maya
Indians of, 214.
British West Indies, 2292-2298; archaeology, 120;
development of, 1700-1763, 2297.
Brito, O. N., 1665.
Broadalbin, N. Y., 1552.
Broadway tabernacle church, N. Y., 1850.
Brock, G. W., 1243.
Sir Isaac, 2139a.
Brook Farm, 1981.
Brookline, Mass., 922, 1531.
Brooklyn, N. Y., 1008, 1013.
Brooks, A. A., 31.
F. D., 56.
Phillips, 1176, 1880.
R. P., 3.
Brooks genealogy, 1409.
Broome, N. Y., 1571.
Brosnan, C. J., 774.
Brothertown Indians, 280.
Brown, C. E., 121, 122.
E. v., 979.
Georee, 2136.
H. G., .50.
Jacob, 1178.
John, 1203.
Mather, 1185.
Warren, 979a.
Brown family, 1410.
Browne, Clyde, 727.
W. B., 1523.
Browning, W. E., 1899.
Bruce, G. A., 649.
Bruce, Helm, 1719.
Brumbaugh, G. M., 1.537.
Brunson, Alfred, 1144.
E. C, 1144.
Bruun, Daniel, 235.
Bryan, Andrew, 1817.
— Samuel, 1052.
Gen. William, 1204.
Bryant, WiUiam Cullen, 1997.
Bryce, George, 2211.
Brydone-Jack, William, 2147.
INDEX.
159
Buccaneer, the Scottish, 520. See also Corsairs,
Pirates, and Privateers.
Buchanan, James, 1179.
Buck, S. J., 57.
Buclfham, J. W., 1811.
Budd, Henry, 1970.
Buell, B. G., 58.
. I. M., 123.
Buenos Aires, Argentina, 2324; National college at,
2333; Spanish colony at, 2324.
Buffalo, N. Y., 1026, 1028.
Buffalo, University of, 1940.
"Buffalo Bill", 1106.
Buffalo historical society, 1011.
Buffaloes, 1107.
Buflinton, A. H., 395.
BuU, J. H., 1411.
Jireh, 387.
Bull family, 1411.
BuUard, P. C, 1310.
Bunker Hill, caricature of, in 1776, 511.
Burd, Edward, 1053.
Burgess, G.W., 608.
Burgoon, I. H., 1044.
Burgoyne, Gen. John, 925.
Biirial, Indian. See Stone grave builders, Indian.
Burial cave, Indian, 209. See also Cemetery, and
Graves.
Burlington co., N. J., 1532.
Burnet family, 1389.
Burnham, Smith, 304, 510.
Burpee, L. J., 2039.
Burr conspiracy, 1622.
Burrage, Champlin, 360.
H. S., 649.
Burt, A, B., 2186.
Burton, Benjamin, 1205.
Bushnell, D. E., 1200.
E. H., 1206.
Bushnell genealogy, 1206.
Bushy Run, battle of, 176S, 349.
Business conditions, T'hiladelphia, in 1790, 1052.
See also Merchants.
Butler, Benjamin, and the "stolen spoons," 1207.
H. R., 1186.
J. W., 2272.
Buttars, Archibald, 928.
Butterlield, G.E.,929.
Buxton settlement in Canada, 2193.
Buzzell, J. R., 1823.
Byrd, William, 418.
Cabell, J. B., 1452.
N. F., 28, 1125, 1730.
Cabeza de Vaca, Alvar Nunez. See Niinez Cabeza
de Vaca.
Cabot, John, 49.
Caffey, Thomas, 609.
Cam, Gordon, 952.
Cairns, W. B., 1976, 1977.
Calendar, JuUan, 216; Maya, 216,*217.
Calhoun, A. W., 1785.
J. C, 560.
California, 721-750; archaeology, 140; bibliography,
8; Catholic educational work in early, 1906; con-
stitutional convention of 1878-1879, 1718; educa-
tion in, during the pre-statehood period, 1907;
early French in, 700; early photographer of, 1357;
historiography of, 62; history stories, 715; Indian
remains in, 150; Indians of, 153, 176, 194, 205; over-
land journey to, in 1852, 290; pioneer, 1199; Span-
ish period, archives of, 35, 36; Spanish presidios in,
1766-1768, 701.
California, University of, 750.
Calkins genealogy, 1379.
Calle, M.J.,2315a.
Callieres, Chevalier de, 2114.
Cambridge, Mass., 900; first parish and first church,
1814.
"Cambridge history of American literature," 1977.
Cambridge university, England, 1903.
Camden, S.C., 1093.
Cameron, John, 2142.
Camp, W.M., 1097.
Camp Douglas conspiracy, 622.
Campbell, C. T., 2187.
J, A,, 1208.
Jane, 1054.
Killis, 1977.
L. D., 570.
Camps, Indian, 188; Revolutionary, 473.
Canada, abolitionists of, 589; and national service,
2061; and the empne, 2056; attitude of French
government toward, during the American revolu-
lution, 2137; bi-lingual schools in, 2071; boundary
between United States and, 2201; Catholic church
history, 1775 to 1789, 2132; Church of England in,
leaders of, 2040a; confederation, 2127, 2128a, 2129,
2136, 2140, 2140a, 2143; constitution, documents of,
1759-1915, 2052; constitution, historicallj^ ex-
plained, 2070; constitutional development in,
2048, 2079, 2124a; constitutional law, 2058; consti-
tutions of, 2043; controversies with Newfound-
land, 2148; evolution of the Dominion, 2060; final
effort of France to save, 1760, 2089; France and,
during the period from 1775 to 1782, 2128; grain
trade, 2065; historical activities in, 1917-1918, 2053;
historical churches of, 2060; history of, bibliogra-
phy, 1916, 11; in the South African war, 2039;
mfluence of engineering in the history of, 2074;
militia of, 2061; militia under the French regime,
2120; old church silver in, 2050; party system in
politics, 2055; pre-assembly legislatures in, 2068;
project for a Friends' settlement in, 1796, 1848;
proposed Friends' settlement in, 1790, 1847;
rebellion of 1837-8, 2124, 2199; school history of
2075; struggle for, 2039; trade relations of, 2062.
See also British America.
Canada, Geographic board, 2038a.
Canada, Review of historical publications relating
to, 2067.
"Canadian boat song," 2037.
Canadian Northwest, 2210.
Canadian Pacific railway, 2141.
Canal, Erie, centenary of, 1011; Illinois and Michi-
gan, 1758; Niagara ship canal projects, 1015;
Panama, 2290.
Cannon foundry of the Revolution, 891.
Canudos, campaign of, 1897, 2340.
Capdequi. See Ots Capdequi.
Cape Cod, Mass., 919.
Caperton, Adam, 859.
Caperton family, 859.
Capitol Hill, Washington, D. C, 761.
Captive Indian children, 1676, 367.
160
INDEX.
Capuchins, contest for supremacy in Louisiana,
176H-180l<, 1821; in South America in 1699, 2220a;
missions in South America, 2251.
Carbia, R. D.,236.
Caricatures, of Bunker Hill, 511; pertaining to the
Civil war, '597.
Carleton, John, 521.
Carlisle, Mass., 1533.
Carnegie endowment for international peace, 1618.
Carnegie institution of Washington, 59.
Carney, M. V., 953.
W.H. B..1851.
Carnochan, Janet, 2139, 2188.
Caron, Ivanhoe. 2081, 2082, 2125.
Carondolet, baron de, 533.
Carpenter, E. J., 357.
W. H., 2004.
W. S.,1699.
Carpet-bag rule, 1794a.
Carroll, Charles, 1209-1211.
William, 730.
Carson, H. L., 467, 1267, 1669, 1670, 1776.
Cartagena, Colombia, 2365.
Carter, C. E., 60, 342.
John, 1212.
Cartographer, Spanish. See Ribero, Diego.
Cartography, early, 258a. See also Atlases and
Maps.
Cartoons. Sef Caricatures.
Casa de la contrataci<5n, Seville, 247.
Cascade mountains, 1759.
Castilla del Oro, founding of, 1514, 242; government
of Pedrarias Davila in, 2261; political jurisdiction
of, 2232; Spanish rule in, 260.
Catchings, F. B., 1396.
Cathedral of old Panama, 2289.
Catherine II, of Russia, 1629.
Catholic church, 1820-1843; activities in the Civil
war, 648; archives of St. Louis, 38; diocesan bibli-
ography, 5; educational activities in early Spanish
America, 2268; educational work in early Cali-
fornia, 1906; in British Honduras, 1851 to 1918,
2287; in Canada, 2132, 2133; in Illinois, 46a,
780, 803; in Latin America, period of discov-
ery and conquest, 2247; in Latin America, readings
in the history of, 21; in Porto Rico, 2309, 2310;
in San Domingo, 2306; in the Philippines, 1565-
1850, 2372, 2373, 2376-2378; mission at Kaskaskia,
111., 816; missions in Emmet co., Michigan,
early, 1828; missions in the Illinois country, 446.
See also Capuchins, Franciscans, Friars, Jesuits,
Ursulines, and Vatif-an.
"Catholic Encyclopedia," 5.
Catholic historical society, a, 99a; Catholic historical
society of St. Louis, 1783.
Catholic history, American, bibliography of, 5.
Catholic newspapers, early, 1802a.
Catholics, explorers and pioneers in Illinois, 438;
first elected to the state legislature of New York,
1223; in the war with Mexico, 580; states settled
by, 346.
Catlett family, 1387.
Catlin, George, 1968.
Catskill aqueduct, 1014.
Cavaliy, Civil war, 674, 679, 682, 684,
Cawcroft, Ernest, 2202.
Ccbrian, J. C, 2222.
Cedar Creek, battle of, 1864, 649.
Cedar Mountain, battle of, 1862, 638.
Cedar township. 111., 787a.
Cedarhurst, N. Y., 1010.
Cejador y Frauca, Julio, 2223.
Celebrations, historical. See Centenary, Historical
celebrations, and Pageants.
Cemetery, an Inca, 215a. See also Burial cave, In-
dian.
Cemetery inscriptions. See Regional genealogy
vital records, etc.
Censorship, military, in the Civil war, 661. See also
Freedom of the press.
Census, of Montgomery co., N. Y., 1800, 1555; of
negro population, 1790-1915, 1800.
Centenary, Illinois, 781, 782, 787-789, 796, 797, 809,
813, 813a, 814; Lancaster, Pa., 1067; Missouri, 967;
of the Erie canal, 1011.
Central America, 2285-2290; antiquities, 214, 214a,
215, 225a; conflicting interests of Great Biitain
and the United States in, 1655; relations with the
United States, 1642.
Century association, N. Y., 1214.
Ceremonies, Indian, See Rites.
Cerrada, Diego Albeniz de la. See Albeniz do la
Cerrada.
Chadboume, Louis, 1978.
Chad wick, F. E., 1604.
Chamber of commerce of the state of New York,1736.
Chamberlain, G. W., 895.
Chambers, E. J., 2039.
"Chameu," shipwreck of the, 2059.
Champaign co., 111., 817a.
Champlain, Samuel de, 1009.
Champlain, Lake, battle of, See Plattsburg, battle,
of.
Chandler, C. L., 1737.
Chang, Tso-Shuen, 1714.
Charming, Eva, 1814.
W. E.,1812.
Chapais, Thomas, 2126.
Chapin, H. M., 6, 7, 385, 386, 1352.
Chapman, C. E., 35, 36, 61-63, 2224, 2224a, 2338.
Chappell, G. S.,1952.
Chapultepec, Mex., storming of, 1847, 581.
Charcas, Audiencia de, 2241a.
Charland, Charles, 2134.
Charles I., king of England, 2117a.
Charleston, S. C, 1090, 1095, 1096, 1534.
Charleston expedition, 1863, 670a.
Charlestown, Mass., 1823.
Charnwood, Lord, "Life of Abraham Lincoln," 1287.
Charter for Louisiana, Crozat's, 439.
Charter government in Connecticut, 391.
Chartier, Emile, 2127.
Chase, F. H., 1340.
S. P., 570, 1213.
Chateaubriand, F. A. R., vicomte de, in America,
286.
Chatham, Earl of. See Pitt, William.
Chattanooga, Teiin., relief of, 1863, 649.
"Chaudiere-Noire," Iroquois chief, 2120.
Chelsea Creek, Mass., battle of, 1775, 495.
Chemistry, from 1818 to 1918, 2033.
Chenango country, 1874.
Cheney, Ruth, 1560.
Cherokee nation, 432. See also Nacoochee mound.
Chesnutt, C. W.,1975.
Chester, C. M., 475, 1593.
i I
INDEX.
161
Chester, F. E.,333.
Cheyenne Indian villages, 130.
Chiapas, 15i.
Chicago, 111., Catholic church history, 791, 1832, 1833;
first real estate boom, in 1835, 822; joumej' to, in
in 1835, 276; site of, secured from the Indians, 5-12;
strike, 1894, 1769.
Chicago, University of, 1944.
Chicago historical society, 781, 782.
Chicago treaty, of 1821, 811; of 1833, 195.
Chicoutimi, Que., 2086.
"Chief Joseph," Indian chief, 174.
Chieftains, Indian, 164, 174. See also Sachem, and
Warriors.
Childers, H.,1314.
Children, books for, 1977; in Illinois history, 813.
Chile, 2348-2356; archaeology, 224.
Chiitcn, W. E., 1142.
China, elations with America in regard to treaty
ports in, 1656: visit of the Allies to, in 1900, 1604.
Chinard, Gilbert, 286.
Chinese discovery of America, 249.
Chinese in the United States, 29.
Chippewa Indians, 166, 195, 2075; material culture-
153.
Chippewa river, Wis., 1145.
Chiquitos, 2316.
Chishokn, J. A., 2040.
Choate, J. H., 1214-1218.
Choctaw Indians, 202.
Choroti Indians, 218.
Chouart, Medard, sieur des GroseiUiers, 2044, 2120,
2122.
Christian CO., 111., 779a.
Christie, F. A., 896.
Chronology, Maya and Christian, 216, 217; prehis-
toric, 144.
Chupas, war of, 2225.
Church and state in Ontario, 2142.
Church influence, in Michigan politics, 18S7-1S60,
1696; in the Philippines, 1565-1850, 2372, 2373.
Church of England in Canada, 2046a.
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day saints, 1860.
Church records, New York state, 1375. See also
Regional genealogy, vital records, etc.
Church silver, old Canadian, 2050.
Churches, Canada, historic, 2060; colonial New
York, 1810; historic, of Boston, 1814; Medford,
Mass., 90S; Mount Bethel, N. J., 994; Neshanic,
N. J., 9S8; New York city, 1012; Ohio, 1039; Penn-
sylvania Reformed, 1071; Philadelphia, 1049. See
also Cathedral, Religious history, particular de-
nominations, and under various denominations.
ChurchiU, J. W., 1844.
Cieza de Leon, Pedro de, 2225.
Cincinnati, O., 571, 1828a; Catholic biblic^aphy, 5.
Circuit riders, 713.
Citizenship, American, 1768; documents relating to,
29; of colonial New York, 402; training for, 105.
Citizenship, Canadian, 2047.
City government, 1714, 1717.
City manager plan of goverimient, 1714.
Civic education, 74.
Civics, teaching of, 51, 53, 67, 105, 1902; textbook,
308, 319. See also Government, teaching oL
Civil authority, and the military, in the Civil war,
655. See also Committee on the conduct of the
Civil war.
Civil officers of Vermont, 1777 to 1918, 1124.
Civil war, 596-686; and the World war, parallels
and contrasts, 633, 641, 1601; border defense in
Iowa, 829; capital city in March and April, 1861,
766; children of, 813; conscientious objectors,
1322; first hero of, 1232; in Mississippi, 689; influ-
ence on education in North Carolina, 1035; internal
problems, 623; military movements in, 317; Ne-
braska in, 975; opposition to the government
during, 603; outbreak of, 301; pensions, 1599; per-
sonal recollections of, 669, 1163; Pittsburgh in,
1078; poets of, 1977; political movements during,
317; postage stamp currency, 1086; Russia and,
1629; secret political societies, 603, 622; southern
poetry of, 1994; State historical society of Iowa
and, 840; State university of Iowa and, 839; Wis-
consin home guards, 1157.
Ci%-ilization, American, Anglo-Celtic ideals as foun-
dation of, 49; ancient Peruvian, 228; Chippewa
Indian, 153; Inca, 2363; of the old South, 1790;
Philippine, 2375; prehistoric, diffusion of, 151a;
Spanish, in the new world, 2224, 2236. See also
Americanism, Institutions and National charac-
teristics.
Claims, against the federal government, 1142; of
United empire loyahsts. 2188; of West Virginia
on account of the Northwest territory, 1142.
Clans and moieties, Indian, 176.
Clap, Thomas, 696.
Clark, A. C, 759.
D. E., 829-831.
George Rogers, biography, 1219; expedition to
the Illinois country, 177&-1779, 458, 474; memoir
of, 454.
J. M., 2041.
N. D., 783.
V. S., 610, 1738.
Walter, 611, 1033, 1594, 1700.
William. See Lewis and Clark expedition.
Clarke, John, 1S12.
W.M., 552.
Clarke school for the deaf, Northampton, Ma3S.,1936.
Clay CO., Minn., 960.
Clayton, J. M., 1655, 2288.
Cleary, Francis, 934.
Cleland, R. G., 731, 732, 1754.
Clemens, Samuel Langhorne, 19S4.
Clement, E. W., 1619.
Clephane, Lewis, 1220.
W.C, 1220.
Clergy, engaging in military service, 1892a; of colo-
nial New York, 1810; Roman Catholic, in Porto
Rico, 2310. See also Bishops, Divines, Religious
history, biography, and Religious leaders.
Clesson, Cornelius, 915.
— Matthew, 915.
Cleveland, Grover, 1179; official characteristics,
1221; Venezuela message, 1662.
Cleveland, 0., 1038.
Clifton, A. R., 733.
Clinton, George, 1011.
Cloisters of California, 727.
162
INDEX.
Clossom, W. G., 1565.
Club, literary, at Boston, 899.
Cliiverius, W. T., 1595.
Clyde, Samuel, 1222.
Coad, O. S., 1786, 1979.
Coal industry, 174na.
Coburn, F. W., 476, 1980.
Coconino Forest, Ariz., 125.
Coddington, Col. William, 1081.
■ Gov. William, 1081.
Codman, Ogden, 1530.
Cody, W. F., 1106.
Coe, W. R., 2033.
Co-education in Massachusetts, 1168.
Coffin, I. F., 2353.
Cohansey road, N. J., 1000.
Cohen, I. D., 64.
Coins, Argentine, 2325; British Columbia gold, 2217;
used in the fur trade prior to 1865, 1745. See also
Tokens.
Colby, E.T., 612.
Colden, Cadwallader, manuscripts of, 1711-1729, 400.
Cole, A. C, 65, 613, 614, 784, 1684, 1685.
■ H. E., 1146.
J. R., 1201.
Coles, Edward, 590.
Colleges, land-grant, 1898; New York colonial, 1908.
See also Educational institutions, and undername
of individual colleges.
Collier, W. M., 1928.
Collins, W. H., 1791a.
CoUot, G. v., 538; arrest of, 1796, 547.
Colombia, 2357-2359; discovery of, 244.
Colonial administration, British, of the crown
colonies, 2294; English, in Virginia, 425, 429;
French, 439, 545; Spanish, 87, 260, 448, 2226, 2227,
2232,2234-2236, 2241a, 2246, 2262, 2277, 2300, 2324,
2379. See also Adelantado, Colonial policy and
Indies, Spanish empire in.
Colonial agents. See Agent.
Colonial algebra, early, 1905.
Colonial architecture, 1951, 1952.
Colonial companies, French, 2302. See also Commer
cial companies, Company of the West, and Dutch
West India company.
Colonial dependencies of the U. S., organic laws of,
1716.
Colonial history to 1763, 342-347; French and Indian
war, 348, 349; New England, 696; New Jersey,
1556; New York state, 1009, 1010; regional, 350-448.
Colonial institutions, Spanish, archives relating to,
35, 36.
Colonial libraries of Pennsylvania, 1773.
Colonial merchants and the Revolution, 470.
Colonial period, American theater m, 1786; Anglo-
American relations reconsidered, 1614; architec-
ture, 1963; compulsory education, 1912; freedom
of the press, 1706; labor during, 1768; land system
of New York, 734; newspapers, 1807; population,
estimates of, 696; problem of imperial organiza-
tion, 1713; progress of democracy, 325; schools and
colleges in New York, 1908.
Colonial policy, British, from 1763 to 1917, 2050a;
in America, and in Canada, 2045. See also Colon-
ial administration.
Colonial question, French, in 1789 to 1791, 2302a.
Colonial society of Massachusetts, 1259.
Colonial tarifT policy of France, 2085a, 2302.
Colonial wars, conquest of New France, 2123; expe-
dition against the Pequods, 1637, 381; Harvard in,
1675 to 1748, 1939; Rhode Island and, 385, 386, 388.
See also French and Indian war.
Colonies, British, in 1776 and 1914, 468.
Colonists, "Canadian, 1608-1635, 2094.
Colonization, Dutch, va Brazil and Guiana, 2337;
English, in New England and the Bermudas, 360;
English, of Newfoundland, 2117a; French, in
Louisiana, 439; French, in the Antilles, 2301a,
2301b; in Quebec under English domination, 2125;
of New France, 2103; Spanish, 2242, 2266; Spanish
in the Southwest, 448; Spanish and Portuguese,
demarcation line of, 237. See also Austin's colony
in Texas, Colonial administration, and Union
colony at Greeley, Colo.
Colorado, 751-754; prehistoric rums in, 153.
Colquhoun, A. H. U., 1620.
Colton, H. S., 124, 125.
M. R. F., 125.
Columbia, Wash., 1137. '
Columbia river, 285.
Columbian college, 1894.
Columbus, Christopher, 232, 233; and his detractor,
the Marques de Dos Fuentes, 258; Aragon pro-
tectors of, 260; iconography of, 231a; place of birth,
229, 230, 236; third voyage of, 24^.
Colve, Anthony, 405.
Commerce, New York Chamber of, 1736.
Commerce and industry, 1735-1751; American, in-
terference with, during the Argentine-Brazil war,
1825-W28, 1638; and the Amencan revolution,
1763-1776, 470; between France and the Antilles,
18th century, 2302,2302a; Canada, 2065; Canadian
trade relations, 2062; connection between Virginia,
and Massachusetts, 17th century, 419; Jewish
merchant at Philadelphia, 1755-1761, 416; Jewish
shipowners at Philadelphia, 1730-1775, 415; of the
province of Massachusetts, in 1763, 364; opening
of the Amazon to the world's, 1638; period of 1777
to 1831, 1246; regime m the French colonies in
America, 2085; regulations in Mexico, in 1822, 2271;
relations of the colonies with Great Britain, in
1763, 364; relations with Chma, 1656; Spanish
America and the Philippines, early period, 2261;
treaty of 1815, with Great Britain, 551b; Virginia
colonial, 425. See also Business conditions. Fur
trade. Freedom of the seas. Merchants, Neutral
trade, Open-door policy, Pacific coast trade, TarifT
and Trade.
Commercial companies, in New France, 2087. See
also Colonial companies, Compagnie des Indes
occidentales, Hudson's Bay company, and
Northwest company of Canada.
Commercial supremacy, maritime, struggle for, 549.
Commission plan of government, 1714.
Commissions, New Jersey civil and military, 1708-
1710, 409.
Committee of observation for Elizabeth Town dis-
trict, Maryland, 1777, 463.
Committee on the conduct of the Civil war, 656.
Common at Cambridge, Mass., 900.
Commons, J. R., 1768.
Communication and transportation, 1752-1762;
in Canada, in 1849, 2157; in early British Colum-
bia, 2215; in early Quebec, 2173; in Nova Scotia,
INDEX.
163
1756-1867, 2158; prehistoric, 151a; Windsor and
Detroit ferry, 931. See also Canals, Cunard steam-
ship line, Oregon trail. Portage, and Roads.
Communist settlement, at Economy, Pa., 1063;
Llano del Rio, Cal., 733. See also Brook Farm.
Community dwellings, Pueblo, 143. See also
Pueblo, Zufii.
Compafiia general de tabacos de FiUpinas, 237.
Compagnie des habitants, 2120.
Compagnie des Indes occidentales, 2301a.
Compagnie du Nord, 2100.
Compagnie frangaise du pole arctique, 246.
Company of the West, 439.
Comprehensive histories, 295-301.
Compromise of 1850, 576, 1696.
Compulsory education, 351, 1153; in the colonies,
1912.
Comstock, J. M., 1124.
Concord, Mass., 1673.
Concord, N. H., 983, 984.
Concord township. 111., 789.
Condon, Peter, 2306.
Condorcet, marquis de, 755.
Confederate army, 602, 679, 680, 682-686; North
Carolina troops in, 611 ; ordnance for, 630; personal
reminiscence of service, 609, 1236; retreat from
Petersburg to Appomattox, 1864-1885, 654; surgi-
cal treatment in, 619; trans-Mississippi depart-
ment, powers of commander, 634.
Confederate navy, 624.
Confederate states of America, and the Declaration
of Paris, 671; collapse of, 627; effect of Lincoln's
re-election upon, 649; expulsion of British con-
suls, 604; flags, 663; foreign policy, 650; funds of,
599, 600; medical and pharmaceutical conditions
in, 635; pension and relief measures for soldiers,
629; treatment of prisoners in, 598.
Confederate treasure, 599, 600.
Confederation, Ohio in the time of, 1041.
Confederation, Canadian, 2127, 2128a, 2129, 2136,
2140, 2140a, 2143; Quebec and, 2181.
Congregational church, 1844, 1845; Boston, Mass.,
1814; Concord, N. H., 984; in colonial New Eng-
land, 357a; Congregationahsm as a factor in the
making of Michigan, 944.
Congress, U. S., and General Lafayette, 543; and
Oregon, 1819 to 1829, 574; and the negro problem,
1799a; committee on the conduct of the Civil
war, 656; joint resolutions of, 12.
Connecticut, 755-758; agent for the colony in Lon-
don, 450; cemetery inscriptions, 1580; church
records, 1529; colonial history, 389-391; free
schools in, 1918; governorship of, 1754-1758, 390;
history of, as illustrated in names of her towns;
696; in the French and Indian war, 348; journey
through, in 1770, 277; Uterary history, 696; loss of
charter government, 391; loyalists of, 478; official
printing in, in 1776, 472; public records of, 37.
Connecticut river, 702.
Connelley, W. E., 167, 168, 845, 846, 1335.
Connor, H. G., 1208.
Conquest, Spanish. See Spanish conquest.
Conquistadors, Spanish, 257. See also Alvarado,
Pedro de.
Conscientious objector. Civil war, 1322.
Conselheiro, Antonio, 2340.
Conspiracy against the government, in the Civil
war, 622; in the Old Southwest, 531.
Constitution, U. S., 464, 1674; allegiance to, 1676;
attitude of the framers, in regard to judicial con-
trol over legislation, 1683; bankruptcy clause,
1764a; framing of, 541; treason under, 1708;
Webster's work for, 562.
Constitution of Canada, historically explained, 2070.
Constitutional convention of 1787, Madison's notes
of debates in, 1679; slavery question in, 1799a.
Constitutional conventions, invention of, 1673; Cali-
fornia, 1878-1879, 1718; Illinois, 790; Kentucky,
1849, 1719; Louisiana, of 1852, 868; New Hamp-
shire, 1722; Virginia, 1133; Washington, 1787, 1141.
Constitutional government, Abraham Lincoln and,
1296.
Constitutional history, 1669-1683; influence of Amer-
ican, upon the French, 464; power of a court to
declare a law unconstitutional, 301.
Constitutional history and law, Canadian, 2043,
2048, 2052, 2058, 2079, 2124a.
Constitutional law, foreign corporations in, 1740.
Constitutionalism, American, crisis in, 327.
Constitutions, state, 1716; Kentucky, 1719; Massa-
chusetts, 1720; Massachusetts, of 1778, 1721a; New
Hampshire, 1722; state of Washington, first, 1141.
Constitutions of Canada, 2043.
Continental army, 501, 504; officers and privates in
a Philadelphia jail, in 1778, 527.
Continental congress, Ohio in the papers of, 1041;
president of, 455.
Controversies, Anglo-American, 325, 1613, 1630,
1655; between the states, settlement of, 1680,
1698; Oregon, 1653; United States and Brazil,
1825-1828, 1638; West Florida, 1622.
Convent at Charlestown, Mass., destruction Of,
18S4, 1823.
Convention of 1860, Lincoln and, 1692.
Conventionality in history teaching, 54.
Conway, Brig. Gen. Thomas, 457.
Conwell, Henry, 1881.
Cook, L. A., 896a.
T. A., 1621.
V. Y., 615.
Cooley, L. C, 8.
Verna, 584, 785.
Cooper, Francis, 1223.
James Fenimore, 1998-2000.
Thomas, 1224.
-W. W., 1412.
Cooper genealogy, 1412.
Cooperation movement in South Carolina, 1848 to
1852, 563.
Cope, Gilbert, 1847.
Copley, J. S., 1969.
Copperheads, 603, 622, 647.
Cordoba, Francisco Herndndez de, 259.
Cordoba, Universidad de, Argentina, 2329.
Cornbury, Lord, commission and instructions,
1702, 395.
Corning, A. E., 1233.
Cornish, N. H., 1535.
Cornwallis, Lord, surrender of, 496.
Corporations, foreign, American law of, 1741; in the
colonial and early national periods, 1740.
Correa. See Sanfuentes y Correa.
Correctional institutions of New Jersey ,986.
164
INDEX.
Corsair, a Canadian, 2109. See also Buccaneer, and
Pirate.
Corse, John, 760.
Corwin,C.E., 477, 1876.
Thomas, 571.
Cosa, Juan de la, 244.
Cost of Uving. See Prices.
Cost of the Ci\^l war, 646.
CotteriU, R. S., 564, 1755.
Cottman, G. S., 2025.
Cotton, Josiah, vocabulary of the Indian language,
373a.
Cotton, and Anglo-American relations, in the Civil
war, 665.
Cotton gin, 1089.
Couillard family, 2164.
CouiUard-Despres, Azarie, 2083, 2164, 2165.
County organization in Michigan, 933.
Coureurs de bois, 951.
Covusen genealogy, 1413.
Court costumes worn by American diplomats, 1784.
Court-martial, 1600.
Court records, Essex co., Mass., 364a.
Courtney, J. E., 2042.
. W. L., 2042.
Courts, Canadian, first court of judicature, 2040; in
early Ontario, 2195, 2196.
Courts, U. S., 1699; control over legislation, 301;
North CaroUna, 1033, 1700; Sandusky co., O.,
pioneer, 1044; Tazewell co.. 111., 786; Supreme
court of the U. S., 1670, 1678, 1680, 1698.
Cox, I. J., 537, 1622.
. J. M., 1724.
Craig, N. B., 1055.
Crampton, E. M., 2334.
Crane, Israel, 989.
V. W., 169, 170.
Crawford genealogy, 1414.
"Crazy Horse," Indian chief, 174.
Credit, national, 1764; Hamilton as founder of, 503.
Creek Indians, 170.
Crehore family, 1415.
Creighton, Thomas, 1056.
Creole architecture of New Orleans, 1953.
Crequi-Montfort, G. de, 210a.
Crescentville, Pa., 1056.
Crime. See Murder.
Criminal courts and law in early Ontario, 2196.
Critics, Lincoln's war-time, 614.
Croll, P. C, 1196.
Cromwell family, 1416. I
Crook family, 1417. |
Crosby, Enoch, 513. j
Cross, use of, by primitive Indians, 225. |
Croswell, Harry, 696. j
Crozat's charter for Louisiana, 439. |
Crozer theological seminary, 1818.
Crozier, WilUam, 1604.
Cruz, Carlos Silva. See Silva Cruz.
Cruzat, H. H., 437, 538.
Cuba, 2299, 2300; Lopez's expeditions against, 1593.
Culemans, J. B., 438.
Culleton, Leo, 1585.
Culpeper, Lord, 429.
Culture, Chippewa material, 153; Indian, 155, 182-
218; of early French in Canada, 2073; of the
Hopi Indians, 182; prehistoric, in South Amer-
ica, 218, 219. See also Art, aboriginal, and Civil-
ization.
Culture contact, prehistoric, 163, 173.
Culver, F. B., 1416.
Cumberland co.. Me., 525.
Cumberland co.. Pa., 1536.
Cummings, H. A., 1531.
John, 1727, 1800.
"Cumulative book index," 9.
Cunard, Samuel, 2154.
Cunard steamship Line, 2154.
Ctmningham, C. H., 2226, 2227, 2371-2374.
CuraQao, 2301.
Curious laws, early New Jersey, 1703.
Curler, Arent van, 407.
Curran, W. R., 786.
Currency, colonial New England, 363; of British
Columbia, 2217; of the American revolution,
1764; postage stamp, during the CivU. war, 1086.
See also Money.
Current events, history teaching and. 111; teaching
of, 48.
"Current lawful money of New England," meaning
of the term, 363.
Curriculum, history, 51, 52, 84.
Curtis, E. N., 1671.
N. C, 1953.
Gen. S. R., campaign, 1864, 642.
Cushman, J. T., 1418.
Cushman genealogy, 1418.
Custer, Milo, 171, 1400.
Custis, John, 419.
Custis heirlooms, 1352.
Cuthbertson, A. S., 787.
Cutler, Manasseh, 288.
Cutting, R. F., 1012, 1862.
Dahlinger, C. W., 1057-1059, 1701.
Dakota Indian war, 1862-1863, 617, 620, 974. See
also Slim Buttes battle.
Dakota Indians, 196. See also Teton Sioux. '
Dakota region before 1861, 1098, 1101, 1102; explora-
tions in, 273, 274, 1108.
Dakota territory, cavalry, 1862-1865, 1100; educa-
tion in, 1923; Sioux Indian war, 617, 620.
Dale, H. C, 267.
Dall,W. H., 1777.
Dalton, Henry, 722.
Dana, G. S., 2033.
Dance, Indian, 206.
Daniels, E. S., 2292.
Danvers, Mass., 373, 906, 918, 923.
Dario, Ruben, 2019b.
Darly, Matthew, 511.
Dart, H. P., 439, 1702.
W. K.,866.
Dartmoor prison, England, 557.
Dates, historic, 295.
Daughters of the American revolution, 526, 787a.
Davenport, Harbert, 238.
John, 696.
Davidson, F. C, 695.
INDEX.
165
Davidson, G. C, 2203.
Davies, Samuel, 420.
D&vila, Pedrarias, 2261.
Davis, Commander C. H., 1596.
H. E.,760.
H. S., 752.
. J. W., 1817.
Jefferson, 1225, 1226; capture of, 888.
Mrs. Jefferson, 888.
Davison, W. B., 66.
Dawson, Edgar, 67, 1900.
Martin, 1947.
Day, S. A., 1769.
Deaf, education of, 1901; school for, at Northamp-
ton, Mass., 1936.
Dean, J. C, 280.
Thomas, 280.
Deane, J. G., 1227.
Death records. See Regional genealogy, vital
records, etc.
Deats, H. E., 1548.
Debenedetti, Salvador, 211-212a.
De Booy. See Booy.
Debs case, 1894, 1769.
D^carris, Jean, 2102.
D6carris family, 2102.
Decatur, Stephen, 1228.
Decelles,A.-D., 2043.
Declaration of independence, 464, 496; Mecklenburg,
484. See also Independence, opposition to.
Declaration of Paris, 671.
Decorative arts, of the Indians of the Amazon, 213a;
prehistoric Pajaritan, 159. See also I e^ign and
Ornament.
Deeds, of Hanover, N. J., 1725-1800, 992; Rhode
Island land, 1650-1671, 383; Somerset co., N. J.,
1714-1822, 1002. See also Land grant, and Land
titles.
Deer Greek Indians, 194.
Deerfield, Mass., 920.
Defense, national, duty of, 327; in 1863, 975. See
also Home guards.
De Grasse. See Grasse.
De Kay, Charles, 1954.
Delabarre, E.B.,126.
DeLand, C. E., 1098.
Delano family, 1419.
Delaplaine, E. S., 1346. i
DeLestry, E. L., 1300, 1304, 1345. I
Delgado,J. M.,2286.
Delgado de Carvalho, C., 2339.
DeLinctot, Godfrey, 474.
Dellenbaugh, F. S., 1321.
Demarcation, disputes of Spain and Portugal, 2371;
line of Alexander VI, 237.
"Deming's Vermont tfficers," 1124.
Democracy, American, English origin of, 331,
American, tests of, 327; Anglo-American, 325;
1615; English and American revolutions as her-
alds of, 467; founding of, in America, 325; Illinois
in the movement toward, 798; in Massachusetts
and Virginia, a comparison, 926. See also French
revolution.
Democratic party in Michigan, 1858-1860, 1696.
DeMott, J. J., 988.
Dempster, James, 1581.
Denise genealogy, 1420.
Denny, B. T., 616.
Densmore, Frances, 153, 172.
Dentistry. See Teeth.
Denton col, Tex., 1117.
Denver, Colo., 752.
Denys de Vitr6, Charles, 2107.
Depew genealogy, 1378.
Deschambault, Que., 2104.
Description and travel, 275-294; Georgia, in 1756,
433; historic Mackinac country, 951; Illinois one
hundred years ago, 811; Mexico, 2284; Plymouth
colony in the earliest days, 360; Rhode Island in
1833, 1084.
Desdevises du Dezert, G., 2316.
Design, arts of, 1955; prehistoric art as a source of,
2072; prehistoric ornamental, 152; prehistoric use
of dragon in, 225a. See also Decorative arts, and
Ornament.
Des Moines river, 283.
DeSoto, Hernando, discovery of the Mississippi
river, 255, 256, 266; route in Arkansas, 252; route
west of the Mississippi, 253.
Despotism, German, American revolution a war
against, 466. See also Absolutism, and Autoc-
racy.
Destroyers, U. S. navy, 1602.
Destruge, Camilo, 2317.
De Tremaudan, A. H., 2044.
Detroit, Mich., 934; historical geography of, 941;
Italians in, 949.
Detroit, University of, 1931. '
Dett, R. N., 2032.
Deupree, J. G., 682.
Dewey, George, 692.
Dexter, F. B., 450, 478, 696, 1882, 1929, 1930.
Dialect writers, 1977.
Diamond Springs, Kans., 853.
Diary of Rev. Thomas Prince, 1737, 378.
Dickinson college, Carlisle, Pa., 1224.
Digeon, Aur^lien, 2001.
Dighton rock, 126.
Dillon, P. R., 295.
Dinwiddle CO., Va., 1126.
Diplomacy, American, literary men in, 1659; of
1821 to 1827, Oregon and, 574; principles of, 1641.
See also Foreign policy, American.
Diplomacy, French, in Latin America, 2269.
Diplomatic history and foreign relations, 1613-1668;
Americanism and world politics, 327; conflict with
Spain, 180 4-1 806, 545; controversy between the
United States and Brazil, 1825-1828, 1638; difficul-
ties with Great Britain over conflicting interests
in Central America, 1849-1850, 2288; French de-
signs on America, in 1793, 541; interaction of
European and American politics, 1823-1861, 568;
negotiations and conventions with Great Britain,
1814-1818, 551a, 551b; relations with the republics
of Central America, 2285; relations with the
Spanish American republics, from 1810 to 1830,
2267; treaty of Ghent, negotiation of, 551a, 551b.
See also Algerines, tribute to, German aggres-
sions in the Philippines, International politics.
Jay treaty, and Oregon question.
Diplomats, American, court costumes worn by,
1784; in Japan, 1619.
166
INDEX.
Directories, old time city, 337.
Disallowance of laws, in Canada, 2041, 2078.
Disarmament on the Great Lakes. See Rush-
Bagot agreement of 1817.
Disciples of Christ, in Boston, 1814.
Discipline, military, 612.
Discovery and exploration, 229-274; Catholic church
during the period of, 2247; Chinese discovery of
America, 249; discovery of America, 248, 262, 2120;
discovery of Yucatan in 1517, 2259; French, in
the Northwest, 2044; in Hudson Bay, 2144; in
New France, 2103; in the trans-Mississippi region,
973; Venezuela, 2237, 2365. See also Columbus,
Exploration, and Spanish conquest of America.
District of Columbia, 759-768; in the American rev-
olution, 524; marriage Licenses, 1801-1820, 1537.
Divines, American, 1783-1860, 1977.
Dixon, R. B., 173,
W. B., 1030.
Dobbs, n. J., 970.
Documents. See Archives, and Official publications
Documents relating to the constitutional history of
Canada, 2124a. See also Archives.
Dodd, W. E., 301, 1726.
Doe, E. E., 1421.
Doe genealogy, 1421.
Dog's hair blankets, 184.
Domestic service, Indian captives in, 367.
TDonehoo, G. P., 157, 1061.
Door CO., Wis., 151.
Doran, W. T., 1931.
Dorchester, Lord, 2042.
Dorchester, Mass., 1814.
Dorgan, M. B., 897.
D'Orlic family, 1054.
Dorris, J. T., 565.
Dorsainvil, J. B., 2307.
Dos Fuentes, marques de, 258.
Doten genealogy, 1422.
Doubleday, Abner, 653.
Doud, G. W., 617.
Doughty, A. G., 2124a.
K. F., 2291.
Douglas, F. A., 1315.
Doukhobors, 2214.
Dover, Vt., 1588.
Dow, G. F., 364a, 897a, 897b, 1802.
Moses, 1229.
Dowling, D. B., 2213.
Downer, Silas, 451.
Downing, G. C, 1541.
M. B., 761.
Doyle, H. G., 2309, 2310.
Drago, L. M., 1238.
Dragon, prehistoric use in design, 225a.
Drake, B. M., 1883.
Sir Francis, 247a; chronicle of, 265.
W. W., 1883.
Drama, a prehistoric Quecha, 223. Sec also Plays,
and Theatre.
Dramatists. See Playwrights.
Draper, A. G., 618.
Dred Scott case, 567.
Drinks of early settlers in New France, 2120.
Driver, William, 340.
Drowne, H. R., 1507.
DuBois, W. E. B., 1975.
Du Bourg, William, 1824.
Duden, Gottfried, 964.
Dudley, Joseph, 382.
Duguay, L. E., 2166.
Duguay family, 2166.
Du Gue de Boisbriand family, 2084.
Dulany, Daniel, 1230, 1231.
"Dull Knife," Indian chief, 174.
Dunbar, P. L., 1975.
Dunlap, Boutwell, 1127.
WilUam, 1955.
Dunmore's war, 458.
Dunne, E. F., 788.
Dunstable, N. H., 1844.
Du Pont, S. F., 670a.
Durham, Lord, 2042.
Dutch, colonization in Brazil and Guiana, 1600-167 J,
2337; in Guiana, letter of the governor, 1672, 2360
migrations into and out of New Jersey, 997; set
tlements in Wisconsin, 1161; settlers at Pernarr
buco, Brazil, 1864.
Dutch Guiana, 2360.
Dutch history of the United States, 300.
Dutch Reformed church, 477.
Dutch thanksgiving proclamation, 1674, 405.
Dutch West India company, 406.
Duty, export, on tobacco, 1711, 425.
Duvale. See Altolaguirre y Duvale.
Dwellings, ancient pit, 153; Pueblo, 143. See als:
Small house ruins.
Dyson, Zita, 585.
Eagleton, Clyde, 68.
Eardeley, W. A., 1378.
Earnhart, T. M., 619.
Earthenware, pre-Columbian, 221.
East, Far. See Far East
Eastern states, and the development of the West,
1785-1832, 301. See also Atlantic states.
Eastham, Mass., 1538.
Eastman, C. A., 174.
Easton, N. Y., 1539.
Eaton, A. W., 2150.
D. W., 965.
Eayrs, H. S., 2139a.
Ecclesiastical influence in the Philippines, 1565-
1850, 2372, 2373. See also Church and state.
Eckenrode, H. J., 1235.
Eckman, R. B., 1703.
Economic history, effects of the Civil war, 666:
Illinois, 1758; Revolutionary war, sugar in, 460;
status of the New York Whigs in the forties,
1687; system of the old South, 1726. See also
Social and economic history.
Economic interdependence of the English-speakinp
peoples, 1615.
Economic legislation in Iowa, 1728.
Economy, Pa., 1063.
Ector's Texas brigade C. S. A., 686.
Ecuador, discovery and conquest, 259a; expedi-
tion of Pedro de Alvarado to, 1534, 259a; Inca-
in, 215a; pre-Columbian earthenware, 221.
Eddy, Mary Baker, 1884.
EdeUn, T. L., 1704.
Edes, G. W., 1364.
I:
n
INDEX.
167
Edes and Gill, printers, 1768, 379.
Edgecombe co., N. C, 1036.
Editorial function, in history, 70.
Edmunds, Newton, 620.
Education, among the ancient Mexicans, 227; Bap-
tist, in Pennsylvania, 1818; California, 726, 784;
Canada, 2071, 2185; compulsory, in colonial New
England, 351; compulsory, in Wisconsin, 1153;
in Argentine, 2329, 2333; legislation in Ohio, 1803
to 1850, 1042; Massachusetts, 1168; Methodist
Episcopal church, 1855, 1904; military, 1604;
naval, 1597, 1604; New England, 696; New York
state history, 1030; North Carolina, influence of
the Civil war on, 1035; Ohio, 77; province of
Quebec, 2163, 2168, 2176; services of Benjamin
Rush to, 1331; Spanish America, in the 16th cen-
tury, 2268; technical, what Massachusetts has
done for, 1168.
Education, religious. See Sunday-school movement
and Theological seminaries.
Educational history, biography, 1947-1950; general,
1898-1905; particular institutions, 1925-1946; re-
gional, 1906-1924.
Educational institutions, 1925-1946. See also Theo-
logical seminaries.
Educational system, the Lancasterian, 1899.
Educators, Moravians of Georgia and Pennsylva.
nia as, 771.
Edwards, Agnes, 919.
Jonathan, 696.
W. J., 716.
Edwards co.. 111., 779, 1875.
Effigy mounds, 139.
Effigy statuette, prehistoric, 132.
Egerton, H. E., 2294.
Eichelbaum, Samuel, 2351.
Eitel, E. H., 2026.
Elbert, Samuel, 457.
Elder, M. M., 1932.
Eldersridge academy, 1932.
El Dorado, 749.
"El Morro," 137.
Elections, campaign of 1844, in Pennsylvania, 1060;
Illinois senatorial, 1855, 1690; presidential, of
1864, 613; Wisconsin senatorial, 1869, 1155.
Electric plants in Wisconsin, 1151.
Elementary schools, history in, 79, 302-305.
Elgin association settlement, 2193.
Eliot, Ephraim, 898.
John, 379a.
M. M., 1814.
S. A., 1168.
"Elizabethan sea-dogs,^' 265.
Ellinger, E. P., 1994.
ElUot family, 1423,
i:iliott,J.D.,553.
L. E.,2340.
T. C, 293, 539, 540.
Walter, 1890.
Wilfiam, 2189.
Ellis, E.S., 296, 297.
Ellsworth, E. E., 1232.
Ely, S. M., 524, 762.
Salem, 789.
Emancipation of slaves, 594.
Embargo of 1807, 1622.
Embroidery. See Needlework.
Emerson, E. W., 899.
R. W., 1978, 1984, 2001.
Emigration, to Texas, 1822-1825, 1115; to the Ore-
gon country, in 1829, 704; western, see Overland
journeys to the Pacific, and Union colony at
Greeley, Colo.
Emmetco., Mich., 938.
Emory, W.H., 649.
Encalada, Manuel Blanco, 2356.
Endacott, John, 847.
Engelhardt, Zephyrin, 1906.
Engineering, influence on the history of Canada,
2074.
England, J. H., 1241.
England, activities of Miranda in, 1798-1805, 2314;
American attitude toward, history teaching and,
96, 97, 112; America's debt to, 331; attitude of our
textbooks toward, 68, 97; genealogical research in,
1371, 1384; King of, instructions to Lord Ciilpeper,
1';81I2, 429; King's gift to Christ church, Boston,
1733, 372; Queen of, instructions to Lord Corn-
bury, 1702/3, 395; struggle with France for control
in America, 343, 2082; Virginia genealogical
gleanings in, 1585. See also Anglo-American,
British, and Great Britain.
EngHsh, A. M., 1100.
English, allies of the Indians, 385; attitude toward
the interpretation of the American revolution,
289; background of American institutions, 46, 49;
background of American political system, 1713;
colonial administration in Virginia, 425, 429;
colonial beginnings in the South, 354; coloniza-
tion inn New England and the Bermudas, 360;
colonization of Newfoundland, 2117a; discovery
and exploration, 247a, 265; immigrant in Illinois
in 1817, 811; in the Ohio country, 199; origin of
American democracy, 331; origin of American
political order, 1675; records of American gene-
alogy, 1371; settlements in pioneer Wisconsin,
1143; side of the taxation controversy with the
colonies in 1769, 454a.
English-French conflict in America from 1690 to
1760, 2114, 2123.
English-speaking peoples, 1640; future relations
and joint international obligations, 1615; political
ideals of, 325.
English universities and the development of New
England, 696.
Engravings, rare historical, 496; wood, 1962. See
also Prints.
Ennis,C. C.,1439.
Eno, J. N., 1121, 1371, 1409.
Ensor,L. ,484a.
Episcopal church. See Protestant Episcopal
church.
Eq-uipment for teaching of history, 101.
Equipment of troops, Civil war, 611, 673. See also
Weapons.
Equity, early administration of, 1709.
Ercilla y Zilniga, Alonso de, 222.
Eric the Red, saga of, 245.
Erie, Lake, battle of, 181^, 553.
Erie canal centenary, 1011.
Erskine, John, 1977.
Esarey, Logan, 699, 824, 1995.
Escanaba, Mich. , 937.
Eshleraan,H. F,,412,
168
INDEX.
Eskimos, 719: archaeology of, 160.
Espanola, U92-1524, 242; political jurisdiction of,
2232.
Espinosa,A.M.,2228.
— Alonso de, 13.
Esquivel ObregSn, Toribio, 2273.
Essex, I. B., 817.
Essex CO., Mass., 364a, 914.
Essex CO., N. J., 989.
Estill's defeat, 1782, 859.
Etchings of American revolution, French, 506, 507.
Ethnology, of the Iroquois, 153; work in Louisiana,
153.
Europe, American intervention in affairs of, 549;
balance of power, Monroe doctrine and, 1634;
commercial relations with, 1777 to 1831, 1246;
influence on the development of New England,
696; land communication with America, pre-
historic, 131; opinion of the Civil war, 651; our
beginnings in, 304; politics, interaction of Ameri-
can poUtics, with, 1823-1861, 568; politics, con-
cerned with America, 1796-1806, 545; politics, the
United States and, 1793 to 1815, 1654; radicalism
of, and its influence in New England, 18th century,
546.
European backgroimd of American history, 304,
309, 318.
European steamship company in South America,
first, 2317.
European war. See World war.
EvangeUst, a Baptist, 1886.
Evans, Chris., 1770.
L. B., 305.
Evans, M. S., 69.
Everts, W. W., 1894.
Evertsen family, 1388.
Ewing, J. A., 734, 1907.
Thomas, 570^
Exchange lectureship in 1865, 1903.
Exchequer, early Spanish colonial, 2234.
Exclusion, commercial policy of, 2085a, 2302.
Executive, American municipal, 1717. See also
President.
Expansion. See Territorial expansion.
Expenses, Washington's Valley Forge, 480.
Exploration, first ascent of Long's Peak, Kan., 850;
French, in the Mackinac country, 951; of Sir John
Frankhn and others in northwest Canada, 1819-
1827, 2131. See also Discovery and exploration.
Explorations, archaeological, 135, 138; in southern
Florida, 158; in Trinidad, 120; of the Smithsonian
institution, 153.
Explorers, French, in the lUinois country, 438; of
Africa, American, 332; of the Grand Canyon, first,
1321.
Export duty on tobacco, 1711, 425.
Exum, Jeremiah, 1132.
Eyer, Marguerite, 700.
Factory, iron, at Salem, Mass., 894.
Fairchild, H. L., 1420.
Fairfield, L. W., 1349.
Falconer, R. A., 468, 2045.
Fallows, Samuel, 334.
Family, American, social history of, 1785.
Family band, Indian, 200.
Family histories. See Genealogy.
Far East, foundations of American policy in, 1657; I
United States and, 1624, 1625. See also China, j
Farabee, L. T., 1424.
W.C. ,213,213a.
Farabee geneaology, 1424.
Faris, J. T., 281, 1062, 2311.
Farley, J. M., 1892.
John, Cardinal, 1885.
Farlow, J. W., 1772.
Farmer, the historical, 1731.
"Farmers' register," Ruffin's, 27.
Farnam, H. W., 1768.
Farr, F. C, 735.
Farrand, Max, 298.
Farrar, V. J., 1136.
Farrell, C. H., 1318.
Farrington, C. C, 900.
Farwell, J. W., 452.
Fauntleroy, C. H., 621.
Faust, A. B., 1189.
Fauteux, Aegidius, 2167.
"Favorita," voyage of the frigate, 1799, 271.
Faxon, F. W., 1.
Feather work, Hawaiian, 2369.
Federal convention. See Constitutional conven-
tion of 1787.
Federal power, growth and necessity of, 1681.
Federalism, American, background of, 1637, 1675;
rise and fall of, 541.
FederaUst congressman from South Carolina, 291.
Federalists. See Hartford convention.
Feet of the American Indian, 204.
Feipel, L. N., 1596.
Felch, A. D., 980.
Fellowships in history, 62.
Felter, W. L., 1013.
Fenian raids, 2039.
Ferrell, J. L., 269.
Ferry, Windsor and Detroit, 934.
Fesler, Mayo, 622.
Fessenden family, 1377.
Fewkes, J. W., 127, 128, 153.
Fiction, American, negro in, 1975; social thought j
in, 1910-1917, 1992. See also Novels.
Fifth avenue. New York, 1019.
Filibustering in the fifties, 1596.
Filipino characteristics.
Fillmore, Millard, 570.
Finance, 1763-1767; banking in New Orleans, 1830
to 1840, 883; British Columbia, 2217; Civil war
658; colonial New England, 363; during the
American revolution, 479, 500, 503; early Spanish
colonial system, 2234; of the Confederacy, 601.
See also Currency, and Lotteries.
Fine arts, Argentine, 2330; biography, 1964-1972;
general, 1951-1963. See also Art, prehistoric, and
Pottery.
Finegan, T. E., 397, 1908, 1909.
Finney, C. G., 1886.
Josiah, 1425.
Fire. See Forest fire.
Firelands, Ohio, 1039, 1040, 1043. i
Fish, C. R., 298a, 623.
Hamilton, 1233.
Fisher, Ezra, 1046.
L. G., 1148.
INDEX.
169
Fisheries, convention of 1818, with Great Britain,
551b; of the Massachusetts Bay colony, 364. See
also Salmon fishing, and Whaling.
Fiske, John, 2002, 2003.
. Willard, 2004.
Fitch, A. W., 1379.
Thomas, 348; papers of, 1764-1768, 390.
Fitzgibbon, John, 930.
Fitzpatrick, Charles, 1660, 2138.
J. C, 44, 479, 480.
Five Nations, constitution of, 190.
Flag, American, 333-335, 339, 340; Confederate, 663;
Iowa state, 833; of the city of New Orleans, 867;
Spanish, in Louisiana, 865.
Flaget, B. J., 1825.
Flagg, C. A., 524a.
Flaherty, R. J., 268, 2144.
Flateyjarbdk, 245.
Fleet, Thomas, and John, printers, 379.
Fleming, G. T., 1055.
Florida, 769, 770; " adelantado " of, 241; antiqui-
ties, 138, 142, 144; archaeology of, 158; Catholic
diocesan organization in, to 1819, 1836; early
Spanish settlement of, 242; Louisiana purchase
and, 1622; prehistoric human remains in, 133;
Spanish discovery and exploration, 254; Spanish
political jurisdiction of, 2232; War of 1812 in, 558.
See also West Florida.
"Florida,"U. S. S., 1608.
Floyd, John, 566, 1234.
Floyd family, 1388.
Foerster, Norman, 1997.
Follett, Oran, papers of, 570.
Folsom, J. F., 989, 1240, 1971.
Fonseca Betancur, Pedro de, 2300.
Folk pottery, early American, 1957. I
Foote, H. W., 2033. !
Ford, H. J., 541.
W. C, 70, 365, 1181.
W. E., 2033.
Foreign corporations in American constitutional
law, 1740.
Foreign element in Michigan politics, 1837-1860,
1696. See also Aliens.
Foreign opinion of the Civil war, 651.
Foreign policy, American, before 1914, 1615; evolu-
tion of, 1613a; intervention in European affairs,
549; President Wilson's, 1651; review of, 1634. See
also Diplomacy, American.
Foreign relations. See Diplomatic history and
foreign relations, and under Europe.
Foreign service, training for, 106.
Foreign trade, 1737. See also Europe, commercial
relations with.
Forest fire in Wisconsin, 1871, 1159.
iForman, S. E., 306.
iiForrest,N.B., 615, 1235.
iForster, H. A., 567.
Forsyth, Mathieu, 2085.
Fort, J. P., 1236.
Fort, W.B., 624.
Fort, Indian, in Rhode Island, 385; Oneida Indian,
1009. See also Garrison house.
Fort Donelson, battle of, 1862, 625.
Fort Harrison, engagement at, Sept. 29, 1864, 649.
Fort Independence, Boston harbor, 694.
Fort Leavenworth, Kans., in 1861, 642.
Fort Loudoim on the Tennessee, 443.
Fort Madison, la., 844.
Fort Snelling, Minn., 954.
Forty-niners, a chronicle of, 749,
Fossum, Andrew, 239. /
Foster, C. H., 1597.
H. D.,481.
J. W., 625, 1237, 1238.
M. M., 736.
Foundations, Pennsylvania historical, 1073.
Fowkes, H. L., 779a.
Fowler, Mary, 2004.
Fox, D.R., 1687, 1723.
G.R.,129.
G. v., 670a.
K. M., 931.
Fox Indians, 153.
France, and Louisiana, 1796 to 1806, 1647; and the
American revolution, 484a, 485, 502; and the con-
flict between Spain and America, 1804-1806, 545;
and the Louisiana purchase, 1632; assembly of
1848 and American constitutional doctrines, 1671;
attitude toward Canada during the years of the
American revolution, 2128, 2137; bargaining in
regard to Louisiana and West Florida, 1622; cele-
bration of the founding of New Orleans, 863, 870,
871; colonialquestion, 1789 to 1791, 2302a; colonial
tariff policy, 2085, 2302; commendation of the
Continental congress to King Louis XVI, for
services of Lafayette, 455; Constituent assembly
of 1848, 2302b; designs on America, 179S, 541; dip-
lomatic relations with Latin America, 2269; expe-
dition of reenforcements sent to Canada, in 1760,
2089; final effort to save Canada, 1760, 2089;
Franklin's services in, 464; interference with
neutral trade, 1798-1800, 1737; naval war with,
1798-1800. 1737; officials of, and the American
revolution, 485; relations with Latin America,
2220; relations with the United States, 1796 to
1806, 1647; struggle with England for control in
America. 343, 2082. See also Fre*ich, and Maxi-
milian's empire in Mexico.
Franciscans, and the colonization of America, 442;
in America, 2242; in the Philippines, in 1691, 2376;
missionary to Alaska in 1779, 271; missions in
California, 727.
Francoeur resolution, 2181.
Franklin, Benjamin, 449, 1238a, 1239; activities in
France, 464.
Sir John, 2131.
W. B., 1241.
William, 1240.
Franklin, commonwealth of, 533.
Franklin co., Ky., 1540, 1541.
Franklin co., N. Y., 1025.
Franklin Park, N. J., 411.
Franklin township, N. J., 990.
Franks, David, 1242.
Franks genealogy, 1426.
Eraser, Alexander, 2195.
Frederick, Md., 1346.
Fredericksburg, Va., 1128.
Free Baptists, founder of, 1893.
Free school idea in Virginia before the Civil war,
1917.
170
IN"DEX.
Free schools, in Connecticut and Michigan, dcA^el-
opment of, 1918; in New York state, 1909; laws oi
Pennsj'lvania in regard to, 1834, 1911.
Free soil part j% 1696.
Free state settlers in Kansas, 852. See also Marais
des Cygnes massacre.
Freedmen, legislation regarding, 1796.
Freedom, religious. See Religious freedom.
Freedom of the press, 1706; in the Civil war, 661.
Freedom of the seas, 549. See also Neutral trade.
Freemasons, Peterborough, N. H., 1781; St. Paul,
Minn., 1778. See also Anti-Masonic party.
Freestone family, 1384.
Free-thinking. See Radicalism, religious.
Free-thinking societies, 1813.
Fremont, J. C, 283.
French, agriculture in early Illinois, 812; Arctic
explorations, 246; book on the United States,
first, 506, 507; church in New York, 1820a; colonial
administration in Louisiana, 439; colonial policy
in America, 545; colonization in the Antilles, 2301a,
2301b; colony of Saint -Pierre et Miquelon,
2146; discovery and exploration, 264, 272, 438, 951,
2044, 2103, 2118, 2119; documents concerning the
early history of Louisiana, 436; educator in
Argentine, 2333; expansion into the Pacific, 17th-
19th centuries, 700; fleet in Boston harbor in 1778,
517; fleet off the Chesapeake in 1781, 1603; in
Canada, 2044; in Canada, culture of early settlers,
2073; in Louisiana, 439; in the far West, 17th-19th
centuries, 700; in the Illinois country, 438, 812, 813,
816; in the Ohio country, 199; land system in
Canada, 2038; law in the Canadian west, 2206; legal
institutions in Louisiana, 439; medals of the
American revolution, 515; narrative of Louisiana,
202; participation in the American revolution,
4.55, 456, 484a, 485, 491, 513a, 517; politics in Brazil,
2336; regime in the Niagara region and adjacent
lakes, 403; regime in Wisconsin, 1145; theatre in
New Orleans, 879; visitor to America in 1777, 282.
See also France, Huguenots, Lafayette, and
Louisiana.
French-American accord, 1627, 1631; founders of-
1636.
French and Indian war, 348, 349; French reinforce,
ments sent to save Canada in 1760, 2089; Rhode
Island soldiers and sailors in, 386. See also
Canada, struggle for.
French Canada. See New France.
French-Canadian, history, 2160; nobility, 2175;
problem, 2063.
French Canadians, attempt to influence in the
Revolutionary cause, 490.
French-English conflict in America from 1690 to
1760, 2114, 2123.
French-Indians in the U. S., 183.
French language in Canada, official status of, 2126.
See also Language question.
French regime in Canada. See New France.
French revolution, influence of American revolu-
tion upon, 464.
French West India company. See Compagnie des
Indes occidentales.
French West Indies, 2301a, 2302b.
Friars, Spanish, in America in the 16th century,
260, 2268. See also Capuchins and Franciscans.
Fried, A. H., 1623.
Friedenberg, A. M., 482, 1803.
Friedman, L. M., 366.
Friends, Society of, 1314, 1846-1849; conscientious
objector in the Civil war, 1322; "fighting Quak-
ers," 1178; in early Newport, R. I., 1812; in early
Charleston, 1096; meeting house in Philadelphia,
1049.
Friendship, in the settlement of Massachusetts, 374.
Friendship salt company, 993.
FrisseU, H. B., 1947a.
Froidevaux, Henri, 2128, 2145.
Fronsac, vicomte de, 2085.
Frontenac, Louis de Buade, comte de, 2123.
Frontier, lUinois, 1818-181,8, 809; western, passing
of, 703, 784.
Frontier and pioneer life, 703; Illinois, 784, 820;
Indiana, 1811-1812, 697; Nebraska, 970, 971; San-
dusky CO., O., 1044; Utah, 1118, 1119; Wisconsin,
1143, 1148. See also Prairie schooners.
Frontier defense in Iowa, 1850 to 1865, 829, 830.
Frontier presidios of New Spain, 2277.
Frost, H. H., 1598.
Frothingham, T. G., 1604.
Fugitive slaves. See Dred Scott case, and Negro
refugees.
Fullbrook, E. S., 626, 832,
FuUer, M. W., 1975.
Margaret, 1981, 2005. •
Fullerton, Aubrey, 175.
Fulton, M. G., 326.
Robert, 1064.
Funk, H.D., 1778.
Fur trade, 267; early, 2203; in early Ohio, 699; in
the Mackinac country, 951; in the upper Missouri
region, 1098; in Wisconsin prior to 1822, 1741;
North West company, 695; tokens used in, prior
to 1865, 1745.
Fur trading companies, in the Northv.est, 1760-
1816, 712. See also American fur company, Com-
pagnie du Nord, Hudson's Bay company, and
North West company of Canada.
Gable, F. M., 848.
Gageco., Neb., 970.
Gagnieur, W. F., 932.
Gagnon, Alphonse, 240.
Gaillard, Gaston, 2230.
Gainesville, Va., battle of, 1862, 638.
Galesburg, 111., 787a.
"Gall," Indian chief, 174.
Gallagher, N. M., 1814.
Gallaher, R. A., 833, 834.
Gallen, Helen, 71.
GaUeon, the Manila, 2261, 2282.
Galvez, Bernardo de, 459.
GambriU, J. M., 51.
Gann, T. W. F., 214.
Gannon, F. A., 901.
Garcia, Esteban, 2274,
Garcia Nabia, Juan, 2300.
Garcilaso de la Vega, Inca, 2231.
Gardner, B. F., 1243. i
F. A., 525. I
Theodore, 681.
Garfield, J. A., 1179. I
Garfield co., Wash., 1137. '
INDEX.
171
Garraghan, G. J., 791, 1826, 1835.
Garretson, John, 985.
Garrison house, colonial, 387.
Gary genealogy, 1427.
Gasca, Pedro de la, 2260.
Gaspesia, in 1888, 2161; last royal governor of, 2085.
Gates, S. Y., 1372.
Gathany, J. M., 72.
Gauvain, D., 2146.
Gay, F. L., 1244.
H. N., 1280.
Gayon, Roberto, 2275.
Genealogical society of Utah, 10.
Genealogy, books on, in the Genealogical society
ofUtah, 10; collected, 1376-1389; general, 1371-
1375; individual families, 1390-1522; method of
research, 1374; regional genealogy, vital records,
etc., 1523-1590; Andover, Mass., 917; Canada,
2084, 2164-2168, 2171, 2172, 2175, 2180; Pittsburgh,
Pa., 1800-1832, 1059; South Dakota, 1105.
GeneraUties, 1-118.
Gentry, W. R., 966.
Geographic factors in history, 107; in the develop-
ment of Brazil, 2339; in the development of Min-
nesota, 956; in the history of Detroit, 941; in the
history of the lower St. Lawrence valley, 2177;
in the industrial development of New England,
1743.
Geographic names. See Names.
Geographical study of the Algonquian Indians, 165a.
Geological surveys, government, a century of, 2033.
Geology, a century of, 2033.
George, H. M., 1428.
J. P., 1428.
George family, 1428.
George Washington university, 1928.
Georgia, 771-773; and the African slave trade, 595;
antiquities of, 141; cavalry in the Civil war, 679;
Civil war in, 607; colonial history, 433, 435; com-
missions to Benjamin Franklin to act as agent
of, 449; description of, in 1756, 433; documents
and books relating to the history of, 1774; infantry
in the Civil war, 680; Nacoochee mound in, 134;
Wymberley Jones De Renne library, 1774.
Gerard, A., 1624, 1625.
G6rin, L6on, 2046.
German despotism, American revolution a war
against, 466.
German Flats, N. Y., 1542.
Germans, immigration, 1799; immigration to Mis-
souri, 964; in Brazil, 2346; in Virginia in 1717, 423;
in Wisconsin, 1153. See also Lyon Creek settle-
ment.
Germany, aggressions in the Philippines, 692; and
Latin America, 2270; diplomatic correspondence
with the United States, 1914 to 1917, 1650; treaties
with the United States, 1618.
Gerould, F. R., 1814.
Gerrard, Thomas, 761.
Gettemy, C. F., 1727.
Gettysburg, battle of, 186S, 653; Twelfth corps at,
649; Mississippi regiment at, 683.
Gettysburg battlefield, President Lincoln's address
at, 1289.
Ghent, peace of, I8I4, 551a, 551b; treaty of, 551a,
551b.
136908°— 21— VOL. 3 13
Gibault, Pierre, 438, 521a.
Gibbons, James, Cardinal, 1887.
Giddings^ F. H., 73.
Gide, Charles, 2302.
Gideon, S. E., 1964.
Gifford, E. W., 176.
Gifford family, 1429.
Gilbert, Benjamin, 1848.
Gilboa, N. Y., 1571.
Giles, V. C, 685.
Gill, E. M., 902, 903.
Gilles, Armand, 326a.
Gillespie, A. H., 737.
Oilman, Charles, 886.
W. S., 792.
Gillmore, George, 1430.
Gillmore genealogy, 1430.
Gipson, L. H., 627.
Girard, Stephen, 1245, 1246.
William, 1981.
Girault, Arthur, 2085a, 2302.
Gist, Mordeeai, 457.
■ W. W., 628.
Glasson, W. H., 629, 1599.
Glen, N. Y., 1543.
Gloucester co., N. J., 996.
Gloucester co., N. Y., 1544.
Glover, Brig. Gen. John, 457.
Gnadenhuetten, O., massacre, 1782, 706.
Godefroy, FranQois, 506, 507.
Godfrey, C. E., 1863.
J. M., 2140.
Gods, Indian war, 147.
Goffe, William, 696. *
Goforth, A. M., 868.
Gold coinage of British Columbia, 2217.
Gold discoveries, California, 749; in the Northwest,
577. See also Overland journey to California in
1852.
"Golden Dragon," legends relating to, 214a.
Goldenweiser, A. A., 177.
Goldsborough, L. M., 670a.
Goldsmith, M. A., 1281.
Gdmez Restrepo, Antonio, 2357.
Gonzalez, J. V., 2366.
Good, H. G., 133L
J. I., 1864.
Goodale, G. L., 2033.
Goodpasture, A. V., 178.
Goodrich, C. F., 1600.
Goodridge, E. A., 1431.
Goodridge genealogy, 1431,
Goodspeed, C. E., 1955.
Goodwin, W. W., 1948.
Goodwyn, W. S., 1129.
Gordon, A. C, 1225, 1432.
G. A., 1948.
G. B., 179, 214a.
— W. A., 859.
Gordon family, 1432.
Gordy, W. F., 307, 1169.
Gormly, A. M. H., 1063.
Gorsuch family, 1385.
Gosnell, R. E., 2128a.
Gosselin, A. E., 2086, 2087.
Amed6e, 2088, 2168,
172
INDEX.
Gosselin, Auguste, 2132.
Goutel. See Hennet de Goutel.
Gouverneiir, Isaac, 991.
Government, American, in Mexico, 1846-1848, 582;
American method of, 309; Connecticut charter,
391; constitutional, Abraham Lincoln and, 1296;
federal, backgroimd of, 1675; federal, establish-
ment of, in 1789, 541; in the British colonies, re-
sponsible, 2050a; national, 1711-1713; of Austin's
colony, 1821-1831, 1114, 1116; opposition to state,
in New Hampshire, 1776, 452; teaching of, 1900,
1902. See also Civics, and Politics and govern-
ment.
Government, state and local, 1714-1725.
Government, U. S., claim of "West Virginia against,
1142.
Government control of railroads, 631.
Government geological surveys, a century of, 2033.
Government land surveys, 1140.
Governors, Illinois, 1818-1918, 795; New Jersey's last
colonial, 1240; of Georgia, by royal commission,
434; territorial, legislation by, 1715.
Graham, W. A., 1034.
Grain industry, California's, 746; Canadian, 2065.
Grand Canyon, first explorer of, 1321.
Grand Forks, N. Dak., 1037.
Grand Traverse region, Mich., 950.
Grant, U. S., 1179.
Grasse, comte de, 1603.
Graves, C. A., 1947.
Rear-Admiral Thomas, 1603.
Graves, Indian, 208; of Revolutionary soldiers, 526.
See also Burial cave, Indian, and Cemetery, an
Inca.
Gray, J. C, 649.
Samuel, 903.
William, 903.
Great Britain, and the American Civil war, 596,
604, 665; colonial action in 1776 and 1914, contrast
in, 468; colonial administration of the crown colo-
nies, 17th-19th centuries, 2294; colonial policy,
from 1763 to 1917, 2050a; commercial relations with
the colonies, in 1763, 364; committee of trade and
plantations, 429; consuls of, expelled by the Con-
federate government, 604; controversy with the
colonies over taxation in 1769, English side of
454a; crown colony government, 2294; difficultie,
with the U. S., over conflicting interests in Cen-
tral America, 1849-1850, 2288; diplomatic corre-
spondence concerning the republic of Texas, 1838-
1846, 1113a; diplomatic negotiations with the
United States, I8I4-I8I8, 551b; policy toward the
American Indians, 342; regime in Wisconsin,1145,
relations with the United States, 574, 665, 1613-1617
1620, 1621, 1630, 1633, 1634, 1637, 1640, 1644, 1645,
1649, 1653, 1655, 1660, 1662; rule in Canada, .first
fifty years of, 2039; struggle with Spain, over the
West Indian trade, 2291. See also Anglo-Amer-
ican, British empire, England, Ghent, treaty of,
Jay treaty, and Oregon question.
Great Lakes, limitation of armament on. See Rush-
Bagot agreement of 1817.
Great Lakes region, 191; French in, in 1660 and 1671,
2118, 2119; French missionary at, in 1660, 2122;
historical geography of, 941; Indians of, 195.
Great Plains, early Indian occupancy of, 167.
Greek revolution, 1258.
Greeley, Colo., 754.
Green family, 1433.
Green Point, N. Y., 1013.
Greene, E. B., 74, 568, 1170, 1620.
John, 1247.
Nathanael, 523, 1178.
William, 571.
Greenland, N. H., 452.
Greenough, C. N., 904.
C. P., 1307.
Greensville co., Va., 1129.
Greenville, treaty of, 1795, 542.
Greenwich, N. Y., 1539.
Greenwich village, N. Y., 1024.
Greenwood, Isaac, 1905.
Gregory, H. E., 2033.
Grenier, Edouard, 1282.
Grierson, Francis, 1283.
Griffen, Z. T., 1434.
Griffin, G. G., 11.
John, 1434.
M.I. J. ,1881.
Griffin family, 1434.
Griffith, E. C, 687.
Griffiths, J. L., 1171.
Grimk6, J. F., 453.
Grinnell, F. W., 1213, 1720.
G. B., 130.
Griselle, Eugfene, 282.
Gronert, T. G., 860.
Groseilliers, Medard Chouart, sieur des. See
Chouart, Medard.
Grosvenor, John, 1435.
Grosvenor family, 1435.
Groulx, Lionel, 2127, 2129.
Ground-house Indians, 208.
Grunsky, C. G., 738.
Guadeloupe, 2302b.
Guerrilla warfare, 625; in Tennessee, Civil war, 649.
Guevara, Juan de, 13.
Guiana, discovery of, 244; Dutch colonization in,
1600-1674, 2337.
Guild, C. T., 1814.
Guilday, Peter, 1885.
Guilford, H. M., 1436.
Guilford genealogy, 1436.
Guillet, Dom Urbain, 2133.
Guinn,J. M., 739.
Guion, W. B., 283.
Guitteau, W. B., 308.
Gulf blockade, 1862 to 1864, 670a. 672.
Guthrie, W. B., 51.
Guzman y Gallo, J. P. de, 241, 263.
Gwatkin, Thomas, 1173.
Habitants, Compagnie des, 2120.
Hackett, C. W., 242, 2232.
Hadley, A. H., 825.
Haeberlin, H. K., 180.
Haessler, L. H., 51.
Hagan, H. H., 1301.
Hagedorn, Hermann, 1326.
Hager, W. C, 1064.
Hahnemann medical college and hospital, Phila
delphia, 1927.
Haiti, 2303-2308; independence of, 2306.
INDEX.
173
Hale, E. E., 1888.
Nathan, 492.
Halevy, Daniel, 1367.
Halifax, N. S., 2150.
Halifax co., N. C, 1031.
Hall, E. H., 1014.
M. L., 1865.
Hallock, C. M., 75.
Halsey, R. T. H., 483.
Hamelton massacre, in Kansas, 1858, 852. See also
Marais des Cygnes massacre.
Hamer, P. M., 1092.
Hamilton, Alexander, 503, 1635; founder of the
credit of the U. S., 1764; part in the diplomatic
situation leading to Jay's treaty, 1616.
. F. W., 1804, 1805.
. J. G. de R., 1034.
Hamlin, L. B., 548, 570, 571.
Hammond, O. G., 1373.
Hampton, C. G., 648a.
■ W. J., 1172.
Hampton Falls, N. H., 979a.
Hampton institute, 1941.
Hancock, T. W., 1510. '
W. S., 1248.
Hands of the Indians, 204.
Hanley, S. B., 793.
Hanna, Annie, 869.
Elias, 287.
Hannay, David, 243, 2233.
Hannegan, E. A., 1249.
Hanotaux, Gabriel, 870, 871.
Hanover, N. J., 992.
Hanover, N. H., 1673.
Hansen, M. L., 954.
Hanson, Burton, 1239.
Harden, William, 434, 771, 772.
Hardin family, 1437.
Hardy, John, 630.
Hare, Bishop W. H., 1176.
Hanng, C. H., 2234-2236.
Harlan, E. R., 18.
Harlow, Samuel, 1438.
Harman, H. E., 2006.
Harmon township, 111., 810.
"Harriet Lane," U. S. gunboat, 672.
Harrmgton, J. P., 153.
Harris, H. J., 12.
Joel Chandler, 2006-2009.
Townsend, 1619.
W. R., 131, 2075.
Harrisburg, Pa., 1827.
Harrison, Benjamin, 1171, 1179.
■ M. L., 1263.
W. H., 1688.
Hart,A. B,, 309, 690.
0. H., 1350, 1966.
Samuel, 1176,
W. 0., 872.
Hart family, 1439.
Hartford, F, W., 981.
Hartford convention, 535.
Hartgrove, W. B., 586.
Harvard college, class of 1780, 898; commencement
of 1829, 1943; effort to secure a new charter for,
1698-1703, 382; in 1758 to 1760, 1188; < int he colonial
wars, 1675-1748, 1939; medicalprofessorship estab-
lished, in 1770, 370; monitor's bill, 696; project
fbr a lectureship at Cambridge university,
England, 1903; social distinctions at, 696.
Harvard law school, 1933.
Harvey, B. A., 794.
C. A. P., 1284.
Harwich, Mass., 1545.
Hasbrouck, L. S., 2276.
Haskell,M.L.,701.
Hasque, Urban de, 132.
Ilassett, M. M., 1827.
Hathaway, W. H., 933.
Haver ford college, 1945.
Haverhill, N. H., 1229.
Havre, France, 2302a.
Havre de Grace, Md., 890.
Hawaiian Islands, 2369, 2370; bibliography, 17.
Hawes, John, 1440.
Hawikuh, N. Mex., Zuni pueblo at, 135, 153.
Hawkins, Sir John, voyages of, 265.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 1171, 1977, 2010.
Hay, John, 2011.
O. P., 133.
Haydon, A. L., 2203a.
Hayem, Julien, 2302a.
Hayes, R.B., 1179, 1684.
Hayman, Robert, 2117a.
Haynes, L. S., 702.
Hays, D. P., 1313.
Hayter, Moses, 2199.
Hazlitt, Henry, 631.
Head, human, in primitive art, 226.
Head of the River, N. J., 1545a.
Hebert, Casimir, 2169.
- — — Louis, 2094.
Heckewelder, John, 706. i
Heeney, Cornelius, 1251.
W.B. ,2046a.
Hegemen ancestry, 1378,
Heiskell,S.G., 1110, 1260.
Heller, C, N., 1629.
Henderson, Archibald, 430,
Henderson, E. P., 1252.
G.C.,1740.
H. W., 905,
S.F..1046.
1341, 2012.
Henley, Samuel, 1173.
Hennet de Goutel, baron, 484a, 485.
Henning, Paul, 215.
Henrlquez Urefia, Pedro, 13.
Henry, H. T., 1245.
"Henry, O." See Porter, William Sydney.
Henry, Patrick, 459.
Henry family, 1381.
Henson, Josiah, 586.
Heraldry, French Canadian, 2175.
Herkimer, N.Y., 1546.
Hermann, Binger, 1047.
Hermannsson, Halldor, 2004.
Hernandez, Carlos, 2278.
Hern4ndez de C6rdoba, Francisco, 259.
Herndon, W. H., 1253.
Herrick, C. A., 350.
Hesse, district of, Ont., 2195.
Hewitt, C. N.J 1176.
174
INDEX.
Hewitt, J. N. B.,153.
Hewlett, N. Y., 1010.
Heye, G.G.,134.
Hickey, William, 2298.
Hicks, J. D., 632, 955.
Hidalgo y Costilla, Miguel, 2255,
Hieroglyphics. See Inscription rocks.
Higginbothani family, 1441.
Higgins, K.C.,1442.
Richard, 1442.
Higgins genealogy, 1442.
High schools, history teaching in, 77; in Ontario,
2185.
Highways, Missouri-Montana, 1761. See also Roads.
Hill, D. H., 633.
D. J., 327.
• E. G., 756.
E. Y., 1866.
• H. F., 982.
H. W., 1015, 1756.
J. A., 1800.
J. J., 1254.
Hillsborough, N. J., 1547.
Himes, C. F., 1224.
Hinehman, W. S., 1982.
Hines, E. D., 906.
"Hispanic American historical review," 61, 78.
Hispanic American history, study of, 63.
Hispaniola. See Espaiiola.
Historians, American, 1783-1850, 1977.
Historic buildings. See Houses, historic.
Historical activities, in Canada, 1917-1918, 2053; in
the Old Northwest, 1917, 65.
Historical celebrations, 82; bi-centenary of the
founding of New Orleans, 863, 870, 871, 882: of the
275th anniversary of the founding of Montreal,
2182. See also Centenary, Pilgrim tercentenary,
and Pageantry.
Historical hoaxas, 1809.
Historical misconceptions, origin of political mis-
understandings in, 325.
Historical museum, Illinois, 782.
Historical periodicals, American, 99. See also His-
panic American historical review.
Historical pictures, Canadian, 2077.
Historical poetry, 104.
Historical publications relating to Canada, 2067.
Historical research, 55, 59. See also Historiography,
methodology, study and teaching.
Historical revisions, 469; of Anglo-American rela-
tions, 1614.
Historical societies. Catholic, 99a; of the state of
Washington, 1136. See also under name of indi-
vidual society.
Historiography, methodology, study and teaching,
46-118; state history in the New York schools, 1030.
History, appUcation to life, 72. See also Histori-
ography, methodology, study and teaching.
History classes, readings for, 26.
History reader, 345.
Hoagland, H. E., 1768.
H. W., 51.
Hoar, R. S., 1673.
Hoaxes, historical, 1809.
Hobby, Sir Charles, 382.
Hobson, E. G., 1910.
Hockett, H. C, 76, 1689.
Hockey, J. L., 1911.
Hodgdon, G. E., 1510.
Hodge, F. W., 134, 135, 153.
Hodgins, G. S., 335.
Hog Isfend, Charleston harbor, 1096.
Holden, E. G., 1338.
J. A., 1999.
"Hole-in-the-Day," Indian chief, 174.
Holladay, F. E., 634.
Holland family, 1388.
HoUiday, Carl^ 2016.
R. C, 2027.
Hollister, Wilham, 1204.
HoUoway, Emory, 1977.
Holman, A. L., 1443.
Hohnan genealogy, 1443.
Holme, Thomas, 1051.
Holmes, C. N., 1228.
D. O. W., 1934.
W. H., 181.
Holmes genealogy, 1444, 1445. '
Holt, Henry, 2003. |
Holton, F. J., 934. I
H . week, F. G., 38. ' \
Homeguards, Wisconsin, during the Civil war, 1157. j
Homer, E. B., 1814. i
Homestead bill, 575. |
Homoeopathic medical college of Pennsylvania, i
1927. ;
Honduras, ancient pottery from, 225a; Catholic i
church in, 2287. j
Honeyman, A. V. D., 486, 1380, 1381, 1879. j
Hook, W., 1188. )
Hooker, W. F., 1787.
Zibeon, 1255.
Hooper, Moses, 1150, 1705. i
Hoover, T. G., 77. '
Hopi Indian collection, 182.
Hopi Indians. See Moquis. }
Hopkins, Esek, 1256. j
F. C, 2287.
Joshua, 1446.
Eev. Dr. Samuel, 1812.
Stephen, 1257.
Thomas, 993.
Hosmer, J. K., 1259.
Hospital, Civil war, 636.
Hoss, E. E., 488.
Hostetter, A. K., 1065.
Hotel, oldest in America, 1022.
Houdon, J. A., statue of Washington, 1353.
Hough, Emerson, 703.
Walter, 153, 182.
Houghton, G. M., 1016.
L. S., 183, 330.
Houses, historic, 281; Albany, N. Y., 1021; Illinois,
793; Kentucky, 861; Lancaster, Pa., 1064; Mary- i
land, 1963; Massachusetts, 920; New Brunswick, ,
N. J., 987; New York city, 1019, 1024; New York i
state, 1960; Pennsylvania, 1072; Providence, R.I., I
1082, 1085; Rhinebeck, N. Y., 1022; South Kings- j
town, R. I., 387; Virginia, 1963; Washington, i
D. C, 763, 764; Wisconsin, 1165. !
Houston, M. H., 1226.
Hovelaque, Henri, 489.
(
I
INDEX.
175
How family, 1447,
Howard, McHenry, 889.
Howard university, 1934.
Howay, F. W., 184.
Howe, G. B., 1447.
M. A. De W., 907.
S. G., 1258.
. W. D., 1977,
Howe family, 1448, 1449.
Howell, E. v., 635,
Howells, W. D., 2013.
Howland famUy, 1450.
Howlett, W. J., 1825.
HrdUcka, Ale§, 136, 2035.
Huard, V. A., 2047.
Hubbard, F, A., 1451,
Hubbard genealogy, 1451.
Hudgins, F. L., 680.
Hudson, Henry, 246.
Hudson Bay, discovery of, by land, 2044; discovery
of the Belcher Islands in, 2144; French expedition
against the Enghsh, in 1686, 2081, 2082.
Hudson's Bay company, 2214; activities in CaU-
fornia, 738; chief factor of, 2204; governor of, 1825-
1833, 2202; struggle with the Northwest company,
2203, 2212; tokens used by, 1745.
Hiihner, Leon, 551.
Hughes, S. C, 1812.
Huguenots in South CaroUna, 1090.
Hulbert, A. B., 1041.
Hull, A. M., 1740a.
E.B., 1093.
w'. J,, 1812.
Hull, Mass., 921,
Human factor in history, 107.
Humane society of the commonwealth of Massa-
chusetts, 1792.
Humanitarianism, I84O-I86O, 1768.
"Humble request of the Massachusetts Puritans,"
372a.
Humorists, American, 1977, 1984.
Humphreys, C. A., 636.
Hunnicutt family, 1452.
Hunt, Gaillard, 1711.
H. F,, 185.
— J, D., 2048.
R. D., 1199.
Hunter, A. F., 2192.
"Alvarado," 1600.
C. G., 1600,
Chadwick, 1956.
J. T., 637.
R. M. T., 659.
Hunterdon co., N, J., 150a, 1548.
Huntington, W, E., 1168.
W, R., 1176.
Hurd, Percy, 2049.
Hutchinson, J. II., 1512.
Gov. Thomas, 462, 1259.
Hyde, J. H., 1631,
Iberville, Pierre Le Moyne de, 439.
Iconaclism. See Image breaker, history teacher as;
and Mythological history, American.
Idaho, 774, 775.
Idealism, American, 330.
Ideals, American, teaching of, 85, 92; historical, and
the great war, 98; pohtical, 325; power of, in his-
tory, 81. See also National characteristics and
ideals.
Ijzerman, J. W., 2320.
Illinois, 776-822; agricultural resources of, 1733; and
the underground railroad, 584; Catholic church
in, 46a, 1828b, 1833, 1838, 1843; Catholic missions
in, 1675 to 1844, 1838; early physician, 1243; edu-
cational history, 1937, 1942, 1944; effigy m-ounda
in, 139; Episcopal church in Edwards county,
1875: first citizen, 521a; founder of Beardstown,
1196; history, 316; journalism in, before the thir-
ties, 1806; journey to, in 1837, 294; lancoln in,
1292; momentous incident in the political history
of, 1690; movement of the population, 1870-1910,
1794; prehistoric remains in, 132; Presbyterian-
ism in Stephenson co., 1867; radical Republicans,
1686; struggle of freedom and slavery in, 590.
Illinois, University of, Urbana, 111.., 1942.
Illinois and Michigan canal, 1758.
Illinois centennial commission, 795-797.
Illinois country. Catholic church in, 1820; Catholic
explorers and pioneers of, 438; George Rogers
Clark expedition, 458; missions in, 446; Revolu-
tion in, 521a,
IlMnois river, 811.
lUuminati agitation in New England, 546.
Image breaker, history teacher as, 93. See also
Mythological history, American.
Immigration, documents relating to, 29; German,
964, 1799; into Canada, since 1900, 2141a; into
Texas, 1822 to 1825, 1115.
Imperial CO., Calif., 735,
Imperialism. See Autocracy,
Imperialistic designs of Germany in South Amer-
ica, 2270,
Imperialistic tendencies of the Monroe doctrine,
1634.
Implements, Indian, 121, 122; prehistoric wood
products, 160. See also Archery.
Importation. See Non-importation movement.
Incas, an ancient drama of, 223; cemetery of, 215a;
conquest of the empire of, 259a; in Ecuador, 215a;
institutions, 2363; of Peru, 2231.
Independence, American, declaration of, 464, 496;
opposition to, in 1776, 452; Vergeniies and, 484a,
485. See also Mecklenburg declaration of inde-
pendence.
Independence, Spanish American, See Spanish
American independence.
Independence Hall, Philadelphia, 496.
Indexes (cumulative) to serial publications, 31-33,
Indian captivities, 1266, 1311.
Indian children, captive, 1676, 367.
Indian fort, Oneida, 1009.
Indian Lake, N, Y,, 1016.
Indian land grant in South Carolina, 1734, 432.
Indian land titles, in Minnesota, 952.
Indian language, Massachusetts, vocabulary of,
373a,
Indian massacre, at Gnadenhuetten, O., 1782, 706;
in New Jersey in 1777, 487; Spirit Lake, la., 1857,
831, 841.
Indian moimds, 134, 139, 142, 144,
Indian place names in Michigan, 932.
176
INDEX.
Indian wars, battle of Slim Buttcs, 1876, 1097, 1104,
1592: battleofBushy Run, ^7^5, 319; Black Hawk
war, 1S32, 561, 578; Dakota Indian war, 18G2-1863,
617, 620, 830, 974: Dakota Indian war, 1876, 1097-
1104, 1592; in colonial Rhode Island, 385, 386, 388;
in early Iowa, 844: in Iowa, 1850-1865, 830; in Ne-
braska, in 1823, 971; Pequot war, 16S7, 381; Pon-
tiac's conspiracy, 349; St.- Clair's campaign, 1791,
1605: Sioux war, 1862-1863, 617, 620, 830, 974; TIp-
pecaiioe campaign, 1811, 694, 697. See also French
and Indian war.
Indiana, 823-827; early history of, 694, 697; journey
to, in 1817, 280; Lincoln in, 1288; populist party in.
1694; volunteers in the Mexican war, 579.
Indiana territory, U. S. troops in, 1811-1812, 694, 697.
Indians, 162-208; attacked by Champlaln, Oct. 11,
1615, 1009; British policy toward, 342; chiefs, 165,
385; Fox, Sauk, and Potawatomi, 153; in Califor-
nia, 150, 153; in Canada, 2075; in colonial Rhode
Island, measures of defence against, 388; in
Georgia, antiquities of, 141; in Maine in the Revo-
lution, 498; in New England and New Nether-
land, 162: in Ohio, 706, 1045; in Rhode Island,
English allies of, 385; in sculptural art, 1956; in
the Great Lakes region, in 1671, 2119; in the
Northwest during the American revolution, 474;
. in the Southwest, expedition against, in 1780, 1006;
in Wisconsin, fur trade with, 1741; infantry in the
Civil war, 625; missions to, 693, 816, 847, 1868;
missions in South America, 2316; origin of, 131;
painter of, 1968; remains in Wisconsin, 151; re-
moval from Minnesota, 957; seek a western home,
in 1817, 280; trade in Wisconsin, prior to 1822, 1741:
treaty of 1795, 542; tribal rites, 153; villages, early
Cheyenne, 130. See also Aboriginal America,
antiquities; Clark, George Rogers, expedition of;
Fur trade, Man, prehistoric, and under names of
individual tribes.
Indies, and the rise of the Spanish empire, 2246;
government of, 2262; Spanish empire in, 251;
Spanish trade with, 2233, 2236. See also Archive
general de Indias, and Spanish colonial adminis-
tration.
Industrial education in Illinois, 1840 to 1870, 1942.
Industry, v century ago, in Massachusetts, 901;
beet sugar, in California, 744; California's grain,
746; during the Civil war, 610; in the United
States, development of, 1735; Indiin, use of
rubber, 220; of New England, influence of the sea
upon, 1743; of the Hopi Indians, 182; oil, in
southern California, 748; salt, discovery and pro-
duction in Kansas, 858. See also Commerce and
industry.
Industries, Hawaiian. See Feather work.
Infantry, Civil war, 680, 685, 686.
Ingalls, J. J., 8-±9.
Ingersoll, Tared, 450, 497.
Ingraham, C. A., 530, 1232, 2014.
Inn, oldest in America, 1022. See also Taverns.
Inquisition in the Philippines, 2373.
Inscription rocks, prehistoric, 126, 137; Kensington
rune stone, 156.
Institutional background of Spanish American
history, 2226.
Institutions, American, English background of, 46.
See also Americanism, Civilization, Culture, and
National characteristics.
Institutions. See Societies and institutions.
Insurance broker, colonial, 1242.
Intellectual life of early New England, 350. See
also Culture, and Literature.
Intercolonial commerce, Virginia and Massa-
chusetts, 419.
Intercolonial politics. New York's place in, 394.
Internal improvements, tnd Michigan politics, 1696.
Internal problems dxiring the Civil war, 623.
International arbitration. See Arbitration.
International cooperation, 1634.
International disputes, judicial versus military
settlement of, 1604. See also Arbitration, inter-
national.
International friendship, history teachin and, 97,
International law, American influence upon, 1661.
International mind in history teaching, 69.
International obligations of English-speaking peo-
ples, 1615.
International politics, the Panama canal and, 2290.
Internationalism, 1679. See also World court, and
World politics.
Intervention in West Florida, 1810, 1622.
Intervention of America in European affairs, 549.
Intolerance, religious, in New Netherland, 1816.
Inward Light, doctrine of, 187.
Imvood, N. Y., 1010.
Iowa, 828-844; Black Hawk war, 1832, 578; eco-
nomic legislation in , 1728; soldiers in the Civil war,
628; state finances in, during the Civil \\ar, 658;
topographical surveys in, in 1841, 283.
Iowa, State historical society of, 663, 840.
Iowa, State university of, 839.
Iowa economic history series, 837.
Ipswich, Mass., 927.
Ireland, Archbishop, 1889.
Irish, burghers of New Amsterdam, 401; emigrants
m Niagara in 1847, 2190; in colonial Ne'v York,
401; in the American revolution, 508; mariners of
New England, 708.
Iron factory, early Salem, 894.
Iron industry, Quebec, 2162.
Iroquoian Indians, 191; ethnology of, 153; prehis-
toric village site, 146.
Iroquois, 111., 789.
Irrigation in the state of Washington, 1135.
Irvin, John, 2152.
Irving, Washington, 263, 2014.
Isham, N. M., 387.
Island in the Atlantic, a prehistoric, 131.
Isle of Wight CO., Va., 1132.
Isolation, American policy of, 1634. See also Inter-
vention of America in European affairs.
Ispizua, Segundo de, 14a, 2237, 2238.
Italians in Detroit, Mich., 949.
Iturbide, Agustin de, 2255, 2271.
Jack, William Brydone-, 2147.
Jackes, L. B., 2130.
Jackson, Andrew, 1260, 1261; and early Tennessee
history, 1110; opposition to, 566.
Cordelia, 1195.
Joseph, 1066.
R. L., 2029.
■ T. J., "Stonewall," 667, 1262.
Jackson genealogy, 1453.
Jacksonian period, 566.
Jacob, Henry, 357a.
INDEX.
177
Jacques, Am^d^e, 2333.
Jamaica, British colonial administration in, 2294,
description of, in 1775, 2298.
Jamaica, Vt., 1588.
James, E. J., 994, 1942.
Henry, 1984, 2015.
. J. A., 310, 454.
— Capt. John, 1454.
William, 1176.
Jameson, J. F., 11, 59, 78.
Japan, American diplomats in, 1619.
Japanese in the U. S., 29.
Jasper Park, Alberta, 2213.
Jay's treaty, 541, 1616.
"Jayhawker," origin of the name, 851.
Jefferson, Thomas, 532, 549, 1263-1265, 1693, 1795.
Jefferson genealogy, 1382.
Jefferson co., Ky., 1549.
Jeffersonian states, 532.
Jeffersonisn, 1693.
Jemison, Mary, 1266.
Jenison, Marguerite, 1151.
Jenks, A. E., 186.
W. L., 935, 1715.
Jenness, Diamond, 719.
Jennings, A. H., 587.
Jenson, Andrew, 1119.
Jemegan, M. W., 301, 351, 1912.
Jassup, Alfred, 269.
Jesuits, contest for supremacy in Louisiana, 1763-
1803, 1821; in Quebec under the French regime,
2093, 2113; in South America, 2316, 2321; missionary
in Louisiana, 440; missions in IlUnois, 1842.
Jewell, E. f., 352.
Jewish, journalism to the close of the Civil war,
1803; magazine in Curagao, 1864-1865, 2301.
Jews, Cotton Mather and, 366; early settlement in
the Island of Barbados, W.I., 2292; in New York
dty, 1850; in the District of Columbia, 765; in the
War of 1812, 551; insurance broker, 1757-1758,
1242; of Newport, R. I., 1812; owners of ships at
Philadelphia, 1730-1775, 415; patriots of New
York, in 1770, 482.
Jijon y Caamano, J., 215a.
Johns, J. M., 1690, 1691.
Johnson, AUen, 265, 354, 465, 541, 668, 703, 749, 798,
1987, 2103, 2123.
■ Andrew, 575, 1179.
C. B., 799.
Clifton, 769.
E. F., 1590.
FrankUn, 1796.
J. G,, 1267.
Sir Wilham, 1456.
Johnson family, 1455, 1456,1 i
Johnston, Gen. A. S., 632.
John, 2031.
Mary, 354.
R. M., 638.
■ S. B., 2353.
A. E., 440.
A. J., 1913, 1914.
C. K., 15.
E. A., 1173, 2050.
E. L., 1814.
Guernsey, 1969.
Jones,J. W., 1901.
Jacob, 1268.
John Paul, 520, 1269, 1598.
L. H., 421, 861, 1270.
R. M., 1322.
Capt. Roger, 421, 422.
T. R., 740.
Thomas ap Thomas, 1270.
W. S., 1812.
Jonsson, Finnur, 245.
Jordan, J. W., 1174.
Journalism, in Canada, 2142; in Illinois, before the
thirties, 805; in Louisiana, 869; Jewish, to the
close of the Civil war, 1803; New York colonial, 399.
See also Newspapers.
Juan, Jorge, 2362.
Juda, Fanny, 741.
Judd, C. H., 1902.
L. S., 1850.
N. M., 153.
Judge, famous British Columbia, 2216.
Judges, territorial legislation by, 1715. .
Judicial review of legislation, 301, 1683, 1699.
Judicial settlement of controversies between the
states, 1680, 1698.
Judicial tenure, 1699.
Judiciary, Cahfornia, under the Mexican regime,
721; early administration of equity, 1709; early
Canadian, 2040; Massachusetts, 1830 to 1860, 1340;
North Carolina, 1033; Ontario, early, 2195, 2196;
Sandusky CO., O., pioneer, 1044; Tazewell co., 111.,
786. See also Courts, Legal institutions, and
Supreme Court of the United States.
Jujuy, province of, Argentina, 211, 212.
Juneau co., Wis., 123.
Jusserand, J. J., 299, 491.
Justice. See Judiciary.
Kane family, 1457.
"Kannekuk," Kickapoo prophet, 171.
Kansas, 845-858; antiquities of, 208; artillery in the
Civil war, 681; cavalry in the Civil war, 674;
Civil war in, 642; early Indian occupancy, 167,
208; Indians of, 168, 208; Quantrill raid, in 1863,
657. See also Plains, Indian occupation of.
KansasCity, Mo.,1835.
Kaskaskia, lU., 816, 1834; capture of, 1778, 521a.
Keane, J. J., Archbishop, 1890.
Keating, J. P., 1271.
John, 1271.
"Keeanakuk," Kickapoo prophet, 171.
Keir, Malcolm, 1742, 1743.
Keith, A. B., 2050a.
A. L., 423.
Kelby, Wilham, 492.
Keller, A. G., 1735.
Kelley, H. J., 704.
Kellogg, L. P., 493, 936, 1152-1155, 1725, 1744, 1745,
2051.
KeUy, Faustina, 1437.
H. A., 1370.
Kelsey, R. W., 187.
Kemper, G. W. H., 639.
Kendall, C. N., 79, 322.
Kendig, J. M., 1877.
Kennebec river, loyalists of, 521.
Kennedy, W. P. M., 2052.
178
INDEX.
Kenney, J. F., 2053.
Kennon, L. W. V., 640.
Kensington rune stone, 157.
Kent, C. A., 542.
Daniel, 1435.
R. A., 1915.
Kent genealogy, 1458.
Kentucky, 859-862; anti-slavery movement in,
prior to 1850, 592; as part of Virginia, 1127; battle
of Richmond, 186S, 660, 664; constitution and con-
stitutional convention of 1849, 1719; first lessons
in the history of, 305; genealogy, 1540, 1541, 1549;
George Rogers Clark in, during the Revolution,
454; great lawyers of , 1704; military campaign in,
18GS, 664; reminiscences of the Louisville bar,
1707; slavery in, 1792 to 1865, 591.
Keplinger, L. W., 850.
Kern, J. W., 1272.
Kettleborough, Charles, 1716.
Keyes, F. P., 1229, 1348.
Ejckapoo Indian prophet, 171.
Kilmer, G. L., 641, 1601.
Kimball, Fiske, 763.
H. A., 1423,
M. G., .549.
King, F. E., 937.
Grace, 441, 1306.
King of England, gift to Christ church, 1733, 372.
See also Charles I.
King of France.See Louis XVI.
King's chapel, Boston, 1814.
King's Mountain, battle of, 1780, 488.
Kingston, N. Y., 41.
Kingston, Ont., 2186, 2195.
Kinley, David, 1599, 1642, 2285. j
Kinney, J. F., 1120.
Kinnicutt, L. N., 1308.
Kinsey, John, 1273.
Kinship terms, Indian, 200.
Kirk, M. C, 803.
Kirkfield, Ont., 2192.
Kitchen-middens. See Shell mounds.
Kite, E. S., 494.
Kitts,J. H.,642.
"KiSet," Indian chief, 2120.
Klaber, J. J.,1351.
Klein, H. M. J., 1674.
Klotz, Otto, 2054. \
Knight, E. W., 1035, 1916.
Knights of the Golden Circle, 622.
Know-nothing party, 1696.
Knowlton, D. A., 1867.
D. C, 51, 81.
Knowlton, N. J.,. 1550.
Knox, WilUam, 454a.
Knox CO., 111., 787a.
Kohlmann, Anthony, 1891.
Kolff, C. G., 1017.
Koren, John, 1727.
Kosciusko, Thaddeus, 486.
Kroeber, A. L., 2375.
Kruszka, Wenceslaus, 1797.
Kunz, G. F., 2239.
KuykendaU, G. B., 1935.
Labor, 1768-1771 a century ago, in Massachusetts,
901.
Labouchfere, G., 1632.
La Bourgonnifere de Hauteville, B. F. de, 2106.
La Clair, O. R., 742.
Lacombe, Phe, 2207.
La Cosa, Juan de. See Cosa, Juan de la.
Lafayette, marquis de, and America, 489, 499; and
the 18th Congress, 543; in the United States, 514;
services of, 455.
La Flesche, Francis, 153.
La Grange, J. Leger de, 2109.
Laguna, N. Mex., 147.
Laidlaw, G. E., 2075.
Lake Erie, battle of, 1813, 553.
Lake Forest academy, Lake Forest, HI., 1937.
Lake Superior, in 1660, 2118; missionary at, in
1660, 2122.
Lake Superior and Mississippi railroad, 1760.
Lalande, Louis, 1798.
Lamarche, P. E., 2055.
Lamb, F. W., 495.
Lambert family, 1459.
Lamberton, E. v., 413.
Lammers, S. J., 16.
Lamoni, la.. Mormons at, 1859.
Lancaster, Joseph, 1899.
Lancaster, Pa., 1064, 1065, 1067, 1068.
Lancaster co.. Pa., 412; turnpike in, 1069, 1070.
Lancasterian school system, 1899.
Lanctot, Gustave, 2089.
Land, ancient, disappearance of, 2075. See also
Atlantic islands, prehistoric, and Atlantis.
Land, Canadian, system, 2038; grant of 1862, 1898;
in Chicago in 1835, 822; Indian grant in South
Carohna, 17S4, 432; Indian titles in Minnesota,
952; Rhode Island, deeds, 1650-1671, 383; surveys
in Washington territory, 1140; system of colonial
New York, 1734; tenure in Montreal, early period,
2182; Vermont grants, 1121, 1123. See also Home-
stead bill, and New Hampshire grants.
Land communication between Europe and Amer-
ica, prehistoric, 131.
Land-grant colleges, 1898.
Landis, C. I., 1068-1070.
C. K.,995.
Landmarks, Pennsylvania, 1072. See also Houses,
historic.
Landon, Fred, 2193, 2194.
Lane, A. H., 528.
Langdon, Samuel, 1905.
Language, Massachusetts Indian, 373a; question in
Canadian schools, 2071, 2126.
Lanier, Sidney, 1977, 2016-2018.
Lansdowne, first lord, 1620.
Lanzas, Pedro Torres. See Torres Lanzas.
Lapahce. O. H. A., 2090.
La Plata region, Indians of, 254; trade with the
United States, 1798-1800, 1737.
LaPointe, Wis., 1165.
Larimer, W. H. H., 752.
WilUam, 752.
Larkin, T. O., 731.
La Ronciere, Charles de, 246.
Larrazabal, Fehpe, 2318.
Larrea, CM., 215a.
La Salle, discoveries of, 1627.
"Last of the Mohicans," 1999.
Latan^, J. H., 311, 1633, 1634.
Latcham, R. E,, 25.
i
INDEX.
179
Latin America, and the Monroe doctrine, 1663, 1665,
1666, 1668; Catholic church history, 2247; church
history, readings in, 21; French diplomacy in,
2269; general, 2220-2270; history, 2258; history, as
a field of study, 63, 89; study of, in secondary
schools, 116. See also Pan Americanism, and
Spanish America.
"Latin America," the term, 2228, 2245,2264; protest
against, 2222.
Latorre, German, 43, 247.
Latourette, K. S., 1046.
. N. E., 1046.
Laughlin, H. H., 1635, 2240, 2241.
Laurens, Henry, 455.
Laurier, Sir Wilfred, 2042, 2142.
Laussat, Pierre-CMment de, mission to Louisiana,
1803, 1647.
Lavell, C. F., 343, 2056, 2057.
La Vergne, H. J. de, 1197.
Law, R. R., 481.
Law, 1698-1710; constitutional, 1669-1683; in early
Wisconsin, 1150; in French Louisiana, 439; in
Maryland, career of Chief Justice Taney, 1346;
in Massachusetts, 1830-1860, 1340; power of a
court to declare unconstitutional, 301 ; Rye, N. Y.,
1029. See also Bar, Claims, Judicial review of
legislation, Land titles. Laws, Legal aspects,
institutions, etc., Legislation, and Trials.
Law, Canadian, 2040, 2041, 2078; Canadian con-
stitutional, 2058; criminal, in early Ontario, 219G;
French, in the Canadian west, 2206; in early
Ontario, 2195, 2196.
Lawler, T. B., 312.
Lawrence, E. P. (Mrs. G. A.), 787a.
Lawrence, Mass., 897.
Lawrence, N. Y., 1010.
Lawrence co.. 111., 821,
Laws, Bennett law in Wisconsin, 1153; Massachu-
setts colonial, 369; New Hampshire, 1792-1811,
1708a; organic, of the territories and dependencies
of the U. S., 1716; Pennsylvania married woman's
property law of 1848, 1057; Pennsylvania's free
school, 1911; pension, of the Revolution, 512.
See also Constitutions, and Law.
Lawson, B. H., 138.
Lawyers, early Wisconsin, 1150; great American,
1267, 1358; Kentucky, 1704.
Lea, Alice, 2131.
J. H., 1492.
Leach, F. W., 1316.
J. G., 1474.
League of nations. See Society of nations, and
World court.
Learned, H. B., 1903.
Leavitt, Charles, 1417.
Lebanon, Pa., 1075.
LeConte, J. N., 269, 284.
Rene, 1799.
Lectureship at Harvard university, in 1865-6, 1903.
Ledoux, A. R., 1012.
Lee, Charles, 459.
R. E., 1274r-1276.
T. A., 1198.
Lee CO., 111., 778.
Lee's army, 602.
Leesburg, Va., 1551.
Lefroy, A, H. F., 2058.
Legal aspects of Spanish colonization In America,87.
Legal institutions, of French Louisiana, 1702; of
Louisiana, 439. See also Judiciary.
Legal periodical, first published in New England,
Legal status of women, in Iowa, 834. See also
Pennsylvania married woman's property law
of 1848.
Leggett, E. H., 1455.
Leger de la Grange, Jean, 2109.
Legislation, compulsory education, in Wisconsin,
1153; concerning the free negro, development of
state, 1796; economic, in Iowa, 1728; educational,
m New York, 1910; educational, in Ohio, 1803 to
1850, 1042, 1919; judicial control over, 301, 1683,
1699; Michigan, 1729; Miimesota, affecting state
aid to public schools, 1915; Ohio, 1042, 1724, 1919;
prohibition, 947; territorial, by governor and
judges, 1715; Wisconsin, 1153.
Legislatures in British Canada, 2068.
Lejeune, P. L., 2091.
Le Maire, Isaac, 246.
Le May, Pamphile, 2069.
Lemmer, J. A., 1878.
Le Moy, A.. 456.
Le Moyne d'lberville, Pierre de, 439.
Lenhart, J. M., 2092, 2132.
Lentz, E. G., 317.
Leon, Pedro Cieza de. See Cieza de Le<3n.
Le6n Stiarez, Jos6, 1238.
Leonard, E. C, 1936.
Henry, 1604.
L. A., 1210.
Leopoldine association, 1833.
Leslie, Shane, 1712.
Le Sueur, C. P., explorations of, 272.
Leupp, F. E., 183.
Le Vasseur, L., 2059.
Levillier, Roberto, 2241a, 2324.
Levy, T. A., 1285.
Lewis, F. G., 1818.
John, 2140a.
Samuel, 2289.
T. H., 139.
W. S., 705.
Lewis and Clark expedition, 273, 710.
Lexington, battle of, 1775, 301, 476.
Liberalism. See Free-thinking societies, and Rad-
icalism.
Liberty bell, 496.
Liberty co., Ga., 773.
Liberty loan of the Revolution, 479.
Liberty party, 1696.
Liberty tree of Newport, R. I., 1087.
Libraries, 1772-1775; colonial, 353; early New Eng-
land, 696; early private, 696; first public library
in New Haven, 696; library of James Bowdoin,
in 1775, 925; school, history books for, 20.
Library of Congress, manuscripts in, 44, 45; works
on Mexico in, 15.
Lichtenstein, Gaston, 1036.
Lieber, Francis, 1170, 1277.
Liele, George, 1817.
Lifeand manners, 1784-1791; colonial Virginia, 422;
Spanish and Mexican California, 736; of the mid-
180
INDEX.
die west, 707; of Washington, D. C, in the Jack-
sonian period, 566. See also Description and
travel, Friendship, Frontier and pioneer life, and
Theatre.
Life-savers of Hull, Mass., 921.
Lilbmne family, 1382.
Lincoln, Abraham, 1171, 1179, 1278-1298, 1635; and
his war-time critics, 614; and the convention of
1860, 1692; and the Illinois radical Republicans,
1686; and the presidential election of 1864, 613;
and the Union, 668; as a man of letters, 1293; in
Illinois, 815; nomination to the presidency, 1691;
pictures of, 1289; re-election of, effect upon the
Confederacy, 649.
J. G., 1602.
N. S., 496, 1352.
Waldo, 1779.
Linctot, Godfrey de, 474.
Lindley, Harlow, 82.
Lindsay, Lionel, 2133.
Vachel, 1996.
Linehan, Thomas, 938.
Lines, E. S., 497.
Lingley, C. R., 1221.
Linn, L. F., 574.
Lintum, C. te, 300.
Lippincott, H. M., 1268.
Liquor traffic in Michigan, 930.
Literary club at Boston, 899.
Literary history, Argentine, 2326-2328, 2331; first
American poem, 222; first American writer, 13;
New England, 696; Philadelphia, 1776; spirit
among early Ohio valley settlers, 699.
Literary men in American diplomacy, 1659.
Literature, biographical and critical, 1996-2031;
Colombian, 2357; Cuban, 2299; general, 1973-
1992: in early New England, 350; Iowa authors
and their works, 18; national ideals in, 329; Ne-
braska authors, list of, 16; regional, 1993-199£a;
Spanish American, 2223; teaching American
Ideals through, 85. See also Poetry.
Litle, John, 996.
Little Thomas, 1869.
Little Colorado valley, prehistoric ruins in, 154.
"Little Crow," Indian chief, 174.
"Little Iowa," 835.
"Little Wolf," Indian chief, 174.
Livermore, T. L., 649.
"Living Age," wreck of the ship, 912.
Llano del Rio, communistic colony of, 733.
Loan, Revolutionary liberty, 479.
Local government, 1714-1725.
Localhistory. See Regional history, and Historical
celebrations.
Lockley, Fred, 2215.
Lodge, H. C, 1180, 1977.
Logan, James, 414.
Logstown, Pa., 1061, 1079.
London, Jack, 1984,
London. Ont.. 2187, 2189.
Long, J. R., 1706.
R.C. E., 216.
Longlsland, N. Y., 1027.
Longs Peak, Kans., 850.
Longevialle, Louis de, 1636.
Longfellow, H. W., 1977.
Longley, Justice, 2148.
Lonn, Ella, 688, 873.
L6pe de la Puebla, almirante, 254.
Lopez' expeditions against Cuba, 1596.
Lord, M. B., 1884.
Thomas, 1460.
i'
Lord family, 1460.
Lorimier, Louis-Raoul de, 2093.
Los Angeles, Calif., 732; public library, 8.
Lothainville, fief of, 2088.
Lothrop, John, 357a.
Lotteries, at Montreal in 1701, 2101; historic, in 1753,'
1863.
Loud, L. L., 140.
Loudoun, fort, 443.
Louis XVI, king of France, 485.
Louisbourg, capture of, 1745, 2123; from its founda-
tion to its fall, 1713-1758, 2095; sieges of, 1745 and
1758, 344.
Louisiana, 863-885; ethnology, 153; populism m,
1697; reconstruction in, after 1868, 688; secession
of, 677; seizure of the federal arsenal at Baton
Rouge, 1861, 605.
Louisiana (province), Bonaparte and, 1632; contest
between the Jesuits and Capuchins for supremacy
ia, 1763-1803, 1821; delimitation of , in 1803, 1647,
early history of, 447; French and Spanish docu-
ments concerning the early history of, 436; French
colonization, 1627; French period, 436, 437, 43^
441, 444, 447; hospitals and schools for girls in, 444;
Indians in, during the French period, 202; legal
institutions of, 439; retrocessix)n from Spain to
France, 1647; sidelights on the history of the
colony, 445; Spanish period, 1647; Spanish officials
of, and the American revolution, 459; Spanish flag
in, 865: to the 18th centiu-y, 1647; under Bienville,
437; Ursulme sisters in, in^727, 444.
Louisiana purchase, 545; and the Floridas, 1622;
Bonaparte and, 1632.
Louisville, Ky., reminiscences of the bar, 1707.
Lovejoy, O. A.. 743.
Lovelace family, 1385. ,
Lovett, H. M., 543, 1248, 1788.
R. M., 1182.
Low, A. M.. 1368.
Lowe, W. J., 1071.
Lowell, James Russell, 1977.
Lower Canadian rebellion, 1837-1838, 2039.
Lowrey, L. T., 572.
Loyal Block house, 505.
Loyal legion. See Military order of the loyal legion.
Loyalists, 1430; New Haven, Conn., 478, 696; of
Niagara, claims of, 1784-1790, 2188; of the Ken-
nebec, 521; of the St. Lawrence, 505; Virginia,
1173. See aZso Tories.
Luneberg, district of, Ont., 2195.
Lungkwitz, Herman, 1964.
Lutherans, 1851-1853; leaders, 1895, 1896.
Lydecker, R. C, 2368a.
Lye, Joseph, 901. •.
Lyman, W. A., 851.
W. D., 285, 1137.
Lynching, 1795.
Lynn, Mass., 901.
Lyon, Mary, 1949.
Lyon Creek settlement, Kan., 855.
INDEX.
181
Maar, Charles, 997.
Maas, Otto, 442.
MacAdam, George, 1319.
McAdie. A. G., 247a.
Macbeth, Madge, 2060.
MacBeth, R. G., 2205, 2216.
McCabe, W. G., 2028.
McCann, M. A., 1828a.
MacCaughey, Vaughan, 17, 2370.
McChesney, Mark, 1666.
McClellan, Gen. G. B., at Antietam, 649.
McCloskey, John, Cardinal, 1892.
McCormack, E. F., 1814.
McCrea, Jane, 487.
McCrea family, 1381.
McCuUough, G. G., 1461.
McCullough family, 1461.
MacCurdy, G. G., 216a.
McDermott, E. J., 1707.
Maedonald, Sir John, 2042.
McDonald, Archibald, 705, 2204.
McDonald genealogy, 705.
McDonnell, John. 509.
Macdonnell y de Gond^, E. R., Spanish admiral,
550.
McDougle, I. E., 591, 861a.
McDowell, J. H., 1462.
McDowell family, 1462.
McFarland, Baxter, 683.
McGill, J. T., 1365.
McGrath, John, 874.
MacGregor, William, 2368.
Mcllwaine, H. R., 427.
Mcintosh, H. T., 141.
Lachlan, 457.
Mackall, L. L., 1774.
McKeever, F. G., 1812.
Mackenna, B. Vicuna. See Vicuna Mackenna.
Mackenzie, Alexander, explorations of, 2203.
• Donald, 2202.
McKim, R. H., 1274.
Mackinac. Mich., 943, 951. See also Michilimack-
inac.
McKinley, William, 1179, 1299.
McKinley birthplace memorial association, 1299.
MacMnnen, William, 2296.
McEanney, Hayes, 1708.
Mackquinney, Michael, 1132.
McLain, C. A., 1721a.
McLaughlin, A. C, 301, 1637, 1675, 1713, 1977.
Maclaurin, R. C, 1168.
Maelay, E. S., 336, 1202, 1256, 1789.
McLennan, J-. S., 2095.
MacLeod, C. C, 1320.
McMaster, J. B., 313, 1246.
MacMechan, Archibald, 1977.
MacMurchy, Angus, 2194a.
M'NeiUy, J. H., 643, 644.
McNeily, J. S., 689, 962.
MacRitchie, David, 188.
Maddox, W. A., 1130, 1917,
Madeline Island, Wis., 1165.
Madison, James, notes of debates in the Federal
convention, 1679.
Madison, Fort, Iowa, 844.
Magalloway valley, Me., 887.
Magazines, 1783-1850, 1977; early agricultural, 27;
Jewish, in Curacao, 1864-1866, 2301. See also
Periodicals.
Magellan, Ferdinand, voyages of, 237, 2371.
Magic, among the primitive Indians, 225.
Magnan, Hormisdas, 2171.
Magnuson, T. A.. 744.
Maguire, T. M., 645, 646.
Mahan. A. T., 83. 1603.
Maine. 886, 887; genealogical records, 1528, 1589;
Indians in the Revolution, 498; loyalists of, 521;
regiment in the Revolution, 525; Revolutionary
pensioners In, 524a.
"Maine," U. S. battleship, 1595.
Maipu, battle of, 1818, 2349, 2350, 2354.
Major, H. A., 875.
Malchelosse, Gerard, 2120, 2172.
Malchelosse family, 2172.
Maiden, Mass., 895.
Mallard, J. B., 773.
Malvern. la.. 836.
"Mamachtaga," Delaware Indian, 1050.
Man. prehistoric, 133, 136; antiquity of, 181 ; in South
America, 224a; origin of, 163, 173, 210a, 224a; phy-
sique of, 164. See also Aborigines.
Manchester, Vt., 1122.
Manierre, George, 1937.
Manila, P. I., 1604.
Manila galleon, 2261, 2379; Mexico and, 2282.
Manitoba, Can., 2211, 2212.
Manjarrfe, Ramdn de, 270.
Mann, M. W., 908-913.
Manners and customs. See Life and manners.
Manning, Ada, 1258.
W. R., 1638.
Manufacturing, during the Civil war, 610; economic
facts in the development of, 1742. Sec aZso Indus-
try, and Factory.
Manumissions of negroes in California, 728.
Manuscripts, 34^45; historical, in the State historical
society of Wisconsin, 1159; letters of Cadwallader
Colden, 1711-1729, 400; of Jasper Maduit, agent
hi liondon of the Massachusetts Bay province,
1760-1765, 371; of Jonathan Edwards, 696. See
also Fitch papers. Preston papers, Flateyjarb<3k,
Plymouth scrapbook, and Torrence papers.
Maps, in the collection of the Geographic board of
Canada, 2038a; of Juan de la Cosa, 244; of Med-
ford, Mass., 910; of Ohio, first, 1787, 288; of the,
Bermudas, 16£2, 1626, 360; of the Firelands, Ohio,
1043; ofthe Northwest territory in 1785,532; of the
Ohio coimtry, 1045; of Rhode Island, checklist of,
6; peciiliar, 338. See also Atlases, and Cartog-
raphy.
Marais des Cygnes massacre, 852, 857.
Marblehead, Mass., 368.
Marguy. Henri, 499.
Marie-Victorin, Frtre, 2173.
Marine, in New France, commissaries of, 2108. See
also Admiralty.
Marine corps, 1591.
Marines in the Penobscot Bay expedition, 2773,1593.
Marinette co., Wis., 129.
Marion. M., 500.
Maritime commerce, 18th and 19th centuries, 549,
1246.
182
INDEX.
Maritime intercourse, France and the Antilles
earl}^ period, 2302a; prehistoric, 151a. See also
Freedom of the seas, Navigation, Transatlantic
navigation, and Voyages.
Maritime law. See Declaration of Paris.
Maritime provinces, Can., 2173.
Markham, Sir C. R., 2225.
Edwin, 1996, 2012.
Marksville, La., 878.
Mdrmol, Jose, 2331.
Marple, Alice, 18.
Marquette, Father, at Michilimackinac, 264.
Marquis, T. G., 2039.
Marriage in early Upper Canada, 2197.
Marriage records. See Regional genealogy, vital
records, etc.,
Marshall, W. R., 1300.
Marshalsea of Quebec, 1681-1768, 2111.
Martin, A. E., 592, 862.
Luther, 1301.
— P. A., 2342.
Martinez Saralegui, P., 248.
Marye, W. B., 890.
Maryland, 888-890; colonial history, 417; commit-
tee of observation for Elizabeth Town district,
1777, 463; genealogy, 1564; general assembly, acts
of, 1694-1729, 417; in the Revolution, 463; law,
career of Chief Justice Taney, 1346; Revolution-
ary period, 1210.
Mascot of Wisconsin infantry, Civil war, 1156.
Mason, John, plantations of, 355.
Laura, 2067.
Masons. See Anti-Masonic party, and Freemasons.
Massachusetts, 891-927; and the Revolutionary war ,
471: antiquities, 126; "Berkshire constitutional-
ists, " in connection with the Massachusetts const-
tution, 1720; biographical history, 1168; chief justice
of, 1830-1860, 1340; colonial history, 350-353, 356-382;
colonial history, conflicts with New France, 347;
commercial connection with Virginia, 17th cen-
tury, 419; constitution of 1778, 1721a; constitu-
tional amendments, 1820 to 1917, 1721a; early
architecture, 1951; early schools, 1914; educa-
tional history, 1936; friendship as a factor in the
settlement of, 374; genealogical records, 1523, 1525,
1526, 1530, 1531, 1533, 1538, 1545, 1553, 1563, 1570,
1572, 1579, 1586, 1587, 1590; governor of, in 1703,
382; historic churches of Boston, 1814; Humane
society of, 1792; laws, etc., 1775 to 1776, 1721; Mili-
tary order of the loyal legion, 1782; pioneers in
Ohio, 1560; politics and government, colonial
period, 369, 371; politics at the time of the Revo-
lution, 462; Quakers at Sandwich, 1849; railroads
in, 1752; regiment in the Civil war, 636, 669; regi-
ment in the Revolution, 525.
Massachusetts Bay colony, 363-383; banishment of
Roger Williams, 384.
Massachusetts biographical society, 1168.
Massachusetts general laws, 1672 and 1675 editions
of, 369.
Massachusetts historical society, 1780.
Massacre, at Marais des Cygnes, Kan., 1858, 852, 857;
Boston, 493; Indian, at Gnadenhuetten, O., 1782,
706; at Spirit Lake, la., 1867, 831, 841; in New
Jersey in 1777, 487.
Massicotte, E. Z., 2096-2102, 2134, 2174, 2175.
Massip, Salvador, 249.
Mather, Cotton, 366, 382.
Increase, 382.
Mathews, C. T. R., 398.
Mathieu, Louis, 2302b.
Matteson, D. M., 32.
Matthews, Albert, 369, 370, 378, 647.
Brander, 1977, 1983.
John, 1041.
T. E., 531.
Mauduit, Jasper, 371.
Maurault, Olivier, 2176.
Maurer, Will, 826.
Maurice, A. B., 1018.
Maury, M. F., 1302.
Maximilian's empire in Mexico, 2280.
Maxwell, C. J., 1405.
William, 1303.
Mayalndians,214;ohronology,216, 217; pottery, 225a.
Mayfield, N. Y., 1552.
" Mayflower," .)Ohn Alden of the, 360a.
Mayflower Pilgrims, 356, 357. See also Pilgrims.
Mayoralty, historical development of, 1717.
Maytown, Pa., 1071.
Mead, A. R., 1918.
S. P., 501.
Mead family, 1463.
Meade, Kate, 1828b.
Means, Delia, 1187.
P. A., 250, 2319, 2363.
Meany, E. S., 1138.
Mecklenburg, district of, Ont., 2195.
Mecklenburg declaration of independence, 484.
Medals, of the American revolution, French, 515.
Medford, Mass., 902, 908-911.
Medical biography, 1927.
Medical history, conditions in the Confederacy, 635;
lectures in colonial Massachusetts, 370; of Quebec,
2159; professorship established at Harvard col-
lege, in 1770, 370.
Medical hbrary, Boston, 1772.
Medicine. See Surgery.
Medill, Joseph, 570.
Medina, J. T., 2353.
Meehan, T. F., 580, 648, 1251.
Meek, Basil, 1044.
Meese, W. A., 804.
M6hda, J. R., 2325.
Mellen, G. F., 1261, 2011.
Mellick, A. D.,;>., 998.
Mellon, W. L., 752.
Memorials, historic, of Illinois, 793; Indian tribal,
175; Pennsylvania, 1073. See also Totemism.
Memphis, Tenn., railroad convention, I849, 564.
Menage, Jean, 2104.
Menard, Ptre Ren6, 2122.
Mendenhall, J. C, 1517.
Mendes, J. P., 1812.
Mendoza, Diego, 2252.
Menendez de Aviles, Pedro, 241.
Menendez Pidal, Ramon, 2245.
Menominee Indians, 129.
Mercer, J. K., 1724.
Merchant adventurers. See Traders, early English.
Merchants, Boston, and the non-importation move-
ment, 471; colonial, and the American revolution,
i
INDEX.
183
470; Jewish, at Philadelphia, 1730-1775, 415, 416;
of Philadelphia, 415, 416, 1066, 1246.
"El Mercurio," newspaper, 2351, 2352.
Merk, Frederick, 1156.
Merlant, Joachim, 502.
Merrimac river, 982.
Merriman, R. B., 2246.
Merritt, Douglas, 1495.
■ Percival, 372.
. W. H., 2061.
Merwin, B. W., 189.
Mesopotamian traveller in America, 1668-1683, 287.
Mesplet, Fleury, 2130.
Messmer, S. G., 1829.
Methodism, Wisconsin, pioneer of, 1144.
Methodist Episcopal church, 1854-1857; circuit
riders in the West. 1783-1811, 713; education in,
1892 to 1917, 1904; in Mexico, 2272; leader in the
South, an early, 1883; mission to the Indians in
Kansas, 847; missionary work in the Canadian
Northwest, 1883 to 1913, 2210.
Methodist Episcopal church. South, 1854.
"Methodist review," centennial of, 1854.
M6tis, French-Indian, 1S3; of the Northwest, 2044.
Mexican regime in California, 721; social life and
customs, 736.
Mexican war, 579-582; Iowa lq, 843; political con-
troversy over, 1696.
Mexico, 2271-2284; American rule in, I846-I848, 582;
and the Manila galleon, 2261; antiquities, 215-217;
archaeology, 215; ayuntamiento of San Felipe de
Austin, 1828-1832, 1116; capture of town of Alva-
rado, by U. S. S. Scourge, lUJ, 1609; disoovery and
exploration, 259; discovery of Yucatan, in 1517,
2259; early educational efforts, 2268; education
among the pre-Columbian Aztecs of, 227; educa-
tion in ancient, 227; from Cortes to Carranza, 2276;
in revolution, bibliography of, 15; independence
of, 2283. See also Mayas.
Mexico, University of, 2268.
Michaud, Regis, 1984.
Michel, Andr6, 1353.
Michelson, Truman, 153.
Michigan, 928-951; archives, 39, 40; at Vicksburg,
648a; Carl Schurz in, 1338; Congregationalism as a
factor in the making of, 1845; department of state,
archives of, 39; early politics, 1695; educational
history, 1931, 1946; executive department, ar-
chives of, 40; free schools in, 1918; political parties
in, 1837 to 1860, 1696; prohibition legislation in,
1729; schools of Portage township, 1922.
Michigan, University of, 1946.
Michigan-Wisconsin boundary, 936.
Michilimackinac, Marquette at, 264.
Michillimackinac company, 712.
Mickle, Jonathan, 573.
Middle west, life and customs, 707. See also Missis-
sippi valley and Ohio country.
Middleborough, Mass., 1553.
Middleburgh, N. Y., 1554.
Middlebury, Vt., 1361.
Middlebush, N. J., 1004.
Migrations, Dutch, 997; prehistoric, 173. See also
Emigration, and Overland journeys to the Pacific.
Miles, Dudley, 1977.
Military camp, Revolutionary, 473. -
Military, command, and civil authorities, in the
Civil war, 655. See also Committee on the conduct
of the Civil war.
Military discipline, 612.
Military expedition, French, to Canada, in 1760,
2089.
Military government, American, in Mexico, 1846-
1848, 582.
Military historical society of Massachusetts, 649.
Military history, 1592, 1594, 1599, 1601, 1604-1607,
1609, 1610, 1612; colony of Rhode Island, 385-388;
Dakota, 1862-1865, 1100; early Iowa, 844; frontier
defense in Iowa, 1850 to 1865, 829, 830; heroes of
1812,554; Louisiana artillery company, 877; Min-
nesota, 1819 to 1858, 954; Missouri soldiers 100
years ago, 966; New Jersey commissions, 1708-
1710, 409; of Canadafrom the earliest days to close
of the world war, 2039; Ohio, from 1787 to 1812,
papers relating to, 548; organization of North
Carolina troops in the Civil war, 611; organization
of the volunteer army in 1861, 632; posts in the
West, early 19th century, 954; prisons in the
Civil war, 649. See also Army, Continental army.
Militia, Uniforms, and Wars.
Military instruction, 1604.
Military order of the loyal legion of the United
States, Massachusetts commandery, 1782.
Military organizations. See Regimental histories.
Military pensions, 1599; laws of the Revolution, 512.
Military policy of the U. S., ie04.
Military secrecy, during the Civil war, 661.
Military service, question of clergy engaging in,
Military strategy, and tactics, at Antietam, 1862,
649; World war and Civil war, parallels and con-
trasts, 641.
Militia, Canadian, 2061; Dakota, 1862-1865, 1100;
in New France, 1636 to 1700, 2120; of Greensville
CO., Va., 1782-1815, 1129; Ohio, papers relating to,
1787-1812, 548; Rhode Island, in the French and
Indian war, 386; Virginia Revolutionary, 529.
See also Regimental histories, and Volunteer
army.
Millard, F. J., 650.
Miller, C.R., 805, 1806.
— E. A., 1042, 1919.
George, 745.
I.E., 328.
Joaquin, 1996.
John, 2364.
Stephen, 1304.
Gen. William, 2364.
Mills, Dudley, 1640.
H. W., 745.
T. C.,939.
Millstone, N. J., 1547.
Milton Grove, Pa., 107. "
Milwaukee, Wis., 1152.
Mims, Edwin, 1977.
Mine Run campaign, 1863, 649.
Mine workers of America, United, 1770.
Mineralogy, from 1818 to 1918, 2033.
Mining. See Gold discoveries.
Ministers, Presbyterian, 1740-1827, 1869. See also
Clergy, Divines, and Religious history, biogra-
phy.
184
INDEX.
Minnesota, 952-961; freemasons In, 1778; governors
of, 1300, 1304, 1345; Indians in, 196; Norwegian
Lutheran church in, 1852; organization of volun-
teer army in, 1861, 632; social and economic effects
of the Civil war, 666; state aid to public schools,
1915; Swedish Baptist church in, 1819.
Minnich, J. W., 679.
Mintun, J. F., 1858.
Miquelon, Island of, 2146.
Miranda, Francisco de, 2252, 2255, 2314.
Mires, Austin, 1938.
Miscellaneous, 332-341.
Missionaries, at Saguenay, Que., from 1671 to 1700,
2080; Baptist, in Oregon, 1046; Capuchin, in South
America, in 1699, 2220a;Franciscan, in Alaska,
1779, 271; Franciscan, in the Philippines, in 1691,
2376; in Cajnada at the beginning of the colony,
2121; in Louisiana, Jesuit, 440; to the Canadian
West, in 1660, 2122. See also Missions.
Missions, CaUfornia, 727, 737, 742; CathoHc, 1828,
1833, 1838, 2316; IlUnois, 1833, 1838; Illinois coun-
try, 446, 816, 1838; Indian, 847, 972; Jesuit, to the
Mojos and Chiquitos, 1767 to 1808, 2316; Method-
ist, in the Canadian Northwest, 1883 to 1913, 2210;
Methodist, in Kansas, 847; Michigan, 1828; Ore-
gon, 693; Presbyterian, in Nebraska, 972; Presby-
terian, in the Pawnee country, 1868; Quebec, 1672
to 1696, 2086; Spanish, 2242, 2251; Spanish, archi-
tecture of, 1961.
Mississippi, 962, 963; De Soto's discoveries in, 255,
256; education of the negro in, 1921; public schools
of, 1921 ; regiments in the Civil war, 682, 683; war
and reconstruction in, 1863-1890, 689.
Mississippi company. See Company of the West.
Mississippi river, discovery by De Soto, 253, 255,
256,266.
Mississippi valley, CathoUc activities in, in 1812 and
1815, 1825, 1826; circuit riders in, 1783 to 1811, 713;
colonial period, 436-447; contest between the Jes-
uits and Capuchins for supremacy in, 1763-1803,
1821; early wars in, 844; French discovery and
settlement, 1627; settlement in, in 1789, 534; social
and economic conditions just before the Civil war,
784; social life and customs, 707; trade in, 1810-
1820, 1739. See also llUnois country. Middle
West, and Northwest, Old.
Missouri, 964-969; bibliography, 14; CathoUc ar-
chives of, 38; centennial of the CathoUc church in,
1841; newspapers of, historical articles in, 14;
settlement of New Madrid, in 1789, 534.
Missouri campaign, 1861-1862, 625.
Missouri river, route to the West, 1761; steamboat
wrecks on, 1103.
Missouri river region, 273, 1098.
Missourians, eminent, 968.
MitcheU, E. P., 399, 1808.
G. W., 1799a.
Mitchell family, 1464, 1465.
Mitjans, Aurelio, 2299.
M4re, Bartolome, 2327, 2354.
Mitre, M. de Vedia y. See Vedia y Mitre, M. de.
Mittelman, E. B., 1768.
Mixon, Ada, 252, 253.
Moberley, Walter, 2141.
"Modell of Christian charity,'' 372a.
Moieties, Indian, 176.
Mbireau, Auguste, 503. '
Mojos, 2316.
Molasses act of 1733, 364.
Money, 1763-1767; of colonial New England, 363; j
Revolutionary paper, 500, 503. See also Coins, Cur- 1
rency, and Finance. |
Monopoly, trade, with the French colonies, 2085a, j
2302. See also Commercial companies, and Exclu- j
sion, commercial poUcy of.
Monro, J. D., 2312.
Monroe, James, 1024, 1668; mission to Spain, in 1804,
1622. '
Paul, 328.
Monroe doctrine, 1634, 1637, 1663-1668; Russia and, ;
1629. i
Montalembert, Charles de, 651. ;
Montalvo, Francisco, 2358.
Montana, overland route to, 1761. 1
Montcalm, Louis Joseph, marquis de, at Quebec, j
2123; victories of, 2123.
Montgolfier, Vahhe Etienne, 2096.
Montgomery, D. H., 314.
T. L., 1053, 1072.
Montgomery, 111., 789.
Montgomery co., N. Y., 1555,
Montpetit, Edouard, 2062. j
Montreal, Can., archives of, French regime, 2098; i
first printing press in, 2130; Gazette de. 1796-1797,
2170; land-surveyors of, French regime, 2097; lot- {
teries at, in 1701, 2101; origins of, 2182; Petit sem- ;
inaire de Montreal, 2176; shoemakers at, in 1728,
2099; Soci^te historique de, 2182; Soci^te Saint- ;
Jean Baptiste, 2183; surveyors of. 1760 to 1800, 2174. ;
Monuments, historic, of Illinois, 793; of Kansas, 847; \
Washington monument at Baltimore, 889. '
Moody, Joel, 852.
K. T., 1502.
Moore, C.B., 142.
G. F., 1950.
H. P., 1466.
J. B., 1641.
W. II,, 2063.
Moore family, 1466.
Moorehead, W. K., 157.
Mooresville, Ind., 825.
Moot, Adelber t, 1359.
Moquis, expedition to, 1780, 1006.
Morale, Confederate, 601.
Moralists, American, 1783-1860, 1977.
Moravian Indians, 706.
Moravians as educators, 771.
Morayan, Francisco, 1635.
More, P. E., 1183.
Moreau, Celestin, 2083.
Morehouse, G. P., 853.
Moreno, Mariano, 2255, 2332.
Morgan, C. C, 1844.
Col. George, 459.
Moriarty, G. A., 1384.
Morice, A. G., 2206.
Morison, S. E., 372a, 551a, 551b, 677a, 1939.
Morley, R. K., 217.
Mormons, 1858-1860; an early defense of, 1120; as
pioneers, 1119; at Nauvoo, 111., 783.
Morrall, Albert, 854.
Morrill, C. H., 1467.
i
i
INDEX.
185
Morrill family, 1467.
Morris, E.H., 143.
G.S.,2019.
. M. B., 764.
Roland, 1619.
Seymour, 1484,
Morrison, A. J., 443, 1131, 1731, 1920.
Angus, 2194a,
J. C, 2194a.
Morristown, N. J., 999.
Morse, J. T., jr., 1287.
Morton, J. S., 973.
Morton, Nathaniel, 358,
Morton family, 1468.
Moses, J. M., 355.
Lionel, 1019.
Motley, John Lothrop, 1977.
Mott, H. S., 1559.
Motto, Massachusetts state, 904.
Mounds, Indian, 144; effigy, in Illinois, 139; in
Florida, 142; in Georgia, 134.
Mound builders. See Ground-house Indians.
Mount Bethel, N, J., 994.
Mount Vernon, Va., historic needlework from, 1791.
Mountain climbing, 850.
Moynihan, Humphrey, 1889.
Mudge, James, 1469, 1854.
Mudge family, 1469.
Mullan, C. W., 1676.
Mummification, 226.
Munfordville, Ky., battle of, 1862, 670.
Munger, E.G., 940.
Mxmicipal executive, 1717.
Municipal government, 1714.
Munitions, Revolutionary war, 891. See also
Equipment, military, and Ordnance.
Munro, D. G., 1642, 2285.
W. B.,2103.
W. H., 1083.
Murder, first conviction west of the Alleghanies,
1050; trial in Ohio, in 1817, 1040.
Murfree, Hardy, 1305.
W. L., 1305.
Murphey, H. X. 652.
Murr, J. E., 1288.
Music, negro, 2032; Teton Sioux, 172. See also
Songs.
Musser, John, 2280.
Mutiny of Wayne's Pennsylvania troops, 1780-1781^
516.
Muzzey, D. S., 1264.
Myers, W. S., 51.
Mystic river, Mass., 892, 913.
Mystics, Anglo-Saxon, 1984.
Mythological history, our, 73.
Myths, Indian, relating to the Golden Dragon, 214a.
Nacoochee mound; 134.
Nahuas, 215.
Name, "Jayhawker," origin of, 851.
Names, geographical, Connecticut towns, 696;
Idaho, 775; Indian, 932; Michigan, 932; Missouri,
965; southern California, 743; state of Washing-
ton, 1138. See also Nomenclature.
Napoleon, and Louisiana, 1632; and the West
Florida controversy, 1622.
Napoleonic wars, 549.
Narragansett Indians, 385.
Nash, Francis, 1034.
Frank, 504.
H. S., 1176.
Nashua, N. H., 1844.
Nashua and Lowell railroad, 1752.
Nashville, Tenn., 1365.
Nashville convention of 1850, 576.
National characteristics and ideals, 325-331; Mexi-
can, 2284. See also Americanism, Civilization,
and Institutions.
National convention of 1860, 1691, 1692.
National defense, duty of, 327; in 1863, 975. See
also Home guards.
National government and administration, 1711-1713
National hterature, American, 1977.
National mdseum, U. S., 182.
National progress, 1907-1917, 690.
National service, Canada and, 2061.
NationaUsm and sovereignty, of English-speaking
peoples, 1615; Spanish American, 2263.
Nationalistic interpretation of history, 96.
Nationality, American development of, 298a; Span-
ish American, 2263.
Nationalization, governmental policy of, 1681;
period of, from 1860 to 1877, labor conditions dur-
ing, 1768.
"Native sons of the Golden West," 62.
Naturalist, celebrated Canadian, 2047.
Naturalization, documents relating to, 29.
Naugatuck valley. Conn., 757.
Nauvoo, lU., 783.
Naval academy, U. S., requirements for admission,
1597.
Naval heroes of 1812, 554.
Naval history, 1591, 1593, 1595-1598, 1600, 1602, 1603,
1608, 1611; prisoners of the War of 1812, 557; re-
search and writing, 83; War of 1812, 552-554, 557.
See also Freedom of the seas, and Navy.
Naval war college, U. S., 1604.
Naval warfare. Admiral Mahan on, 1603; New
Hampshire's contribution to, 978.
Navarrete, Martin Fernandez de, 263.
Navigation, between Spain and the Indies, 2236.
of the Connecticut river, 702. See also Maritime
intercourse. Steam navigation, and Trans- Atlan-
tic steamship company.
Navy, Confederate, 624.
Navy, U. S., 1598, 1600; and filibustering in the
fifties, 1596; assistant secretary of, correspondence,
1861-1865, 670a; blockade in, 1863, 1608; Civil war,
670a, 672, 1608; names borne by destroyers, 1602;
story of, 1611. See also Marines, Naval history
and Naval warfare.
Neafie, John, 1477.
Nebraska, 970-975; Indians of, 208; Presbyterian
mission in, 1831-1849, 1868.
Nebraska history teachers' association, 84.
Needlework, historic, from Mount Vernon, 1791.
Neeser, R. W., 2000.
Negro village in Brazil, destroyed in 1696, 2338.,
Negroes, as soldiers in our wars, 1594; Baptist
preachers, 1817; discussions in the Constitutional
convention regarding, 1682; documents relating
to, 29; education of, 1921, 1941; free, state legisla-
tion concerning, 1796; historical account, 1798; in
186
INDEX.
California, manumission papers, 1851-1856, 728;
in literature and art, 1975; in the Civil war, 19-11;
in the South, lynching of, 1794a; labor during the
plantation regime, 1771; mathematician and
astronomer, 1192; migration to the North, 1800a;
music, 2032; of New York city, 585; pohtical his-
tory, 1799a; population, 1790-1915, 1800; problem,
1798, 1799a; refugee colony in Canada, 2193, 2194;
Thomas Jefferson's thoughts on, 1795. See also
Howard university, and Slavery.
Nehantic Indians, 201.
Nelson, N. C, 144.
WilUam, 1807.
Neponsit, N. Y., 1010.
Neshanic, N. J., 988.
Neumann, Henry, 85.
Neutral trade, 1798-1800, 1737. See also Declaration
of Paris, and Freedom of the seas.
Neutrahty, American, end of, in 1917, 1634; armed,
of 1794, 1616.-
Nevada, 976, 977.
Nevada co., Cal., 725.
New Amsterdam, Irish burghers of, 401.
New Bedford, Mass., 916.
New Brunswick, N. J., 486, 987.
New Brunswick, University of, Fredericton, N. B.,
2147.
New England, and the Bavarian Illuminati, 546;
beginnings of, 352, 1814; colonial history, 350-391;
compulsory education in colonial, 351; English
shipments to, 1636-1639, 380; history of, 696; in-
fluence of English universities on, 696; influence
of the sea upon the industries of, 1743; Irish mari-
ners in, 708; minister of, diary, 1784-1819, 896; re-
ligious and political agitation in, 18th century,
646; religious history, last quarter of the 18th cen-
tury, 1815; schools, development of, 1789 to 1860,
1913; tour through, in 1790, 291; Unitarianism in,
1814.
New Englanders, early, 350.
New France, 2081-2123; conquest of, 2123; crusad,
ers of, 2103; history of, 2044; origin of the name-
2110. See also Canada, discovery to 1763.
New Granada, last viceroys of, 2358.
New Hampshire, 978-984; colonial history, 355;
Congregational church in Nashua, 1844; consti-
tution and constitutional conventions, 1722; con-
stitutional convention, 1918, 1722; freemasons in,
1781; genealogy, 1535; laws of, 1792-1811, 1708a;
opposition to the movement for independence in,
in 1776, 452; pioneers of religious liberty, 1893,
1897.
New Hampshire grants, 1121.
New Haven, Conn., 755, 756; first public library in,
696; in 1784, 696; loyaUsts of, 478.
New Haven co., Conn., 756.
New Haven colony, 450.
New Jersey, 985-1005; antiquities, 155; archaeol-
ogy, 150a; colonial history, 409-411; commissions,
civil and military, 1708-1710, 409; curious early
laws of, 1703; genealogy, 1380, 1532, 1544, 1545a,
1547, 1548, 1550, 1556, 1567, 1568, 1573, 1574, 1582-
1584; governor of, 1312; last colonial governor,
1240; Presbyterian church in, 1870; Presbyterian
ministers in, 1740-1827, 1869; wills, administra-
tors, etc., 1730-1760, 1556.
New Madrid, Mo., 534,
New Mexico, antiquities, 137, 143, 147, 1.53; expedi-
tion of the governor to the Moquis, in 1780, 1006;
mission architecture, 1961; prehistoric inscription
rock in, 137; Spanish colonization in, 448.
New Netherland, Indians of, 162; religious intoler-
ance in, 408; source for the history of, 406. See also
New York state, colonial history.
New Orleans, La., 863, 867, 870-872, 879, 880, 883;
banking in, from 1830 to 1849, 1767; Catholic
bibliography of, 5; Creole architecture, 1953;
founding of, 447; under Bienville, 437.
New Spain, Augustinians in, 2274; early colonists,
2281; founding of, 2232; frontier presidios of,
inspection of, 1766-1768, 2277. See aho Mexico,
and Spanish r(^gime in America.
New York (city), Broadway tabernacle church,
1850; Catholic bibliography, 5; Church of St.
Vincent de Paul (French), 1820a; colonial citi-
zen of, 402; colonial history, 396-402; colonial
schools and colleges, 397; Dutch Reformed church
in, during the Revolution, 477; families of, in 1723,
398; Fifth avenue, 1018; Jewish patriots, 1770,
482; negroes of, 585; old houses of, 1019; old-time
directories of, 337; place in intercolonial politics,
394; quaint reminders of history in, 1024; rapid
transit in, 1762; relation to the New York central
railroad, 1757; Revolutionary camp at, 473;
Richmond Hill, 1023; Salmagundi club, 1958;
vital records, 1557-1559; water supply, 1014-
New York (state), 1007-1030; architecture of early
houses in, 1960; archives of the city of Kingston,
41; Chamber of commerce, 1736; church records,
transcribed by the New York genealogical and
biographical society, 1375; colonial history,
392-408; colonial journalism in, 399; colonial
land system, 404; colonial schools and colleges,
397; educational history, 1940; educational legis-
lation and administration in, 1777 to 1850, 1910;
genealogical records, 1527, 1539, 1542, 1543, 1546,
1552, 1554, 1555, 1557-1559, 1565, 1566, 1569, 1571,
1577,1578, 1581; history and government, 315;
land system, of colonial period, 1734; Lutherans
of, 1648-1918, 1853; newspapers of, 1690-1820,
bibhography, 4; politics, decline of aristocracy
in, 1723; prehistoric Indians in, 192; prehistoric
Iroquoian site in, 146; Presbyterian church at
Spencer, N. Y., 1865; Presbyterian missionary
in, in 1798, 1874; project for the conquest of,
from Canada, in 1689, 2114; struggle for free
schools in, 1909; tories of, 2150; tory lieutenant
governor of, 400; troops in the battle of Gettys-
burg, 653; Whig party in, in the forties, 16S7.
New York genealogica .and biographical society,
1375.
New York historical society, 400, 473; early Ameri-
cana in, 19.
New York state archeological association, 146.
New York state library, 1775.
New York Sun, story of, 1808.
Newbury, Mass., 1586.
Newcomb, William, 1377.
Newfoundland, colonization of, 2117a; difficulties
with the Dominion of Canada, 2148.
Newman, Samuel, 1605.
Newport, R. I., 388, 1081, 1086, 1087, 1812.
I
I ■
INDEX.
187
Newport historical society, Newport, R. L, 1812.
Newspapers, 1775-1860, 1977; and military secrecy,
during the Civil war, 661; bibliography of, 1690-
mo, 4; Canadian, 1793-1797, 2170; development
of, 1804; early Catholic, 1802a; early I;ancaster,
Pa., German, 1065; in the State historical society
of Wisconsin, 30; notes toward a history of, 1807;
South American, 2351, 2352; story of the Sun,
N, y.; 1808. See also Journahsm.
Newton, A. P., 2064.
Simon, 1086.
Newton, N. J., 1870.
Niagara, Ont., Irish emigrants in, in 1847, 2190;
loyalists of, 2188.
Niagara region under French control, 403.
Niagara ship canal projects, 1015.
Nicaragua, 2288: bombardment of Greytown, 1834,
1596; filibuster war, 1855-1860, 1596.
Nichols, B. R., 373a.
Nicholson, Meredith, 707.
Nicolay, Helen, 1606.
NicoU family, 1470.
Nicollet, Jean, 2044.
NicoUs, Mathias, 1433.
NicoUs family, 1388.
Nitchie, Elizabeth, 1985.
Nitze, W. A., 286.
NobiUty, French Canadian, 2175.
Noble, H. H., 505.
■ S. G., 1921.
Noel, F. R., 1764a.
Nolan, Philip, the real, 1306.
Nolhac, Pierre de, 506, 507.
Nomenclature, Philippine rehgious, 2375. See also
Names, geographical.
Non-importation movement, 471.
NordensMold, Erland, 218-220.
Norfolk CO., Mass., 896a.
NorUe, 0. M., 1852.
Norman co., Minn., 960.
Norse discovery of America, 234, 235, 239, 240, 245.
Norsemen's route from Greenland to Wineland, 261.
North, during the Civil war, 668; opinion of ap-
proaching secession, 1859-1860, 572; railroads and
the Civil war, 652; secret political societies in,
during the Civil war, 622.
North Carolina, 1031-1036; colonial history, 430;
Continental line of, 504; influence of the Civil war
on education in, 1916; Regulation in, 430; Superior
court of, 1700; Supreme court of, 1700; troops in the
Civil war, 611.
North Dakota, local history, 1037; Roosevelt's
ranch hf e in, 1328.
North Pacific coast, primitive art of, 180. See also
Pacific coast.
North Pacific Indians, 175.
Northeast passage, 246.
Northmen. See Norse discovery.
Northwest, description and travel, 285; during the
French and British regimes, 1145; far, 285, 293, 693,
695, 709, 775; French discovery and exploration in,
2044; fur trading companies in, 1760-1816, 712; gold
discoveries in, 577; Indians of, 185; journeys in, in
1811-1812, 293; Pacific, 709, 775; relations of Ameri-
can and Canadian, 1617; upper Missouri region,
1830 to 1848, 1098. See also Oregon country. Pa-
cific coast, and West.
136908°— 21— VOL. 3 14
Northwest, Canadian, exploration in, 1819-1827,
2131; history of, 2209; "king" of, 1825 to 1833, 2202;
relations with American Northwest, 2036.
Northwest, Old, American supremacy in, during
the Revolution, 521a; George Rogers Clark in,
during the Revolution, 454; in the time of the
Confederation, 1041; Indian menace in, 542; jour-
ney in, in 1817, 280; journey in, in 1835, 276; map
of, 1787, 288; Methodist circuit riders in, 1783 to
1811, 1856; pioneer priest in, 1879; Revolution in,
454, 458, 474, 521a; U. S. troops in, 1811-1812, 694.
See also Illinois country. Northwest territory, and
Ohio country.
Northwest boundary, 693.
Northwest coast, Russian interests in, 1821 to 1827,
1653. See also Pacific coast.
Northwest company of Canada, 2203; struggle with
Hudson's Bay company settlers, 2212.
Northwest confederacy, 1868-1864, 603, 622. See
also Northwestern conspiracy, 1864.
North West mounted poUce, 2203a.
Northwest Territory, 1041; and the ordinance of
1787, 530; Cathohc activites in, 1812, 1825; claim of
West Virginia against the government on account
of, 1142; first governor of, 1333; legislation in, 1715;
rare map of, in 1785, 532; St. Clair's campaign
against the Indians, 1605; U. S. army ii^, from
1797 to 1802, 945. See alsb Northwest, Old, and
Ordinance of 1784.
Northwestern conspiracy, 1864, 603. See also North-
west confederacy, 1863-1864.
Norton family, 1471.
Norwegian Lutheran church, 1852.
Norwich, Vt., military academy, 1122.
Norwood, Richard, map of the Bermudas, 1622
and 1626, 360.
Notarial papers of Albany, N. Y., 1660-1696, 392.
See also Deeds.
"Nouvelle- France," origin of the name of, 2110.
"Nova Albion," location of, 247a.
Nova Scotia, 2149-2158. See also Acadia, and
Louisbourg.
Nova Scotia historical society, 2156.
Novels, American, in Germany, 1871-1913, 1990;
early American, 1973.
Noxubee squadron, C. S. A., 682.
Nulhflcation in South Carohna, 573.
Numismatics, Argentine, 2325. See also Coins.
Nun, first American born, 1837. See also Sisters,
and Ursulines.
Nlinez Cabeza de Vaca, Alvar, 238.
Obreg(5n, Toribio Esquivel. See Esquivel Obreg<5n.
O'Brien, F. M., 1808.
M. J., 401, 508, 915, 1327, 1415, 1457.,
M. N., 708.
Observatories in Canada, 2054.
Ocampo, Juan de, 254.
O'Daniel, V. F., 1830.
Odiorme's Point, Portsmouth, N. H., 355.
O'Dwyer, G. F., 509.
Official publications, Connecticut Revolutionary,
472. See also Documents.
Officials, Spanish. See Adelantado.
Ogg, F. A., 690.
O'Hara, J. F., 21.
O'Higgtns, Bernardo, 2356.
188
INDEX.
Ohio, 1038-1045; educational legislation in, from
1803 to 1850, 1919; first map and description of,
1787, 288; historiography, 60; Indians in, 199;
jom-ney to, in 1811, 292; legislative history, 1913-
1917, 1724; Massachusetts pioneers in, 1560; mili-
tary affairs, 1787-1812, 548; oldest Cathohc church
in, 1830; pohtical movements in, from 1830 to
1856, 570, 571; Reformed church in, 1877; teaching
of history in, 77.
Ohio company, 1041.
Ohio country, early fur trade in, 698; in the time of
Confederation, 1041; map of, 199, 1045; naiUtary
affairs in, 1787-1812, 548; Moravian Indians of, 706.
See also Northwest, Old, and Northwest Terri-
tory.
Ohio valley, English-French conflict in, 347; French
exploration and settlement in, 2123; literary spirit
among early settlers, 699.
Oil industry in Southern California, 748.
Ojeda, Alonso de, 244.
Ojibwa myths and tales, 2075.
" Old Abe," Wisconsin's famous Civil war eagle,
1156.
"Old Glory," first use of the name, 340.
Old Northwest, historical activities in, 65. See
also Northwest, Old.
Old Southwest. See Southwest, Old.
Oliphant, M. C, 1094.
Oliveira Lima, Manuel de, 2343.
Oliver, Andrew, letters of, 462.
J. W., 1157.
Ollantay, ancient Quecha drama, 223.
OUer, Angel Paniagua. See Paniagua Oiler.
Olney, Richard, 1307.
O'Malley, M. F., 1831.
Onahan, W. J., 1832.
Oneida Indians, 1009.
Ontario, Province of, 2185-2200; archaeology of,
2075; church and state in, 2142; Indians of, 2075;
rebellion of 1837-8, 2039.
Ontario, Bureau of archives, 2195.
Ontario, U. S. S., 539.
Open-door poUcy, 1634.
Opisso, Alfredo, 2248.
Oppenheim, Samuel, 415, 416, 1242, 1426.
Opposition, pohtical, in the Civil war, 603; Lincoln
and his war-time critics, 614. See also North-
western conspiracy, 1864.
Orange co., Va., 424, 1561.
Orange Quarter, Charleston, S. C, 1090.
Orators, American, 1800-1850, 1977.
Orcutt, W. D., 1207.
Order book, Revolutionary, 453, 461.
Order of American knights and sons of hberty, 022.
Ordinance of 1784, 1041.
Ordinance of 1787, 580.
Ordnance, Confederate, 630. See also Arms, and
Canon foundry.
Oregon, 1046-1048; educational history, 1926, 1935,
1938; pioneer educator of, 1252; Catholic bibliog-
raphy of, 5.
Oregon City, Ore., 1046.
Oregon country, American occupation of, in 1818,
539, 540; and the diplomacy of 1821-1827, 1653;
controversy with Great Britain, 1653; immigra-
tion to, 704; father of, 1234; federal relations of,
1819-1843, 574; first roads to, 1759; letters from, (
1853-1854, 1046; missions, 693; pioneer of, 705; j
Puget's Sound agricultural company, I840, 1130. ,
See also Spokane coimtry.
Oregon question, 1653. :
Oregon territory, Idaho part of, 775. (
Oregon trail, 565. |
Orient, the United States and, 1624, 1625. See also i
China, and Far East. ;
Orleans, Mass., 1538. j
Ornament, prehistoric Pajaritan, 159. See also ■
Decorative arts, Design, and Pottery. [
Ornaments, Indian, 122. See also Banner stones. \
Orr, R. B., 2075. !
Orvis, H. D , 1814. |
Osage Indians, 153. {
Osborn, H. F., 1215. \
Osborne, A. C, 2199. ■
Osgood, E. W., 86. !
Otero, J. P., 2326-2328.
Otis, E. S., 1604.
Otis family, 1472.
Ots Capdequi, J. M., 87.
Otsego CO., N. Y., 192.
Ottawa Indians, 195.
Ottsen, Hendrik, 2320.
Oussani, Gabriel, 287.
Outbreak, war of the, 1862-1865, 620.
Outline of United States history, 334. See also I
Text-books, outlines, etc. .
Overland journeys to the Pacific, early routes, 747, I
1759, 1761; in 1822-1829, 267; in 1852, 290. See \
also Oregon trail, Pacific railroad, Prairie schoon- I
ers, and Santa Fe trail. I
Oviedo y Vald^s, Fernandez de, 238. I
Owen, AlUson, 877. j
G. A., 806, 807, 1175. i
Owens river, CaUf., 739. j
Pacific coast, discovery of central route to, 1822- I
1829, 267; French in, 17th-18th centuries, 700; j
history stories, 715; Indians of, 175; primitive i
art of, 180; settlement of, 2368; Spanish regime i
in, 35, 36; trade, struggle for, in 1849, 564. See |
also Northwest, far. Northwest coast. Oregon I
country, and Overland journeys to the Pacific. \
Pacific Islands, 2368-2379. See also Manila galleon, i
Pacific northwest, history of, 709, 775. See also |
Oregon country.
Pacific ocean, Spanish exploration in, 270. I
Pacific railroad, project for, in 1849, 1755. !
Pacifism, during the CivU war, 603. See also Con- I
scientious objector.
Packard, Joseph, 654. j
Paddock, Gains, 808.
J. D., 836. I
Page, Leigh, 2033. ji
R. W., 1644. I
Rosewell, 1995a. '
T. N., 1265.
Pape, W. J., 757. '
Pageantry possibiUties, 103. i
Pageants, of Escanaba, Mich, 937; of lUinois his- ,
tory, 807, 813, 813a, 814. j
Paine, Nathaniel, 1308. ■
Painlev6, Paul, 1613a. '
Painter, E. E., 22. ;
INDEX.
189
Painter, eld-time landscape, 1971. See also Artists,
Fine arts, Biography, and Portrait painters.
Painting, Argentine, beginnings of, 2330. See also
Fine arts.
Pajaritan biscuit ware, 159.
Palmares, negro x^Uage of, 2338.
Palmer, Howard, 2141.
Paltsits, V. H., 552.
Panama, cathedral of, 2289.
Panama canal, 2290.
Pan American bibliographical association, pro-
posed, 25.
Pan-American statesmen, 2241.
Pan-Americanism, 1616a, 1623,1634, 1668.
Paniagua Oiler, Angel, 2310.
Panic of 1837,1767.
Paper money issued during the Revolution, 500,
503.
Paquet family, 2171.
Paraguay, Spanish province of, 2321.
Paris, Declaration of, 1856, 671; treaty of, 1803, 1647.
Park, C. E., 374.
Julian, 1940.
Lawrence, 1185, 1965.
Roswell, 1309.
Park family, 1388.
Parke, J. G., 1310.
Parker, A. C, 145, 146, 190.
James, 410.
Theodore, church of, 1814.
Parkins, A. E., 191, 941.
Parks, Leighton, 1880.
Parliament, sovereignty of, 469.
Parra Perez, C, 2320a.
Parsons, E. C, 147.
J. W., 1891.
Parties, pohtical. See PoUtical parties.
Party systems in Canadian pohtics, 2055,
Pastells, Pablo, 2321.
Pastor, C. A., 221. ,
Patchin, Gen. Freegift, 1311.
Paterson, Wilham, 1312.
Paton, F. E., 942.
Patriotism, 51, 64, 66, 90, 112.
Patriots, American, biography, 1169; Jewish Revo-
lutionary, 482; Revolutionary, 524; Spanish
American, 2255. See also Revolutionary soldiers.
Pattee, F. L., 1977.
Patterson, F. H., 2153.
Patteshall genealogy, 1384.
Patton, J. S., 1219.
Paul, Hosea, 1043.
Paul family, 1473.
Paulding, Hiram, 1596.
Paullin, C. O., 553.
Paulmier, Hilah, 1022.
Pawling family, 1474.
Pawnee country, Presbyterian mission in, 1831-1849,
1868.
Pawnee Indians, 193, 972.
Paxson, F. L., 88.
Payne, A. M., 2154.
C. E., 343, 2056, 2057.
■ L. W.,jr., 1986, 2021.
W. M., 1977.
Peabody, A. P., 1176.
F. G., 1941.
Peace, Abraham Lincoln on, 1860-1864, 1294; Anglo-
American, 325; a badly negotiated, 1620; conven-
tion of 1861, 659; John Quincy Adams on, 551b;
premature, 603, 1620; treaty of Ghent, negotiation
of, 551a, 551b; treaty of 1783, 1620; universal, BoU-
var and, 2320a. See also Pacifism.
Peace democrats. Civil war, 603.
"Peace without victory" during the Civil war, 603.
See also Peace, premature.
Peaceful solution of international disputes, 551b.
See also Arbitration.
Pearson, Jonathan, 392.
Pease, T. C, 809.
Z. W., 916, 1747.
Peattie, Roderick, 2177.
Peck, P. E., 2250.
Peddlers in colonial New England, book, 353.
Peery genealogy, 1475.
Peirson, C. L., 649.
Peixotto, D. L. M., 1313.
Pell family, 1389.
Pelletier, Georges, 2141a.
Peltier, Nicolas, 2087.
Penal institutions, of New Jersey, 986. See also
Penitentiary.
Pence, George, 1193.
Penetanguishene, Ont., 2199.
Penitentiary, Kansas, 848. See also Penal institu-
tions.
Penn, WilUam, 207, 414, 464, 1315, 1316; trial of,
1670, 1314.
Penniman, J. H., 13.54.
Pennsylvania, 1049-1080; archaeology of, 157; Bap
tist education in, 1818; biography, 1174; Catholic
church in, 1827; colonial history, 345, 412-416; co-
lonial libraries of, 413; educational history, 1925,
1927, 1932, 1945; free school laws of 1834, 1911;
Friends in, in 1790, 1847; genealogy, 1524, 1536,
1562; Lutheran church in, 1851; married woman's
property law of 1848, 1057; pensioners of the Revo-
olution, 528; troops in the Revolution, mutiny of,
516.
Pennsylvania historical commission, 510, 1074.
Pennsylvanian, autobiography of, 1317.
Pennypacker, S. W., 1317,
Penobscot Bay expedition, 1779, 1593.
Pensacola, Florida, 138.
Pension laws of the Revolution, 512,
Pensioners, Revolutionary, 524a, 528.
Pensions, military, 1599; for Confederate soldiers,
629.
Pepper, G. H., 134.
Pequods, expedition against, in 1637, 381,
Pereyra, Carlos, 2343.
Perez, Lorenzo, 2376.
Periodical literature, guide to, 22, 23.
Periodicals, 1783-1850, 1977; American historical,
99; California, to about 1880, 724; first legal peri-
odical published in New England, 1698a; subject
index to, for 1917, 1. See also Magazines, and
under name of individual periodical.
Perley, M. V. B., 1448, 1449.
Sidney, 375-377.
Perlman, Sclig, 1768.
Pernambuco, Brazil, 1864.
Pernin, P., 1168.
190
IN'DEX.
Perrier, Edmond, 2270.
J. L., 222, 223.
Perrot, Nicolas, 2120.
Perrotin, Leo, 665.
Perry, Bliss, 19S7.
O. H., 553.
Pershing, Gen. J. J., 1318, 1319.
Personal papers of- prominent Americans, 44. See
also Golden mss.. Fitch papers, and Manuscripts.
Personal reminiscences. Civil war, 681, 684.
Perth, N. Y., 1552.
Perth Amboy, N. J., 410.
Peru, 2361-2364; aborigines of, 210a; ancient art of,
226; ancient races and civilizations of, 228; ancient
tapestries of, 210; and the Manila galleon, 2261;
conquest of, 2225, 2260; civil wars of, 2225; Indians
in, from 1767 to 1808, 2316; reign of the Incas, 2231;
surgery in ancient, 216a.
Peterborough, N, H., 1781.
Petersburg, Va., retreat from, 1864-1865, 654; siege
of, 1864, 649, 675.
Petion, Alexander, 2306.
Petrie, Richard, 1964.
Petrology, as a science, 2033.
Pewter, early American, 1959.
Pharmaceutical conditions in the Confederacy, 635.
Phelan, T. P., 1211.
Philadelphia, Pa., Catholic bibliography, 5; Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter day saints in, 1860; com-
mercial affairs, in 1790, 1052; Continental army
in, in 1778, 527; first eity plan of, 1051; Friends
meeting house in, 1049; genealogical records, 1562;
Hahnemann medical college and hospital, 1927;
history of, 1077; Homeopathic medical college,
1927; Independence Hall, 496; Jewish merchant
at, 1755-1761, 416; Jewish owners of ships at, 17?,0-
1775, 415; Joseph Bonaparte in, 1080; letters from,
1765-1786, 1053; Market street, 1066; old time
directories of, 337; personal recollections of, in
1770-1781, 450; political affairs, in 1785, 1052;
romance of old, 1062; Theological seminary of St.
Charles 'Borromeo, 1839; Wistar association, 1776.
Philadelphia and Lancaster turnpike, 1069, 1070.
Philanthropist, 1251. See also Barton, Clara.
Philanthropy, 1792, 1793. See also Humane society,
Humanitarianism, and Relief work.
Philippine Islands, 2371-2379; early Spanish- Amer-
ican trade with, 2261, 2282; Filipino characteris-
tics, 1604; German aggressions in, 692; occupation
of Manila, in 1898, 1604.
Phillips, Charles, 1290.
J. D., 90.
P. L., 288, 337, 338, 511, 532.
U. B., 593.
Philosopher, a typical New England, 2019.
Philosophical society of Washington, 1777. See also
American philosophical society.
Philosophy. See Transcendentalism.
Phianey, C. S., 1277.
• Col. Edmund, regiment of, 525.
Phinney family, 1476.
Phips, Sir William, 2123.
Physicians. See Medical biography.
Physics, century's progress in, 2033.
Physiologist, pioneer American, 1370.
Physiology. See Anatomical lectures.
Physique, of prehistoric Americans, 164. See also
Hands and feet of the American Indian.
Pictures, Canadian historical, 2077. See also En-
gravings, Etchings, and Prints. ;
Pierce, G. M., 512, 513. i
Piermont, N. H., 1348. !
Pierson, A. A., 192. I
W.W., jr., 656.
Pignatelly y Rubi, Cayetano Maria, 701.
Pike, J. A., 657.
Pilcher, J. M., 878.
Pilgrim tercentenary, 1811.
Pilgrims, 356, 357, 360-362.
Pillsbury, F. J., 983.
— Hobart, 1722.
Pilven, Theodore, 513a.
Pioneer societies of the state of Washington, 1136.
Pioneers, California, 745; Illinois, 817; Michigan,
950; Mormbns as, 1119. See also Forty-niners.
Piper, F. S., 1781.
Pipiles, 215.
Pirates. See Algerines, Buccaneers, Corsairs, and
Privateers.
Pirsson, L. V., 2033.
Piscataqua river, Masonian plantation on, 355.
Pit dwellings, ancient, 153.
Pitkin, A. H., 1957.
Pitman, F. W., 2297.
Pitney, H. C, 999.
Pitt, William, earl of Chatham, 483; strategy of, 2123.
Plttman, Henry, 760.
Pittsburgh, Pa., 1055, 1078; marriages, baptisms,
and funerals, 1800-1832, 1059; Sisters of mercy,
1840.
Pittsburgh, University of, 1925.
Pizarro, Francisco, landing place of. In 1532, 250.
■ Gonzalo, 2260.
Place names. See Names.
Plains, Great, Indian occupancy of, 167,
Planas Suarez, Sim6n, 2250a.
Plantation regime, 1771.
Planters of the old South, 1788.
Plantz, Samuel, 1855.
Piatt, E. G., 193.
Platte Bridge, battle of, 1865, 674.
Plattsburg, battle of, I8I4, 555.
Playfair, W. E., 2181.
Plays, early Wisconsin, 1991; first American, 1979;
Illinois centennial, 813; native American, prior to
1870, 1989. See also Drama, and Pageants.
Playwrights, American, prior to 1870, 1989.
Pleasant Hill, 111., 819.
Pleasants, J. H., 1385, 1504.
Plum, H. G., 1667.
Plum Island, Mass., 927.
Plymouth colony, 356-362; John Pory's lost de-
scription of, 360; vital records, 1657-1675, 1563.
Plymouth scrap book, 359.
Poe, E. A., 1977, 2019b, 2020.
O. M., 1320.
Poem, first American, 222.
Poetry, American, 1974; American narrative, 1775
to 1875, 1985; historical, 104; southern, of the Civil
war, 1994.
INDEX.
191
Poets, American, biography, 1996; Canadian, 2069;
early American, 1977; early colonial Massa-
chusetts, 2029; of the Civil war, 1977; southern,
2024, 2028. See also Literature, biography.
Polar Eskimo, 160.
Polar explorations, early French, 246.
PoJes in America, 1797,
Police, Royal North West mounted, 2203a. See
also Marshalsea.
Political education, 1900.
Political history of the negro, 1799a*
Political ideals of English-speaking peoples, 325.
See also Democracy.
Political jurisdictions in Spanish North America,
to 1535, 242.
Political parties, 94; in Michigan, 1837 to 1860, 1696;
influence of the West on, from 1790 to 1830, 1689.
See also Anti-Masonic party, Democratic party.
Federalists, Populist party, Eepublicans, and
Whigs.
Political prisoners, colonial, 1240; of the Canadian
rebelUon of 1837-8, 2124.
Political societies. Civil war, 603, 622; secret, 622.
PoMtical system and theory, American, 1681, 1713;
background of, 1675; influence upon France,
1789 to 1850, 1671. See also Federalism, and i effer-
sonism.
Politics, government, and law, 1613-1725.
Politics and .government, 1684-1725; admission of
Louisiana into the Union, 881; aristocracy in
Massachusetts and Virginia, 926; causes of the
American revolution, 469; Connecticut colony,
389-391; controversies of United States history,
301; during the Civil war, 317, 668; early Michigan,
946; federal relations of Oregon, 1819 to 1844, 574;
in 1850, 576; interaction of European and Ameri-
can, 1823 to 1861, 568; intercolonial. New York's
place in, 394; Jacksonian period, 566; Lincoln in,
1285; Maryland, 1694 tc 1729, 417; Massachusetts,
colonial period, 309, 371; Massachusetts, duringthe
Revolution, 462, 471; Michigan, 931, 935; Missis-
sippi,at the close of the Tyler administration, 963;
New England, 18th century, 546; New York, de-
-cline of aristocracy in, 1723; New York colonial,
394, 395, 402; nulhfication in South Carolina, 573;
Ohio, from 1830 to 1856, 570, 571; Old Northwest,
1041; period from 1826 to 1876, 559; period from
1830 to 1856, 670, 571; Philadelphia, in 1785, 1052;
political development of the United States, 298a;
President Wilson's state papers, 691; rise and fall
of Federalism, 541; status of women in Iowa, 834;
text-book, 308; Virginia, 1133; Virginia, before the
Civil war, 1917; Virginia, 1831 to 1834, 1234; Vir-
ginia colonial, 427-429; Washington state, 1141;
Wisconsin, 1845-1S46, 1160. See also Citizenship,
Colonial administration. Democracy, Elections,
Hartford convention. Legislation, Ordnance of
1787, Secession, State rights, and Suffrage.
Politics and government, Canada, 2041, 2043, 2045,
2048, 2050a, 2052, 2055, 2056, 2058, 2066, 2068, 2070,
2079, 2124, 2124a, 2127, 2128a, 2129, 2136, 2140, 2140a,
2142, 2143, 2148, 2198, 2218, 2218a, 2219.
Politics and government, Spanish America, 2226,
2227, 2232, 2241a. 2243, 2252-2254, 2263, 2269, 2279,
2280, 2283, 2285, 2286, 2315, 2322, 2324, 2336, 2339,
2341-2345, 2348, 2358, 2362. See also Spanish colo-
nial administration.
Polk, Leonidas, 1892a.
Pollard, A. F., 469.
Pollock, I. L., 837, 838.
Pollok, Allan, 2155.
"Pomham," Shawomet sachem, 385.
Ponce, Nicolas, 506, 507.
Pons, Louis, 514.
Pontiac's conspiracy. See Bushy Run, battle of.
Pool, D. de S., 2301.
Poore, Alfred, 917.
Pope, C. H., 359.
S. T., 194.
William, 1132.
Pope's campaign in Virginia, 186S, 638.
Population and race elements, 1794-1801; Dutch set-
tlements in Wisconsin, 1161; Enghsh settlements
in pioneer Wisconsin, 1143; in the American
colonies, estimates of, 696; Italians in Detroit,
949; of Illinois, movement of, 1870-1910, 1794.
Populist party, in Irtdiana, 1694; in Louisiana
during the nineties, 1697.
Porritt, Edward, 2065, 2066.
Port Hudson, La., siege of, 1863, 606.
Portage, an old Louisiana, 876.
Portage township, Mich., 942,
Porter, G. B., 195.
J. L., 810.
K. H., 1677.
William Sydney, 2021, 2022.
Porto de la Plata, capture of, 1740, 2291,
Porto Rico, 2309-2310; burial cave, 209.
Portrait of Governor Coddington, 1081; of John
Adams, Mather Brown's, 1185.
Portrait painters, early American, 1954, 1966, 1967;
early Boston, 1965.
Portsmouth, N. H., 355, 981.
Portugal, and Spanish American independence,
2250a; demarcation dispute with Spain, 2371;
government in Brazil, 1808-1821, 2345; indepen-
dence of Brazil, 1821-182S, 2345.
Portuguese in Brazil in 1696, 2338.
Pory, John, description of the Plymouth colony, 360,
Posada, Eduardo, 2359,
Posey, C. J., 956.
Posnansky, Arthur, 223a.
Post, C. A., 1608.
Post family, 1477.
Post office in Nova Scotia, 1755-1867, 2158.
Postage stamp currency, 1086.
Potawatomi Indians, 153, 165, 168, 195.
Potter, M.E., 9.
Pottery, Bennington, 1957; early American, 1957;
prehistoric, 128, 159. See also Earthenware.
Powder horn, 1088.
Powell, B.E., 1942.
J. W., 850, 1321.
T. R., 1678.
Power, L. G., 2156.
Tyrone, 1084.
Powers, H. H., 1645.
W. H.,1923.
Poyntz, James, 2152.
Prairie band of Pottawatomie Indians, 168.
Prairie schooners, 1787.
Preachers, negro Baptist, 1817.
Prence, Thomas, 358.
Preparedness, historical, 57.
192
INDEX.
Preparedness, military. See Unpreparedness, mili-
taiy.
Presbrey genealogy, 1478.
Presby, J. W., 1478.
Presbyterian church, 1861-1874; concise history of,
1871; General synod, 1872; General synod, organi-
zation of, 1866; mission in Nebraska, 1831 to 1849,
972; New York city, 1012; of Belvidere, 111., 1839-
1918, 800.,
Presby terianism in Stephenson co.. 111., 1867.
Presbyterians, Scotch, in the American revolution,
518.
Prescott, W. H., 1977, 2023.
Presidency, American, the legend of, 1712; nomina-
tion of Lincoln to, 1691.
President, U. S., administration of Rutherford B.
Hayes, 1684; candidate of the anti-Masonic party
in 1838, 1688; form of address of, 336; kome in New
York city, 1024.
"President," ship of war, 552.
Presidential campaign, of 1844, 1069; convention of
1860, Lincoln and, 1691, 1692; election of 1864,
Lincoln and, 1685.
Presidents, U, S., biography, 1172, 1179.
Press, and military secrecy, during the Civil war,
661; Associated, 2157; Canadian, 2142, 2157; free-
dom of, 1706. See also Journalii^m, Newspapers,
and Printing and publishing.
Presses, printing, 1805,
Pressley, E. S., 746.
Preston, H. W., 1085.
William, papers relating to western Virginia,
458.
Prevost, J. B,, 540.
Price, N. W., 879.
Prices, in 1863, 616; sugar in the Revolutionary war,
460. See aZso Expenses.
Priest, Josiah, 1311.
Prince, Thomas, 378,
"I*rince Charles of Lorraine," sloop, 1083.
"Princesa," voyage of the frigate, 271.
Princess Anne, Md., 1564.
Princeton theological seminary, 1873.
Princeton university, 341,
Pringle, Cyrus, 1322.
Print of the Boston massacre, early, 493. See also
Engravings, and Etdiings,
Printer, -a Revolutionary, 490.
Printing and publishing, 1802-1809; an early agri-
cultural periodical in Virginia, 27; In Canada,
1793-1797,2170: in the colony of Connecticut,
in 1776, 472; Providence, R. I., 1212. See also
Books, Magazines, Newspapers, and Periodi-
cals.
Printing bills, Massachusetts Bay province, 1768,
1768, 379,
Printing plant, Kansas state, 856,
Printing press, first in Montreal, 2130; Topsfield,
Mass., 897b.
Prisoners, British, in the American revolution, 509;
in the Confederacy, treatment of, 598; of the
War of 1812, at Dartmoor, Eng., 557,
Prisons, British Revolutionary, 1024; Civil war,
636, 649; historic, in New York city, 1024; War
of 1812, 1024.
Private libraries, 696.
Privateer "Yankee," 18^, 1083.
Privateers in the West Indies, early 18th century,
2291.
Privilege, commercial, 2085a, 2302. See also Monop-
oly, trade.
Probate records, White Plains and Rye, N. Y.,
1569. See also Notarial records, and Wills.
Procter, A. G., 1291.
Prohibition, in Michigan, 930; legislation in Michi-
gan, 947.
Propaganda, of the American revolution, in Canada,
2130.
Property law of 1848, married woman's, 1057.
Property list, personal, Dinwiddle co., Va., 1782,
1126.
Prophet, Kickapoo Indian, 171.
Protestant Episcopal church, 1875; in Edwards co.,
ID., 779.
Provancher, Leon, 2047.
Providence, N. Y., 1565.
Providence, R. I., 1082, 1085, 1088.
Prudden, T. M., 149.
Prud'homme, L. A., 2208, 2218.
Prussia, treaties with the United States, in 1785,
1799, and 1828, 1618.
Public accounts, Massachusetts Bay colony, 379.
Public archives. See Archives.
Public documents. See Archives, and Official pub-
lications.
Public libraries, 696. See also under Libraries.
Public opinion, history and, 96.
Public records. See Archives.
Public schools, Arizona, 1924; Minnesota, state aid
to, 1915; Mississippi, 1870 to 1910, 1921; Ontario,
Can., 2185. See also Free schools.
Public utilities. See Electric plants, and Water
supply.
Public works, 1752-1762. See also Irrigation.
Publicists, American, 1977.
Publishing. See Journalism, Periodicals, and Print-
ing and publishing.
Puebla, L6pe de la. See L6pe de la Puebla.
Pueblo, Zufli, 135.
Pueblo Indians, 124, 125, 182; culture, 124; dwell-
ings, 143; ruin, 148. See also Aztec ruin.
Puget's Sound agricultural company, 1139.
Pulaski's legion, 519.
Pumpelly, J. C, 1216.
Raphael, 1323.
PurceU, J. B., ArchUsJiop, 1828a.
R. J., 758.
Puritans, "Humble request" of, 372a; standards
and institutions, undermining of, 1815. See
also Massachusetts Bay colony.
?urrington,W.A., 1217.
Purvis, W. J., 1000.
Putnam, Archelaus, 918.
E.W., 659.
Eben, 1374.
Harrington, 1709.
J. W\, 1758.
Rufus, 1324.
Ruth, 1977.
Putnam co., N. Y., 1566.
Pyle, J. G., 1254.
INDEX.
193
Quaife, M. M., 195, 811, 1143, 1148, 1159, 1160, 1605,
1809.
Quakers. Sec Friends.
Quantrill raid, 657.
Quarter, William, 1833.
Quartermaster-General, Revolutionary, 523.
Quebec (city), bishopric of, French regime, 2096;
defense of, in 1775, 2135; impressions of, 2044;
Jesuit college of, 2093; Petit s^minaire de Quebec,
2168; Trinity House, 2178, 2179.
Quebec, Province of, 2159-2184; and Confederation,
2128a; colonization in, under English domina-
tion, 2125; in 1629 to 1631, 2120; language question
in, in 1793, 2126; marshalsea of, 1681 to 1758, 2111;
officers of, under the French regime, 2112; rebel-
lion of 1837-8, 2039; under the French regime,
2111-2113, 2115.
Queen Anne, of England, 395.
Queen's loyal rangers, 505.
Queenston Heights, battle of, 181S, 2139.
Quichas, 259a.
Quiche dfama, an ancient, 223.
Quillwork, Indian, 189.
Quincy, M. S., 1943.
Quisenberry, A. C, 660.
Quito, Spanish provinces of, 2362.
Race elements, 1794-1801; in the Andean countries,
2319; prehistoric Peruvian, 228. See also Popu-
lation and race elements.
Race problem. See Negro problem.
Race mixture, 1801.
Radical republicans, Hlinois, 1686.
Radicalism, religious and political, late 18th cen-
tury, 1815. See also Free-thinking societies.
Radisson, Pierre, 2044, 2120, 2122.
Radnor Forges, Que., 2162.
Raguet, Condy, 1638.
Raids, Civil war, 676. See also Price's raid.
Railey, W. E., 1479, 1494.
Railroads, and the Civil war, northern, 652; con-
vention at St. Louis, in 1849, 1755; convention at
Memphis, in 1849, 564; first railroad between the
Mississippi and Lake Superior, 1760; government
control of, 631; Massachusetts, 1752; Pacific, pro-
ject for, in 1849, 1757; transcontinental, efforts for,
in 1849, 564; Baton Rouge, Grosse Tete and Ope-
lousas railroad, 874; Canadian Pacific railway,
2141; New York central railroad, 1757; Salem and
Lowell railroad, 1752.
Railways, street, in the national capital, 767. See
also Rapid transit.
"Rain-in-Face, " Indian chief, 174.
Rait, R. S., 289.
Raithbeck genealogy, 1384.
Randall, Benjamhi, 1893.
J. G., 661, 1609.
J. R., 2024.
James, 481.
Randolph genealogy, 1382, 1479.
Randolph co., 111., 804.
Rankin, David, 534.
T. E., 1988.
Rapeer, L. W., 91.
Rapid transit in New York city, 1762.
Raritan, N. J., 985, 1567.
Rasdell, Humphrey, 365.
Raymond, W. O., 2147.
Reader, a biographical school, 1175; for history
classes, 101a, 102.
"Readers' guide to periodical literature," 22, 23.
Readership, the Thompson, 1903.
Reading, in early New England, 350, 353; soldiers',
in the Civil war, 678.
Readington, N. J., 1568.
Real estate in Chicago, in 1835, 822.
Realists, Anglo-Saxon, 1984.
Reardon, K. N., 379a.
Rebellions in British America, 1837-1885, 2039; re-
bellion of 1837-1838, 2039, 2199.
Reciprocity, Canada and the United States, 1617.
Recognition of the Spanish-American republics, by
the motherland, 2254; by Portugal, 2250a; by the
United States, 2253.
Reconstruction, 317; in Louisiana, 688; in Missis-
sippi, 689.
"Red Cloud," Indian chief, 174.
Red River settlement, Man., 2212; rebellion, 1869-
1870, 2039,
Rederus, S. F., 1161.
Redfyne family, 1388.
Redstone, V. B., 380.
Reed, D.W., 662.
P. I., 1989.
Rees, J. E., 775.
Reformatory institutions of New Jersey, 986.
Reformed church, 1876, 1877; at Milton Grove and
at Maytown, Pa., 1071; in New York during the
Revolution, 477.
Refugees, negro, in Canada, 588; San Domingo, in
France, 1794-1795, 2303; San Domingo, in Phila-
delphia, 1054.
Regan, J. W., 2157.
Regimental histories, Civil war, 636, 669, 674, 679-
686; Revolutionary war, 525; Revolutionary war,
order books, 453, 461; South Carolina artillery in
the Revolution, 453. See also Militia, and Pu-
laski's legion.
Regimental history of the U. S. army, 1866 to 1918,
1612.
Regional (local) history, 693-1166; colonial, 350-448;
educational, 1906-1924; genealogy, 1523-1590; lit-
erary, 1993-1995a.
Regulation in North Carolina, 430.
Rehoboth, Mass., 924.
Reichner, L. I., 1386.
Reichner genealogy, 1386.
Reid, R. L., 2217.
Relf, F. H., 957.
Relief work, in the Civil war, 626; of the Confeder-
acy, 629.
Religion, Indian, 187; use of the cross as a symbol,
225. See also Temple of the sun, and War god
shrines.
Religious fanatic, a Brazilian, 2340.
Religious freedom, in Virginia, 1689-1788, 301. See
also Intolerance.
Religious history, biography, 1878-1897; Canada,
2046a, 2050, 2060, 2132, 2133, 2142, 2207, 2210; divines
and moralists, 1783-1860, 1977; Concord, N. H.,
983, 984; Congregational churches in colonial New
England, 357a; general, 1810-1816; influence in
194
INDEX.
Michigan politics, 18S7-1S60, 1696; Maiden, Mass.,
895; Medford, Mass., 908; Michigan, 944; Minne-
sota, 958; Moravians of Georgia and Pennsylvania,
771; New England, 18th century, 546; New York
city, 1012; particular denominations, 1817-1877;
Philadelphia, 1049; Salem, Mass., 1784 to 1819, 896;
Spanish America, 2242, 2247, 2251, 2256, 2268, 2272,
2287, 2289, 2321; Wisconsin, 1144. See also Circuit
riders, and Missions.
Religious intolerance in New Netherland, 408.
Religious leaders, of Newport, early, 1812. See also
Clergy, Divines, and Religious history, biography.
Religious liberty, New Hampshire pioneers of, 1893
1897.
Religious nomenclature in the Philippines, 2375.
Religious orders, Spanish, and the founding of
America, 442. See also Augustinians, Capuchins,
Franciscans, Jesuits, Saint Jerome, order of, Span-
ish friars, and Ursulines.
Religious radicalism, 1815. See also Free-thinking
societies.
Remensnyder, J. B., 1289.
Remsburg, G. J., 150.
Renaut, F. P., 1646. 1647, 2344, 2345.
Rengifo, Roberto, 224.
Renshaw, James, 880.
Rensselaerswyck, colony of, 392, 407.
Republican party, dissatisfaction in, 1857 to 1858,
1696; in Michigan, advance of, 1858-1860, 1696;
organization of, 1696.
Republicans, Illinois radical. President Lincoln and,
1686.
Research, historical, 55, 59.
Residencia in the Spanish colonies, 2227.
Retaliation. See Non-importation movement.
Revere, Paul, print of the Boston massacre, 498.
'* Review of historical publications relating to Can-
ada," 2067.
Revisions of historical ideas, 469.
Revolution, American, attitude of France toward
Canada during, 2128, 2137; border hero, 1341; Brit-
ish prison in New York city, 1024; effort to influ-
ence the French Canadians in the cause of, 2130;
canon foundry of, 891; general, 464-470; Graves
and De Grasse off the Chesapeake, in 1781, 1603;
Halifax and, 2150; in the Ohio country, 199; in the
West, 454, 844; interpretation of, 96; Morristown,
N. J., in, 999; officers, 1204, 1255, 1256, 1270, 1305,
1324, 1341; paper money of, 1764; personal obser-
vations upon, by a French traveller, 282; pre-
liminaries of, 301; relation to the development of
the British empire, 343; Russia and, 1629; sea
power in, 1603; soldiers of, 524-529; sources and
documents, 282, 449-463; Spanish correspondence
concerning, 459; special, 471-523; teaching of, 96;
treatment of, by British historians, 289.
Revolution, Spanish American, 2252. See also
Spanish American independence.
Reyes, C4sar, 1668.
Reynolds, J. H., 720.
John, 812.
L. W., 533, nil.
M. B., 1402.
Rhode Island, 1081-1088; bibliography, 6, 7; colonial
history, 383-388; deeds of land, 1650-1671, 383;
early religious leaders, 1812; early settlers, 1247;
maps of, check list, 6; soldiers and sailors in the'
French and Indian war, 386.
Rhode Island historical society library, 6.
Ribas, J. F., 2366.
Rivero, Diego, 247. -
Rice, Ben, rescue of, 857. ]
Luther, 1894.
Wallace, 813, 813a, 814.
Rich, E. M., 839.
J. W., 662, 663.
Richard, Edouard, 2105.
Richards, H. M. M., 1075.
Richardson, C. F., 444.
Sir John, 2131.
Lillie, 881.
Richeson family, 1480.
Richmond, Ky., battle of, 1862, 660, 664.
Richmond, Va., capture and occupation of, 1865,
649; evacuation of, 1865, 599, 600; first Federal
troops to enter, 1865, 618.
Riddell, W. R., 2068, 2195-2197.
Riggs, S. R., 196.
Riley, James Whitcomb, 2025, 2026.
Woodbridge, 1813.
Rio de las Palmas, political jurisdiction of, 2232;
settlement, 1527, 242.
Riobd, John, 271.
Rioja, province of, Argentina, 212a.
Rionegro, Froildn de, 2367.
Riot, at Alton, 111., Nov. 7, 1837, 792; at Boston,
Mass., 1778, 517.
Ripley, S. A., 1325.
Ritchie, J. W., 2156.
Rites, tribal, of Osage Indians, 153.
Rivadavia, Bernardino, 1635.
River and harbor improvement in Michigan, 1696.
River Plate voyages, 1798-1800, 1737.
Riverside educational monographs, 79.
Rivet, Paul, 210a.
Road building in New Jersey, early, 989.
Roads, first across the Cascade movmtains, 1759;
old Cohansey road in New Jersey, 1000; Philadel-
phia and Lancaster turnpike, 1069, 1070. See also
Highways, Oregon trail, and Santa Fe trail.
Roanoke Island, N. C, expedition against, 1861,
670a.
Robbins, W. A., 1578.
Roberts, Octavia, 815.
T. S., 1190.
W. H., 1871, 1872.
William, 1967.
Robertson, D. A., 1944.
J. A., 459, 2377, 2378.
J. Ross, historical collection, 2077.
James, 531.
W. S. 1648, 2252-2255. ^
Robinson, Doane, 272, 273, 1098, 1102, 1103. ;
Gilbert, 2199.
J. C, 653.
L. E., 1293.
Roca de Borja, Pedro, 23^5.
Rochambeau, comte de, 491.
Rochester, Minn., 961.
Rockaway, N. Y 1010.
Rocks. See Inscription rocks.
INDEX.
195
Rodd, J. E., 2323.
Rodrigue family. 1054.
Rodrigues, Gustavo, 330.
Rodriguez del Benito, A., 2329. ^ *
Rogers, H. G., 267.
H. M., 1782.
Mrs. Harry, 528.
Rogersfamily, 1481, 1482.
Roland, M. J. D., 340.
''Roman Nose," Indian chief, 174.
Romera Navarro, M., 2023.
Romero, A. A., 224a. |
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1179, 1326-1329.
Root, Elihu, 1218.
Ross, A. F., 92.
E. D., 93, 94.
Roth, I., v., 651,1294.
Rothensteiner, John, 816, 1783, 1834.
Kothery, A. E.; 919.
Rouiilard, Eugene, 1162.
Roux, Benedict, 816, 1834, 1835.
Rowan, John, 1330. i
Rowland, A. L., 345. '
Dunbar, 255, 256.
Roxbury, Mass., 1814.
Roy, Camille, 2069.
Louis, 2170.
P. G., 2106-2115, 2178, 2179.
Roy, R6gis, 2116, 2175, 2180.
Royal governors, Georgia, 434; Massachusetts, 1259
New Jersey's last, 1240; of Carolina, 431; of Gait-
pasia, 2085; of Halifax, N. S., 2150.
Royce, Josiah, 1176.
Rubber, Indian use of, 220.
Rubi, G. M. Pignatelly y de, inspection of the
frontier presidios, 1766-1768, 701.
Ruffin, Edmund, 27.
Thomas, 1034.
Rugg, A. P., 1259.
Ruins, prehistoric, Aztec, 143; in Arizona, 124, 125;
of the Southwest, 127, 143, 148, 149, 153, 154; Zuni
pueblo of Hawikuh, 135. See also Mounds.
Rulliere, H., 1693.
Rune stone, Kensington, 156.
Rupert's Land, Council of, 2208.
Rush, Benjamin, 1331.
Rush-Bagot agreement of 1817, 551b, 1660.
Russell, Jonathan, 1332. /
Russia, American relations with, 1629; and the
Alaska purchase, 1629; negotiations with, in
regard to Russian interests on the Northwest
coast, 1653.
Russian America, 1629.
Rutherford, M. L 1790.
Ryan, Edwin, 18^.
F. T., 664.
Ryden, P., 958. • .
Rye, N. Y., 1029, 1569. n
Sabin, E. L., 197.
Sacajawea, 710.
Sachem, Shawomet Indian, 385.
Safford, E. K., 747.
Saga of Eric the Red, 245.
Sage, Walter, 2198.
Saginaw co., Mich., 939.
Saguenay, Que., 2086, 2087.
Sailors, Rhode Island, in the French and Indian
war, 386.
Sainsbury, W. N., 429.
St. Charles, Mother, 1837.
Saint Charles river. Que., 2113.
St. Clair, Arthur, 1333.
St. Clair's campaign against the Indians, 1605.
Saint Eustache, Que., 2184.
Saint Gabriel de Brandon, Que., 2169.
St. Germain-en-Laye, treaty of, 168ii, 2044.
Saint Jerome, order of, 2262.
St. Lawrence valley, 2177.
St. Louis, Mo., 1755, 1783, 1831, 1841; Catholic
archives of, 38; Catholic biVjliography of, 5.
Saint Maurice Forges, Que., 2162.
Saint Nicolas, Que., 2171.
Saint-Ours family, 2165.
Saint-Ours, Que., 2165.
St. Paul, Minn., 1778.
Saint Pierre, Island of, 2146.
Saint-Sauveur, chevalier de, 517.
Saintyves, P., 225.
Salaverria, J. M., 257.
Salcedo y Ordonez, F., 254.
Salem, Mass., 896; in 1700, 375-377; iron factory
894; of the witches, 905; Salem savings bank
1765; vital records, 1570.
Salem and Lowell railroad, 1752.
Salish Indians, 184.
Salley, A. S.,jr., 1575.
Salmagundi club. New Yort, 1958.
Salmon, Wilham, 1578.
Salmon fishing of Alaska, 718.
Salt company, New Jersey, in 1780, 993.
Salt discovery and production in Kansas, 858.
Saltonstall, Brayton, 943.
Salyards, Anna, 1859.
SAmano, Juan, 2358.
Sampson, F. A., 1334.
Sanborn, F. B., 1335-1337.
V. C, 1336.
Sanchez-Arjona, Eduardo, 2281.
Sanchez de Moya, Francisco, 2300.
Sanderson, J. P., 944.
Sandham, W. R., 817.
San Diego, Calif., 737.
San Domingo, Catholic church in, 2306; commercial
relations with, late 18th century, 1246; history of,
2308; revolt of, 2302a; refugees in France, 1794-
1795, 2303; refugees in Philadelphia, 1054.
Sandt, G. W., 1895.
Sandusky co., O., 1044.
Sandusky county pioneer and historical associa-
tion, 1044.
Sandwich, Mass., 1849.
San Felipe de Austin, ayuntamiento of, 1116.
Sanford, A. H., 310.
C. M., 1175.
San Francisco, Calif., Catholic bibliography, 5.
Sanfuentes y Correa, Enrique, 258.
San-Ildefonso, treaties of, 1796, 1800, 1647.
Sanitary commissions. Civil war, 626.
San Juan, province of, Argentina, 211a.
San Martin, Jose de, 2256.
Santa Cruz, Alonso de, 258a.
i
196
INDEX.
Santa Cnn, Calif., 741.
Santa Fe trail, S53.
Santiago de Cuba, 1607 to 1640, 2300; blockade, 1898,
1603.
Santiago Vela, Gregorio de, 2274.
Santibanez, Enrique, 2258.
Sao Paulo, Brazil, 2346.
Sapin, E. L., 554.
Saposs, D. J., 1768.
Saralegui. See Martinez Saralegui.
Sargent, M. B., 787a.
— Noel, 1718.
Sarmtento, D. F., 2328.
Saskatchewan rebellion, 1885, 2039.
Saturday club, Boston, Mass., 899.
Sauk Indians, 153.
Sauk CO., Wis., 1146.
Saunier, Charles, 515.
Saurwalt, A, V., 95.
Savard, A., 2181.
Saville, M. H., 259, 259a, 2259, 2260.
Savings bank, of Baltimore, Md., 1766; Salem,
Mass., 1765.
Sawyer, R. D., 1893, 1897.
Saybrook, Conn., 696.
Scandinavians in America, 55.
Schaeffer, Catharine, 1838.
Schafer, Joseph, 709.
Scharmann, H. B., 290.
Schlesinger, A. M., 470.
Schmidt, L. B., 665.
Schmucker, B. M., 1895.
Schnure, W. M., 1076.
Schoenrich, Otto, 2308.
Schoharie co., N. Y., 1571.
Scholefield, E. O. S., 2218-2219.
School libraries, history books for, 20.
School system, Laneasterian, 1899.
Schoolcraft, H. R., 811.
Schools, American, are they Prussian in origin, 1913;
early Worcester, Mass., 1914; free, in New York,
1909; Michigan, 1922; New York colonial, 1908,
1909; New York state, attention given to the
history of the state, 1030; of Portage township,
Mich., 942; Ontario, 2185; Pennsylvania's free
school laws of 1834, 1911. See also Educational
institutions. Elementary schools, and Public
schools.
Schrabisch, Max, 150a.
Schuchert, Charles, 2033.
Schulte, A. J., 1839.
Schultz, J. W., 710.
Schumacher, J. P., 151.
Schurz, Carl, 1170, 1338.
W. L., 2261, 2282, 2379.
Schuyler, R. L., 96.
Schuyler mansion at Albany, 1021.
Schwartz, H. B., 2013.
Science, 2033-2035. See also Medical professorship.
Scituate, Mass., 357a.
Scotch Presbyterians in the American revolution,
518.
Scott, A. P., 301.
Dred, case of, 567.
F. W., 1977.
J. B., 1618, 1679, 1680.
Scott, J. F., 97.
Col. John, 1339.
L. M., 1759.
W. S., 2070.
W. W., 1561.
Scottish buccaneer, 520.
Scoville, Samuel, jr., 1295.
Sculptural art, American Indian in, 1956.
Sea, freedom of, 549; influence upon the industries
of New England, 1743. See also Neutral trade.
"Sea-dogs, EUzabethan," 265.
Sea tales. Cooper's, 2000.
Seaman, A. H., 1023, 1024.
Sears, L. M., 98.
Seaver, F. J., 1025.
J. E., 1266.
Secession, apostle of, 1234; constitutional right of,
621; movement in South Carolina, 1847 to 1852,
563, 569; movement of 1850, 560; Northern opinion
of approaching, 1859-1860, 572; of Louisiana, 677.
Secret political societies in the North during the
Civil war, 603, 622.
Secretaries of state, 1711; under Grant, 1233.
Sectionalism, 309.
Seeger, Alan, 1996.
Seigniorial system, 2038, 2120.
Seiss, J. A., 1896.
Seitte, Adrien, 1355.
Selby, Paul, 779a.
Selinsgrove, Pa., 1076.
SeUar, Robert, 2136.
Selma, Ala., 615, 630
Semling, C. K., 960.
Semmes, R. T., 1483.
Semmes family, 1483.
Senator, election of IlKnois, in 1855, 1690; election,
Wisconsin, in 1869, 1155; from Mississippi, in 1844,
963.
Seneca Indians, 1266.
Senseman, Gottlieb, 706.
Sephardic Jews of Newport, R. I., 1812.
Serrano y Sanz, Manuel, 260.
Settlers, of the colony of Rensselaerswyck, 407.
See also Frontier and pioneer life, and Pioneers.
Seven Oaks, Man., battle of, 1816, 2212.
Severance, F. H., 198.
Sevier, John, 531.
Sewing. See Needlework.
Seybolt, R. F., 402.
Seymour family, 1484.
Shackleton, Robert, 1077.
Shambaugh, B. F., 837, 840, 1728.
Sharpless, Isaac, 1273, 1945.
Shaw, Albert, 691.
Chief Justice Lemuel, 1213, 1340
W. B., 1946.
Shawnee Indians, 847.
Shawomet sachem, 385.
Shearer, A. H., 99.
Sheboygan co., Wis., 1161.
Shelby, Isaac, 1341.
Sheldon, George, 920.
J. M. A., 920.
Shellmound, prehistoric, 144.
Shelton, W. H., 1958.
"Shemah Israel," magazine, 2301.
.
INDEX.
197
Shenandoah valley campaign of 1864, 640.
Ihepard, Mrs. Frederick, 1026.
Shepherd, H. E., 711, 2017, 2020, 2024.
W. R., 1652.
Sherman, A. M., 516.
F. F., 1959, 1972.
S. P., 1977.
Sherman family, 1485.
Iherman's march to the sea, 607.
Iherwood, E. J., 22, 23,
Justus, 605.
Shetrone.H. C.,199,
!hields, C. M. F.,855.
E. T.,581.
M\6h,l>aUle oi, 1862,662.
Ihipbuilding, Salem, Mass., early, 894.
Ihippee, L. B., 574, 666, 1653, 1760.
Shipping, Spanish, to the Indies, 2236, See also
Commerce , Maritime intercourse , Navigation , and
Transatlantic steamship company,
ihips, old Bristol, R. I., 1083.
ihipwrecks, in Boston Bay, 921; in South Dakota
waters, 1103; in the St. Lawrence and Atlantic
coast of Canada, 2059; of the "Living Age," 912.
Ihirley, Mass., 1572.
ihivers, Thomas, 573.
hoemaker, F. C, 968, 1334.
hoemaking a century ago, 901.
hortt, Adam, 2124a.
hort story, American, 1977.
hrewsbury,N. J.,1869.
hrines, Indian, 147.
hute's Folly island , 1096.
ibelius, Marco, 2330.
idney, Algernon, 904.
iedenburg, Fredeiic, 99a.
iegfried,r. P.,403.
iggins family, 1486.
ilcox,C. E.,1812.
ilvaj. F, V.,550,2263.
ilva Cruz, Carlos, 25.
ilver, old church, in Canada, 2050.
ilver Spring, Md., 888.
imcoe county pioneer and historical society, Ont.,
2199.
imms, W. G.,1094.
imon, Abram, 765.
impson, M. E.,100.
ims,A. N.,1132.
inclair, Upton, 1984.
ioussat, St. G. L., 101, 575, 576, 1112.
ioux, 191, 196, 830, 957; music of, 172.
ioux Indian war, 1862-1863, 617, 620, 974.
ioux Indian war, 1876. See Slim Buttes battle,
irron, F. W.,1358.
issons, C. B.,2071.
isters of mercy, Pittsburgh, 1840. See also Nuns,
and Ursulines.
ites, historic. S^e Houses, historic.
Sitting Bull," Indian chief, 174; captuie of, 1106.
ituado, the Philippine, 2379.
ix-Mile Run, N. J., 411, 1004.
kinner, A. W., 26, 101a, 315.
Charlotte, 360a.
lade family, 1487.
lattery, C. L., 1176.
Slaughter, E.M., 305.
Slave trade, 595.
Slaveholders, economic study of, 1771.
Slavery, 301, 583-595; among the Indians, 185; anti-
slavery movement in Michigan, 1696; in Califor-
nia, 728; in Canada, 2134; in the Federal conven-
tion of 1787, 1799a; Kansas troubles, 852, 854, 857;
Webster's attitude toward, 5'62. See also Com-
promise of 1850, and Dred Scott case.
Slaves, convention of 1818 with Great Britain for the
restoration of, 551b.
Slim Buttes battle, S. Dak., 1876, 1097, 1104, 1592.
" Small house ruins," aboriginal, 124, 125, 149.
Smith, C. A., 1977, 2022.
C.C, 1342, 1780.
D. E.,1905.
Daniel, 53L
E.C.,1227.
Elias,1897.
Fitz-Henry,517,921.
G.E., 151a, 225a.
G. O., 2033.
G. W., 316, 317, 766.
Gerrit, 585.
H. A. M., 431, 1095, 1096, 1360, 1522.
H. I., 152.
, Harold, 1892a.
J. H., 582.
Jedediah Strong, explorations of, 267.
John, 49, 360.
Elder John, 1859.
Jonathan, 518.
L. E., 1163.
P. F., 1078.
P. T., 102.
T. C, 1654.
W. L., 291.
W. R., 856.
W. W., 1860.
William, 2158.
Smithsonian institution, 153.
Snelling, old Fort, 954. '
Snider, E. W. B., 2200.
Snow Hill normal and industrial institute, 716.
Sobel, Bernard, 103.
Social and economic history, 309, 1726-1809; agricul-
ture, forestry, and land, 1730-1734; Canada, 2046;
commerce and indxistry, 1735-1751; communica-
tion, transportation, and public works, 1752-1762;
communiitic colony in California, 733; controver-
sies of U. S. history, 301; effects of the Civil war,
666; finance and money, 1763-1767; general, 1726-
1729; history of the American family, 1785 ; labor,
176&-1771; libraries, societies, and institutions,
1772-1783; life and manners, 1784-1791; of New
' Jersey, 986; philanthropy, 1792, 1793; population
and race elements, 1794r-1801; printing and pub-
lishing, 1802-1809; system of the old South, 1726.
See also Communist settlement, and Economic
Jiistory.
Social life, Boston, Mass., 899; distinctions, before
the Revolution, 696; of Washington's adminis-
tration, 1789; Southern ante-bellum, 714. See
also Friendship, and Life and manners.
Social organization. See Clans and moieties.
Social philosophy of the old South, 1726.
198
INDEX.
Social science. See Citizenship.
Social service. See Relief work, and Women's edu-
cational and industrial union.
Social thought in American fiction, 1910 to 1917,
1992.
Soci6t6 Saint-Jean Baptiste de Montreal, 2183.
Societies and Institutions, 1776-1783; early free-think-
ing, 1813; historical, 99a, 840; pioneer and historical,
of the state of Washington, 1136. See also vmder
name of individual societies.
Society for the propagation of the faith, 1843.
Society of nations, 1679.
Soldiers, Civil war, ages of, 628; Dakota's first, 1100;
Missouri, 100 years ago, 966; Revolutionary, 524-
529; Rhode Island, in the French and Indian
war, 386.
Soldiers' reading in the Civil war, 678.
Somerset co., N. J., 998, 1380, 1573, 1574; deeds, from
1714 to 1822, 1002; Union league, 1S63-1865, 1003.
Somerville, N. J., 985, 1567.
Sommer, Federico, 2346.
Songs, and history teaching, 75; authorship of the
Canadian boat song, 2037. See also Music.
Sons of liberty, order of, 622.
Soule family, 1488,
Soules, S. L., 2199.
Source problems in U. S. history, 301.
Sources, historical, of early Catholic history in Illi-
nois, 46a; of Vermont history, 1123; period of 1789
to 1829, 548-550; Revolutionary period, 449-463;
value of memoir of George Rogers Clark, 454. See
also Archives and manuscripts.
South, ante-bellum society, 714; bibliography and
syllabus of the history of, 3; civilization of the old,
1790; English colonial beginnings in, 354; Indians
in, British policy toward, 342; lynching and the
negro in, 1794a; negro labor under the plantation
regime, 1771; not responsible for slavery, 587;
notable families, 1376; pioneers of, 354; planters
of the old, 1788; poet of, 2024; poetry of the Civil
war, 1994; prose poet of, 2006-2009; social and
economic system before the Civil war, 1726; social
philosophy of the old, 1726; studies in, the history
of, 711; travel in, in 1791, 291; travel in, in 1831-
1832, 293a; travel in, in 1833, 270. See also Con-
federacy.
South African war, 2039.
South America, 2314-2367; antiquities, 210-213a,
215a, 216a, 218-226, 228; beginning of steam
navigation in, 2317; bibUography, 2317a; efforts
to attain independence, 549; imperialistic' de-
signs of Germany in, 2270; independence, 2332,
2344; oldest daily newspaper, 2351, 2352; Span-
ish conquest of, 250; trade relations with the
U. S., 1798-1800, 1737; voyage to, 1598-1601, 2320.
See ab'o Spanish American independence.
South Atlantic blockade, 670a.
South Berwick, N. H., 355.
South Carolina, 1089-1096; and the building of a
fort in Tennessee in 1757, 443; artillery in the
Revolution, 453; attempt to take lands in Geor-
gia in 1763, 435; colonial history, 431, 432; early
Indians in, 169; genealogy, 1534, 1575-1576; gov-
ernor of the province of, 431; Indian land grant
In, in 1734, 432; nullification in, 573; prominent
settler of, 1669 to 1685, 1360; secession and coop-
eration movements in, 1848 to 1852, 563;
sion movement in, 1847 to 1852, 569.
South Dakota, 1097-1109; Lewis and Clark expedi
tion in, 273; State historical society of, 1105.
South East, N. Y., 1577.
Southampton, N. Y., 1007.
Southold, N. Y., 1578.
Southwest, antiquities of, 127, 128, 143, 148, 149l
153, 154; Spanish colonization in, 448; Spanish!
exploration in, 1528-1636, 238; Spanish regime
in, archives relating to, 35, 36.
Southwest, Oxd, building of a fort in, 1757, 443;
commonwealth of FrankUn, 533; Indian wars
of, 1730-1807, 178; Spanish "conspiracy" in, 531.
See also Louisiana.
Souvay, C. L., 1841.
Sovereignty, American, 1615; of Parliament, 469.
Spain, and affairs in Spanish North America, 1808-
1814, 544; and Louisiana, 1647; and the Ameri-
can revolution, 459; correspondence with the
city of Buenos Aires, 1615-1700, 2324; conflict
with the United States, in 1804-1806, 550, 1646,
1647; demarcation dispute with Portugal, 2371;
discovery and colonization, 237; in the Philip-
pine Islands, U93-1518, 2371; influence on
Mexico, 2273; possessions in the New world,
demarcation hne of, 237; recognition of Spanish
American independence, 2254; struggle with
Great Britain over the West Indian trade, 2291
West Florida controversy with, 1622, 1646. See
also Archive general de Indias, Seville.
Spanish, architecture of New Orleans, 1953; civili-
zation in the New world, 2224, 2226, 2236: colonial
administration in America, 87, 260, 448, 2226, 2227,
2232, 2234-2236, 2241a, 2246, 2262, 2277, 2300, 2324;
colonial administration in the Philippines, 2379;
colonial exchequer, 2234; colonial regime, 35, 36,
241, 242, 251, 260, 2261, 2282; colonization in Amer-
ica, 442, 448; conquest of America, 259a, 2247, 2257,
2360a; conquest of Peru, 250, 2225, 2260, 2361; con-
quistadors, 257; "conspiracy" in Tennessee, 531;
correspondence concerning the American revolu-
tion, 459; discovery and exploration, 237, 238, 244,
247,248, 250, 252-257, 259, 259a, 260, 263, 266; discov-
ery and exploration in the Pacific, 270; documents
concerning the early history of Louisiana, 436;
documents relating to the Philippines, 1493-1518,
237; dominion in America, origin of, 260; empire,
rise of, 2246; flag in Louisiana, 865; friars in Amer-
ica in the 16th century, 2268; in Florida, 241; in
Louisiana, 545, 865; missionaries in Mexico from
1602 to 1638, 2274; missions in California, 727, 737,
742; missions in South America. 2251; official in
Florida, 241; period in California, 8, 736; presidios
in California, 1766-1768, 701; records of West Flor-
ida, 875; regime in North America, delimitation Of
political jurisdictions, to 1535, 242; regime in North
America, archives relating to, 35, 36; rule ia
America, early, 260; settlement in the New world,
2232; trade with the Indies, 2233, 2236. See also,
Archivo general de Indias, and Spain.
Spanish America, foreign relations, 2250a; history
of, 2248, 2258; independence, 2240, 2250a, 2252,
2253, 2255, 2283, 2286, 2315a, 2356, 2358, 2364; pol-
itics and government, 2226, 2227, 2232, 2241a, 2243,
2252-2254, 2263, 2269, 2279, 2280, 2283, 2285, 2286,
INDEX.
199
2315, 2322, 2324, 2336, 2339, 2341-234S, 2348, 2358.
2362; Portugal and the independence of, 2250a,
recognition of independence, by the United States:
2253; relations with the United States, 1616a, 1652;
relations with the United States from 1810 to 1830,
2267; republics, rise of, 2255. See also Latin Amer-
ica, and Pan-Americanism.
'Spanish America," use of the term, 2222, 2264.
Spanish American war, 692; naval warfare, 1603;
occupation of Manila, 1604.
Spanish American wars of independence, 2252, 2286,
2315a, 2356, 2358, 2364. See also Maipti, battle of.
Spanish California, bibliography, 8; social life and
customs, 736.
Spanish documents relating to America. See Ar-
chive general de Indias.
Spanish Louisiana, 545, 865.
Spanish Main, 2291.
Speck, F. G., 200, 201.
Sp«ncer, Alfred, 2298.
C. W., 404.
R. H., 519, 1230, 1231.
spencer, N. Y., 1865.
Spier, Leslie, 154, 155.
Spies, arrest of Gen. Collot as, in 1796, 538; in Loui-
siana in 1796, 538; Revolutionary, 513. See also
Hale, Nathan.
5pirit, the American, 326a, 328; in literature, 1987.
See also Americanism, and National character-
istics and ideals.
spirit Lake, la., massacre, 1857, 831, 841.
spokane country, 293.
spotswood, Alexander, 425.
'Spotted Tail," Indian chief, 174.
5prague family, 1489.
Springfield, 111., 808.
spurious copies of historic newspapers, 1809.
?quier, E. G., 1655.
squire, Andrew, 1710,
5quires, W. H. T., 1303.
;tael, Madame de, 549.
5tahl,.T. M.,555, 556.
stamp act, 450, 497.
stamp master, colonial, 450, 497.
stamps, postage, 1086.
5tanard, E. E., 104.
5tanding, P. C, 520, 667, 1177
5tandish family, 1490.
Stanley, D. S., 1610.
Stanwood, Edward, 1337.
'Star Spangled Banner," song, 339.
5tarbird, C. M., 1205.
stark, Gen. John, 481.
Stark's independent command at Bennington, 481.
state, American conception of the, 327; aid to public
schools, 1915.
5tate, secretaries of, 1711.
istate and local government, 1714-1725; constitu-
tional convention of Louisiana, 18SS, 868; county
organization in Michigan, 933; Illinois constitu-
tional conventions, 790; Illinois governors, 1818-
1918, 795; in New Hampshire, opposition to, in
1776, 452. See also Constitutional conventions,
tate boundary dispute, 936.
tate finances, Iowa Civil war, 658.
tate flag, Iowa, 833.
State historical celebrations, 82.
State papers, President Wilson's, 691.
"State papers of Vermont," 1123.
State politics, Michigan, 1835-1843, 1698.
Staterights, 559, 1680.
State universities. See under name of state.
Statehood, admission of Louisiana, 881; California,
729; Illinois centennial, 781, 782; Wisconsin, move-
ment for, 1845-1846, 1160.
Staten Island, N. Y., 1017.
States, controversies between, 1680, 1698.
Statistical work, of the federal government, 1727;
oftheseveralstates, 1727.
Statuette, prehistoric Indian, 132.
StaufCer, Vernon, 546.
Steam navigation in South America, beginning of,
2317.
Steamboat wrecks, in South Dakota, 1103.
Steamship company, Cunard, 2154; first European
operating in South American waters, 2317.
Stearns, C. H., 922.
Stebbins, C. B., 1859.
Steel, M. F., 1106.
Steele, J. A., 557.
Steensby, H. P., 261.
Steiner, B. C, 279, 417.
Stephens, Kate, 1343.
N. T., 1343.
Stephenson, N. W., 668.
Stephenson co.. 111., 801, 1867.
Stevens, 1. 1., 2, 1140.
M. L., 388, 1086.
Thaddcus, 1911.
W. E., 712.
W. O., 1611.
Stevenson, C. S., 274, 1107, 1108.
Stewart, E. D., 827.
F. H., 1541.
J. R., 817a.
Stickle, W. A., 105.
Stidger, W. Le R., 1996.
Stiles, Ezra, 1812, 1849, 1950.
Stillman, W. O., 481.
Stockton, C. G., 1309.
Stone, J. M., 669.
L., 2184.
W. F., 753.
Stone genealogy, 1491.
Stone, Kensington rune, 156.
Stone axes, Indian, 121.
Stone grave builders, Indian, 208.
Stoneham, Mass., 1579.
Stones, prehistoric banner, 145.
Story, R. Mc, 1717.
StoughtOB, Israel, 381.
Stoughton, Mass., 891.
Stowell, George, 1252.
Strategy, naval, of the War of 1812, 1603. See also
Tactics.
Strathcona and Mount Royal, Lord, 2042.
Stratton, H. R., 1493.
Stiatton family, 1492, 1493.
Stratton, Vt., 1588.
Street, Julian, 607.
Street railways. See Railways.
Streeter, F. B., 946-948.
t
U
200
INDEX.
Streets, Maiket street, Philadelphia, 1066; State
street, Albany, N. Y,,1020. See also Fifth avenue.
Strike, Chicago, 1894, 1769.
Strothers family, 1494.
Stryker, F. E., 79.
Stuart,B. C, 1344.
Hamilton, 1344.
Stubbs, W. C, 1387.
Sturges, H. C, 1991.
Su&rez, Siradn Planas. See Planas Su&rez.
Submarine, in the Confederate navy, 624.
Sucre, Jose de, 2335.
SufTrage, alien, in AVisconsin, 1725; equal, in Michi-
gan, 931; in the United States, history of, 1677.
Sugar, in the Revolutionary war, 460; industry m
California, beet, 1746.
Sully, Thomas, 1970.
Sulpician college in Montreal, 2176.
Suite, Beniamin, 262, 2073, 2118-2122, 2137, 2169.
Summit lodge No. 163, 1778.
Sumner, E. V., 274.
H. L., 1768.
S. S.,649.
Sumter, Fort, attempted relief of, 670a; capture of,
1861, 301.
Sun, prehistoric temple of the, 223a.
Sun, N.Y., newspaper, 1808.
Sun dance of the Blackfoot Indians, 206.
Sunapee, N. H., 980.
Sunday school movement, in the Methodist church,
1857.
Superior, I ake. See I ake Superior.
Supplies for the Massachusetts Bay colony, 380.
Supreme court of the U. S., 1670; as a prototype of
a world court, 1698; decisions on constitutional
questions, 1914-1917, 1678; settlement of contro-
versies between the states, 1680.
Surgeons of the Civil war, 639.
Surgery, among the ancient Peruvians, 216a; in the
Confederate army, 619.
Surinam, governor of, 2360.
Surveyer, Arthur, 2074.
Surveyors of Montreal, from 1760 to 1800, 2174.
Surveys. See Land surveys.
Susquehanna river region, archaeology of, 157.
Sutherland family, 1495.
Swan, Jedidiah, 461.
Swanton, J. R., 153, 202.
Swedish Baptist church in Minnesota, 958.
Sweeney, W. M., 1441.
Sweet, W. W., 713.
Swem, E. G., 27, 28, 534, 1133, 1730.
Swift, H. A., 1345.
L. B., 331.
Swiggett, G. L., 106.
Sykes, E. T., 670.
Symbol, Indian magico-religious, 225.
Synod, Presbyterian General, 1866, 1872; first in
America, 1864.
Sy nodical government, 1864.
Tabb family, 1496.
Tactics, American, in the World war, 1604. See
aUo Military policy and Strategy.
Tadoussac, Que., mission at, 2086; trade at, 16th
and 17th centuries, 2087.
Taft, W. H., 1179.
Tai, En-Sai, 1656.
Tallman, C. C, 1960.
Talmage, R. W., 1497.
Talmage family, 1497.
"Tamahay," Indian chief, 174.
Taney, R. B., 1346, 1347.
Tannar, A. H., 857.
Tanner, H. O., 1975.
Tapestry, ancient Peruvian, 210.
Tapley, H. S., 923.
Tappan, E. M., 318.
Tariff, and Michigan politics, 1837 to 1860,
French colonial, 2085a, 2302; Mexican, in 182i
2271. I
Tarkington, Booth, 2027. )
G. A., 319. i
Tarieton, William, 1348. j
Tassin, Algernon, 1977. j
Tatamagouche, N. S., 2153. 1
Tavern keeper. New Hampshire colonial, 1348. •
Taverns, in New Brunswick, N. J., 987. See ok
Inn.
Taxation, in Nevada, 976; William Knox's treatiJ
on, 1769, 454a. See also Export duty, and Stam
act.
" Taxation without representation," 469.
Taylor, H. E., 1473.
H. O., 1184.
John, 1059.
Rowse, 292.
Tazewell co.. 111., 786.
Teachenor, R. B., 1503.
Teachenor family, 1503.
Teacher among the Pawnees, 193.
Teaching of history. See Historiography, method
ology, study and teaching.
Teakle, Thomas, 841.
Technical education, 1168.
Teeth, Indian mutilation and decoration of, 204a
Teggart, F. J., 107.
Teich, E. L., 9.
L. D., 9.
Telfair, Edward, 772.
Te Lintum, C, 300.
Tell City, Ind., 826.
TeUer family, 1388.
Tello, J. C, 226.
Temiscouata, portage of, Que., 2173.
Temple, H. W., 1079.
Temple of the sun, Indian, 223a.
Tenaya canon, 269.
Tenderfoot days in Utah, 1118.
Ten Kate, H. F. C, 204.
Tennessee, 1110-1113; building of Fort LoudouB
in, 443; commonwealth of Franklin, 533; guer-J
riUa operations in, 649; politics, in 1850, 576;!
Spanish "conspiracy" in, 531; voluntary emanci-l
pation of slaves in, 594.
Tennessee campaign, 1864, 643, 644. >
Tennessee river, 443. \
Tenure of judges, 1699.
Territorial expansion, effect on Michigan politics,!
1837 to 1860, 1696; western, 86, 565. See also
Alaska purchase, Louisiana purchase, and West,
development of.
INDEX.
201
Territorial legislation, 1716.
Territories of the U. S., organic laws of, 1716.
Terry, A., 1812.
Roderick, 1087.
Terry's Texas rangers, C. S. A., 684.
Teton Sioux music, 172,
Teunise, John, 991.
Tex, M. C, 320, 321.
Texas, 1114-1117; cavalry in the Civil war, 684; Civil
war blockade, 672; conditions in, in 1822, 2271;
first Europeans in, 1528-1536, 238; infantry in the
Civil war, 685, 686; pioneer editor and newspaper
publisher, 1344. See also Southwest.
Texas, RepubUc of, 1113a.
Textbooks, outUnes, etc., 100, 298a, 302-334; atti-
tude toward England, 68; history of Enghsh and
American literature, 1982, 1986; history of industry
and trade, 1735; improvement in, 71; Minnesota
history, 953; Missouri history, 969; of South Caro-
lina history, 1094; syllabus of the history of the
South, 3. See also Readers.
Textbooks on government, 67.
Thacher genealogy, 1498.
Thanksgiving proclamation, early Dutch, 405.
Thatcher genealogy, 1498.
Thayer, H. O., 521.
W. R., 108.
Theater, in the 18th century, 1786; in New Orleans,
first, 879; in Philadelphia, 1993; prior to 1870,
1989.
Theological progress, since the time of the Pilgrims,
1811.
Theological seminary, CathoUc, at Philadelphia,
1839; Presbyterian, at Auburn, N. Y., 1861;
Presbyterian, at Princeton, 1873.
Thew genealogy, 1384.
Thomas, A. C, 1200.
Thomas, A. O., 973.
J. L., 1499.
S. E., 109.
Thomas family, 1499-1501.
Thompson, B. F., 1027.
David, 293.
George, 761.
H. Y., 1903.
J. J., 521a, 1842.
J. R., 2028.
Jacob, 963.
Sir John, 2142.
R. M., 670a.
T. P., 447, 882.
Thomson, Dr. Benjamin, 2029.
Thoreau, Henry David, 1977, 2030.
Thorn family, 1502.
Thorndike, A. H., 1977.
Thorne, J. C, 984.
Thought, American, Francis Lieber's influence on,
1277.
Three Rivers, Que., imder the French regime, 2112.
Thwaites, R. G., 322.
Tiahuanacu, Bolivia, culture, 219; sua temple at,
223a.
Tichenor family, 1503.
Tilghman, Tench, 496.
Tilton, A. C, 1164.
G. H., 924.
Time. See Chronology.
TindaU, WiUiam, 767.
Tippecanoe campaign, 1811, 694, 697.
Tithes, Orange co., Va., ^24.
Tobacco, export duty on, 1711, 425.
Tobacco act, Virginia, 1713, 425.
Todd family, 1504.
Todhunter, R., 686.
Tokens of the Hudson Bay company, 1745.
"Tom Green rifles," C. S. A., 685.
Tomlinson, E. T., 522.
Tomson, John, 1505.
"Topenebee," Indian chief, 165.
Topsfield, Mass., 364a, 897a, 897b, 918a.
Tories, lieutenant-governor of New York, 400; New
York, Halifax and, 2150. See also Loyalists.
Toronto, Can., 2194a.
Torrence papers, 548.
Torrente, Mariano, 2^83.
Torres I^anzas, Pedro, 43.
Torres Quintero, Gregorio, 227.
Totemism, 175, 177.
Totten, J. R., 1498.
Toussaint, Pierre, 1348a.
Tower, Charlemagne, 1080.
Town farm, Medford, Mass., 911.
Towne, Ezra, 293a.
Township division, Canadaan, 2038.
Trabue, C. C, 594.
Tracadie, derivation of the name, 2145.
Trade, African slave, 595; between Manila and
Spanish America, xmder the Spanish colonial
regime, 2261, 2282, 2379; between Spain and the
Indies, 2233, 2236; development of, 1735; fur, 267,
695, 699, 712, 951, 1098, 1741, 1745, 2203; ua early
Ohio, 698; in New France, 2087; in the Blue-Gras3
region, 1810 to 1820, 860; methods of the North-
west company, 2203; Philippine, with Spanish-
America, early period, 2261, 2282, 2379; with the
far West, in 1849, 1755. See also Business condi-
tions, Commerce, Freedom of the sea, Merchants,
Neutral trade. Open-door policy. Pacific coast
trade, and Tariff.
Trade and plantations, Committee of, 429.
Trade implements, Indian, 122.
Trade relations, Canadian, 2062.
Trade restrictions, colonial, 471.
Trade unionism, 1768.
Traders, early English, 265.
Trading companies, fur, 712. See also American
fur company. Colonial companies, Compagnie du
Nord, Hudson's Bay company, and Northwest
company of Canada.
Trading posts in the Upper Missouri region, 1830
to 1848, 1098.
Trails, early British Columbia, 2215; early Cali-
fornia, 747, 749; Oregon trail, 565; Santa Fe trail,
853. See also Portage.
Transatlantic navigation, from 1571 to 1610, 2302a.
See also Cunard steamship line.
Transcendentalist movement, 1978, 1981.
Transcontinental railroad, effort for, in J849, 564,
1755. See also Canadian Pacific railway.
Transcontinental travel. See Overland journeys.
Transportation, development of, teaching of, 86; in
California, before the railroads, 732. See also
Automobile, Commvmication and transportation,
Ships, and Shipping. •
202
INDEX.
Travel, to California, early, 747. See also Descrip-
tion ajid travel, Overland travel, and Trails.
Treason, cases since the adoption of the Constitu-
tion, 1708; trials in Indiana, during the Civil war,
622; under the Constitution, 1708. See also
Northwestern conspiracy, I864.
Treasonable societies, Civil war, 603, 622.
Treat, P. J., 1657.
Treaties, commercial treaty of 1815, 551b; conven-
tion of 1818, with Great Britain, 551b; Indian, in
1795, 195, 642, 620; Indian, in 1865, 620; Jay's
treaty, 541, 1616; treaty of Greenville, 1795, 542;
treaty of Paris, 1803, 545; treaty of peace of 1783,
1620; treaty of St. Germain-en-Laye, 1632, 2044;
treaties of San Ildefonso, 545; with Prussia, in
1785, 1799, and 1828, 1618. See also Rush-Bagot
agreement.
Treaty belts, Indian, 207.
Treaty ports in China, 1656.
Trees, historic, in Wisconsin, 1149.
Trejo, Fray Fernando, 2329.
Trelles, C. M., 13.
Trent, W. P., 1977.
Trenton, N. J., 155; first Presbyterian church in,
1863.
Trescot, W. H., 671.
Trexler, H. A., 1761.
Trextor, L. E., 51.
Trial for murder, early District of Columbia case,
760; first conviction west of the Alleghenies, 1050;
in Ohio, 1817, 1040; treason, 622; trial of William
Penn in 1670, 1314.
Tribal memorials, Indian, 175. See also Totemism.
Tribal rites of Osage Indians, 153.
Tricoche, G. N., 349.
Trimble, William, 577.
Trimmer, D. P., 819.
Trinidad, British West Indies, 120; discovery, 2365.
Troyes, Pierre, chevalier de, 2081, 2082.
Trufant, S. A., 883.
Trumbull, Lyman, 1690.
Tryon, R. M., 110.
Tryon co., N. Y., 158.
Tuckahoe, N. J., 1545a.
Tucker, P. C, 672.
S. P., 1430.
Tulare Co., Cal., 150.
Timison, John, 991.
Turner, John, 960.
Jonathan, 1506.
Turner, Kan., 847.
Turnpike, Philadelphia and Lancaster, 1069, 1070.
Turrill, C. P., 1357.
Tuscarora Indians, 198.
Tuttle, J. H., 382, 925, 1188, 1342.
Turcios, R. S., 2286.
Twain, Mark. See Clemens, S. L.
Twelfth army corps, 649.
Twitchell, R. E., 448, 1006.
"Two Strike," Indian chief, 174.
Tyler, L. G., 714, 926.
Type, printing, 1805.
Ullman, P. G., 1413.
Ulloa, Antonio de, 2362.
Uhich, B. A., 1296.
Ullrick, L. F., 2334.
Ulster county gazette, Jan. 4, 180Q, 1809.
Umpqua academy, Wilbur, Ore., 1926, 1935, 1938.
"Uncle Tom's cabin," 586.
Underground railroad, 584; in Illinois, 813.
Uniforms, Revolutionary, 501.
Union, federal, Abraham Lincoln and, 668; Web-
ster's work for, 562.
Union, N. Y., 1874.
Union club, in Nebraska, in 1863, 975.
Union colony at Greeley, Col., 754.
Union league, Somerset cotmty, N. J., 1003.
Union of British America and the United States,
plan for, 1866, 2036.
Union Pacific railroad, 974.
Unions. See Trade unions.
Unitarianism, beginnings of, 1814.
United empire loyalists, 2188. See also Loyalists.
United mine workers of America, 1770.
United States, 1763-1783, 449-529; 1783-1789, 530-534;
1789-1829, 535-558; 1829-1861, 559-595; 1861-1865,
596-686; 1865-1918, 687-691; biography, 1167-1370;
colonial history to 1763, 342-448; comprehensive
histories, 295-301; description and travel, 275-294;
educational history, 1898-1950; fine arts and litera-
ture, 1951-2031; genealogy, 1371-1590; military and
naval history, 1591-1612; miscellaneous, 332-341;
na,tional characteristics and ideals, 325-331; poli-
tics, government, and law, 1613-1725; regional
(local) history, 693-1166; religious history, 1810-
1897; social and economic history, 1726-1809; text-
books, outlines, etc., 302-334.
U. S. Bureau of the census, 1800.
United States Christian commission, 626.
"United States law journal," 1698a.
United States sanitary commission, 626.
University of Chicago, 110.
Unpreparedness, military, 556.
Unzaga y Amezago, Luis de, 459.
Upham, C. B., 673, 842, 843.
Upper Canada, courts and law in, 2196; court rec-
ords, 1789-1794, 2195; marriage in early, 2197;
rebellion of, 1837-1838, 2039; Sk George Arthur
and his administration, 2198. See also Ontario.
Upper Canada gazette, 2170.
Urena, Pedro Henrlquez. ^ee Henrlquez Urena.
Urrutia, F. J., 1658.
Ursuline sisters, 444; convent at Charlastown,
Mass., 1823.
Urteago, H. H., 228.
Usher, John, 419.
R. G., 361, 362.
Utah, 1118-1120; archaeological work in, 153; pre-
historic ruins in, 153.
Utah, Genealogical society of, family histories in,
10.
Utensils, prehistoric wood, 160. See also Imple-
ments.
Utter family, 1507.
Vaca, Domingo, 119a.
Vail, M. D., 1508.
Vail famUy, 1508.
Vald^s. See Oviedo y Vald6s.
Vallandigham, C. L., 603.
Vallette, M. F., 346, 2268.
Valley Forge, Pa., Washington's expenses at, 480.
Van Cortlandt, G. (S.), 398.
INDEX.
203
Van Cortlandt family, 1388.
Vancouver Island, House of assembly, correspond-
ence. 1856 to 1859, 2218; House of assembly,
minutes, 1856 to 1858, 2218a; Legislative coun-
cil, minutes, 1851 to 1861, 2219.
Van Curler, Arent, 407.
Van der Heyden family, 1509.
Van der Zee, Jacob, 578, 844.
Van Doren, Carl, 1977.
Van Dyke, Henry, 1659.
Van Laer, A. J. F., 392, 406, 407.
Van Liew, Elizabeth, 1004.
Van Rennselaer family, 138S.
Van Rippen, Bene, 204a.
Van Sant, Louise, 111.
Van Tyne, C. H., 112.
Varnedoe, J. O., 2018.
Vascolcellos, R. S. de, 2347.
Vatican, diplomatic representation of the United
States at, 1643.
Vaughan, Henry, 1176.
Vaughan family, 1510.
Vedia y Mitre, Mariano de, 2331, 2332,
Vega, Garcilaso de la. See Garcilaso de la Vega.
Vehicles. See Automobile, and Prairie schooners.
Velasco, Rodrigo de, 2300.
Venezuela, 2365-2367; Basques in, 2237, 2238; dis-
covery and exploration of, 244, 254, 2237.
Venezuela message of President Cleveland, 1662.
Veniard, Etienne de, 2116.
Vergennes, Charles Gravier, comte de, 484a, 485.
Vermont, 1121-1124; cemetery inscriptions, 1588;
colonial architecture in, 1952.
Versterre, Peter, 2360.
Vespucci, Amerigo, 231, 244.
Vesque, Mgr., 2301b.
Viator, C. S., pseud., 2076.
Vicksburg, siege of, 1863, 648a.
Vicksburg Daily Citizen, July 2, 1863, 1809.
Victoria township. 111.. 787a.
Vicuna Mackenna, Benjamin, 23361, 2356.
Vierra, Carlos, 1961.
Villages, early Cheyenne Indian, 130.
Vil:anueva, C. A., 2269.
Villaverde Ureta, Juan de, 2300.
Vincenn«s, Ind., winning of, 1778-1779, 521a.
Vincent, Frank, 858.
Vineland, discovery of, 234, 235, 239, 240, 245; loca-
tion of, 261.
Vineland. N. J., 995, 1005, 1582-1584.
Violette, E. M., 969. ^
Virgin Islands, 2311-2313.
Virginia, 1125-1134; agricultural periodical in, 27;
agriculture, organization of, 1732; agriculture,
bibliography of, 27, 28; and the building of Fort
Loudoun, in 1757, 443; authors, 1995a; bank funds
in 1865, 599, 600; bill of rights, 1776, 1672; Civil war
in, 675, 676; colonial history, 418, 429; Council of,
legislative journals, 1680-1714, 427; Council of,
minutes, 1622-1629, 428; education, 1863 to 1882,
organization of, 1920; free school idea in, before the
Civil war, 1917; genealogical gleanings in, 1585;
genealogy, 1551, 1561, 1585; General assembly,
register of, 1776-1918, 1133; General court, minutes,
1622-1629, 428; George Rogers Clark in, during the
Revolution, 454; governor of, 1829 to 1834, 1234;
136908°— 21— VOL 3—15
in 1681-1682, 429; political history, 1826 to 1876, 559;
Pope's campaign in, 1862, 638; post Revolutionary
history of agriculture in, 1730; religious freedom
in, 1689-1786, 301; Revolutionary war in, 458;
state troops in the Revolution, 529.
Virginia, University of, 1947.
Virginia City, Nev., 977.
Visher, S. S., 1109.
Vismara, J. C, 949.
Vital records, 1523-1590.
Vitre, Charles Denys de, 2107.
Vollmer, Clement, 1990.
VoUweiler, A. T., 113, 1328.
Volunteer army in 1861, 632; organization of, 955.
Voorhees, P. A., 294.
Vosburgh, R. W., 1375, 1527, 1542, 1543, 1546, 1552,
1554, 1571.
Voyage to South America, 1698-1601, 2320.
Voyages. See Discovery and exploration, Eliza-
bethan sea-dogs, and Maritime intercourse.
Vredenburgh, La Rue, 1511.
Vredenburgh family, 1511.
Wabash co., lU., 794.
Wade, M. J., 114.
Wadsworth, L. G., 1814.
Wager family, 1389.
Wagner, E. R., 2270.
Harr, 715.
Wainwright, R. D., 158.
Richard, 670a.
Wait, S. E., 950.
Wakeley, A. C, 973.
Walker, Edmund, 1660.
G. M., 674.
J. B., 1762.
R. J., 963.
S. H., 1791.
W. S., 1369.
William, 1596.
Wall, Edward, 675, 676.
Walla Walla co.. Wash., 1137.
Wallace, J. W., 2031.
Richard, 522.
Wallach, Richard, 759.
WaUer, Elbert, 820.
Walters, J. C, 2030.
Wampum treaty belts, 207.
Wanamaker, R. M., 1297.
War, Abraham Lincoln on, 1294; John Quincy
Adams on, 551b. See also Warfare, and Wars.
War department, U. S., documents of the world
war, 42.
War god shrines, Indian, 147.
War of 1812, 551-558; Canada and, 2039; general
strategy of, 1603; hostile Indians, 165; in the
• Upper Mississippi valley, 844; prison in New
York city, 1024; Russia and, 1629; Sir Isaac
Brock's part in, 2139a. See also Hartford con-
vention.
Ward, C. B., 1588.
J. C, 1971.
W. I., 1812.
Ward family, 1389, 1512.
Wardle, A. G., 1857.
Wardsboro, Vt., 1588.
Ward well f anally, 1513.
204
INDEX.
Warfare, American methods of, 1604; comparison of
world war and American civil war, 1*01; costs and
consequences, 646; naval, Mahan on, 1603; naval.
New Hampshire's contribution to, 978. See also
Battles, long-drawn, and War.
Warfield, B. B., 1873.
Warren, Mercy (Otis), 462.
Warren co., N. J., 150a.
Warriors, Indian, 178, 197. See also Chiefs.
Wars, American, history of, 1606; colonial, Har-
vard in, 1675 to 1748, 1939; costs and consequences,
646; Indian, of the Old Southwest, 17SO-1807, 178.
See also Civil war. Colonial wars, French and
Indian war, Indian wars, Military and naval
history, Spanish- American war, Revolution, and
War of 1812.
Warwick co., Ind., 823.
Washburn, C. G., 371.
. M. T. R., 1388, 1414.
Washbume, E. B., 561.
Washington, George, 1349, 1356, 1635; and the
French, 491; bust of, 1351; correspondence, 1356;
Houdon's statue of, 1353; personal guard, uni-
forms of, 501; the Federalist, 541; Valley Forge
expenses, 480; will of, 1928.
Washington family, 1514.
Washington, D. C, George Washington univer-
sity, 1928; invasion by the British, 18U, 556;
old time directory of, 337; Philosophical society
of Washington, 1777; a pioneer republican of,
1220; social life of, in the Jacksonian period, 566.
See also District of Columbia.
Washington (state), 1135-1141; David Thompson's
journeys in, 1811-1812, 293; first territorial gov-
ernor of, 2. See also Oregon country.
Washington artillery, 877.
Washington co., Md., committee of observation,
1777, 463,
Washington monument, Baltimore, Md., 889.
Washington's administration, social side of, 1789.
Water supply. New York city, 1014.
Waterbury, Coim., 757.
Waterloo co., Ont., 2200.
Waterman, T. T., 205.
Waters, T. F., 927.
Watkins, Albert, 973.
C. E., 1357.
Watson, John, 2019.
Wayland, J. W., 115.
Wayne, Anthony, Pennsylvania troops of, 516.
— J. M., 595.
Weapons, military, 1604. See also Equipment.
Weaver, E. P., 2077.
L. E., 1463.
Webber, M. L., 432, 1534, 1575a, 1576.
Webster, Daniel, 1977; our country's greatest law-
yer, 1358; Wisconsin investments of, 1164; work
for the Union, 562.
M. F., 787a.
Weddell, J. W., 1886.
Weeks, L. H., 1431.
S. B., 1924.
Wegelin, Oscar, 1991.
Weill, Georges, 2333.
Welles, L. A., 391.
Welhnan, J. W., 1516.
Wellman genealogy, 1516.
Wells, H. L., 2033.
J. K., 238.
Wende, Ernest, 1359.
Wenner, G. U., 1853.
Werner, C. J., 1027.
West, H. L., 1681.
Benjamin, 1972.
Joseph, 1360.
Lucy, 1202.
W. M., 323.
West, a chronicle of, 703; De Soto's explorations in,
252, 253; development of, eastern states and, 1785-
1832, 301; during the colonial period, 436-448;
early Indian occupancy of, 167; English-French
conflict in, 347; exploration in, 272-275; explora-
tion in, 1822-1829, 267; exploration in, 1866, 269;
far, description and travel, 285; trade with, in
1849, 1755; French exploration and settlement in,
2123; French explorers and traders in, 2044; fron-
tier and pioneer life, 703; Indian trade in, prior to
1822, 1741; influence on the rise and fall of political
parties, 1689; journey to, in 1817, 280; journey to,
in 1837, 294; Lewis and Clark expedition, 710;
middle, hfe and customs of, 707; military posts
in, early 19th century, 954; revolution in, 454,
458; state builders of, 1300, 1304, 1345. See also
Great Lakes region. Frontier and pioneer life.
Northwest, Overland journeys to the Pacific, and
Pacific coast.
West, Canadian, 2201-2219; grain trade, 2065; mis-
sionary to, in 1660, 2122. See also Northwest,
Canadian.
west Florida, controversy, 1622, 1646; Spanish rec-
ords of, 875.
West Gulf blockade, 1862-1861,, 670a, 672.
West Indies, 2291-2313; antiquities, 209; archaeology,
120; trade with, 18th centmy, 2291. See also
Indies.
West Newbury, Mass., 1586.
West Virginia, claims against the federal go-vern-
ment on account of the Northwest Territory, 1142.
Westcott, Allan, 1603.
Westengard, J. I., 1661.
Westergaard, Waldemar, 748.
Western company. See Company of the West.
Western expansion, 86, 565. See also Territorial
expansion.
Western sanitary commission, 626.
Westo Indians, 169.
Weston, Thomas, 365.
Westport, Mass., 1587.
Whaling, Alaska, 717.
Whaling industry, 1747.
Whalley, Edward, 696.
Wharton, Edith, 1984.
Wheat, influence on Anglo-American relations dur-
ing the Civil war, 665.
Wheatley, Phillis, 1975.
Wheaton, C. C, 677, 884.
Wheelwright, J. T., 1662.
Whelpley, J. D., 1329.
Whicker, J. W., 1249,
Whig party, tendency to unite with the Free soil
party, 1848-1852, 1696.
Whigs, New York, in the early forties, 1687.
INDEX.
205
Whipple, C. H., 1389.
Bishop H. B., 1176.
. Wayne, 1275, 1298.
Whipple family, 1389.
Whitchurch township, Ont., 2075.
White, E. S., 1486.
H. S., 2004.
J. C, 649.
M. J., 885.
M. T., 821.
S. E., 749.
T. W., 263.
White family, 1516.
White House, genesis of, 763.
White Plains, N. Y., 1569.
Whitefield, George, 1812.
Whitehead, R. F., 1951, 1952, 1960.
Whitelock family, 1517.
Whitman, Walt, 677a, 1977, 1978, ^84, 2031.
Whitmore, W. H., 1530.
Whitney cotton gin, 1089.
Whitney's Point, N. Y., 1874.
Whittier, C. A., 1604.
W. G., 1977.
Whittle, G. H., 1962.
Wiggins, R. L., 2009.
Wigglesworth, Michael, 1980.
Wilberforce refugee colony, 2194.
Wilcox, A. R , 1029.
De Lafayette, 822.
Wilcox family, 1518.
Wildman, Edwin, 692.
Wildwyck, N. Y., 41.
Wilkinson, Hazel, 1992.
Gen. James, 2271.
Willard, Emma, 1361.
J. F., 754.
William and Mary college, 1173.
Williams, Charles Hanbury-, 2039.
G. W., 1683.
J. L. B., 341, 523.
■ J. W., 1133.
Eev. John, 920.
M. W., 116, 1655, 2288.
Roger, 384, 1362, 1363; writings of, 7.
Sherman, 1030.
Thomas, 698, 2199.
Williams family of Massachusetts, 920.
Williamson, J. P., 957.
M. A., 1276.
M. L., 1262.
W. C, 1364.
Willis, F. B., 1724.
J. R., 961.
WiUison, John, 2142.
Williston, Seth, 1874.
WUls, New Jersey, 1730 to 1750, 1556. See also Pro-
bate records, and Regional genealogy, vital rec-
ords, etc.
Wilmot, N. H., 97».
Wilson, C, 2078.
C. B., 334.
Edward, 1519.
G. P., 887.
— — George, 1365.
H. B., 117.
Wilson, H. P., 1203.
L. L. W., 159.
Woodrow, 484a, 485, 691, 1366-1368; and the
evolution of our foreign policy, 1613a; foreign pol-
icy of, 1651.
Wilson family, 1519.
Windham co., Vt., 1538.
Windsor, Ont., 934; ferry, 2191.
Wineland. See Vineland.
Winship, G. P., 1244.
Winston, J. E., 963.
Winter, N. O., 770, 2284.
Winthrop, Gov. John, 372a, 381.
Wiscasset, Me., 1589.
Wisconsin, 1143-1165; aUen suffrage provision in
constitution of, 1725; antiquities, 121-123, 129, 151;
archaeology, 123; archives, 34; early lawyers and
early practice in, 1705; an early play, 1991.
Wisconsin, State historical society of, 30, 1159.
Wise, J. C, 1520.
Wise genealogy, 1520.
Wisner, G. F., 1521.
Wisner family, 1521.
Wissler, Clark, 160, 186, 206.
Wistar association, Philadelphia, 1776.
Wiswall, C. A., 1255.
Witchcraft, Salem, Mass., 905.
Witherspoon, John, 1369.
Wiyot Indians, 140; archaeology of, 140.
Woburn, Mass., 1590.
Wolf, Simon, 1179.
Wolff, S. L., 1977.
Wollaston, Captain, visit to New England in 1624,
365.
Woman, service as a marine in the War of 1812, 1202.
Woman's movement, dawn of, 1057.
Women, famous American, 1325, 1949; heroic In-
dian, 197; legal and political status, in Iowa, 834;
married woman's property law, Pennsylvania,
1057; of Mexico, celebrated, 2278; suffrage, in
Michigan , 931. See also Family, social history of,
and Marriage.
Women's educational and industrial union, Buf-
falo, N. Y., 1026.
Wood, E. O., 264, 951.
Leonard, 1604.
M. E., 1524.
William, 265.
Wood, houses, early, 1960; prehistoric use of, 161.
Wood engraving, 1962.
Woodberry, G. E., 2010.
Woodhouse, E. J., 118.
Woodmere, N. Y., 1010.
Woods, J. C. B., 1212.
Woodson, C. G., 1800a, 1801.
Woods worth, James, 2210.
Woodward, E. K., 1551.
Woodward family, 1388.
Woolsey, M. F., 787a.
Worcester, Mass., 1914.
World court, prototype of, 1698.
World politics, Americanism and, 327; United
States and, 1793 to 1815, 1654. See also Interna-
tionalism.
World war, America's entry into, 1637; America's
reaction to, 1615; and the Civil war, parallels and
206
INDEX.
contrasts, 633, 641; and the teaching of American
history, 76; background of, 1615; Canada in, 2039;
diplomatic correspondence, 1650; documents of
the War department, 42; historical ideals and, 98;
history teaching in the light of, 115; Latin Amer-
ica and, 2230; Monroe doctrine and, 1664, 1667;
our participation in, teaching of, 57.
Worthmgton, A. F., 1963.
Wragg family, 1522.
Wrecks. See Shipwrecks.
Wright, I. A., 2300.
Sir James, 434, 435.
T. G., 353.
Wright family, 1389.
Writing, prehistoric. See Inscription rocks.
Wrong, E. M., 2079, 2080.
G. M., 2123, 2143.
Wyckoff, A. C, 1397.
Wyer, J. I., jr., 1588.
Wyman, T. B., 1530.
Wymberley Jones De Renne Georgia library, 1774.
Wyoming, history of, 1166.
X Y company, 2203.
Yahi archery, 194.
Yale, Elihu, 696.
Yale college, benefactors of, 696; early student life
at, 696; graduates who were loyalists, 478; found-
ing of, 696; in Saybrook, 696; officers of, in 1857,
696; removal to New Haven, in 1716, 1929; social
I
distinctions at, 696; student life at, 1795 to 1817/
1930. I
Yanan Indians, 194, 205.
"Yankee," privateer, 1814, 1083.
Yeamans, Sir John, 431.
Yellowstone expedition of 1873, 1610.
York, James, duke of, 396.
Yorktown, Va., m 1862, 637.
Yorktown campaign, French fleet in, 1603.
Yosemite national park, 269.
Young, C. M., 1843.
G. R., 1324.
J. P., 266.
J. R,, 1370.
Younger, H. O,, 129. ',
Yucatan, discovery of, in 1517, 2259; Maya Indians'
of, 214. I
Yust, W. F., 678. I
Zabriskie, L. K., 2313.
Zaldumbide, Gonzalo, 2323.
Zeh, L. E., 207.
Zimmerman, M. E., 208.
Zimmermann, M. H., 290.
Zoology, a century of, 2033.
Zorraquinos, Marina, 750.
Zuni, pueblo, 135; war gods, shrines of, 147.
Ziiniga. See Ercilla y Ziiniga.
Zwierlein, F. J., 408.
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
American Historical Association
FOR
THE YEAR 1919
SUPPLEMENT
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919
COMPILED BY GRACE GARDNER GRIFFIN
WASHINGTON
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
1922
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919.
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF BOOKS AND ARTICLES ON UNITED STATES AND
CANADIAN HISTORY PUBLISHED DURING THE YEAR 1919, WITH
SOME MEMORANDA ON OTHER PORTIONS OF AMERICA.
COMPILED BY
GRACE GARDNER GRIFFIN.
in
i
PREFACE.
The annual bibliography which follows is the fourteenth number
of a continuous series opening with 1906. A volume entitled Writ-
ings on American History, 1902, prepared by Professor Ernest C.
Richardson, librarian of Princeton University, and Mr. Anson Ely
Morse, was published at Princeton in 1904. A volume upon a plan
more like the present, Writings on American History, 1903, prepared
by Professor Andrew C. McLaughlin, Mr. William A. Slade, and
Mr. Ernest D. Lewis, under the auspices of the Carnegie Institution
of Washington, was published by that institution at Washington in
1905. After an interval followed the series. Writings on American
History, 1906, 1907, and 1908, prepared by Miss Grace Gardner
Griffin, and originally published by the Macmillan Company (New
York, 1908, 1909, 1910).
Independent publication ceased for a time with the volume for
1908. Beginning with the volume for 1909, though the preparation
of the material continued to be provided for by subscription, the
printing and publication of the annual bibliography was assumed
by the American Historical Association. In its Annual Reports for
1909, 1910, 1911, bibliographies of the material published m those
years were included. The Yale University Press, with much public
spirit, took up at this point the publication of the series, and issued
as independent volumes the bibliographies for 1912, 1913,1914,1915,
1916, and 1917. Publication by that concern having ended, the
plan of incorporating this annual survey in the Annual Reports was
resumed, and the bibliography for 1918 was incorporated, as a supple-
mentary volume, in the Annual Report for that year. A similar
procedure is followed with this bibliography for 1919.
To those who desire to have complete sets of the volumes hitherto
pubhshed, it may. be useful to know that the volume for 1902 can
still be obtained from the library of Princeton University, that for
1903 from the Carnegie Institution of Washington, while those for
1906, 1907, 1908 (independent volumes), bound '^ separates" of
those for 1909, 1910, and 1911, and the volume for 1918, can be
obtained from the secretary of the American Historical Association.
The ensuing pages have been prepared upon the same system as
in the preceding volumes. The intention of the compiler has been
to include all books and articles, however brief, which contain any-
thing of value to the history of the United States and of British
North America. With respect to the regions lying south of the con-
tinental United States, however, and to the Pacific islands, the
intention has been to include all writings on the history of these
regions published in the United States or Europe; but the product
(not relating to the United States) of South America and other
southward regions has been left to their own bibliographers. New
editions of books, if they contain no new material, have not been
VI PREFACE. !
noticed. When no other date of publication is given, the date i
1919. The annotations have been confined to explanations of title
which seem to need explanation; or analyses of contents (in man;
cases taken from the catalogue cards of the Library of Congress)*
when analyses seemed requisite; or mention of critical appraisals iij
a few journals whose criticisms have value.
A topical arrangement has been followed. As a rule, the booki
and articles in any division are arranged alphabetically by th(
authors' names. In a few cases another arrangement appeared" to b(
more helpful; in the case of biography and genealogy the subject o
the book or article determines the alphabetical arrangement.
In the compilation of the material, performed at the Library o
Congress, Miss Griffin has had most obliging assistance from Mr!
Appleton P. C. Griffin, Chief Assistant Librarian, and the Librarian!
Dr. Herbert Putnam, has kindly afforded her every facility for he:j
work. I
The preparation of the manuscript, as distinguished from the print!
ing and publication, has from the year 1906 to the present tim(]
been sustained by a ^roup of subscribers consisting of various his|
torical societies and individuals, the list for the present volume!
being the following: the American Historical Association, the Acadj
emy of Pacific Coast History, the Chicago Historical Society, th(
Colonial Society of Massachusetts, the« Illinois State Historical Lii
brary, the Massachusetts Historical Society, the Michigan Historical
Commission, the Minnesota Historical Society, the Morrisson-Keeve:|
Library, the New Jersey Historical Society, the New York Historical
Society, the New York State Historical Association, the State Hisi
torical Society of Wisconsin, Mr. Charles Altschul, Mr. T. E. Britj
tingham, Mrs. Washington E. Connor, Professor Henry W. Farnam{
Mr. Edwin F. Greene, Mr. Irving B. Richman, and the late Dr. J. GJ
Rosengarten. Several other friends of the undertaking have kindH
contributed lesser sums toward the expenses of the year. j
J. Franklin Jameson. I
CONTENTS,
^ENERAtlTIES: Page.
Bibliography. 1
Indexes (cumulative) to serial publications 4
Archives and manuscript collections 4
Historiography, methodology, study, and teaching 6
America in General:
Aboriginal America —
Antiquities 11
Indians 14
Mexico, Central America, West Indies, and South America 17
Discovery and exploration 22
United States:
Description and travel 27
Comprehensive 28
Textbooks, outlines, etc 29
National characteristics and ideals 31
Miscellaneous 31
Colonial history to 1763 —
General 32
French and Indian War 33
Regional colonial [arranged geographically] 33
1763-1783—
Sources and documents 39
General 41
Special 41
Revolutionary soldiers: Names 43
1783-1789 44
1789-1829—
Miscellaneous 44
War of 1812 45
1829-1861—
Miscellaneous 46
Mexican War 47
Slavery 47
1861-1865—
General 48
Regimental histories 51
1865-1919—
General 51
Spanish-American War : 52
Regional (local) history —
General 53
Alabama 55
Alaska 55
Arizona 55
Arkansas 55
California 55
Colorado 57
Connecticut 57
Delaware 57
District of Columbia 57
Florida 58
Georgia 58
lUinois 58
Indiana 59
Iowa 60
Kentucky 60
VII
VIII CONTENTS.
United States — Continued.
Regional (local) history — Continued. Page-
Louisiana 61
Maine 62
Maryland 62
Massachusetts 63 i
Michigan 65 i
Minnesota 66 j
Mississippi 66
Missouri 66
Montana 67 j
Nebraska 67 i
New Hampshire 68 [
New Jersey 68 j
New Mexico 69;
New York 70;
North Carolina 71^
North Dakota 71!
Ohio 721
Oklahoma 72i
Oregon 72;
Pennsylvania 73 j
Rhode Island 74|
South Carolina 75'
South Dakota 75:
Tennessee 75 j
Texas 76|
Utah 761
Vermont 77|
Virginia 771
Washington 77!
West Virginia 78!
Wisconsin 78 ;
Wyoming 79'
Biography —
Comprehensive 80:
Individual [arranged alphabetically by subject] 81 1
Genealogy —
General 981
Collected genealogy 981
Individual families 98;
Regional genealogy, vital records, etc 104i
Military and naval history 1091
Politics, government, and law — ;
Diplomatic history and foreign relations 110;
Monroe doctrine 112;
Constitutional history and law 113
Politics 114'
Law 115;
National government and administration 116i
State and local government and administration 116
Social and economic history — 1
General 119j
Agriculture; forestry; land 119;
Commerce and industry 119,
Communication; transportation; public works 120'
Fiuance; money 122'
Labor 123,
Libraries; societies; institutions 123'
Life and manners 1231
Philanthropy 124,
Population and race elements 124|
Printing and publishing 125;
Religious history —
General 126
Particular denominations 126{
Biography , 131'
ii
CONTENTS. IX
United States — Continued.
Educational history — Page.
General 133
Regional 133
Particular institutions 134
Biography 135
Fine arts —
General 137
Biography 138
Literature —
General 138
Regional 139
Biographical and critical 140
Music 143
Science 143
British America:
General 144
Discovery to 1763 146
1763-1867 149
1867-1919 151
Regional history-
New Brunswick 151
Nova Scotia 152
Province of Quebec 152
Province of Ontario 153
Western Provinces and Territories 155
Latin America:
General 156
Mexico 161
Central America 162
West Indies —
General 162
British West Indies 162
Cuba 162
Dutch West Indies 163
French West Indies 163
Porto Rico 163
Santo Domingo 163
South America —
General 164
Argentine Republic 166
Brazil 166
British Guiana 166
Chile 167
Colombia 167
Dutch Guiana 168
Ecuador 168
Paraguay 168
Peru 168
Uruguay - 169
Venezuela 169
Pacific Islands:
Hawaiian Islands 170
Philippine Islands 170
Index 172
I
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Adams, Press of Byron S. Adams, 512 11th st., N. W., Washington. M
Alcan. Librairie Felix Alcan, 108 boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris.
Am. Bapt. pub. soc. American Baptist publication society (Judson press), 16 Ash-
burton place, Boston; 1707 Chestnut st., Phila.; 125 N. Wabash ave., Chicago.
Am. bk. CO. American book company, 100 Washington square, N. Y.; 330 E. 22d
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Am. hist. soc. American historical society, 267 Broadway, N. Y.; 180 N. Market st.,
Chicago.
Appleton. D. Appleton and co., 29-35 W. 32d st., N. Y.; 533 S. Wabash ave., Chi-
cago; 25 Bedford St., W. C, London.
Arch, book pub. co. Architectural book publishing co., 31 E. 12th st., N. Y.
Atlantic monthly press, 8 Arlington st., Boston. |j
Beauchemin, Librairie Beauchemin, Montreal, Can. W
Beers. J. H. Beers and co., publishers, 202 S. Clark st., Chicago. P
Bonnier, Albert Bonniers forlag, Stockholm, Sweden.
Calatrava. Establecimiento tipografico de Calatrava, Salamanca, Spain.
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Caxton CO. Caxton co., printers, 715 Caxton building, Cleveland, O.
Century. Century^ co., 353 Fourth ave,, N. Y.
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Chatto. Chatto and Windus, 97 and 99 St. Martin's Lane, Charing Cross, W. C,
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Dent, J. M. Dent and sons, 10-13 Bedford st,, W, C, London; 25-27 Melinda st,,
Toronto, Can,
De Vinne press, 395 Lafayette st., N. Y.
Dodd. Dodd, Mead and co, , Fourth ave. and 30th st. , N . Y,
Donnelley, R. R. Donnelley and sons co., Plymouth court, cor. Polk st., Chicago,
Doran, George H, Doran co,, 244 Madison ave., N. Y,
Doubleday. Doubleday, Page and co,. Garden City, N. Y.
Ducharme. G. Ducharme, libraire-editeur, 133 rue Saint-Laurent, Montreal, Can.
Dutton. E. P. Dutton and co. , 681 Fifth ave. , N . Y.
Editorial- America. Editorial- Am erica, Concesionaria exclusiva para la venta:
Sociedad espaiiola de libreria, Ferraz, 25, Madrid.
Elander, Elanders boktryckeri, Goteborg, Sweden.
Epworth press, 25-35 City Road, E. C, London.
Faxon. F. W. Faxon co., 83 Francis st., Boston.
Fischbacher. Librairie Fischbacher, 33 rue de Seine, Paris.
Franklin pub. and supply co. Franklin publishing and supply co., 1615 American
St., Phila.
Funk. Funk and Wagnalls co., 354-360 Fourth ave., N. Y,
Gallach, Casa editorial "Gallach," Consejo de Ciento, 416, Barcelona, Spain,
Garneau, Librairie Garneau, 47 rue Buade, Quebec, Can,
Ginn. Ginn and Co., 15 Ashburton place, Boston; 2301-2311 Prairie ave., Chicago.
Gov. print, off. Government printing office, Washington.
Hachette, Librairie Hachette, 79 boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris.
Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Leinstr. 32, Hannover, Germany.
Harper. Harper and brothers, Franklin square, N, Y. ; 45 Albemarle st. , W. , London.
Harrap, George G. Harrap and co. , 2 and 3 Portsmouth st. , Kingsway, W. C. , London.
xi
Xn PUBLISHERS REPEESENTED.
I!'
Harrasowitz. Otto Harrasowitz, Querstr. 14, Leipzig, Germany.
Heath. D. C. Heath and co., 50 Beacon st., Boston; 231 W. 39th st., N. Y.
Heinemann. William Heinemann, 20 and 21 Bedford st.. Strand, W. C, London.
Homewood press, 633 Plymouth court, Chicago.
Holt. Henry Holt and co., 19 W. 44th st., N. Y.
Houghton Mifflin. Houghton Mifflin co., 4 Park st., Boston; 16 E. 40th st., N. Y.
Insel-Verlag. Insel-Verlag, Kurzestr. 7, Leipzig, Germany.
Jack. T. A. and E. C. Jack, 35 Paternoster Row, E. C, London.
Jones. Marshall Jones co, , 212 Summer st. , Boston.
Judson press. See Am, Bapt. pub. soc.
Kenedy. P. J, Kenedy and sons, 44 Barclay st., N. Y.
King. P. S. Kiug and son, 2 and 4 Great Smith st., Victoria st., Westminster, S. W.,
London.
Lane. John Lane, The "Bodley Head", Vigo st., London.
Lewis pub. co. Lewis publishing co., 542 S. Dearborn st., Chicago; 826 Eighth ave.,
N. Y.
Lindblad. J. A, Lindblads forlag, Upsala, Sweden.
Lippincott. J. B. Lippincott co.. East Washington square, Phila.; 16 John st.,
Adelphi, W. C, London,
Little. Little, Brown and co., 34 Beacon st., Boston.
Longmans. Longmans, Green and co,, 443-449 Fourth ave., N. Y. jj
McClelland. McClelland and Stewart, 215-219 Victoria st., Toronto, Can.
McClurg. A. C. McClurg and co. , 330-352 E. Ohio st. , Chicago. j
McKinley pub. co. McKinley publishing co., 1619 Ranstead st., Phila. i
Maclehose. Maclehose, Jackson and co. (formerly J. Maclehose and sons), 61 St. i
Vincent St., Glasgow. |
Macmillan. The Macmillan co. , 66 Fifth ave. , N. Y. ; 10-15 St. Martin's st. , Leicester I
square, W. C, London; 70 Bond st., Toronto, Can. I
Marzo. Imprenta de Antonio Marzo, San Hermenegildo, 32, Madrid. I
Mateu. Artes graficas Mateu, Paseo del Prado, 34, Madrid. |
Milford. Humphrey Milford, Oxford university press, Amen Corner, E, C, London. I
Munsell. Munsell publishing co., 536 S. Clark st,, Chicago,
Murray. John Murray, 50a Albemarle st., W., London.
National Americana society, 44 E. 23d st., N. Y.
National bk. co. National book co., 6 Chamberlain Building, Chattanooga, Tenn.
National pub. co. National publishing co., 259 S. American st., Phila.
Nijhoff. Martinus Nijhoff , The Hague.
Pilgrim press, 14 Beacon st., Boston; 19 W. Jackson boulevard, Chicago.
Plon-Nourrit. Plon-Nourrit et cie, , 8 rue Garanci^re, Paris,
Potter. Charles H. Potter and co., 431 11th st., N. W., Washington.
Pueyo. Imprenta de Juan Pueyo, Luna, 29, Madrid.
Putnam. G. P. Putnam's sons, Putnam building, 2-6 W. 45th st., N. Y. ; 24 Bedford
St., Strand, W. C, London.
Rand, McNally. Rand, McNally and co.. Rand, ilcNally building, Chicago; 40
E. 22dst.,N.Y.
Rates. Establecimiento tipogrdfico de Jaime Rates, Costanilla de San Pedro, 6,
Madrid.
Reimer. Dietrich Reimer, Wilhelmstr. 29, Berlin.
Renaissance du livre. La Renaissance du livre, 78 boulevard Saint-Michel, Paris.
Revell. Fleming H. Revell co., 158 Fifth ave., N. Y.; 17 N. Wabash ave., Chicago.
Rex printing house, 321 Cherry st., Phila.
Rico. Imprenta de V. Rico, Paseo del Prado, 30, Madrid.
Rider. William Rider and son, 8-11 Paternoster Row, E. C, London.
Rivadenevra. Editorial Rivadeneyra, Paseo de San Vicente, 20, Madrid.
Rudge. William E. Rudge, 218 William st. , N. Y.
Ryerson press, Ryerson press (William Briggs), Wesley buildings, Queen and John
sts,, Toronto, Can.
Sanborn. B. H. Sanborn and co., 623 S. Wabash ave., Chicago; 15 W. 38th st., N. Y.
Scott, Foresman. Scott, Foresman and co., 623 S. Wabash ave., Chicago; 8 E. 34th
st.,N. Y.
Scribner. Charles Scribner's sons, 597 Fifth ave., N. Y. ; 608 S. Dearborn st., Chicago.
Segui, Miguel Segui, editor, Buenavista, 30, Barcelona, Spain,
Silver, Burdett. Silver, Burdett and co., 126 Fifth Ave., N. Y.; 218-223 Columbus
ave., Boston.
Sirven. Impr.-editeur B, Sirven, 10 rue de la Pepinike, Paris.
Society for promoting Christian knowledge, 6 St. Martin's place, W, C, London.
Sudrez. Libreria general de Victoriano Sudrez, calle de Preciados, 48, Madrid.
PUBLISHERS REPRESENTED.
XIII
Tasso. Imprenta de la viuda de Luis Tasso, Arco del Teatro, 21 y 23, Barcelona,
T^qui. G. Tequis, 82 rue Bonaparte, Paris,
Teubner. B. G. Teubner, Poststr. 3, Leipzig; Genthinerstr. 40, Berlin.
Univ. pub. CO. University publishing co., 1126-1128 Q st., Lincoln, Neb.; 2126
Prairie ave., Chicago.
Unwin. T. Fisher Unwin, 1 Adelphi Terrace, Strand, W. C, London.
Veit. Veflag Veit und co., Marienstr. 18, Leipzig, Germany.
Wagner. Harr Wagner publishing co., Hearst building, San Francisco, Cal.
Wilson CO. H. W. Wilson co., 958 University ave., N. Y.
Winston co. John C. Winston co. , 1006-1016 Arch st. , Phila.
Wright and Potter. Wright and Potter printing co., state printers, 34 Derne st.,
Boston.
Yale univ. press. Yale university press, 143 Elm st.. New Haven, Conn.; 19 E.
47th8t.,N. Y.
Zarzuela. Tipografia Zarzuela, Alvarez Quintero, 72, Seville, Spain.
•I
ji
LIST OF PERIODICALS, WITH ABBREVIATIONS
USED.
Acad, inscrip. comptes rendus. Academie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, comptes
rendus, Paris.
Acad, Pacific coast hist. pub. Academy of Pacific coast history, publications,
Berkeley, Cal.
Acad. pol. sci. proc. Academy of political science in the city of New York, pro-
ceedmgs.
Action frany. L'Action franyaise, Paris.
Am. anthrop. American anthropologist, Washington.
Am. anthrop. assoc. mem. American anthropological association, memoirs, Wash-
ington.
Am. antiq. soc. proc. American antiquarian society, proceedings, Worcester, Mass.
Am. arch, American architect, N. Y.
Am. bankers assoc. jour. American bankers association, journal, N, Y.
Am. bar assoc. jour. American bar association journal, Baltimore, Md,
Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec. American Catholic historical society of Philadelphia,
records.
Am. Cath, quar. rev. American Catholic quarterly review, Phila.
Am. econ, rev. American economic review, Princeton, N. J.
Am. educ. American education, Albany, N. Y.
Am. hist, assoc, rep, American historical association, annual report, Washington.
Am, hist, rev. American historical review, N. Y.
Am. Ind. mag. American Indian magazine, Washington.
Am. inst. arch. jour. American institute of architects, journal, Washington.
Am. jour, archaeol. American journal of archaeology, N. Y.
Am. jour, internat law. American journal of international law, N. Y..
Am. jour, physical anthrop'. American journal of physical anthropology, Washington.
Am. jour. sci. American journal of science, New Haven, Conn.
Am. jour, sociol. American journal of sociology, Chicago.
Am. jour, theol. American journal of theology, Chicago.
Am. law rev. American law review, St. Louis, Mo.
Am. legal news. American legal news, Detroit, Mich.
Am. lib. assoc. bul. American library association, bulletin, Chicago.
Am. mag. art. American magazine of art, Washington.
Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap. American museum of natural history, anthropo-
logical papers, N. Y. ^
Am. phil. soc. proc. American j)hilosophical society, proceedings, Phila.
Am. pol. sci. rev. American political science review, Baltimore, Md.
Am. Scandinavian rev. American Scandinavian review, N. Y.
Am. scenic and hist, preservation soc. rep. American scenic and historic preservation
society, annual report, Albany, N. Y.
Am. schoolmaster. American schoolmaster, Ypsilanti, Mich.
Am. statistical assoc. pub. American statistical association, quarterly publications,
Boston.
Americana. Americana, American historical society, N. Y.
Anglican theol. rev. Anglican theological review, N Y.
Anjou hist. L'Anjou historique, Angers, France.
Ann. Am. acad. pol. sci. Annals of the American academy of political and social
science, Phila.
Ann. geog. Annales de geographie, Paris.
Ann. medical hist. Annals of medical history, N. Y.
Ann. re vol. Annales revolutionnaires; organe de la Societe des etudes Robespier-
ristes, Besan^-on, France.
Anthropologie. L' Anthropologic, Paris.
Anthropos. Anthropos, Vienna, Austria.
Appalachia. Appalachia, Appalachia mountain club, Boston.
Arch. nac. bol. Boletin del archivo nacional, Havana, Cuba.
XIV ^
i
LIST OF PEBIODICALS. XV
A.rch. rec. Architectural record, N. Y.
A^rchiv f. Anthrop. Archiv f iir Anthroj)ologie, Brunswick, Germany.
A.rchivo Ibero-am. Archivo Ibero-americano, Madrid, Spain.
\rt in America. Art in America, N. Y.
Iiirts and decoration. Arts and decoration, N. Y.
!\.thenaeum. Athenaeum, London.
\.tlantic. Atlantic monthly, Boston.^
Baessler- Archiv. Baessler- Archiv, Leipzig and Berlin.
Bellman. Bellman, Minneapolis, Minn. ^»
3ib. sacra. Bibliotneca sacra, Oberlin, O. w'
Bib. world. Biblical world, Chicago. * I14'
Bibliog. soc. Am. pap. Bibliographical society of America, papers, Chicago. mi
3ibliothec[ue de I'Ecole des chartes. Biblioth^que de I'Ecole des chartes; revue ^
d' Erudition, Paris.
Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde van Nederlandsch-Indie, The Hague.
Blackwood's. Blackwood's magazine^ Edinburgh.
Bol. hist. Puerto Rico. Boletin historico de Puerto Rico, San Juan, Porto Rico.
Bookman. Bookman, N. Y.
Boston pub. lib. bul. Public library of the city of Boston, bulletin.
Bostoniansoc. proc. Bostonian society, proceediiigs, Boston.
Brookline hist. soc. proc. Brookline historical society, proceedings, Brookline, Mass.
Buffalo hist. soc. pub. Buffalo historical society, publications, Buffalo, N. Y.
Bul. of bibliog. Bulletin of bibliography, Boston.
Bul. recherches hist. Bulletin des recherches historiques, Levis, Que.
3al. law rev. California law review. University of California, Berkeley, Cal. ^
M. univ. chron. University of California chronicle, Berkeley, Cal. ^1
]anad. law times. Canadian law times, Toronto, Can. ^|
]anad. mag. Canadian magazine, Toronto, Can.
Canada franp. Le Canada frangais, Quebec, Can.
Canada law jour. Canada law journal, Toronto, Can.
^aribbeana. Caribbeana, London.
]ath. educ. rev. Catholic educational review, Washington. ^'j
3ath. hist. rev. Catholic historical review, Washington. |J
]ath. world. Catholic world, N. Y.
Central law jour. Central law journal, St. Louis, Mo.
^entro estud. Am. Sevilla bol. Centro de estudios Americanistas de Sevilla, boletin,
Seville, Spain.
Century. Century magazine, N. Y.
3hamb. jour. Chambers's journal, Edinburgh,
^iudad de Dios. La Ciudad de Dios, Madrid.
!!olumbia hist. soc. rec. Columbia historical society, records, Washington.
!!olumbia law rev. Columbia law review, N. Y.
:!olumbia univ. quar. Columbia university quarterly, N. Y.
Columbia univ. stud. Columbia university studies in history, economics, and public
law, N. Y.
'onfed. vet. Confederate veteran, Nashville, Tenn.
'onst. rev. Constitutional review, Washington.
Constructive quar. Constructive quarterly, N. Y. and London,
bntemp, rev. Contemporary review, London,
'ornell law quar. Cornell law quarterly, Ithaca, N. Y.
;ornhill mag. Cornhill magazine, London.
;orresp. Correspondant, Paris.
Cultura hispano-americana. Cultura hispano-americana; organo del Centro de este
nombre, Madrid.
Cultura latin o-americana. Cultura latino-americana, Ibero-Amerikanische Institut,
Cothen, Germany.
). A. R. mag; Daughters of the American revolution magazine, Washington.
). A. R. rep. National society of the Daughters of the American revolution, annual
report, Washington.
)an vers hist. soc. coll. Dan vers historical society, historical collections, Danvers,
Mass.
)el. hist. soc. pap. Historical society of Delaware, papers, Wilmington, Del.
)eutsch. Gesells. Anthrop. Korresp.-Blatt. Deutsche Gesellschaft fiir Anthro-
poloMe, Korrespondenz-Blatt, Brunswick, Germany.
)eutsc]i-Am. Geschichtsblatter. Deutsch-Amerikanische Geschichtsblatter, Chicago.
)eutscli-sudam. u. iberisch. Inst. Mitteil. Deutsch-siidamerikanisches und iberiscHes
Institut, Mitteilungen, Cologne, Germany.
XVI LIST OF PERIODICALS.
Dial. The Dial, N. Y.
Dutchess CO. hist. soc. yr. bk. Dutchess county historical society, year book, Pough
keepsie, N. Y.
Eccles. r^v. Ecclesiastical review, Phila.
Ecole. Ecole, Paris.
Econ. jour. Economic journal, London.^
Edinburgh rev. Edinburgh review, Edinburgh.
Educ. foundations. ^ Educational foundations, N. Y,
Educ. rec. Educational record, London.
Educ. rev. Educational review, N. Y.
Education. Education, Boston. J
Element, school jour. Elementary school journal, Chicago. j
Elseviers' maandschrift.^ Elseviers' geillustreerd maandschrift, Amsterdam, Holland j
Emp. rev. Empire review, London. j
Eng. hist. rev. English historical review, London.
Englishwoman. The Englishwoman, London.
Espana y Amer. Espaiia y America, Madrid. j
Essex inst. hist. coll. Essex institute historical collections, Salem, Mass. _ (
Estudiante latino-americano. Estudiante latino-americana, Ann Arbor, Mich,
^studio. Estudio, Barcelona, Spain.
Etudes. ;^tudes, Paris.
Everybody's. Everybody's magazine, N. Y.
Field artillery jour. Field artillery journal, Washington. i
Fortn. rev. Fortnightly review, London. !
Forum. , Forum, N.Y. , |
France-Etats-Unis. France-Etats-Unis, Paris. j
Friends' hist. soc. bul. Friends' historical society of Philadelphia, bulletin. i
Friends' hist. soc. jour. Friends' historical society, journal, London. !
Ga. hist. quar. Georgia historical quarterly, published by the Georgia historical.
society, Savannah, Ga. [
Ga. hist. soc. proc. Georgia historical society, proceedings of the annual meeting,!
Savannah, Ga. J
Geneal. Genealogist, London. '
Geneal. mag. Genealogical magazine, Boston.
Geog. jour. Geographical journal, Royal geographical society, London.
Geog. rev. Geographical review, N. Y.
Geografia. Geografia, Novara, Italy.
Geographie. La geographie; bulletin de la Society de geographic, Paris,
Ger. Am. ann. German American annals, Phila.
Grande rev. Grande review, Paris.
Granite mo. Granite monthly. Concord, N. H.
Grizzly Bear. The Grizzly Bear; a monthly magazine devoted to all California,
Los Angeles, Cal.
Harper's. Harper's monthly magazine, N. Y.
Harv. grad. mag. Harvard graduates' magazine, Cambridge, Mass.
Harv. law rev. Harvard law review, Cambridge, Mass.
Harv. theol. rev. Harvard theological review, N. Y.
Hispania. Hispania; a quarterly devoted to the interests of teachers of Spanish,
Stanford university, Cal., and New York city.
Hispanic Am. hist. rev. Hispanic American historical review, Baltimore and Wash-
ington.
Hist, outlook. Historical outlook, Phila.
Hist. f)ub. Canad. Review of historical publications relating to Canada, Toronto, Can.
Historia. Historia, Oklahoma City, Okla.
History. History, London.
Holborn rev. Holborn review, London. i
Holland soc. yr. bk. Holland society of New York, year book, N. Y.
Hug. soc. S. C. trans. Huguenot society of South Carolina, transactions, Charleston,
S. C. '
la. conservation. Iowa conservation. Cedar Rapids, la.
la. jour. hist. Iowa joiu-nal of history and politics, Iowa City, la. i
la. law. bul. Iowa law bulletin, Iowa City, la. i
la. state med. soc. jour. Iowa state medical society journal, Des Moines, la. I
111. Cath. hist. rev. Illinois Catholic historical review, Chicago. '
111. hist. lib. pub. Illinois state historical library, publication, Springfield, 111. '
111. hist. soc. jour. Illinois state historical society, journal, Springfield, 111. |
111. hist. soc. trans. Illinois state historical society, transactions, Springfield, 111. i
I
LIST OF PERIODICALS. XVII
111. law bul. Illinois law bulletin, Urbana, 111.
111. law rev. Illinois law review, Chicago.
Illustraci6n espan. y amer. Illustraci6n espanola y americana, Madrid.
Ind. hist. soc. pub. Indiana historical society, publications, Indianapolis, Ind.
Ind. mag. hist. Indiana magazine of history, Bloomington, Ind.
Indep. Independent, N. Y.
Index to legal period, and Law lib. jour. Index to legal periodicals and Law library
journal, N. Y. v ,
Infantry jour. Infantry journal, Washington. Ik
Inter- America. Inter- America, N. Y. p
Intemat. Archiv f. Ethnog. Internationales Archiv fiir Ethnographie, Leyden, ^j
Holland. %^
Intemat. studio. International studio, N. Y.
James Sprunt hist. pub. James Sprunt historical publications. University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
John Ry lands lib. bul. Bulletin of the John Rylands library, Manchester, England.
Johns Hopkins alumni mag. Johns Hopkins alumni magazine, Baltimore, Md.
Johns Hopkins hospital bul. Johns Hopkins hospital bulletin, Baltimore, Md.
Johns Hopkins univ. stud. Johns Hopkins university studies in historical and polit-
ical science, Baltim'ore, Md.
Jour. Am. folk-lore. Journal of American folk-lore, Boston and N. Y.
Jour. Am. hist. Journal of American history, N. Y.
Jour. 6con. Journal des ^conomistes, Paris.
Jour. educ. Journal of education, Boston.
Jour. educ. psychol. Journal of educational psychology, Baltimore, Md.
Jour. geog. Journal of geography, N. Y.
Jour. hist. Journal of history^ published by the Reorganized church of Jesus Christ
of Latter day saints, Lamoni, la.
Jour, internat. relations. Journal of international relations, Worcester, Mass.
Jour, negro hist. Journal of ne^o history, Washington.
Jour. pol. econ. Journal of political economy, Chicago.
Jour, savants. Journal des savants, Paris.
Jour. soc. comp. legia. Journal of the Society of comparative legislation and inter-
national law, London.
Jour. U. S. artillery. Journal of the United States artillery. Fort Monroe, Va.
Kent hist. soc. pap. Kent historical society, paj^ers and addresses, Chatham, Ont.
Ky. hist. soc. reg. Kentucky state historical society, register, Frankfort, Ky.
Ky. law jour. Kentucky law journal, Lexington, Ky.
La. hist. quar. Louisiana historical quarterly, New Orleans, La.
Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap. Lancaster county historical society, papers, Lan-
caster, Pa.
Landmark. The Landmark; the monthly magazine of iihe English-speaking union,
London.
Larousse mensuel. Larousse mensuel illustr^; revue encyclop^dique, Paris.
Law lib. jour. Law library journal. See Index to legal periodicals.
Lawyer and banker. Lawyer and banker. New Orleans, La.
Lebanon co. hist. soc. pap. Lebanon county historical society, papers, Lebanon, Pa.
Lectura. La Lectura, Madrid.
Lectures pour tous. Lectures pour tous, Paris.
Lennox and Addington hist. soc. pap. Lennox and Addington historical society,
papers and records, Napanee, Ont.
Lib. jour. Library joiu-nal, N. Y.
London and Middlesex hist. soc. trans. London and Middlesex historical society,
transactions, London, Ont.
Luth. eh. rev. Lutheran church review, Phlla.
Luth. quar. Lutheran quarterly j Gettysburg, Pa.
Lynn hist. soc. reg. Lynn historical society, register, Lynn, Mass.
Maclean's mag. Maclean's magazine, Toronto^ Can.
Maine Cath. hist. mag. Maine Catholic historical magazine, Waterville, Me.
Maine law rev. Maine law review, Bangor, Me.
Man. Man; a monthly record of anthropological science, London.
Marine corps gazette. Marine corps gazette. Marine corps association, N. Y.
Mass. hist. soc. proc. Massachusetts historical society, proceedings, Boston.
Mass. law quar, Massachusetts law quarterly, Boston.
Mayfl. desc. Mayflower descendant, Boston.
Md. hist. mag. Maryland historical magazine, Baltimore, Md.
59976'— 22 2
XVIII LIST OF PERIODICALS.
!
Med. soc. N. J. jour. Medical society of New Jersey, journal, Orange, N. J. ;
Medford hist. reg. Medford historical register, Medford, Mass. '
Mercui-e de France. Mercure de France, Paris.
Mercurio. Mercurio, New Orleans, La.
Mercurio peruano. Mercurio peruano, Lima, Peru.
Meth. quar. rev. Methodist quarterly review, Nashville, Tenn.
Mexican rev. Mexican review, Mexico City, Mex.
Mexico antig. Mexico antiguo, Mexico City, Mex.
Mich. hist. mag. Michigan histor^^ magazine, Lansing, Mich.
Mich. law. rev. Michigan law review, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Minn, alumni wkly. Minnesota alumni weekly, University of Minnesota, Minneap-
olis, Minn.
Minn. hist. bul. Minnesota history bulletin. Saint Paul, Minn.
Minn, law rev. Minnesota law review, Minneapolis, Minn.
Miss. hist. soc. pub. Mississippi historical society, publications, Jackson, Miss.
Miss. Valley hist, assoc. proc. Mississippi Valley historical association, proceedings,
Cedar Rapids, la.
Miss. Valley hist. rev. Mississippi Valley historical review. Cedar Rapids, la.
Mo. hist. rev. Missouri historical review, Columbia, Mo.
Month. The Month, London.
Munsey's. Munsey's magazine, N. Y.
N. C. booklet. North Carolina booklet, Raleigh, N. C. |
N. C. hist. com. pub. North Carolina historical commission, publications, Raleigh, 1
N. C. j
N. C. lit. and hist, assoc. proc. North Carolina state literary and historical association,
proceedings, Raleigh, N. C. ^
N. J. hist. soc. proc. New Jersey historical society, proceedings, Newark, N. J. I
N. Y. geneal. and"biog. rec. New York genealogical and biographical record, N. Y. |
N. Y. hist. soc. bul. New York historical society, quarterly bulletin, N. Y. J
N. Y. hist. soc. coll. New York historical society, collections, N. Y. |
N. Y. pub. lib. bul. New York public library bulletin, N. Y. ^ I
N. Y. state hist, assoc. jour. The Quarterly journal of the New York state historical
association, Albany, N. Y.
N. Y. state mus. bul. New York state museum. Museum bulletin, Albany, N. Y.
N. Y. state teach, assoc. jour. New York state teachers' association, journal, Albany,
N. Y. .... . j
Nantucket hist, assoc. proc. Nantucket historical association, proceedings, Naii^
tucket, Mass.
Nation. Nation, N. Y.^
Nation (London). Nation, London.
Nation, acad. sci. proc. National academy of sciences, proceedings, Washington.
Nation, educ. assoc. jour. National education association, journal, Washington.
Nation, educ. assoc. proc. National education association, journal of proceedings
and addresses, Washington.
Nation, geneal. soc. quar. National genealogical society, quarterly, Washington.
Nation, geog. mag. National geographic magazine, Washington.
Nation, municipal rev. National municipal review, Phila.
Nation, rev. National review, London.
Natural hist. Natural history; journal of the Museuin of natural history, N. Y.
Naval hist. soc. pub. Naval history society, publications, N. Y.
Navorscher, De Navorscher, Amsterdam, Holland.
Neb. hist, and rec. pioneer days. Nebraska history and record of pioneer days,
Lincoln, Neb.
Neb. hist. soc. pub. Nebraska state historical society, publications, Lincoln, Neb.
Nederlandsch arch. v. kerkgeschiedenis. Nederlandsch archief voor kerkgeschiiedenis, |
The Hague.
New Brunswick hist. soc. coll. New Brunswick historical society, collections. Saint '
John, N. B.
New-Church rev. New-Church review, Massachusetts New-Church union, Boston. ?
New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg. New England historical and genealogical register/
Boston.
New Eng. soc. anniv. celeb. New England society in the city of New York, anniver- 1
sary celebration, N. Y. I
New Mexico hist. soc. pub. New Mexico historical society, publications, Santa I
Fe, N. Mex. \
New world. The New world, London. i
Newport hist. soc. bul. Newport historical society, bulletin, Newport, R. I.
I
It
»i
.
LIST OF PERIODICALS. XIX
19th cent. Nineteenth century and after, London,
No. Am. rev. North American review, N. Y.
Normal instructor. Normal instructor and Primary plans, Dansville, N. Y.
Nouv. rev. Nouvelle revue, Paris.
Nuestro tiempo. Nuestro tiempo, Madrid.
Numismatist. Numismatist, Worcester, Mass.
Nuova antologia. Nuova antologia di lettere, scienze ed arti, Rome.
Ohio archaeol. and hist. quar. Ohio archaeological and historical quarterly, Co-
lumbus, O. Il
Ohio educ. mo. Ohio educational monthly, Columbus, 0. r
Ohio hist, and phil. soc. pub. Historical and philosophical society of Ohio, quar- J
terly publication, Cincinnati, O. %
Ohio hist, teach, jour. Ohio history teachers' journal, Columbus, O.
Ohio law bul. Ohio law bulletin, Norwalk, O.
Ohio law rep. Ohio law reporter, Cincinnati, O.
Ont. hist. soc. pap. Ontario historical society, papers and records, Toronto, Can.
Ore. hist. soc. quar. Oregon historical society, quarterly, Portland, Ore.
Ottawa naturalist. Ottawa naturalist, Ottawa, Can.
Outlook. Outlook, N. Y.
Overland. Overland monthly, San Francisco, Cal.
Pa. geneal. soc. pub. Genealogical society of Pennsylvania, publications, Phila.
Pa. mag. hist. Pennsylvania magazine of history and biography, Phila.
Pa. soc. yr, bk. Pennsylvania society, year book, N. Y.
Palacio. El Palacio, Santa Fe, N. Mex.
Pan Am. union bol. Union panamericana, boletin, Washington.
Pan Am. union bul. Pan American union, bulletin, Washington.
Pan-American mag. Pan-American magazine, N. Y.
Pays laurentien. Pays laurentien, Montreal, Can.
Pedagog. sem. ' Pedagogical seminary, Worcester, Mass.
Petermann's Mitteil. Petermann's Mitteilungen, Gotha, Germany.
Phila. city hist. soc. pub. City history society of Philadelphia, publications, Phila.
Phila. geog. soc. bul. Philadelphia geographical society, bulletin, Phila.
Phila. numismat. and antiq. soc. proc. Numismatic and antiquarian society of
Philadelphia, proceedings.
Philippine law jour. Philippine law journal, Manila, P. I.
Pol. SCI. quar. Political science quarterly, N. Y.
Popular educ. Popular educator, Boston.
Presbyterian hist. soc. jour. Presbyterian historical society, journal, Phila.
Princeton theol. rev. Princeton theological review, Phila.
Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico, San Juan, Porto Rico.
Quar. jour. econ. Quarterly journal of economics, Cambridge, Mass.
Quar. rev. Quarterly review, London.
Queen's quar. Queen's quarterly. Queen's university, Kingston, Can.
R. I. hist. soc. coll. Rhode Island historical society collections. Providence, R. I.
Rdbida. La Rabida, Huelva, Spain.
Raza espan. Raza espanola; revista de Espafia y America, Madrid.
Razon y fe. Razon y fe, Madrid.
Real acad. hist. bol. Real academia de la historia, boletin, Madrid.
Real soc. geog. bol. Real sociedad geogrdfica, boletin, Madrid.
Reforma soc. Reforma social, N. Y. and Havana, Cuba.
Reformed ch. rev. Reformed church review, Phila.
Rev. and expositor. Review and expositor; a Baptist theological quarterly, Louis-
ville, Ky.
Rev. antiurop. Revue anthropologique, Paris.
Rev. archeol. Revue archeologique, Paris.
Rev. archives. Revista de archivos, bibliotecas y museos, Madrid.
Rev. bimestre cubana. Revista bimestre cubana, Havana, Cuba.
Rev. bleue. Revue bleue (Revue politique et litteraire), Paris.
Rev. canad. Revue canadienne, Montreal, Can.
Rev. chretienne. Revue chretienne, Paris.
Rev. deux mondes. Revue des deux mondes, Paris.
Rev. etudes hist. Revue des Etudes historiques, Paris.
Rev. gen. droit internat. Revue generale de droit international public, Paris.
Rev. geog. col. y mere. Revista de geografia colonial y mercantil, Madrid.
Rev. hebdomadaire. Revue hebdomadaire, Paris.
Rev. hispanique. Revue hispani<jue, N. Y. and Paris.
Rev. hist. Revue historique, Pans.
XX LIST OF PERIODICALS.
Rev. hist, colonies fran?. Revue de I'histoire des colonies frangaises, Paris.
Rev. hist. dipl. Revue d'histoire diplomatique, Paris.
Rev. hist. lit. France. Revue d'histoire litt^raire de la France, Paris.
Rev. hist, relig. Revue de I'histoire des religions, Paris.
Rev. internat. enseignement. Revue internationale de I'ensei^nement, Paris. |
Rev. mex. derecho intemac. Revista mexicana de derecho mtemacional, Mexico;
City. . . I
Rev. mond. Revue mondiale, Paris.
Rev. nationale. Revue nationale, Montreal, Can.
Rev. of rev. Review of reviews, N. Y.
Rev. Paris. Revue de Paris, Paris.
Rev. pol. et lit. Revue politique et litt^raire (Revue bleue), Paris.
Rev. pol. et pari. Revue politique et parlementaire, Paris.
Rev. pol. internat. Revue politique internationale, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Rev. sci. pol. Revue des sciences politiques, Paris.
Rev. synthese hist. Re\'ne de synthese historique, Paris.
Rev. theol. Revue de theologie et de philosophie, Lausanne, Switzerland. j
Rev. trimestrielle canad. Revue trimestrielle canadienne, Montreal, Can.
Review. The Review, N. Y. .
Revista hist. Revista historica, Lima, Peru. j
Revolution frany. Revolution frangaise, Paris.
Riv. geog. ital. Rivista geografica italiana e BoUettino della society di studi geografici \
e coloniali in Firenze, Florence, Italy. !
Romanic rev. Romanic review, N. Y. 1
Roxbury hist. soc. yr.-bk. Roxbury historical society, year-book, Roxbury, Mass.j
Royal anthrop. inst. jour. Royal anthropological institute of Great Britain andi
Ireland, journal, London.
Royal artillery jour. Journal of the Royal artillery, Royal artillery institution, I
Woolwich, England. J
Royal hist. soc. trans. Royal historical society, transactions, London. 1
Royal soc. Canad. trans. Royal society of Canada, transactions, Ottawa, Can. j
Royal unit. ser. inst. jour. Royal united service institution, journal, London. I
S. A. R. yr. bk. National society of the Sons of the American revolution, year book,!
Washington.
S. C. hist. mag. South Carolina historical and genealogical magazine, Charleston,!
S. C.
Sabretache. Carnet de la Sabretache, Paris. !
Sat. rev. Saturday review, London.
School and home educ. School and home education, Bloomington, 111.
School and soc. School and society, N. Y. ^
School educ. School education, Minneapolis, Minn. j
School news. School news and practical educator, Taylorville, 111. I
School rev. School review, Chicago.
Science. Science, N. Y.
Scientific mo. Scientific monthly, N. Y.
Scottish geog. mag. Scottish geographical magazine, Edinburgh.
Scottish hist. rev. Scottish historical review, Glasgow. i
Scribner's. Scribner's magazine, N. Y.
Sewanee rev. Sewanee review, Sewanee, Tenn.
Sierra club bul. Sierra club bulletin, San Francisco, Cal.
Smith coll. stud, in hist. Smith college studies in history, Northampton, Mass.
Smithsonian misc. coll. Smithsonian miscellaneous collections, Smithsonian insti-
tution, Washington.
So. American. The South American, N. Y.
So. Atlan. quar. South Atlantic quarterly, Durham, N. C.
So. Cal. hist. soc. pub. Historical society of Southern California, annual publica-
tions, Los Angeles, Cal.
So. workm. Southern workman, Hampton, Va. >
Soc. Am6r. Paris jour. Societe des Americanistes de Paris, journal, Paris. |
Soc. anthrop. Paris bul. Societe d' anthropologic de Paris, bulletin et memoires,-
Paris. i
Soc. ecuatoriana estud. hist. am. bol. Sociedad ecuatoriana de estudios historicosi
americanos, boletin, Quito, Ecuador. ■
Soc. g6og. Cher. bul. Society de geographic du Cher, bulletin, Bourges, France. \
Soc. geog. La Paz bol. Sociedad geografica de La Paz, boletfn, La Paz, Bolivia.
Soc. geog. Quebec bul. Soci6t6 de geographic de Quebec, bulletin, Quebec, Can.
LIST OF PERIODICALS. XXI
Soc. havraise Etudes diverses recueil des publications. Soci6t6 havraise d'^tudes
diverses, recueil des publications, Le Havre, France,
Soc. hist. Protestantisme fran?. bul. Soci^te de I'histoire du Protestantisme frangais,
bulletin, Paris.
Soc. preservation New Eng. antiq. bul. Society for the preservation of New England
antiquities, bulletin, Boston.
Somerset co. hist. quar. Somerset county historical quarterly, Somerville, N. J.
Southw. hist. quar. Southwestern historical quarterly, Austin, Tex.
Spanien. Spanien; Zeitschrift fiir Auslandskunde, Hamburg, Germany.
Spectator. Spectator, London.
Sprague's jour. Maine hist. Sprague's journal of Maine history, Dover, Maine.
St. Louis Cath. hist. rev. St. Louis Catholic historical review, St. Louis, Mo.
St. Louis law rev. St. Louis law review, St. Louis, Mo.
State service. State service, Albany, N. Y.
Teachers' coll. rec. Teachers' college record, N. Y.
Tech. rev. Technology review, Boston.
Tenn. hist. mag. Tennessee historical magazine, Nashville, Tenn.
Texas hist, teach, bul. Texas history teachers' bulletin, Austin, Tex.
Texas rev. Texas review, Austin, Tex.
Texas school jour. Texas school journal, Dallas, Tex.
Tijdschrift v. gesch. Tijdschrift voor geschiedenis, land- en volkenkunde, Gron-
mgen, Holland.
Topsfield hist. soc. coll. Topsfield historical society, collections, Topsfield, Mass.
Toronto univ. stud. Toronto university studies in history, Toronto, Can.
Trinity coll. hist. soc. pap. Trinity college historical society, historical papers,
Durham, N. C.
Tyler's hist, and geneal. mag. Tyler's quarterly historical and genealogical maga-
zine, Holdcroft, V a.
U. S. bur. Am. ethnol. rep. U. S. Bureau of American ethnology, annual report,
Washington.
U. S. Cath. hist. rec. U. S. Catholic historical society, records and studies, N. Y.
U. S. N. inst. proc. U. S. Naval institute proceedings, Annapolis, Md.
U. S. Nation, mus. proc. United States National Museum, proceedings, Washington.
Union ibero-am. Uni6n ibero-americana, Madrid.
Unit. emp. United empire; the Royal colonial institute journal, London.
Unit, ser, mag. United service magazine, London.
Univ. Buenos Aires rev. Universidad de Buenos Aires, revista, Buenos Aires,
Argentine Republic.
Univ. mag. University magazine, Montreal, Can.
Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. University of California publications, American
archaeology and ethnology, Berkeley, Cal.
Univ. of Cal. pub. in hist. University of California publications in history, Berkeley,
Cal.
Univ. of No. Dak. quar. jour. Quarterly journal of the University of North Dakota,
University, No. Dak.
Univ. of Penn. law rev. University of Pennsylvania law review and American law
register, Phila.
Univ. of Penn. mus. jour. University of Pennsylvania, The Museum journal, Phila.
Univ. of Tenn. mag. University of Tennessee magazine, Knoxville, Tenn.
Univ. of Va. alumni bul. Alumni bulletin of the University of Virginia, Charlottes-
ville, Va.
Unpartizan rev. Unpartizan review, N. Y.
Utah geneal. and hist. mag. Utah genealogical and historical magazine, Salt Lake
City, Utah.
Va. jour. educ. Virginia journal of education, Richmond, Va.
Va. law reg. Virginia law register, Charlottesville, Va.
Va. law rev. Virginia law review. University, Va.
Va. mag. hist. Virginia magazine of history and biography, Richmond, Va.
Va. state lib. bul. Virginia state library, bulletin, Richmond, Va.
Victorian hist. mag. Victorian historical magazine, Melbourne, Australia.
Vineland hist. mag. Vineland historical magazine, Vineland, N. J.
^altham hist. soc. pub. Waltham historical society, publication, Waltham, Mass.
jWash. acad. sci. jour. Washington academy of sciences, journal, Washington.
Wash. hist. quar. Washington historical quarterly, Seattle, Wash.
iWash. law. rep. Washington law reporter, Washington.
fVash. univ. stud. Washington university studies, St. Louis, Mo.
fVaterloo hist. soc. rep. Waterloo historical society, annual report. Kitchener, Ont.
f
XXII LIST OF PERIODICALS. |
i
Wentworth hist. soc. pap. Wentworth historical society, papers and records, Han,
ilton, Ont. I
West Va. law quar. West Virginia law quarterly, Morgantown, W. Va. i
Western mag. Western magazine, St. Paul, Minn.
Western Pa. hist. mag. Western Pennsylvania historical magazine, Pittsburgh, PjI
Western Reserve hist. soc. pub. Western Reserve historical society, publications
Cleveland, O.
Wetensch. Bladen. Wetenschappelijke Bladen, Haarlem, Holland.
Wis. archeol. Wisconsin archeologist, Milwaukee, Wis.
Wis. mag. hist. Wisconsin magazine of history, Madison, Wis.
W^omen's Canad. hist. soc. Toronto trans. Women's Canadian historical society c
Toronto, transactions, Toronto, Can.
World [s work. World's work, N. Y.
Wy. hist, and geol. soc. proc. Wyoming historical and geological society, proceed
mgs and collections, Wilkes-BaiTe, Pa.
Wy. hist. soc. misc. Wyoming historical society, miscellanies, Laramie, Wy.
Yale law jour. Yale law journal, New Haven, Conn.
Yale rev. Yale review, New Haven, Conn.
Ymer. Ymer; tidskrift utgifven af Svenska sallskapet for antropologi och geografi
Stockholm, Sweden.
Zeits. Ethnol. Zeitschrift fiir Ethnologie, Berlin,
t
i
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919.
GENERALITIES.
Bibliography.
Annual magazine subject-index, 1918. Including as part II, The Dramatic index,
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Contents.— To 1569.
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Hist, outlook, X (Oct.) 384-387. [5
A list of American historical novels, arranged chronologically according to the period dealt with.
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Cont. from v. IV, no. 3, October 1918.
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of a bibliography of American Catholic history.
Contents.— X. Province of Milwaukee (1843-1875). XI. Province, of Santa F6 (1850-1875). xn.
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list of books printed at London. Gregory Dexter came to Providence, R. I., in 1644.
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Cont. from v. XI, 1918.
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The Cumulative book index. Twenty-first annual cumulation. Author, title and
subject catalog in one alphabet of books published January 1918- June 1919. Comp.
by Emma L. Teich, assisted by Frances Nolan. N. Y.: H. W. Wilson co. [6j,
943 p. [12
1
2 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
I'
Genealogical society of Utah. Catalogue of family histories in the library of the
Genealogical society of Utah. Utah geneal. and hist, mag., X (Jan.-July) '
41-48, 87-96, 136-144. [13
Griffin, Grace Gardner. Writings on American history, 1917.- A bibliography of
books and articles on United States and Canadian history published during the
year 1917, with some memoranda on other portions of America. New Haven: Yale
univ. press; London: Humphrey Milford, Oxford univ. press, xvi, 181 p. [14
Compiled under the direction of Dr. J. Franklin Jameson.
Guilday, Peter. Guide to the biographical sources of the American hierarchy. Cath.
HIST. REV., V (Apr.-July) 120-128, 290-296. ' [16
Bibliographical guide to sources for the biographies of the bishops of the Catholic church in America.
Contents. — A-C.
Historical articles in Missouri newspapers, September 1917-April 1919, inclusive. !
Mo. HIST. REV., XIII (July) 424-457; XIV (Oct.) 172-190. [16 !
Hodge, F. W. Bibliography of Fray Alonso de Benavides. N. Y.: Museum of
the American Indian, Heye foundation. 39 p. plates. (Indian notes and mono-
graphs, V. Ill, no. 1) [17
Illinois state historical library. A list of the genealogical works in the Illinois state
historical library, Springfield, Illinois. Supjjlement to Publication number i
eighteen. Comp'. by Georgia L. Osborne. [Springfield] Printed by authority of |
the state of Illinois. 182 p. {Its Publication no. 25) [18 I
Jones, C. K. Bibliography of the Mexican revolution. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., !
II (May) 311-314. [19 i
Jones, C. K. Hispano- Americana in the Library of Congress. Hispanic Am. hist, i
REV., II (Feb.) 96-104. [20 j
Jones, O.K. La secci6n bibliogrdfica hispano-americana en la Biblioteca del Con- |
greso. Inter- Am:6rica, III (July) 119-124. [21 j
A translation of the article noted above, no. 20. i
Latin Americana in the United States. Ijbrary jour., XLIV (Apr.) 223-228. [22 i
Library employes' union of Greater New York. Industrial democracy, 1848-1919:
a study help prepared by the Library employes' union of Greater New York, Local :
no. 15590, American federation of labor. . . . [N. Y.] 34 p. {Its Pamphlet no. 1,
September, 1919) [23 '
A list of United States public documents published as serials of the 61st, 62d, 63d,
and 64th congresses . . . 1909-1917. Comp. under the direction of Adelaide R.
Hasse, chief of the Economics division, New York public library, 1918. Printed i
for the use of the Joint committee on printing. Washington: Gov. print, off., 1918. i
37 p. [24 I
Coiapiled by the class in public documents of the Summer session of 1917 at Columbia imiversity, i
New York city. Revised by Mary Van Wagenen, Economics division, New York public library. i
Los Angeles. Public Library. Library school. Americanization. [Los Angeles] I
Los Angeles library school. 24 p. [25 l
Bibliography of Americanization.
Meyer, Herman H. B. List of references on the Monroe doctrine. Washington: i
Gov. print, off. 122 p. (U. S. Library of Congress. Division of bibliography) [26
Meyer, Herman H. B. List of references on the Panama canal and the Panama Canal |
Zone. Washington: Gov. print, off. 21 p. (U. S. Library of Congress. Division I
of bibliography) [27 '
Meyer, Herman H. B . List of references on shipping and shipbuilding. Washington: ;
Gov. print, off. 303 p. (U. S. Library of Congress. Division of bibliography) [28 '
National board for historical service. Peace and reconstruction; preliminary bibliog !
raphy. Hist, outlook, X (Mar.) 151-167. [29 !
North Carolina. State library. A bibliography of North Carolina; an alphabetical \
arrangement by authors of the titles of books in the North Carolina state library j
which relate to North Carolina and North Carolinians, the titles of books written by ;
native North Carolinians and North Carolinians by adoption, . . . In its Biennial '.
report ... for the two fiscal years ending November 30, 1918. Raleigh [The '
State library] p. 23-80. [29a '
1919. 3
Quelle, Otto. Nachtrag zu dem " Verzeichnis wissenschaftlicher Einrichtungen,
Zeitschriften und Bibliographien der ibero-amerikanischen Kulturwelt." Deutsch-
stJDAM. u. iBERiscH. Inst. Mitteil., VII Jahig., 47-71. [30
Quelle, Otto. Verzeichnis wissenschaftlicher Einrichtungen, Zeitschriften und Bibli-
ographien der ibero-amerikanischen Kulturwelt. Bearbeitet von Otto Quelle.
Stuttgart und Berlin: Druck der deutschen Verlags-Anstalt, 1916. xvi, 67 p.
(Veroffentlichungen des Deutsch-Siidamerikanischen Instituts Aachen) [31
Headers' guide to periodical literature. Nineteenth annual cumulation. Author and
subject index to a selected list of periodicals. Edited by Elizabeth J. Sherwood,
assisted by Elizabeth M. Eggert and Grace F. Caldwell. N. Y.: H. W. Wilson co.
vi, 669 p. [32
Beaders' guide to periodical literature. Supplement. Sixth annual cumulation,
1918. Author and subject index to a selected list of periodicals not included in the
Readers' guide. Edited by Azalea Clizbee, assisted by Estella E. Painter. N. Y:
H. W. Wilson CO. [4], 207 p. [33
Eivet, Paul. Bibliographie am^ricaniste, 1914r-1919. Soc. Am. Paris jour., n. s. XI,
fasc. 2,677-739. [34
A list of works published diiring the years 1914-1919, relating to American anthropology, archaeology,
ethnology, linguistics, history, and geography.
Saville, Marshall Howard. Bibliographic notes on Quirigua, Guatemala. [N. Y.:
Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] 22 p. (Indian notes and
monographs ... v. VI, no. 1) [36
Schmidt, Louis B. Topical studies and references on the economic history of Amer-
ican agriculture. Phila. : McKinley pub. co. 94 p. [36a
Shearer, Augustus Hunt. American historical periodicals. Am. hist, assoc. rep.,
1916, I, 469-484. [36
Swem, Earl G. A bibliography of Virginia. Part III. The acts and the journals of
the General assembly of the colony, 1619-1776. Richmond: Davis Bottom, super-
intendent of public printing. 71 p. (Va. state lib. bul., XII, nos. 1, 2, Jan., Apr.
1919) [37
Thomas, Allen C. Quaker books and Quakeriana in the library of Haverford college.
[Haverford?] 6 p. [38
Signed: Allen C, Thomas.
Also published in the Bulletin of the Friends' historical society, v. IX, no. 1, May 1919.
Tryon, B. M. A brief review of the current literature relative to history and the
teaching of history in junior and senior high schools. School rev. , XXVII (Jan.)
67-73. [39
Twitchell, Ralph Emerson. Reports, documents, etc. , published by the United States
Government relating to New Mexico, 1847-1874. Palacip, VII (Nov.) 159-167.
[40
U. S. Bureau of American ethnology. List of publications of the Bureau of Ameri-
can ethnology, with index to authors and titles. Washington: Gov. print, off.
40 p. [41
U. S. Library of Congress. American and English genealogies in the Library of
Congress, comp. under the direction of the chief of the Catalogue division. 2d ed.
Washington: Gov. print, off. iv, 1332 p. [42
Contains nearly 7000 titles.
Compiled and edited by Miss M. A. Gilkey, assisted in proof-reading and preparation of index by Misa
Grey Patterson, Miss Edith A. Williams, and Mrs. Edna L. Corson Barteman. c/. Pref. note.
U.S. Superintendent of documents. Alaska; a list of publications relating to above
\ subject for sale by superintendent of documents, Washington, D. C. [4th ed.]
[Washington: Gov. print, off.] 24 p. (Price list 60— 4th ed.) [43
IT. S. Superintendent of documents. American history and biography; publications
relating to the above subjects for sale by the superintendent of documents, Wash-
ington, D, C. [7th ed.] [Washington: Gov. print, off.] 36 p. (Price list 50—
7th ed.) [44
|TJ. S. Superintendent of documents. Foreign relations of the United States; list of
publications relating to above subject for sale by superintendent of documents,
Washington, D. C. [4th ed.] [Washington: Gov. print, off.] 50 p. (Price list
65-4thed.) [46
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
I
I
I
U. S. Superintendent of documents. Indians: including United States government j
publications pertaining to mounds and antiquities; publications relating to thei
above subjects for sale by the superintendent oi documents, Washington, D. C.|
[5th ed.] [Washington: Gov. print, off.] 22 p. (Price list 24— 5th ed.) [46
University of Notre Dame. The library of South Americana of the University of
Notre l5ame. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 490-492. [47
Taken from the Bulletin of the University of Notre Dame, for July 1917, v. XIII, no. 1.
Indexes (Cumulative) to Serial Publications.
Danvers historical society, Danvers, Mass. Index to The historical collections of the
Danvers historical society, vols. I-V. Danvers, Mass. : The Society. 68 p. [48
Hasse, Adelaide Rosalie. Index of economic material in documents of the states of;
the United States: Pennsylvania, 1790-1904. Part I— A to E. [Washington] Car-;
negie institution of Washington. 810 p. (Carnegie institution of Washington. ;
Publication no. 85 (Pennsylvania)) [49 i
Hasse, Adelaide Rosalie. Index to United States documents relating to foreign |
affairs, 1828-1861. In three parts. Part II— I to Q. Washington, D. C: Pub-
lished by the Carnegie institution of Washington. [2], 795-1331 p. (Carnegie
institution of Washington, Publication no. 185, pt. 2) [60
Part I, pub. in 1914.
Illinois. Legislative reference bureau. Constitutional convention. Index to
Debates of Constitutional convention of 1869-70. [Springfield: Schnepp and
Barnes, printers] 31 p. [50a
Iowa and war. Index [nos. 1-23] Iowa City, la. : State historical society of Iowa. !
27 p. (Iowa and war, no. 24, June 1919) [51 1
The Magazine of history, with notes and queries. Extra numbers. A general index i
to the " Extra numbers" of the Magazine of history with notes and queries, volumes '
I-XV. Tarrytown, N. Y.: W. Abbatt. [4], 17 leaves. [52 !
The Magazine of history, with notes and queries. A general index to the magazine of ;
history, with notes and queries, volumes XV-XXV, 1912-1917. Tarrytown. N. Y.: i
William Abbatt. 19 p. [53 i
Washington historical quarterly. Index to volumes I-X. Wash, hist, quae., '
X (Oct.) 243-288. [54 ;
Archives and Manuscript Collections.
American historical association. Public archives commission. Seventeenth |
report of the Public archives commission, with appendixes. Am, hist, assoc. '
REP., 1916, I, 133-209. [65 I
Victor Hugo Paltsits, chairman, !
California. Historical survey commission. The care and use of the county archives
of California. By Owen C. Coy, director and archivist. Publication of the Cali-
fornia Historical survey commission. Sacramento: California state printing office,
viii, 92 p. [56
This study is a reprint of pt. I of the Guide to the county archives of California. See no. 57 below.
California. Historical survey commission. Guide to the county archives of Cali-
fornia. By Owen C. Coy, director and archivist. Publication of the California !
Historical survey commission. Sacramento: California state printing office, ix, j
622 p. maps. [67 |
John F. Davis, chairman. '
Part I reprinted with title " The care and use of the county archives of California'.' (viii, 92 p.) 1919. ,
(California. Historical survey commission) See no. 56 above. ,
Catholic historical society of St. Louis. Archives of Propaganda. St. Louis Cath. i
hist, rev., I (July) 276-285. [68 ,
A calendar of documents (1814-1868) from the archives of Propaganda in Rome copies of which have I
been secured by the society. •
Chapman, Charles Edward. Catalogue of materials in the Archivo general de Indias |
for the history of the Pacific coast and the American Southwest. Berkeley: Uni- j
versity of California press, v, 755 p. (University of California publications in i
history, v. VIII) [69
Rev, in: Am. hist, rev,, XXV (Oct.) 139-140; Hispanic Am, hist, rev., II (Aug,) 456-457.
I
WRITINGS OH AMERICAI^^ HISTORY, 1919. 6
I Conference of archivists. Proceedings of the seventh annual conference of archi-
i vists [Cincinnati, December 27, 1916] Am. hist, assoc. rep., 1916, I, 141-161. [60
Some considerations on the housing of archives, by Louis A. Simon: p. 147-151. The problem of
I archive centralization with reference to local conditions in a middle western state, by Theodore Calvin
Pease: p. 151-154. The repaixing and binding of archives, by William Berwick: p. 154-161.
j Coy, Owen C. Pre-statehood records in county archives. Grizzly bear, XXV
I (Nov.) 3. [61
Extract from '• The guide to the county archives of California'.', published by the CaUfornia historical
survey commission. See no. 57 above.
. Dart, Henry Plauch6. The archives of Louisiana. La. hist, quar., II (Oct.)
i 349-367. [62
Hammond, Otis G. The Weare papers. Granite mo., LI (Aug.) 357-361. [63
An account of the recovery by the state of New Hampshire of a collection of the papers of Meschech
Weare, president of the Council and chairman of the Committee of safety of New nampshire during
" I the Revolution.
Holbrook, Franklin F. The collection of state war service records. Am. hist, rev.,
XXV (Oct.) 72-78. [64
Jameson, J. Franklin. [The archives of] the United States of America. Royal
hist. soc. trans., 4th ser., II, 37-40. [66
Report on the condition of the federal archives at Washington.
Merrill, William Stetson. Transcripts from the Spanish archives at the Newberry
library, Chicago, 111. Cath. hist, rev., II (July) 82-84. [66
New Jersey. Committee of citizens. Report on the condition of the public records
of the state of New Jersey, by a committee of citizens: Nelson B. Gaskill, Hiram E.
Deats, William Libbey [and five others] Am. hist, assoc. rep., 1916, I, 163-199.
[67
I. Condition of the public records. II. Calendar of public papers selected from a thousand or more
manuscripts in private possession.
Quebec (Province) Provincial archives. Inventaire des ordonnances des intendants
de la Nouvelle-France, conserv^es aux Archives provinciales de Quebec. Par
Pierre^eorges Roy. Beauceville: "L'Eclaireur", ^diteur. 2 v. (Archives de
la province de Quebec [I-II]) [68
Scott, Henry Edwards. The publication of vital records of Massachusetts towns.
New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (Jan.) 52-62. [69
Report on the progress that has been made in publishing these records.
Smith, Charles W. The Bagley collection of Pacific Northwest history. Wash,
hist, quar., X (Apr.) 83-87. . [70
The Clarence B. Bagley collection of newspapers, books, and manuscripts relating to the history
of the Pacific Northwest, purchased by the XJmversity of Washington.
Torres Lanzas, Pedro. Catdlogo de legajos del Archivo general de Indias. Sec-
ciones 1 y 2. Patronato y contaduria del Consejo de Indias. Sevilla: Tip.
Zarzuela. 203 p. (Biblioteca colonial americana. t. II) [71
Also published in the Boletin del Centre de estudios Americanistas de Sevilla, afio VI, num. 22-31,
1919.
IT. S. Library of Congress. Report of the Librarian of Congress ... for the fiscal year
ending June 30, 1919. Washington: Gov. print, off. 187 p. plates. [72
Ij Herbert Putnam, Librarian of Congress.
]i Contains a summary of important acquisitions of manuscripts relating to American history, among
I them being the papers of Presidents Tyler, Buchanan, Roosevelt, and Taft; records of the Commis-
sioners of trade and plantations, Beaumarchais papers, letters of Earl Macartney (1777-1779); papers of
Phihp Mazzei, the Rodneys, John Rodgers, David BaiUie Warden, John Lloyd, Willie P. Mangum,
I John Randolph of Roanoke, John P. Hatch, John C. Underwood, John Sherman, Walt Whitman;
and transcripts from manuscripts in the Public record oflfice and the library of the Society for the prop-
agation of the gospel in foreign parts.
U. S. Library of Congress. Division of manuscripts. List of the Washington
manuscripts from the year 1592 to 1775, prepared from the original manuscripts
in the Library of Congress by John 0. Fitzpatrick, assistant chief, Manuscript
I division. Washington: Gov. print, off. iii, 137 p. [73
jl Virtue, Ethel B. The Pond papers. Minn. hist, bul., Ill (May) 82-86. [74
■ Describes a collection of about 200 letters of Samuel W. and Gideon H. Pond, early missionaries to
the Sioux in Minnesota, photostatic copies of which have recently been obtained by the Minnesota
historical society. The letters were written during the period 1833-1850. They tell of the daily life
and activities of the missions, and the habits, customs, and beliefs of the Indians.
6 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Historiography, Methodology, Study and Teaching.
Altamira, Rafael. Las instituciones americanas en la instruccion p^blica de Espana.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 349-362. [76
American historical association. Report of the proceedings of the thirty-second
annual meeting of the American historical association, Cincinnati, Ohio, December
27-30, 1916. Am. hist, assoc. rep., 1916, I, 35-120. [76
American historical association. Pacific coast branch. Report of the proceedings of
the thirteenth annual meeting of the Pacific coast branch of the American historical
association, San Diego, Cal., December 1-2, 1916. By William A. Morris. Am.
hist. ASSOC. REP., 1916, I, 121-131. [77
Andrews, Matthew Page. A new interpretation of the beginnings of American his-
tory. Educ. FOUNDATIONS, XXX (Mar.) 261-268. [78
Points out the emphasis that should be given to the history of the people, of social reforms, and of
the development of political principles, in the "new" treatment of the beginnings of Anglo-American
settlements in this country.
Aurner, Clarence Ray. Historical survey of* civic instruction and training for citizen-
ship in Iowa. Ia. jour, hist., XVII (Apr.) 136-222. [79
Blomquist, Mattie Crabtree. Making a pageant from local history. Normal instruc-
tor, XXVIII (May) 16-17. [80
Bond, Beverley W. A course for the better understanding of Latin -America. Hist,
outlook, X (Oct.) 374-376. [81
Bone, H. A. Geographic problems in American history. Miss. Valley hist, rev.,
extra number (May) 450-453. [82
Brooks, Marvin M. The "movement " method in history. Popular educ. , XXXVI
(Mar.) 376-377. [83
California. Dept. of public instruction. Course of study in history, civics, and ethics
for the day elementary schools. February, 1919. [San Francisco] Levison print.
CO. 164 p. ^ [84
At head of title: Department of education. City and county of San Francisco. State of California.
Carnegie institution of Washington. Annual report of the director of the Department
of historical research. [Washington, D. C] p. 175-184. [86
J. Franklin Jameson, director.
Extracted from the Year book no. 18, for the year 1919.
Carton, Augustus C. Historical work after the war. Mich. hist, mag.. Ill (July)
335-340. [86
Carter, Clarence E. Some notes on Ohio historiography. Ohio archaeol. and
HIST. QUAR., XXVIII (Apr.) 176-185. [87
Chapman, Ernest T. Organized lessons in sixth grade history. Popular educ,
XXXVI (Feb., Apr.) 313, 337, 442-443; XXXVII (Sept.) 23, 50. [88
Clark, John B. Some effects of the war on the teaching of history and civics. Hist,
outlook, X (Oct.) 389. [89
Cohen, Helen Louise. Americanization by class room practice. Teachers coll.
REC, XX (May) 238-249. [90
Coker, Francis W. Survey of high-school texts in civil government. Ohio hist.
TEACH. JOUR., no. 14, 87-95. [91
Committee on history and education for citizenship in the schools. Hist, outlook,
X (Apr.) 190-191. [92
Outlines the organization, programme, etc., of a new "Committee of eight" recently appointed by
the American historical association and the National board for historical service, in cooperation with
the Commission on a national program for education, of the National education association.
Committee on history and education for citizenship in the schools. An open letter
from the Committee on history and education for citizenship. Hist, outlook,
X (Nov.) 448-451. [93
Committee on history and education for citizenship in the schools. Preliminary
report . . . Hist, outlook, X (May) 273-281. [94
Joseph SQhafer, chairman. Daniel C. Knowiton, secretary.
WBITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 7
Committee on history and education for citizenship in the schools. A report of prog-
ress; the decisions reached by the Committee on history and education for citizen-
ship in the schools. Hist, outlook, X (June) 349-351. [95
Conference of hereditary patriotic societies. Proceedings of the conference of heredi-
tary patriotic societies, Cincinnati, December 27, 1916. Am. hist, assoc. rep.,
1916, I, 247-268. [96
Conference of historical societies. Proceedings of the thirteenth annual conference
of historical societies, Cincinnati, December 28, 1916. Am, hist, assoc. rep.,
1916, I, 211-245. [97
Federated historical societies in Ontario, by A. F. Hunter: p. 216-222. Bay State historical league,
by Nathaniel T. Kidder: p. 222-230. Reports of historical societies, 1916: p. 237-245.
Conference on the foundation of a journal of Latin-American history. Minutes of a
Conference on the foundation of a journal of Latin-American history, Cincinnati,
December 29, 1916. Am. hist, assoc. rep., 1916, I, 279-285. [98
Cottrell, Edwin A. The newer civic education. Ohio hist, teach, jour., no. 14,
71-75. [99
Cox, Isaac Joslin. Mississippi valley history. Nation, CVIII (June 7) 923. [100
Brief account of the 12th annual meeting of the Mississippi Valley historical association, held at St.
Louis, May 8 and 9, 1919.
Cox, Isaac Joslin, and others. Syllabi of courses [in Hispanic American history]
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 419-446. [101
. Contents.— The history of Hispanic America, by Isaac Joslin Cox. South American relations (1810-
1910), by John F. O'Hara. A tentative syllabus of Hispanic- American history adapted to high school
use, by Livingston Rowe Schuyler.
Criddle, E. D. The laboratory method in history teaching — its application, scope,
and limitations. Texas hist, teach, bul., VII, no. 2 (Feb. 15) 49-53. [103
Cross, Arthur Lyon. The study of English history as an influence in promoting a
closer Anglo-American entente. Hist, outlook, X (May) 25^256. [103
iDavies, George R. An Americanization program for the schools. Univ. of No. Dak.
QUAR.-jouR., IX (July) 337-350. [104
I Davison, W. B. Reconstruction of history in the elementary school. In Wisconsin
teachers' association. Proceedings of the sixty-sixth annual session . . . held at
Milwaukee, November 6-8, 1919. Madison, Wis.: Democratic print, co. p.
144-152. [106
|A decade of history teaching. Hist, outlook, X (Dec.) 497-511. [106
A brief survey of historical activities in the decade 1909-1919.
Contents.— A decade of committee activity, by Daniel C. Knowlton. Associations of history
teachers, by "Walter H. Cushing. A decade of changes in elementary school history, by Charles A.
Coulomb. History in the grades, by Armand J. Gerson. Training the history teacher— a decade of
progress, by Norman M. Trenholme. A decade of government in the schools, by Edgar Dawson. The
use of sources in history teaching during the last decade ( 1909-1919), by Fred Morrow Fling. American
historical publications of the past decade, by George Matthew Dutcher.
ison, William H. The current events mind. Hist, outlook, X (Oct.) 381-383.
[107
Points out the dangers of allowing the study of current events to encroach upon the domain of history
teaching.
le, R. H. The social utility of history. Ohio hist, teach, jour., no. 15, 110-
112. [108
ler, Hallie. Supervised study of eighth year history. Hist, outlook, X (Feb.)
85-86. [109
ronton, H. J. The study of naval history. U. S. N. inst. proc, XLV (Nov.)
1867-1870. [110
ish, Carl Russell. Mutual understanding as a bond of friendship. Landmark, I
(Sept.) 591-594. [Ill
Pleads for a better teaching of history as a means of mutual understanding, treating particularly of
the problem of history teaching as it affects the relations between Great Britain and America.
IGrardiner, W. H, Teaching our history. Landmark, I (Aug.) 503-506. [112
I Hansen, Marcus Lee] The writing of war history in Iowa. Iowa City, la. : State
! historical society of Iowa. 29 p. (Iowa and war. [no. 23]) [113
8 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. ]'
I
Harding, S. B. What the war should do for our methods in history. Nation, educ. \
ASSOC. JOUR., Ill (May) 621-624. [114
Harley, Lewis R. A new treatment of American history. Education, XL (Sept.)
15-26. [116
Points out the necessity of rejecting myths that still persist, of avoiding a provincial treatment
of the subject, of combating dangerous alien propaganda, and of recognizing the power of ideals or
spiritual forces.
Heer, Amos L. The teaching of history. Ohio educ. mo., LXVIII (Sept.) 350-360.
[116
HoUey, Ella J. How shall I teach history? Popular educ, XXXVII (Nov.)
144-145, 177. [117
Outlines of American history: p. 145, 177.
Illinois. University. High school conference. Proceedings . . . November 21-23,
1918. Urbana: Pub. by the University of Illinois. 306 p. (Univ. of 111. buL,
V. XVI, no. 12) [118
Report of the Committee on training in American ideals: p. 179-183.
[Jameson, J. Franklin] The American historical association, 1919. Am. hist, rev.,
XXIV (Apr.) 349-357. [119
Klein, Julius. A new government office for Latin American research. Hispanic Am.
HIST, rev., II (Aug.) 464-467. [120
The Latin American division of the Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce.
Knowlton, Daniel C. Current events through pictures. Hist, outlook, X (Jan.)
24-28. [121 j
Leighton, Etta V. Patriotism through education. Popular educ, XXXVI (Jan.- i
June) 248-249, 307, 366-367, 426-427, 506-507, 562-563, 585. [122 |
Levin, Samuel M. The use of the problem method in history teaching. Education, I
XL (Oct.) 111-119. [123
Also pub. m Michigan schoolmasters' club. Journal . . . fifty-fourth meeting, held in Ann Arbor, i
April 3, 4, 1919. Ann Arbor, Mich., Pub. by the Club. p. 9-14. i
Lockwood, Ina. Suggestions for the history teacher; method in teaching history.
School educ, XXXVIII (Apr.) 22-25; (May) 21-23. [124 ;
Mackie, Ransom A. History recitation socialized. Hist, outlook, X (May) 256- i
258. [125
Moore, Ernest Carroll. What the war teaches about education, and other papers ■
and addresses. N. Y.: MacMillan. x, 334 p. [126 \
Whatishistoryandwhydowewant it: p. 182-196. i
Morris, Frank A. Memorizing in history. Popular educ, XXXVI (May) 489-
508. [127
Munro, Dana C. The new history. Texas hist, teach, bul., VII, no. 2 (Feb. 15)
42-48. [128
Nebraska. Dept. of public instruction. Outlines and suggestions for patriotic
instruction through a specific knowledge of United States history and civil govern-
ment (for elementary schools). By A. H. Dixon. Lincoln, Neb. [Dept. of public
instruction] 1918. 24 p. [129
New York (State) University. Syllabus for elementary schools. American history
. . . Grades 5-6, biographic history; grades 7-8, narrative history. Albany: The
University of the state of New York. 42 p. (University of the state of New York
bulletin, no. 694) [130
Newton, Arthur Percival. An introduction to the study of colonial history. London:
Society for promoting Christian knowledge; N. Y.: Macmillan. 46 p. (Helps for
students of history, no. 16) [130a
Offers a course of reading in colonial history, mainly directed to the histOTy of British expansion
oversea.
North Carolina historical commission. Seventh biennial report . . . December 1,
1916, to November 30, 1918. Raleigh, N. C: Edwards and Broughton print, co.,
state printers. 27 p. (N. C. hist. com. pub., bul. no. 24) [131
Osbom, Mrs. Henry Fairfield. American school histories and past misunderstandings.
Landmark, I (Nov.) 735-738. [132
Concerned particularly with our relations with England.
WRITINGS 01^ AMERICAIT HISTORY, 1919. 9
Parish, John C. Historical activities in the trans-Mississippi northwest, 1917-1919.
Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (Dec.) 360-380. [133
Pierce, Bessie L. An experiment in individual instruction in history. Hist, out-
look, X (Feb.) 86-87. [134
Eichards, Mabel M. How to study your home town or community. Normal
INSTRUCTOR, XXVIII (May) 26, 60. [136
Eoz, Firmin, and others. L'histoire des Etats-Unis. Rev. synthese hist., XXIX,
221-250. [136
Contents.— Woodrow Wilson, historien, par Firmin Roz. Un historlen am^ricain: James Ford
Rhodes, par Georges Weill. Un historien anglais: Cecil Chesterton, par F.-G. Fernet. Historiens
franQais: Georges Weill, Charles Bastide, par D. Pasquet.
Kugg EarleU. Character and value of standardized tests in history. School rev.,
XXVII (Dec.) 757-771. [137
Sackett, L. W. A scale in United States history. Jour. educ. psychology, X
(Sept.) 345-348. [138
Schmidt, Louis Bernard. The economic history of American agriculture as a field
for study. Hist, outlook, X (Jan.) 8-12. [139
Schuyler, R. L. Standing history on its head. Bookman, XLVIII (Jan.) 570-574.
[140
Has to do with the use of history as an instrument of policy— an instance at hand being the changing
attitude in regard to our relations with Great Britain as shown in the new interpretation of that phase
of our history, particularly in relation to the Revolutionary war.
Seaton, Mary. History in the fifth grade. Va. jour, educ, XII (Apr.) 297-300. [141
Shepherd, William R. An historian of the thirteen colonies [Professor Herbert L.
Osgood] Columbia univ. quar., XXI (Jan.) 79-81. [142
Shively, C. P. Reconstruction of the methods of teaching American history after
the war. Ohio hist, teach, jour., XII, 16-19. [143
Simpson, Mabel E. The divided-period plan of supervised study in American
history. Nation, educ assoc proc, LVII, 587-594. [144
Simpson, Mabel E. Supervised study as applied to history. N. Y. state teach.
ASSOC JOUR., VI (Feb.) 4-12. [146
Skinner, Constance Lindsay. History as literature: and the individual definition.
Bookman, XLIX (Aug.) 750-754. [146
Apropos of the recent appearance of the series called "The chronicles of America", published by the
Yale university press.
Smith, Paul Tincher. A suggestion on the history note-book. Hist, outlook, X
(Apr.) 196-198. [147
^ Bpaulding, Oliver L. Historical branch of the General staff. Infantry jour., XVI
(Dec.) 450-454. *" [148
Jpencer, Henry R. A crisis in civics teaching. Ohio hist, teach, jour., no. 14,
67-70. [149
wift, Lindsay. A course in history at Harvard college in the seventies. Mass.
hist, soc proc, LII, 69-77. [150
i symposium on the teaching of the history of Hispanic America in educational
institutions of the United States. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 397-418.
[151
r,',; Contents.— The teaching of Hispanic American history from the practical standpoint, by Charles
[''' Lyon Chandler. CoursesinHispamcAmericanhistory, by Isaac Joslin Cox. The teaching of Hispanic
American history, by Percy Alvin Martin. What to teach and how to teach it in Hispanic American
history, by John F. O'Hara. Hispanic American history from the student standpoint , by William W.
Sweet. The college course in Hispanic American history, by Mary Wilhelmine Williams.
'eaching citizenship; a series of articles treating different aspects of the subject.
Hist, outlook, X (June) 323-339. [162
Contents.— What is an ideal course in civics for the high school? by E. Mabel Skinner. How our
schools miss the spirit of citizenship, bv Jennie McMullin Turner. The social sciences in the high school
(The Pasadena plan), by R. L. Ashley. A graphic civics exhibit, by Esther Godshaw. A neglected
subject in our public school curriculum, by Edward E. Hill. Study of current history a basis of democ-
racy, by Henry A. Foster.
10 ♦ AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Thayer, William Roscoe. Vagaries of historians. Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Jan
183-195. [161
Presidential address prepared to be read before the American historical association, at Clevelam
December 28, 1918. I
Thomas, S. E. United States history — eighth grade. School news, XXXII i
(Sept.-Dec.) 26-28, 68-70, 140-142, 215-216, 233. [16j
Thomas, S. E. United States history — seventh year. School news, XXXII (Jan.
Apr.) 224-226, 269-272, 313-315, 357-359. [15 1
Wallace, W. S. The text-book poison in Canadian- American friendship. Book'
MAN, XLVIII (Feb.) 680-684. [16
West, Henry Litchfield. Teaching patriotism through books. Bookman, L (Sept.
65-71. [16
Wilson, H. B. Guiding principles in American history teaching. Hist, outlooe*
X (Feb.) 82-85. [15i
The two principles stressed are: a fair presentation of all questions and issues, devoid of prejudice:!
and the emphasis necessary in text and teaching to support the maintenance, improvement, and pei
petuation of American ideals and institutions. \
Wittke, Carl. Canada — our neglected neighbor. Hist, outlook, X (Dec.) 485-488
[15
"It is the purpose of this paper to call attention to just a few of the interesting chapters in Canadia;]
history, with the hope that it may stimulate some to a serious study of our hitherto neglected neighbcj
to the north." j
The Avriter believes this to be the psychological moment to launch in our colleges new courses on thi
history of Canada. I
Woodson, Carter Godwin. Negro life and history in our schools. Jour. negr('
hist., IV (July) 273-280. [16<|
[
1
AMERICA IN GENERAL.
Aboriginal America — Antiquities.
Barrett, Samuel Alfred, and Ernest William Hawkes. The Kratz Creek mound
group; a study in Wisconsin Indian mounds. Milwaukee, Wis.: Pub. by order of
the trustees. 138 p. illus., plates, plan. (Bulletin of the Public museum of the
city of Milwaukee, v. 3, no. 1 . . . Oct. 31, 1919) [161
Barton, J. E. The Marjorie Ayleffe Smith Indian collection. Ky. hist. soc. reg.,
XVII (Jan.) 25-28. [162
Collection of Indian relics presented to the Kentucky state historical Bociety by Mr. Edward Smith of
Detroit.
Bonney, A. F. The stone age in America. Scientific American, CXVIII (June 1,
1918) supplement, 340-341. [162a
Brown, Charles E. Additional trade implements. Wis. archeol., XVIII (Jan.)
16-18. [163
Indian trade implements from archaeological sites in Wisconsin.
Brown, Charles E. Stone celts. Wis. archeol., XVIII (Jan.) 7-15. [164
stone celts, or hatchets, used by the Indians.
Buell, Ira M. Beloit mound groups. Wis. archeol., XVIII (Nov.) 119-151. [165
The area considered is included in the townships Beloit and Turtle in Wisconsin and the adjacent
townships Rockton and Roscoe in Illinois.
Cole, H. E., and H. A. Smythe. Adams county. Wis. archeol., XVIII (Apr.)
43-84. [166
Report of an archaeological survey of Adams county, Wisconsin.
Cope, Leona. Calendars of the Indians north of Mexico. Berkeley: University of
California press, p. [119]-176. maps. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. and
ethnoL, v. XVI, no. 4) [167
A study of the time-reckoning systems in use among the North American Indians.
Delabarre, Edmund B. A unique Indian implement from Warren [R. I.] inscribed,
perforated, double-edged. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XII (July) 96-100. [168
Parabee, William C. Indian children's burial place in western Pennsylvania. Univ.
of Penn. mus. jour., X (Sept.) 166-167. [169
Pewkes, Jesse Walter. Designs on prehistoric Hopi pottery. U. S. bur. Am. ethnol.
rep., XXXIII, 207-284. [170
The author has endeavored to draw attention to some of the most important symbols on Hopi pot-
tery, especially those of prehistoric times.
Fewkes, Jesse Walter. Prehistoric villages, castles, and towers of southwestern
Colorado. Washington: Gov. print, off. 79 p. illus., plates. (U. S. Bureau of
American ethnology. Bulletin 70) [171
study of the ruins of the Pueblo villages and cliff dwellings bearing upon an interpretation of this
advanced prehistoric culture.
Heye, George G. Certain aboriginal pottery from southern California. [N. Y.:
Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] 46 p. illus., plates, map.
(Indian notes and monographs . . . v. VII, no. 1) [172
Heye, George G. Certain mounds in Haywood county, North Carolina. N. Y.:
Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation, p. 35-43. plates, map.
(Contributions from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation, v. V,
no. 3) [173
Reprinted from the Holmes anniversary volume, Washington, 1916.
Hildburgh, W. L. On the flint implements attached to some Apache "medicine
cords." Man, XIX (June) 81-87. [174
Concerning the emplojnoient in magical operations of obsolete flint implements.
59976°— 22 ^3 11
12 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Holand, H. R. The Kensington rune stone, the oldest native document of Ameri-
can history. [Menasha, Wis.] 31 p. illus. [175
Reprinted from the Wisconsin magazine of history, v. Ill, no. 2, December, 1919.
It is the writer's opinion that the stone is genuine and that it contains a recital of an expedition by
Norsemen into the middle of the continent in the year 1362.
Holmes, W. H. Handbook of aboriginal American antiquities. Part I. Introduc-
tory: The lithic industries. Washington: Gov. print, off. xvii, 3^0 p. illus.,
plates. (Smithsonian institution. Bureau of American ethnology. Bulletin
60) [176
This work is designed "as a reference work or manual, the principal purpose of which is to assemble
and present the antiquities of the continent in such a manner and order as to make them readily available
to the student who shall undertake to present a comprehensive view ofthe evolution of cultui'e among
men. "
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 723-724.
Holmes, W. H. Masterpieces of aboriginal American art — VI. Work of the goldsmith.
Art and archaeol., VIII (Dec.) 349-360. [177
Hough, Walter. Exploration of a pit house village at Luna, New Mexico. U. S.
Nation, mus. proc, LV, 409-431. [178
Jeancon, J. A. Preliminary report of the excavations at Po Shu Ouinge, near Abiqui
[New Mexico]. Palacio, VII (Aug.) 67. [179
Johnson, William Templeton. The archaic architecture of New Mexico. Am.
INST. ARCH. JOUR., VII (Feb.) 65-70. [180
Judd,^ Neil M. Archeological investigations at Paragonah, Utah. Washington:
Smithsonian institution . 22 p. plates. (Smithsonian misc. coll., v. LXX, no. 3)
[181
Kidder, Alfred Vincent, and Samuel J. Guernsey. Archeological explorations in
northeastern Arizona. Washington: Gov. print, off. 228 p. illus., plates. (Smith-
sonian institution . Bureau of American ethnology. Bulletin 65) [182
Investigations in the Kayenta district of northeastern Arizona, carried on in the summers of 1914 and
1915 by the Peabody museum of Harvard university, under the authority of permits granted by the Secre-
tary of the interior.
Langford, George. The Kankakee river refuse heap; evidence of a unique and primi-
tive culture in the southwestern Chicago area. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXI (July)
287-291. [183
Larson, Laurence M. The church in North America (Greenland) in the middle ages.
Cath. hist, rev., V (July) 175-194. [184
Maguire, Don. The antiquities of the South-west. Utah geneal. and hist, mag.,
X (Apr.) 65-73. [185
Mills, Truman B. The Ulrich mounds. Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII
(Apr.) 162-175. [186
Indian burial mounds located on the farm of Mr. Joseph Ulrich, near Farmersville, in Jackson town-
ship, Ohio.
Morris, Earl H. The Aztec ruin. N. Y. : Pub. by order of the trustees [of the Ameri-
can museum of natural history] 108 p. illus; (Am. mus. nat. liist. anthrop. pap.,
V. XXVI, pt. 1) [187
The principal member of a large group of prehistoric Pueblo remains near the town of Aztec in San
Juan county, New Mexico.
Morris, Earl H. Further discoveries at the Aztec ruin. Palacio, VI (Jan. 18)19-23,
26. [188
Articles describing the prehistoric Pueblo commimity-dwelling, known as the Aztec ruin, were pub-
lished in the American museiun journal, February and March numbers, 1917.
Morris, Earl H. Preliminary account of the antiquities of the region between the
Mancos and La Plata rivers in southwestern Colorado. U. S. bur. Am. ethnol.
REP., XXXIII, 155-206. [189
In two parts. — I. The cliff-ruins of Johnson Canyon. II. Ruins on the mesas.
Describes the ruins of the buildings and the artifacts found therein.
Nelson, N. C. The archaeology of the Southwest; a preliminary report. Nation.
ACAD. SCI. PROC, V (Apr.) 114-120. [190
Nelson, N. C. Human culture; its probable place of origin on the earth and its mode
of distribution. Natural hist., XIX (Feb.) 131-140. [191
Concerned with the discovery in the American southwest of the apparent 1 aw of distribution of human
cultures, and its application to the American contineiit aji<J to the world a^ a whole.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 13
Nelson, N. C. The Southwest problem. Palacio, VI (Apr.) 132-135. [192
Outlines a new method for the investigation of prehistoric Pueblo culture.
Parker, Arthur C. A contact period Seneca site. Rochester, N. Y. (The New York
state archeological association. Lewis H. Morgan chapter, Rochester, N. Y.
Researches and transactions, v. I, no. 2) [193
Account of an early colonial Seneca site, at Factory Hollow, Ontariocounty, probably a flourishing
Indian settlement when Denonville raided the Seneca country.
j Parsons, Elsie Clews. Increase by magic: a Zuni pattern. Am. anthrop., n. s.
XXI (July) 279-286. ' [194
Pearce, J. E . Indian mounds and other relics of Indian life in Texas. Am. anthrop. ,
n. 8. XXI (July) 223-234. [195
The pilgrimage to Aztalan. Wis. archeol., XVIII (Nov.) 152-156. [196
Pilgrimage of the Wisconsin archeological society and the State historical society to Aztalan, the
site of the most famous prehistoric earthworks in. Wisconsin.
Plischke, Hans. Verschlagungen von Bewohnern Amerikas nach Europa im Alter-
tum und Mittelalter. Petermann'sMitteilungen, LXII (Mar. 1916) 93-95. [197
Extracts from early chronicles noting the appearance in European waters and on the coasts, of people
from the American continent, mainly from the far North, who had been driven across the ocean by
winds and currents.
Reagan, Albert B . The ancient ruins in lower and middle Pine river valley, Colorado.
Palacio, VII (Dec.) 171-176. [198
Saville, Foster H. Steatite quarry at Johnston, R. I. R. I. hist. .soc. coll., XII
(Oct.) 103-105. [199
Aboriginal quarry of steatite or soapstone.
Saville, Marshall Howard. Archaeological specimens from New England. [N. Y.:
I Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] 10 p. illus., plate. (Indian
notes and monographs ... v. V, no. 1) [200
Shine, Michael A. Ancient Pawnee medal; a remarkable engraved medal from a
Pawnee grave. Neb. hist, and eec. pioneer days, II (Apr.) 5. [201
Skinner, Alanson. Exploration of aboriginal sites at Throgs Neck and Clasons Point,
New York city. N. Y.: Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation, p.
47-126. illus., plates, map. (Contributions from the Museum of the American
Indian, Heye foundation, v. V, no. 4) [202
Contents.— I. The Throgs Neck or Schley avenue shellheap. II. Snakapins, a Siwanoy site at
Clasons Point.
Smith, Harlan IngersoU. The archaeological value of prehistoric human bones.
Ottawa naturalist, XXXII (Mar.) 164-166. . [203
Smithsonian institution. Explorations and field-work of the Smithsonian institution
in 1918. Washington: Smithsonian institution. 122 p. illus., plates. (Smith-
sonian misc. coll., V. LXX, no. 2) [204
Partial contents.— Anthropological survey of the southwestern coast of Florida. Anthropological
work in Peru and Bolivia. Archeological field-work in southwestern Colorado and Utah. Antiquities
of the Gulf coast of Mexico. Archeological exploration in Arizona. Archeological reconnoissance of
northwestern Arizona. Archeological studies in central Missouri. Field-work among the Kiowa.
Field-work among the Iroquois. Field-work among the Choctaw and Catawba. Researches among
the Osage. Material culture among the Chippewa. Studies of the Kiowa, Tewa, and California
Indians. Field-work among the Sauk and Fox.
pier, Leslie. Ruins in the "S\niite Mountains, Arizona. N. Y.: Pub. bv order of
the trustees [of the American museum of natural history] p. 363-386. (Am. mus.
nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XVIII, pt. 5) [205
IWaugh, F. W. Canadian aboriginal canoes. Can ad. pield-naturaiist, CMay)
23-33. [206
Iwilloughby, Charles C . The serpent mound of Adams county, Ohio. Am. anthrop. ,
n. s. XXI (Apr.) 153-163. [207
Wissler, Clark. The Archer M. Huntington survey of the southwest Zuni district
[General introduction] N. Y. : Pub. by order of the trustees [of the American museum
of natural history] ix p. (Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XVIII [Introduc-
* ^^ [208
tion])
The object of this survey was the establishment of a chronology for the cultures of the Southwest.
This introduction includes tables of the chronology of the Zuni district, and a diagrammatic
scheme for demonstrating the geographical and chronological relations in the cultures of the Southwest.
IWissler, Clark. New Mexico's great heritage. Palacio, VI (Apr. 19) 146-151,
154-155. [209
14 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Aboriginal America — Indians. See also Antiquities.
Abel, Annie Heloise. The Amerinan Indian as participant in the Civil war. Cleve-
land: Arthur H. Clark co. 403 p. port., map, facsims. {Her The slaveholding;
Indians, V. II) [210 i
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 323-324. j
Adam, Leonhard. Stammesorganisation und Haiiptlingstum der Wakashstamme. I
Zeitschrift FtJR VERGLEiCHENDE Rechtswissenschaft (Stiittgart), XXXV Bd.,
1916,105-480. [211;
Age societies of the Plains Indians. Scientific American, CXVIII (Mar. 30, 1918) I
supplement, p. 201. [211a i
Alexander, Hartley Burr. The poetry of the American Indian. Nation, CIX (Dec. I
13)757-758. [212 1
Balfour, Henry. An Eskimo week-calendar. Man, XIX (June) 92-93. [213
Barce, Blmore. The land of Potawatomi. Fowler, Ind. [The Benton review shop]
115 p. plates, map. [214
"This book is composed in large part from sketches first appearing in the Indiana magazine of his- j
tory."— Pref. i
The Potawatomi Indians were expelled from their lands in what is now Indiana and Illinois to beyond
the Missouri river in 1836. j
Their relations to the early British agents, their part in the Tippecanoe campaign, their trails, and !
the old Chicago road are some of the topics treated. (
Barrett, Samuel Alfred. The Wintun Hesi ceremony. Berkeley: Univ. of Call- j
fornia press, p. [437]-488. plate, diagrs. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. and |
ethnol., V. XIV, no. 4) [216 j
Birket-Smith, Kaj. A geographic study of the early history of the Algonquin-
Indians. Internat. arch, ethnog., XXIV, 1918, 174-222. [216
Blount, Bertha. The Apache in the Southwest, 1846-1886. Southw. hist, quar., ;
XXIII (July) 20-38. [217 \
Story of the conflict between the United States and the Apache Indians and their final surrender. '
Brown, William L. Origin of the Indian race. So. workman. XLVIII (Jan.) 33-36.
[218
Bushnell, David I., jr. Native villages and village sites east of the Mississippi. Wash- '
ington: Goa^ print, off. Ill p. illus., plates, map. (Smithsonian institution. ;
Bureau of American ethnology. Bulletin 69) [219 >
Bushnell, David 1., jr. Ojibway habitations and other structures. In Smithsonian I
institution. Annual report. 1917. Washington: Gov. print, off. p. 609-617. I
[220 j
Davis, Edward H. The Diegueno ceremony of the death images. N. Y.: Museum
of the American Indian, Heye foundation. 33 p. illus. plates. (Contributions
from the Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation, v. V, no. 2) [221
Dickson, Frederick S. A famous Indian dictionary. Yale rev., VIII (July)
770-783. [222
The dictionary of the Abenaki language, compiled by the Jesuit priest, Sebastian RAle.
Drake, Francis Samuel. Indian history for young folks. New and enl. ed., rev. to
date. N. Y. and London: Harper. 522 p. illus., plates, ports., maps. [223
Introduction signed: F. J. Dowd.
First published in 1885.
Dumarest, Noel. Notes on Cochiti, New Mexico, by Father Noel Dumarest, with a
preface by Stewart Culin; tr. and ed. by Elsie Clews Parsons. Lancaster, Pa.:
Pub. for the American anthropological association, p. 137-236. illus., plates.
(Am. anthrop. assoc. mem., v. VI, no. 3. July-Sept., 1919) [224
Notes concerning the Keresan Indians of Cochiti, New Mexico.
Eastman, Charles A. The American eagle an Indian symbol. D. A. R. mag., LIII
(Apr.) 192-195. ' [225
Reprinted in the American Indian magazine, v. VII, no. 2, 89-92.
Elliott,- L. E. American Indianism. Pan-American mag., XXVIII (Mar.) 245-253.
[226
\
WRITINGS ON" AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 15
Fewkes, Jesse Walter, and Carlos Mindeleff. Indian tribes of the Southwest; an-
tiquities, arts and habits of modem and extinct races. Western mag., XIV (Dec.)
230-233. [227
Gilkison, Augusta A. I. The Six Nations Indians. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVIT,
30-32. [228
Gilmore, Melvin Randolph. The Mescal society among the Omaha Indians. Neb.
HIST. soc. PUB., XIX, 163-167. [229
A religious cult introduced into the Omaha tribe in the winter of 1906-7.
Gilmore, Melvin Randolph. Uses of plants by the Indians of the Missouri river
region. Washington: Gov. print, off. p. 45-154. plates. [230
Reprinted from the Thirty-third annual report of the Bureau of American ethnology.
An attemjit to ascertain the relation of the native people of the plains to one phase of their indigenous
physical environment.
Goddard, Pliny Earle. Notes on the sun dance ©f the Sarsi, By Pliny Earle God-
dard. The sun dance of the Plains-Cree. By Alanson Skinner. Notes on the
sun dance of the Cree in Alberta. By Pliny Earle Goddard. The sun dance of
the Canadian Dakota. Bv W. D. Wallis. Notes on the sun dance of the Sisseton
Dakota. By Alanson Skinner. N. Y.: The Trustees, p. 271-385. illus.. (Am.
mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XVI, pt. 4) [231
The sun dance of the Plains-Ojibway, by Alanson Skinner: p. 311-315.
Godfrey, Carlos E. The Lenape Indians, their origin and migrations to the Delaware.
Trenton, N. J.: The Trenton historical society. 16 p. [232
Grinnell, George Bird. A buffalo sweatlodge. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXI (Oct.)
361-375. [233
A study of the ceremonial observances connected with the building of the sweatlodge.
Hunter, H. Chadwick. The American Indian in painting. Art and archaeol.,
VIII (Mar.) 81-96. [234
Krause, Fritz. Wanderungen nordamerikanischer Indianer; ein Beiti*ag zur Methode
der Wanderforschung. Verhandlungen des xix deutschen Geographentages
zu Strassburg, 1914 (Berlin, 1915), p. 213-216. [235
Lamere, Oliver. Clan organization of the Winnebago. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX,
86-94. [236
Lowie, Robert H. Sun dance of the Shoshoni, Ute, and Hidatsa. N. Y.: The
Trustees, p. 387-431. illus. (Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XVI, pt. 5)
[237
Lowie, Robert H. The Tobacco society of the Crow Indians. N. Y.: The Trustees.
p. 101-200. illus. (Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XXI, pt. 2) [238
Malone, James Henry. The Chickasaw nation, a short sketch of a noble people,
souvenir of Memphis centenary celebration. May 19-24, 1919. [Kansas Citv, Mo. :
E. L. Mendenhall, printer] [8], 175 p. ' [239
The four De Soto narratives quoted and compared: p. 100-133. De Soto at the Chickasaw Bluffs:
p. 134^175.
Merwin, B. W. Basketry of the Chitimacha Indians. Univ. op Penn. mus. jour.,
X (Mar.) 29-34. [240
A tribe of Indians on the banks of the Grand river of St. Mary's Parish, Louisiana.
Michelson, Truman. Some general notes on the Fox Indians. Wash. acad. sci.
jour., IX (Oct. 4, 19, Nov. 19) 483-494, 521-528, 593-596. [241
Newcombe, C. F. The McGill totem pole. Ottawa naturalist, XXXII (Dec.
1918) 99-103. [242
A totem pole in the possession of McGill university, Montreal.
Parker, Arthur C. Champlain's assault on the fortified town of the Oneidas, 1615.
In The University of the state of New York. New York state museum. Four-
teenth report of the director of the State museum and Science department . . .
Albany, N. Y.: The University of the state of New York. p. 165-174. (N. Y.
state mus. bul., nos. 207, 208) [242a
Reagan, Albert B. Some games of the Bois Fort Ojibwa. Ed. by F. W. Waugh.
Am. anthrop., n. s. XXI (July) 264-278.
Description of a number of games played by the Ojibwa of Bois Fort, Minn.
16 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION-. i
Remsbiirg, George J. An old Kansas Indian town on the Missouri. Plymouth, la.
G. A. Chandler, printer [1919?] 11 p. plate, port. [24^
The writer concludes that the historic old town of Doniphan was the prehistoric capital of th^
Kaws.
Rollins, Warren E. Passing of the spirit dance. Palacio, VII (Dec.) 187-191. [24il
Roth, Henry Ling. American quill work. Man, XIX (Jan.) 12-13. [24(1
A study of Indian art. i
Sapper, Karl. Die Eskimobevolkerung von Gronland und Labrador. Petermann'sI
MiTTEiLUNGEN, LXIV, 1918, 210-218. [24-;'
Schrabisch, Max. Mountain haunts of the coastal Algonquian. Am. anthrop. ,;
n. s. XXI (Apr.) 139-152. [248
Sefian, Jose. Interrogatorio y respuestas of Fr. Jos6 Senan, August 11, 1815. (Con-j
tributed by Rev. Zephyrin Engelhardt) Cath. hist, rev., V (Apr.) 55-66. [249']
In October, 1812, the Spanish government issued a list of 36 questions v/hich were to be answered
by all missionaries among the Indians. The document here reproduced, contains the reply of the
Superior of the missions in Alta California, describing the Indians at those missions.
Shotridge, Louis. War helmets and clan hats of the Tlingit Indians. Univ. of
Penn. mus. jour., X (Mar.) 43-48. ' [250:
Skinner, Alanson B. An ancient Algonkian fishing village at Cayuga, New York.!
[N. Y.: Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] p. 43-57. illus.,|
plates. (Indian notes and monographs ... v. II, no. 2) [251i
Skinner, Alanson B. The pre-Iroquoian Algonkian Indians of central and western !
New York. [N. Y.: Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] 37 p.'
illus. (Indian notes and monographs . . . v. II, no. 1) [262 1
Skinner, Alanson B. A sketch of eastern Dakota ethnology. Am. anthrop., n. s.l
XXI (Apr.) 164-174. [253 1
Data regarding the Sisseton, Wahpeton and Isanti tribes. !
Speck, Frank G. The functions of wampum among the eastern Algonkian. Lan-i
caster, Pa.: Pub. for the American anthropological association. 71 p. plates. I
(Am. anthrop. assoc. mem., v. VI, no. 1) [254 1
Speck, Frank G. Penobscot shamanism. Lancaster, Pa.: Pub. for the American |
anthropological association, p. 239-288. (Am. anthrop. assoc. mem., v. VI,;
no. 4) [2551
Spinden, Herbert J. American Indian poetry. Natural hist., XIX (Mar.) 301-!
307. [256 i
Sterns, F. H. The peopling of the American plains by the Indians. Scientific {
American, CXVIII (Apr. 13, 1918) supplement, 234-235. [256a !
Sullivan, Louis R. Anthropometry of the Siouan tribes. N. Y.r The Trustees.!
p. 81-174. illus., tables, diagrs. (Am. mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XXIII,
pt. 3) [267
Imprint date covered by label: 1920.
Toronto. Ontario provincial museum. Thirty-first annual archaeological report,
1919. By R. B. Orr. Being part of Appendix to the report of the Minister of
education, Ontario. Printed by order of the Legislative assembly of Ontario.
Toronto: A. T. Wilgress. 120 p. illus., plates. [258
Contents.— Presentation. The Iroquois in Canada. Mortuary customs of our Indian tribes. In-
dian pottery of our native races. The men who broke the trail to Hudson Bay, by Dean Harris. Algon-
quin pottery, by George E. Laidlaw. New accessions to the Museum.
Villiers du Terrage, Marc, baron de, and Paul Rivet. Les Indiens du Texas et les
expeditions fran?aises de 1720 et 1721 k la "baie Saint-Bernard ". Soc. Am. Paris
JOUR., n. s. XI, fasc. 2, 403-442. [269
Gives an account of two expeditions sent out by the Compagnie des Indes to establish a post at the
"bale Saint-Bernard, " the present Matagorda bay, in the Gulf of Mexico; the first under the leadership
of the pilot Jean B^ranger, set out from Louisiana in 1720; the second, commanded by Benard de la
Harpe, left in 1721.
Includes two vocabularies of Indian languages which were brought from Texas by B^ranger and
inserted in his ' ' M6moire ' ' of the expedition, which is now contained in the Archives nationales at Paris.
Vore, Jacob. The Omaha Indians forty years ago. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX,
114-126. [260
Walker, Edwin R. Lenni-Lenape or Delaware Indians. Trenton, N. J.: E. R.
Walker. 27 p.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 17
Weeks, Alvin Gardner. Massasoit of the Wampanoags; with a brief commentary on
Indian character; and sketches of other great chiefs, tribes and nations; also a
chapter on Samoset, Squanto and Hobamock, three early native friends of the
Plymouth colonists. [Fall River, Mass.] Priv. print. [The Plimpton press] xi,
270 p. port., plate. [261
Wissler, Clark. Indian beadwork. N. Y. [American museum press] 30 p. illus.,
plate. (Guide leaflet no. 50) [262
On cover: American museum of natural history. Indian beadwork, a help for students of design.
Wissler, Clark. An Indian peace medal. Univ. of Va. alumni bul., 3d ser., XII
(Aug.) 419-423. [263
Wolf, Morris. Iroquois religion and its relation to their morals. N. Y. : Columbia
univ. press, v, 111 p. [264
Thesis (ph. d.)— Columbia university, 1919.
Aboriginal America — Mexico, Central America, West
Indies, and South America.
Bauer-Thoma, Wilhelm. Unter den Zapoteken und Mixes des Staates Oaxaca der
Republik Mexiko; ethnographische Notizen. Baessler-Archiv, Bd. V, Hft.
8, 1915, 75-97. [265
Beneyton, . Origine des peuples du Mexique. Soc. geog. Cher bul., VI,
1915-1916, 380-381. [266
Beyer, Hermann. Apuntes criticos sobre el ''Manual de arqueologia americana"
de Beuchat. Mexico antiguo, I (Dec.) 97-105. [267
Critical review of the "Manuel d'arch^ologie americaine (Am^rique pr6historique— Civilisations
disparues) par Henri Beuchat." Paris: Picard, 1912.
Beyer, Hermann. Explicacion de un fragmento de un antiguo plato decorado de
Cholula. Mexico antiguo, I (July) 3-23. [268
Beyer, Hermann. Guerrero o dios? Nota arqueologica acerca de una estatua mexi-
cana del Museo de historia natural de Nueva York. Mexico antiguo, I (Oct.)
73-81. [269
An ancient figure of terra cotta from the valley of Mexico, now in the American museum of natural
history, New York.
Beyer, Hermann. Objetos de forma amigdaloide existentes en representaciones
mexicanas de la tierra, Mexico antiguo, I (Oct.) 82-89. [270
Bode, Klaudius. Die Tupistamme und ihre Sprache in der Capitania S. Vicente
(Sao Paulo). Deutsch. Gesells. Anthrop. Korresp.-BlAtt, XLIX, 1918,
51-58. [271
Bolinder, Gustaf. Einiges tiber die Motilon-Indianer der Sierra de Perija. Zeits.
F. Ethnol., XLIX, 1917, 21-. [272
Ethnographical notes upon a little known tribe of Colombia.
Bollo, Luis Cincinato. The native of South America; American civilization prob-
ably older than that of Asia and Africa. So. American, VII (Aug.) 7-8. [273
Study of the origin of South American man, taken from a book shortly to be published, entitled
"South America past and present."
Boman, Eric, and Luis Maria Torres. Proyecto de leyenda uniforme para mapas
arqueologicos de la Republica argentina y de la America del Sud en general. In
Primera Reunion nacional de la Sociedad argentina de ciencias naturales, Tucu-
man, 1916. Buenos Aires, 1919. p. 494-503. [274
Booy, Theodoor de. Archeological investigations in the Virgin Islands. Scientific
American, supplement, no. 2180 (Oct. 13, 1917) 232-234. [276
Booy, Theodoor de. Archeological notes on the Danish West Indies. Scientific
American, supplement, no. 2189 (Dec. 15, 1917) 576-577. [276
Booy, Theodoor de. Archeology of the Virgin Islands. [N. Y. : Museum of the Ameri-
can Indian, Heye foundation] 100 p. illus., plates, maps. (Indian notes and
monographs, v. I, no. 1) [277
Booy, Theodoor de. Santo Domingo kitchen-midden and burial mound. [N. Y.:
Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] p. [107}-137. illus., plates,
plan. (Indian notes and monographs, v. I, no. 2) [278
18 AMERICAN HISTOHICAL ASSOOIATIOIT. I
Breton, Adela C. Relationships in Central America, Man, XIX (Dec.) 186-192. [27tj
ramily relationship terms in Central American languages .
Breton, Adela C. Some Mexican clay heads. Man, XIX (Mar.) 33-34. [28(|
Breton, Adela C. Some Mexican picture-names. Man, XIX (Aug.) 118-121. [28]|
Buohwald, Otto von. Los primeros Incas. Soc. ecuatoriana estud. hist, am!
BOL., Ill, 115-121. [28S
The buried treasure of Peru. So. American, VII (Sept.) 8-9. [282
Ruins of the ancient towns, palaces, and temples of the prehistoric inhabitants of Peru.
Buschan, Georg. Die Inka und ihre Kultur im alten Peru. Cultura latino-amer-
ICANA (Cothen) I, 1915-1918, 417-461. [284
Cook, O. F. The size of Maya farms. Wash. acad. sci, jour., IX (Jan. 4) 11-14.
[285
Crequi-Montfort, G., and Paul B-ivet. Contribution a I'etude de Parch^ologie et de
la metallurgie colombiennes. Soc. Am. Paris jour., n. s. XI, fasc. 2, 525-591.
[286;
" Avec la collaboration de H. Arsandaux, pour la partie m^tallurgique." 1
Includes a description of the specimens in several collections of prehistoric metal objects (ornaments,!
breast plates, and implements) from Colombia. j
Czaplewski, Eugen. Weiteres iiber peruanische Kultur und Totenkult. Deutsch.I
Gesells. Anthrop. Korresp.-Blatt, XLVIII Jahrg., 1917, 93-95. [287!
DeyroUe, E. Notes d'anthropologie guayanaise; les Indiens maraouanes. Soc!
ANTHROP. Paris bul. et mem., 6e ser., t. VII, 1916, 153-164. [2881
Discoveries of prehistoric remains; relics of forgotton races buried many feet beneath!
the accreted soil of the valley of Mexico. Mexican rev. , III (July) 18-22. [289 i
Eriksson, J. V. Montezumas Mexiko; en indiansk storstad. Ymer, XXXIX, hft. 1,1
4-33. [290 I
Estudios paleograficos. Escritura chibcha; jeroglificos de las rocas de "El Abra,"!
Zipaquira. El Campesino (Zipaquird) no. 194, Oct. 5, 1919. [2911
Farabee, William C. Mummified Jivaro heads. Univ. of Penn. mus. jour., Xi
(Dec.) 173-183. [292 [
The Jivaro tribes occupy a large territory on the eastern slope of the Andes movmtains in Ecuador. | I
The mummified head is their most esteemed war trophy. !
Forbin, Victor. On a retrouve la ville sainte des Incas. Lectures pour tous, XXIe \
ann. (June 15) 1267-1274. [293 \
An account of the discovery, by Professor Hiram Bingham, of the buried city of the Incas, called I
Tampu Tocco, on the summit of Machu Picchu mountain. I
Forbin, Victor. Decouverte de la ville sainte des Incas. La Nature, XLIV (Aug. 5,
1916) 88-93. [294 '
Friederici, Georg. Ein Beitrag zur Kentniss der Trutzwaffen der Indonesier, Siidsee- i
v6lker und Indianer. Leipzig und Berlin: B. G. Teubner, 1915. 78 p. plates.
(Baessler-Archiv . . . Beiheft VII) [295 t
Frddin, Otto, and Erland Nordenskiold. Ueber Zwirnen und Spinnen bei den \
Indianern Siidamerikas. Goteborg: Wettergren und Kerber, [1918] 118 p. illus.,
maps. (Goteborgs Kungl. Vetenskaps och Vitterhets-samhalles Handlingar. i
Fjarde Foldjen. XIX. 3.) [296!
Guillemin-Tarayre, E. Le grand temple de Mexico. Soc. Am. Paris jour., n. s. 1
XI, fasc. 1, 1914, 97-120. [297 j
Guillemin-Tarayre, E. Les temples de I'Anahuac; conclusions sur I'unit^ de m^sure I
chinoise introduite au Mexique pour la construction des temples. Soc. Am. Paris ,
jour., n. s. XI, fasc. 2, 501-512. [298
Haeberlin, Herman K. Types of ceramic art in the valley of Mexico. Am . anthrop. .
n. 8. XXI (Jan.) 61-70. [299 >
Haebler, Ruth. Die geflochtenen Hangematten der Naturvolker Siidamerikas. !
Zeits. f. Ethnol., LI, 1-18. [300 '
Hardy, Osgood. The Indians of the department of Cuzco. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXI |
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WBITmOS 0"^ AMERIOAI^ HISTORY, 1^1^. 19
Hestermann, Ferdinand. Die Maya-Kultur Mittel-Amerikas (Sprache, Schrift, Lit-
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Hills, Louis Edward. Historical data from ancient records and ruins of Mexico and
Central America. Independence, Mo.: L. E. Hills. 48 p. illus., port., maps.
Hostos, Adolfo de. Prehistoric Porto Rican ceramics. Am. anthrop., n. s., XXI
(Oct.) 376-399. [304
Jijon y Caamano, Jacinto. Artefactos prehist6ricos del Guayas. Soc. ecuatoriana
ESTUD. HIST. AM. BOL., II, 208-216. [306
Cont. from 1. 1, 1918.
Jij6n y Caamafio, Jacinto. La religidn del imperio de los Incas. v. I. Los funda-
ji I mentos del culto; Huacas, Conopas, Apachitas, Urcos, Huancas, Machais. Quito,
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Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (May 1920) 196-198.
j; jjosselin de Jong, J. P. B. de. Oud-Peruaansch aardewerk in 's Rijks Ethno-
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Josselin de Jong, J. P. B. de. The praecolumbian and early postcolumbian aboriginal
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Contents.— pt. I. The archaeological objects: Pottery.
i Joyce, T. A. Note on a wooden stool from the island of Eleuthera, Bahamas. Man,
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A piece of domestic furniture, the work of some branch of the earlier of the two native stocks, the
so-called Tainan, who were found in occupation of the islands at the time of the discovery.
Zarsten, Rafael. Der Ursprung der indianischen Verzierung in Siidamerika.
Zeits. f. Ethnol., XLVIII, 1916, 155-216. [310
A psychological essay upon the ornamentation of the South American Indians in its relation to
religious ideas and to sorcery.
Kissenberth, W. Beitrag zur Kenntnis der Tapirap^-lndianer. Baessler-Archiv,
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Koch-Griinberg, Theodor. Mitos y leyendas de los Indies. Cultura latino-ameri-
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Koch-Griinberg, Theodor. Ueber die Kultur der Indianer Guayanas. Jahrbuch
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i . . . [313
Koch-Griinberg, Theodor. Zwei Mythen der Arekuna-Indianer. Archiv fijr Re-
LiGiONSWissENSCHAFT (Leipzig and BerUn) XVIII, 1915, 384-39^. [314
Kreichgauer. Damian. Die Astronomie des Kodex Nuttall. Anthropos, X, 1-?
[315
A contribution to the mythology of Central America.
Kreichgauer, Damian. Die astronomischen Kenntnisse der Indianer von Mexiko.
Wien [Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien] 1917. (Sitzungsberichte der kais.
Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien. Philoaophisch-historische Klasse) [316
Kreichgauer, Damian. Die Steinbilder im alten Mexiko. Anthropos, X, 1080.
[317
Note upon the ancient capital of Mexico.
iKunike, Hugo. Goldaltertiimer der Chibcha. Internat. Archiv p. Ethnog.
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lunike, Hugo. Jaguar und Mond in der Mythologie des andinen Hochlandeas
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l.arrea, Carlos M. Notas acerca de la arqueologia de la provincia de Esmeralda.
(contribuci6n al conocimiento de los aborlgenes de "La Tola"), por Carlos M.
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[i jeguizamon, Martiniano P. Etnografia del Plata; el origen de las boleadoras y el
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filosofia y letras. Publicacionea de la Seccion antropologica, no. 19) [321
"De la Revista de la Universidad de Buenos Aires, tomo XLI, pfi,gina 206 y siguientes."
20 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. I
Lelimann, Walter. Ein kostbares Raiichergefass aus Guatemala. Zeits. f. Ethnol.,^
XLVIII, 1916, 335-339. [322*
Long, Richard C. E, The date of the Maya ruins at Santa Rita, British Honduras.
Man, XIX (Apr.) 59-61. [323,
A study of Maya chronology. j
Long, Richard C. E. The highest known Maya number. Man, XIX (Mar.) 39-42. |
[324
Regarding the Maya system of numeration.
Lothrop, Samuel Kirkland. The discovery of gold in the graves of Chiriq^ui, Panama.
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Lowenthal, John. Zur Mythologie des jungen Helden und des Feuerbringers. Zeits. j
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MacCurdy, George Grant. Natiu-e reflected in the art of the ancient Chiriquians. !
Natural hist., XIX (Feb.) 141-151. [327 *
Means, Philip Ainsworth. La civilizacion precolombina de los Andes. Soc. ecua- I
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Means, Philip Ainsworth. Distribution and use of slings in pre-Columbian America, i
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Means, Philip Ainsworth. Las instituciones incaicas del pasado y del presente. \
Pan Am. union bol., XLVIII (May) 538-554. [330 j
Translation of an article written in English. j
Means, Philip Ainsworth. Una nota sobre la prehistoria peruana. Lima, Peru. |
8 p. plates. [331
From a study of the archaeological collection of Sr. Ellas y Ellas, of Morrop6n in the department of [
Piura, Peru, the writer presents his conclusions in regard to the chronology of the prehistoric eiviliza- i
tions of Peru . i
Reprinted from Mercurio peruano, ano II, v. Ill, no. 13, July 1919.
Meiller, R. Note sur un cimetiere precolombien a Cruz-Grande (Chili). Soc. ■
anthrop. Paris bul. et mem., 6e ser., VII, 1916, 233-237. [332 i
Nordenskiold, Erland. An ethno-geographical analysis of the material culture o^ '
two Indian tribes in the Gran Chaco. Goteborg: Elanders Boktryckeri. 293 p- '
illus., maps, [333 ■
Published in German in 1918. i
The two Indian tribes under discussion are the Choroti and the Ashluslay, i
Nordenskiold, Erland. Die ostliche Ausbreitung der Tiahuanacokultm- in Bolivien j
und ihr Verhaltnis zur Aruakkultur in Mojos. Zeits. f. Ethnol., XLIX, 1917, j
10-20. [334 I
Nordenskiold, Erland. Die religiosen Vorstellungen der Itonama-lndianer in Bolivia. |
Zeits. p. Ethnol., XLVII, 1915, 105-113. [336 f
Regarding a tribe which retains some of its primitive ideas, although it has been Christianized, and ',
among which vestiges of totemism are found.
Nordenskiold, Erland. Spiel tische aus Peru und Ecuador. Zeits. f. Ethnol., L, .
1918, 166-171. [336 |
Opisso, Alfredo. Historia de Espaila y de las repiiblicas latino-americanas. . . . t. j
XI. Barcelona: Casa editorial "Gallach" [1919?] xxi, 284 p. illus., plates, maps, j
[337 :
Contents.— America precolombina. Descubridores y colonizadores. ,
Orozco, Enrique . Algo sobre idolatria y costumbres raras de un pueblo de Indios. \
Mexico antiguo, I (Oct.) 67-70. [338
The Indians of San Nicolas Huajuapan, in the municipality of Huehuetlan, district of Tepexi. '
Popenoe, Wilson. The useful plants of Copan. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXI (Apr.)
125-138. • [339 ,
a study of the plants for foodstuffs and other uses cultivated by the ancient Mayas in the valley of
the Copan river in western Honduras .
Posnansky, Arthur. Petratos y recuerdos de animales extinguidos en la cer^mica
de Sud America. Soc. geog. La Paz bol., XVII, 140-149. [340
Quevedo, Samuel A. Lafone. Guarani kinship terms as index of social organization.
Am. anthrop., n. s. XXI (Oct.) 421-440. [341
1919. 21
Badin, Paul. The relationship of Huave and Mixe. Soc. Am. Paris jour., n. s. XI,
fasc. 2, 489-499. [343
A study of the linguistic relationship of the Huave and Mixe-Zoque tribes.
Rawson, Marion NiohoU. Ancient Peru in textiles and pottery. Internat. studio,
LXVII (May) Ixxxvii-xci. [343
Reutter, L. Analyses de deux masses ayant servi aux Incas a embaumer leurs morts.
Soc. anthrop. Paris bul. et mem., 6e ser., VI, 1915, 288-293. [344
Rivet, Paul. Explorations arch^ologiques de M. Eric Boman dans la Republique
Argentine. Soc. Am. Paris jour., n. s. XI, fasc. 2, 664-667. [346
Rocheraux, H. Les Indiens Tunebos et Pedrazas. Soc. Am. Paris jour., n. a. XI,
fasc. 2, 513-524. [346
Indian tribes of Colombia and Venezuela.
Rosen, Eric von. Ar den sydamerikanska kulbagen en efterbildning av den indiska
kuUangbagen. Ymer, XXXIX, no. 2, 175-180. [347
Rosen, Eric von. En forgangen varld; forskningar och aventyr bland Andernas hog-
fjall. Stockholm: A. Bonnier. [12], 408 p. illus., plates, ports, map. [348
Lamningar av en fornindiansk kultur: p. 111-155. Arkeologiskt samlingsarbete under punavistelsen.—
Ruinstaden Morohuasi: p. 177-207.
Saintyves, P. La croix en Afrique et dans I'Am^rique du Sud. Rev, hist, reli-
gions, LXXVIII, 1918, 39-62. [349
Salas, Julio C. Denominaciones geograficas precolombinas de Venezuela. De Re
INDICA (Caracas) I (Sept. 20, 1918) 11-15. [350
[Saville, Marshall Howard] A sculptured vase from Guatemala. N. Y. [4] p. plate.
(Leaflets of the Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation, no. 1) [351
Signed: Marshall H. SavUle.
Schmidt, Max. Die Aruaken; ein Beitrag zum Problem der Kulturverbreitung.
Leipzig: Verlag Veit und co., 1917. 109 p. map, (Studien zur Ethnologic und
Soziologie, herausgegeben von Prof. Dr. A, Vierkandt, Hft. 1) [352
Schmidt, Max. Verhaltnis zwischen Form und Gebrauchszweck bei siidamerikani-
schen Sachgiitern, besonders den keulenformigen Holzgeraten. Zeits, f. Ethnol.,
L, 1918, 12-39. [353
SchuUer, Rudolf. Entdeckung einer neuen Moschene-Handschrift. Anthropos,
X, 1087-? [354
Notice of a native tribe of Bolivia, with a vocabulary compiled by a missionary in 1868.
Seler, Caecilie. Frauenleben im Reiche der Azteken, ein Blatt aus der Kulturges-
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Seler, Caecilie. Die Huaxteca-Sammlung des Kgi. Museums fiii' Volkerkunde zu
Berlin. Baessler-Archiv, Bd, V, Hft. 3, 1915, 98-135. [356
Contents.— Einleitung. Topfereien
Seler, Eduard. Die alten Bauten von Hoch6b im Staate Campeche. Zeits. f.
Ethnol,, XLVII, 1915, 269-270. [357
a note upon the ancient architecture of Yucatan,
Seler, Eduard. Altmexikanische Knochenrassel. Zeits. f. Ethnol., XLVIII,
1916, 392-402. [358
A commvmication upon an ancient Mexican cult.
Seler, Eduard. Beobachtungen und Studien in den Ruinen von Palenque. Berlin:
Verlag der Konigl. Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1915. 128 p. 19 plates, 1 map.
} (Abhandlungen der Koniglich preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Jahr-
j gang 1915. Philosophisch-historische Klasse. Nr, 5) [359
! Seler, Eduard. Gesammelte Abhandlungen zur amerikanischen Sprach-und Alter-
tumskunde. t. V. Berlin, 1915. xxxviii, 585 p. [360
Seler, Eduard. Omamentik der Nascao Topferei. Zeits. f. Ethnol., L, 1918,
177-178. [361
Seler, Eduard. Praparierte Feindeskopfe bei den Jivaro-Stammen des obern Mara-
iion und bei den alten Bewohnern des Departments lea an der Kiiste von Peru.
Baessler-Archiv, VI, 1916, 82-86.
22 AMEEICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Seler, Eduard. Die Quetzalcouatl-Fassaden yukatekischer Bauten. Berlin: Verlag
der Konigl. Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1916. 85 p. illus., 12 plates. (Ab-
handlungen der Koniglich preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Jahrgang
1916. Philosophisch-historische Klasse. Nr. 2) [363
Seler, Eduard. Die Ruinen von Uxmal. Berlin: Verlag der Konigl. Akademie
der Wissenschaften, 1917. 154 p. 36 plates. (Abhandlungen der Koniglich
preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Jahrgang 1917. Philosophisch-
historische Klasse. Nr. 3) [364
Seler, Eduard. Die Ruinen von Uxmal. Zeits. f. Ethnol., XLVII, 1915, 429-432.
[366 1
Sharp, John. The Tiahuanaco mystery. Chambers's jour., 7th ser., IX (May)
302-304. ' [366
Smith, G. Elliot. Dragons and rain-gods. John Rylands lib. bul., V (Apr.) 317-'
380. [367!
Discusses the development of the dragon-legend among primitive peoples of the old and the new worlds j
and includes an account of the god most often depicted upon the ancient Maya and Aztec codices, the '
rain-god, known as Chac by the Mayas and as Tlaloc by the Aztecs. |
Staub, Walter. Some data about the pre-hispanic and the now living Huastec Indiana. '
Mexico antiguo, I (Sept.) 49-65. [368 i
Stovall, Mathilda. The god Quetzalcoatl of Mexico. So. American, VII (Oct.) 8.1
[369 1
Uhle, Max. Los aborigenes de Arica. Revista hist., VI, 1918, 5-26. [370 i
I
Uhle, Max, La arqueologia de Arica y Tacna. Soc. ecuatoriana estud. hist. I
AM. BOL., Ill (July) 1-48. [371
A study of the civilization of the prehistoric tribes of the region of Arica and Tacna in Chile.
TJrteaga, Horacio H. El arte de navegar entre los antiguos Peruanos. Revista
hist., V, 1913-1917, 363-391. [372
Villagomez, Pedro de. Exortaciones e instrucci6n acerca de las idolatrias de los Indies
del arzobispado de Lima. Lima: Sanmarti y ca. (Coleccion de libros y documen-
tos referentes a la historia del Peru. t. XII) [373
Ed. by Horacio H. Urteaga and Carlos A. Romero.
Wright, Hamilton M. An American monument erected three thousand years ago.
So. American, VII (July) 25. [374
A sculptured monolith from Quirigua, Guatemala, a relic of the prehistoric Maya race.
Discovery and Exploration.
Almeida, Fernando de. Ad Alexandra, vi. Pont. Max. Ferd. de||Almeida electi
Eccl'ie Septiii: & Sereniss:||Io. ii. Regis Portugallie oratoris Oratio.||[Romae:
Johannes Besicken, 1493. Boston, 1919] facsim.: 8 leaves. [Americana series;
photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 4] [376
There is no printed pagination, but the leaves of the original have been paged in ms.: 37-44.
Ms. note on fly-leaf, reproduced from fly-leaf of the original: Panzer, n. 507. 519. (Komae: Johannes
Besicken. 1493)
For description of work cf. Panzer, Annales tjrpographlci ... ad annum md, v. II, p. 507; Harrisse,
Bibl. amer. vet., no. 12.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the Bodleian library, October 1919.
Andrews, Charles M. Raleigh's place in American colonization. N. C. lit. and Ml
HIST. ASSOC. PROC, 19th auu. session, 55-76. [376 Hi
Arce, Enrique J. Amdrico Vespucio y el nombre de America. Rev. BiMESTREHlh
CuBANA, XIV (May) 129-148. [377 ff t
Arce, Enrique J. Early presentments regarding the existence of a western world.
Inter- America, II (Feb.) 154-159. [378 1
An examination of the writings of ancient and mediaeval times to ascertain what was known or thougkt |
in Europe regarding the ultramarine regions, prior to the discovery of America .
Avila, Pedro Arias de, known as Pedrarias DSvila. Lettere di Pietro Arias ||Capitano]
Generale della conqui||8ta del paese del Mar Occeano|jScripte alia Maesta Cesareajj
dalla Cipta di Panama del||le cose Vltimamente||scoperte nel Mar Me||ridiano decto
el Mar||Sur MDXXv. [Venice? 1525. Boston, 1919] facsim.: 8 leaves. [Americana
series; photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 2] [379 '
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the British museum, September 1919.
In verse. "The . . . poem . . . refers, we imagine, to the fiUbustering expedition of Diego de
ALmagro, Hernando deLuque and Francisco Pizarro, which sailed from Panama in . . . November. . •
1524, or in 1525."— Harrisse, Bibl. amer. vetus., no. 132.
d.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919.
23
Babcock,
98-106.
William H. The island of the Seven Cities. Geog. rev.
VII (Feb.)
[380
Contains extracts from old narratives and copies of ancient maps describing the legend regarding and
the location of the island of the Seven Cities, commonly caUed AntiUia. This island was supposed to
have been inhabited by refugees from Spam at the time of the Moorish invasion in 711, or shortly after.
Balch, Edwin Swift. Evolution and mystery in the discovery of America. Am.
PHIL. soc. PROC, LVIII, 55-73. [381
Booy, Theodoor de. Lope de Aguirre {ca. 1495-1561). Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II
(Nov.) 638-642. [382
Booy, Theodoor de. On the possibility of determining the first landfall of Columbus
by archaeological research. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Feb.) 55-61. [383
In regard to the identification of the island of San Salvador.
diapman, Charles E. Cortes and California. Grizzly Bear, XXV (Aug.) 3-4. [384
[Colombo, Cristoforo] Epistola de insulis de||nouo repertis. Impressa||parisiu8 in
capo gaillardi||[1493? Boston, 1919] facsim.: 8 leaves, illus. [Americana series;
photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 1] [385
At head of third leaf: Epistola Christofori Col|lom; cui etas nfa multii debet: de Insulis indie supra
Gangem||nuperinuentis. Ad quas perquiredas octauo antea mense au||spicijs ere inuictissimi Fernandi
Hispaniarum Regis missus ||fuerat; ad magnificii dfls Raphaelem Sanxis: eiusde serenissi||mi Regis
Tesaurariu missa: qua nobilis aclfatus vir Aliader||de Cosco ab Hispano ideomate in latinu conuertit:
tercio kl's||Maij. M.cccc.xciij. Potificatus Alexadri. vi. Anno primo:
Original printed by Guyot Marchant.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the only known perfect copy, in the John Carter Brown
Ubrary, August 1919.
[Colombo, Cristoforo] [Letter of Columbus to Luis de Santangel, dated 15 February,
1493. Barcelona, 1493] [Boston, 1919] facsim.: 12 leaves. [Americana series;
photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 3] [386
Spanish text, without title.
Tne text of the letter (4 leaves) is followed by 8 leaves (1 blank) reproduced from two fragmentary
Latinmss.,first, a life of St. Leocadia, second, an appeal presented to the Archduke Philip at Bruges,
May 12, 1497, by Johannes RousseUi, lord of Hernetes. For description of the Columbus letter, and the
accompanying mss. cf. J. B. Thacher, Christopher Columbus ... v. II, p. 10-27; also The Spanish letter
of Columbus to Luis de Sant' Angel . . . lately in the possession of Bernard Quaritch. 1893.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the New York pubUc library, September
1919.
[Cort6s, Hernando] [Des marches, iles et pays trovv^s et conqvits par les capitaines
dv tres illvstre . . . Charles v^] [Colophon: Imprim^ en Anuers par Michiel de
Hoocstraten [1522]] [Boston] facsim.: 30 leaves. [Americana series: photostat
reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 5] [387
No printed t.-p. for this work is known to exist; for the supplied title and its source, cf. Church cata-
logue, V. I, p. 114.
Fordescnptionof work c/. Church catalogue, V.I, p. 114-116; Harrisse, Bibl. amer. vetus. . . . addi-
tions, p. 86.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the Henry E. Huntington library,
November 1919.
Clineo-Vldal, R6mulo. Cuatro documentos in^ditos sobre la sepultura de Francisco
Pizarro. Revista historica, VI, no. 2, 171-179. [388
Ctineo-Vidal, R6mulo. For q\i6 Cristobal Colon paso a Espaiia; critica de los aconte-
cimientos que precedieron al descubrimiento del neuvo mundo. Revista hist.,
VI, no. 3, 270-276. [389
Ctineo Vidal, Rdmulo. Los restos de Col6n. Refgrma soc, XII (Oct. 1918)
162-172. [390
CUneo Vidal, R6nnilo. La tumba de Crist6bal Col6n. Revista hist., V, 1913-1917,
347-362. [391
Davenport, Harbert, and Joseph K. Wells. The first Europeans in Texas, 1528-1536.
SouTHW. HIST. QUAR., XXII (Jan.) 205-259. [392
An analysis of the narratives of Cabeza de Vaca.
jDeLestry, Edmond L. The fabled cities of Cibola; relation of the remarkable and
fruitless expedition of Coronado in the years 1528-1539. Western mag., XIII
(Mar .-June) 72-75, 108-111, 158-162, 198-201; XIV (July-Nov.) 10-14, 51-55,
96-100, 142-146, 186-190. [393
Isteves Pereira, Francisco Maria, ed. Cartas de Americo Vespucci. Soc. geog.
LiSBOA BOL., XXXVII (Oct.-Dec.) 273-289, 321-327, 331-336. [393a
L Carta de Amerigo Vespucci (a Piero Soderini) acerca das ilhas novamente descobertas nas suas
quatro viagens. II. Comega a segunda viagem. III. Comega a terceira viagem.
24 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATIOlSr.
Garcia Pelayo, Dionisio. Los tres privilegios de Colon. Union ibero-am. (May)
4-6. [3941
Giles, Lionel. Translations from the Chinese world map of Father Ricci. Geog.
JOUR., LIII (Jan.) 19-30. [396 j
Includes among the translations of the inscriptions of the map, several dealing with North America I
and South America, with explanatory notes.
Greenlaw, Edwin. Ralegh and British imperialism. N. C. lit. and hist, assoc. I
PROC, 19th ann. session, 30-41. [3961
Ralegh's imperial poUcy was founded upon two convictions; the necessity of sea power for England, '
to be secui-ed through naval strategy, through a great merchant marine, and through alliance with other '
sea powers against Spain, and secondly the advantages of a colonial empire in America as a rival to that I
of Spain. His guiding principle was the destruction of the Spanish menace. .
Heawood, Edward. The earliest maps of the New York region. Geog. jour., LIII |
(Apr.) 276-279. [397 ',
Brief summary of the results of the researches in European archives for early maps of America, made '
by Dr. F. C. Wieder and described by him in the Tijdschrift of the Royal Netherlands geographical i
society, ser. 2, v. XXXV, pt. 2, 1918. See no. 424 below. i
Hersey, Frank Wilson Cheney. Sir Walter Ralegh as a man of letters. N. C. lit.
and hist. ASSOC. PROC, 19th ann. session, 42-54. [398 ■
Innes, J. H. The lost island of Luisa. N. Y. state hist, assoc. jour., I (Apr.) i
87-97. [399 j
The writer presents arguments and deductions to support his hypothesis that the island of Luisa i
described by Verrazano in his famous letter of July 8, 1524, to the French king Francis I, was in fact part i
of what is now Long Island. |
Ispiztia, Segundo de. Una expedicion estupenda. Union ibero-am. (Apr.) 23-24. j
[4001
Brief account of the expedition of Lope de Aguirre in search of El Dorado, in 1560-61. [
Latorre, German. Diego Ribero, cosmografo y cartografo de la Casa de la contratacion [
de Sevilla. Seville [Centre oficial de estudios Americanistas de Sevilla] 29 p. ■
(Publicacion del Centre oficial de estudios Americanistas de Sevilla) [401 1
Lee, Sir Sidney. Raleigh's discovery of Guiana. Unit, emp., n. s. X (Jan.) 23-26. i
[402!
LeVasseur, N. Nationalite de Christophe Colomb. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIII
(Sept.) 304-305. [403 j
McAdie, Alexander G. Nova Albion — 1579. Am. antiq. soc. proc, n. s. XXVIII,
pt. 2, 189-198. [404 j
Locates the place of anchorage of Drake, in 1579, as under the lee of Point Eeyes, which the writer !
beUeves to be the locality which Drake called Nova Albion, from a fancied resemblance of the white
cliffs to those of his native land.
NordenskiSId, Eriand. Sydamerika; kampenomguld och silver 1498-1600. Uppsala: :
J. A. Lindblad. 211 p. illus. (incl. ports., maps, facsims.) [406 j
At bead of title: De geografiska upptackternas historia.
An historical and geographical resume of the discoveries and conquests of the Spanish conquistadores. j
Ocampo, Juan de. Los caciques heroicos: Paramaiboa. Guaicaipuro. Yaracuy. ,
Nicarogudn. Madrid: Editorial- America [1919?] 246 p. (Biblioteca americanaj
de historia colonial) [406 '
From manuscripts in Spanish hbraries. '
Contents. — El mar de las perlas (historia de la conquista de Nueva Andalucia) compuesta per el
maestre Juan de Ocampo, el ano de 1598. Guaicaipuro . . . obra escrita en frances por el abate Jean
Mouhn; version castellana del maestre Juan de Ocampo en 1601. El fiero Yaracuy (de los papeles de
Mencio Vargas) compuesta por Juan de Ocampo en 1605. Vida del guerrero barbaro Nicaroguan, cr6nica
compuesta por Fray Nemesio de la Concepcidn Zapata . . . 1684.
Opisso, Alfredo. Historia de Espaiia y de las republicas latino-americanas. . . .
Barcelona: Casa editorial "Gallach" [1919?] 25 v. illus., plates, ports., maps.
[407
Contents.— t. IX. El descubrimiento de America. Las guerras de Italia. . . . t. XI. America ',
Srecolombina. Descubridores y coloniEadores: Venezuela, Brasil, Honduras, Darien, La Florida,
Kjico. t. XII. Conquista de M^jico, Honduras y del Peru. Las ultimas conquistas: Colombia,
Venezuela, Chile, El Plata y Paraguay.
Pinz6n, J. Luis H. Martin Alonso Pinzon. Ilustracion espan. y amer. (July 30).
[408
Bead, Benjamin Maurice. A short history of slavery in America. St. Louis, Mo.:
"Amerika" print. 7 p. [409
Reprinted from the Fortnightly review, St. Louis, Mo.
Deals mainly with slavery in the Spanish colonies during the 16th and early 17th centuries.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAiSr HISTORY, 1919. 25
Reizler, S. La preparation du quatrieme centenaire de Magellan en Eepagne.
Geographie, XXXIII, 51-52. [410
Notice of the plans for the celebration of the 4th centenary of the discoveries of Magellan, by the 2(1
Congress of Spanish American history and geography, to be held at Seville, in the spring of 1921.
Richards, H. M. M. Who discovered America? Lebanon go. hist. soc. pap., VII,
no. 11, 389-416. [411
An account of the Norse discovery of America.
Richman, Irving Berdine. The Spanish conquerors; a chronicle of the dawn of
empire overseas. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] xi, 238 p. illus., plates,
ports., maps. (The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor . . . v. II)
[412
Contents. — West and East. Columbus and new lands. Balboa and the Pacific. Cortes and
Mexico. Spanish conquerors in Central America. Pizarro and the Incas.
lodrlguez-Navas, ManueL Magallanes. Cultura hispano-americana, aiio VIII,
ndm. 84 (Nov. 15) 17-20. [413
lognoni, Rachele. Sui documenti contradditori relativi a Cristoforo Colombo.
Geografia, VI (Nov. 1918) 428^34. [414
lunclman, Sir Walter. Drake, Nelson and Napoleon. London: T. Fisher Unwin.
373 p. ports., plates. [416
Drake and the fleet tradition: p. 17-60.
Janta Cruz, Alonso de. Islario general de todas las islas del mundo dirigido a la S.
C. R. M. del rey don Phelipe nuestro senor por Al.° de Santa Cruz su cosmographo
mayor. Real. soc. geog. bol., LXI, no. 4, 606-728. [416
Contents.— Cuarta parte. Tierra del Labrador. Isla de San Jvan; islas de las Virgines. La
Bermuda e islas adiacentes a la tierra que descubrio el piloto Estevan Gomez. Isla de los Lucayos.
La Isla espanola o Santo Domingo. La isla Cuba o Fernandina. Jamaica o Santiago. San Joan o
Boriquen con las yslas de los Canibales. Trinidad, Cubagua, Margarita y otras en la costa de Venezuela.
Yucatan, con las yslas junto a ella. Tenuxtitlan, Mexico. Yslas de los golfos de Panama, Nombre de
Dios. Yslas junto a la costa del Brasil. Yslas junto a las provincias de San Vicente, y Cananea y Rio
de la Plata. Tierra o ysla al medio dia del estrecho de Magallanes .
cMfer, Ernst. Fernando Cortes und die Eroberung von Mexico. Spanien; Zeits.
F. Auslandskunde, I, 253-263. [417
heen, Daniel Robinson. Location of Fort Crevecoeur. [Peoria, 111.: Peoria print-
ing and stationery co.] 22 p. illus., map. [418
Fort Crevecoeur was the first structure erected by white men in what is now the state of Illin.ois'
It was built in 1680 by the Sieur de la Salle.
hepard, Isabel S. A remarkable episode in the history of Colombia; three conquista-
dores claim discovery of Bogota. So. American, VIII (Nov.) 16. . [419
The three conquistadores are Gonzalo Ximenes de Quesada, Sebastian Benalcazar, and Nicholas
Federmann.
teensby, H. P. Nordboernes Opdagelse af Amerika. Ymer, XXXIX, 192-203.
[420
lallette, Marc F. A glance at some im_portant facts in early American history. Am.
j Cath. quae, rev., XLIV (July) 387-411. [421
Concerned with the discoveries of Coiumbus and his successors, and their effect upon the nations of
Europe.
allette, Marc F. Jacques Cartier. Am. Cath. quar. rev., XLIV (Jan.) 40-51.
^espucci, Amerigo] Mundus nouus. || [Paris: Berthold Remboldt, 1504? Boston,
1 1919] facsim. : 16 leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproductions by the Massa-
chusetts historical society, no. 6] [423
Black letter. Date in ms. below title: 1503?
For place and date of publication, and description c/. Church catalogue, no. 18.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the New York public library, December,
1919.
ieder, F. C. Onderzoek naar de oudste kaarten van de omgeving van New York-
K. Ned. Aardrijkskundig Genootschap, Tijdschrift, ser. 2, v. XXXV, 1918, pt.
2, 235-260. [424
rench, Winifride. Henry Hudson; to whose memory the members of the English-
speaking union are providing a window in St. Ethelburga's, London. Landmark,
I (Mar.) 157-164. [426
26 AMEKICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION".
!
Later Discovery and Exploration. I
Caron, Ivanhog. Pierre Gauthier de Varennes de la V^rendrye et ees fils. Canada!
PRANp., II (Apr.) 170-182. [426|
Escobar, Francisco de. Father Escobar's relation of the Onate expedition to Cali-i
fornia. (Here made known and published for the first time). Cath. hist, rev., V'
(Apr.) 19-41. [427|
Translated and edited by Herbert Eugene Bolton. [
Diary kept by Father Escobar during the expedition from the Rio Grande "to discover the South'
sea or Gulf of California," tinder command of Juan de Onate, governor of New Mexico, in 1604. Thef
diary fills "a serious gap in the documentation of the early history of the southwest." ;
Sanchez, Nellie Van de Grift. The voyage of Juan P6rez to the northwest coast in!
1774. Grizzly Bear, XXV (Nov.) 4-5, 15. [428!
Tremaudan, A. H. de. A propos des freres La Verendrye. Canada fran^., Ili
(Mar.) 109-117. [429j
Corrects some errors commonly made in regard to the discoveries of La Verendrye and his sons. |
i
^ L
UNITED STATES.
Description and Travel.
Ball, John. Letters of John Ball, 1832-1833. [Ed. by M. M. Quaife] Miss. Valley
HIST. REV., V (Mar.) 450-468. [430
Describes his journey to Oregon as a member of the Nathaniel Wyeth trading expedition.
Bedford, John R. A tour in 1807 down the Cumberland, Ohio and Mississippi rivers
from Nashville to New Orleans. Tenn. hist, mag., V (Apr.-July) 40-68, 107-128.
[431
Brissot de Warville, Jacques Pierre. New travels in the United States of America.
Bowling Green, O.: Historical publications co. 544 p. (Great American historical
classics series) [432
First prublished, Paris, 1791, in 3 vols. The present work contains a translation of the first 2 vols. only.
Travels in North America in the years 1780, 1781 and 1782, by the Marquis de Chastellux: p. [319}-
502. A ramble of six thousand miles through the United States of America, by S. A. Ferrall . . . :
p. [503]-531.
Chamberlain, Ebenezer Mattoon. Journal of Ebenezer Mattoon Chamberlain, 1832-5.
Ind. mag. hist., XV (Sept.) 233-259. [433
"A diary of a journey from Maine to Indiana, together with a description of the villages and cities,
manners and customs of the pioneers."
Condict, Lewis. Journal of a trip to Kentucky in 1795. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s.
IV, 108-127. [434
Journal of a horseback trip from Morristown, N. J., to Kentucky.
Elliott, T. C. David Thompson's journeys in the Spokane country. Wash. hist.
QUAR., X (Jan.) 17-20. [436
Journal of David Thompson, March 25-29, 1812: p. 18-20.
David Thompson was the agent of the North West company, at Spokane House in the Oregon country.
These journals furnish the original record of travel and trade in the Spokane countrv.
Cont. from v. IX, 1918.
Fages, Pedro. An historical, political, and natural description of California. By Don
Pedro Fages. Translated by Herbert I. Priestley. Oath. hist, rev., IV (Jan.)
486-509; V (Apr.) 71-90. [436
One of the earliest descriptions of California extant, written by one of the participants in the first
expedition of Spamards to Monterey in 1769. The original manuscript, dated Nov. 20, 1775, is in the
Mexican archives, Museo nacional. It was written as a continuation to the two previously printed
wor^s on the Galvez expedition.
ohnson, Clifton. What to see in America. N. Y.: Macmillan co.; London: Macmil-
lan and co. xv, 541 p. illus., plates, maps. (His American highways & byways
I series) [437
indley, Harlow. Western travel, 1800-1820. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (Sept.)
167-191. [438
diller, S . V. Copy of letter written by S . V. Miller from Salem, Oregon, November 24,
1852. Wy. hist. soc. miscellanies, 31-40. [439
Describes his journey from Pleasant Grove, Indiana, to Oregon.
!aylor, Rowse. A journey by carriage from Newport, Rhode Island, to Smithfield,
Ohio, 1811. Friends' hist. soc. bul., IX, no. 1 (May) 18-26. [440
Cont. from v. VIII, Nov. 1918.
Account of a trip by a family intending to settle in what was then the far west,
uckerman, Frederick. Gleanings from the visitors' albums of Ethan Allen Crawford.
Appalachia, XIV (June) 367-383. [441
Notes from the visitors' albums as the register was then caUed, kept by Ethan Allen Crawford during
the time he was proprietor of the public house on the Giant's Grave in Nash and Sawyer's Location,
the first White Mountain hotel, 1823-1836.
59976°— 22 4 27
28. AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Comprehensive.
Bailey, Carolyn Sherwin. Broad stripes and bright stars; stories of American history.
Springfield, Mass.: Milton Bradley co. 240, [3] p. plates. (For the children's
hour series) [442
Bastlde, Charles. Collection America, [t. 1-12] Paris: Renaissance du livre. 2 v.
in 12 nos. ports., plates. [443
A history of America, in 12 small unboimd volumes. Intended for French readers.
Each number has been entered separately under its individual title.
Bastlde, Charles. L'expansion americaine. Paris: Renaissance du livre. 66, [4] p.
plates. (Collection America [VII]) [444
Bastlde, Charles. La France et I'Amerique dans I'histoire. Paris: Renaissance du
livre. [5], 334-400 p. ports., plates. (Collection America [V]) [445
Contents.— Les Frangais en Amerique au seizieme siecle. L'cBuvre de Colbert. Le dix-huitieme
siecle. La pertedu Canada. La guerre del' Independanceet La Fayette. L'intervention de la France.
Apres le traite de Versailles, Le dix-neuvieme siecle.
Bastlde, Charles. Qu'est-ce que I'Amerique? Qu'est-ceque les Americains? Paris:
La Renaissance du livre. 78, [1] p. plates, map. (Collection americaine [t. I]) 1
[446 i
On cover: Collection America. At head of title: Collection americaine. ,
Bastide, Charles. Le role de I'Amerique dans le monde. Paris: Renaissance du !
livre. [5], 366-424, [8] p, plates. (Collection America [XII]) [447 '
Channing, Edward, Histoire des Etats-Unis d' Amerique (1765-1865). Traduit de !
I'anglais par G. Guillemot-Magitot. Paris: Colin, iii, 435 p. [448 i
Translation of Channing's " The United States of America, 1765-1865," N. Y. and London: Macmillan.
1896. (
Chesterton, Cecil. A history of the United States. With an introduction by G. K. '
Chesterton. London: Chatto and Windus. xix, 251p. port. [449;
American edition, pub. at N. Y.: George H. Doran co. '
Farrand, Max. The development of the United States from colonies to a world power. ^
Preface by Viscount Bryce. London: Jack. 324 p. [460 '
EngUsh edition of the volume with the same title published at Boston and N. Y. (Houghton Mifflin '
CO.) in 1918.
Farrand, Max. Les Etats-Unis; formation historique de la nation americaine. j
Ouvrage traduit de I'anglais. Preface de M. Jules Cambon. Paris: Hachette.
xix, 232 p. [451
Translation of " The development of the United States from colonies to a world power," pub. at Boston
and N. Y. (Houghton Mifflin co.) in 1918.
Fish, Carl Russell. The development of American nationality. Revised. N. Y.,
Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. xii, 564, xiii-xxxix p. ports., maps. (A short
history of the American people, [v. II]) [452
Fish, Carl Russell. The path of empire; a chronicle of the United States as a world
power. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 305 p. ports. (The chronicles
of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XLVI) [453
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Among the subjects treated are: The Monroe doctrine. Controversies with Great Britain, Blaine and
Pan Americanism, The United States and the Pacific, and the war with Spain and relationships gro^^ing
out of it.
Hovelaque, Henri L6on. Precis de I'histoire des Etats-Unis d'Amerique. Paris:
Delagrave. 282 p. [454
An interpretation of the American nation, written by an admirer.
Livre I. Les colonisations paralleles [French and English] Livre II. Le triomphe des colonies
anglaises. Livre III. La nation. A la recherche del' Unite. Livre IV. L'Unit6.
Huntington, Ellsworth. The red man's continent; a chronicle of aboriginal America.
New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] xii, 183 p. plates, fold. maps. (The chroni-
cles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... V.I) [455
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
The writer has aimed first to present in readable form the main facts about the geographical environ-
ment of American history. In addition, the influence of geographical conditions upon the life of the
primitive Indians has been emphasized.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 293-294.
Leflferts, Walter. American leaders. Phila, and London: Lippincott. 2 v. illus.,
ports. [456
Biographies of national leaders from the Revolutiog to the present, written especially for children
of grade five.
:
1919. 29
Stevens, Ida L. Historical America; a brief and interesting history of each state of the
Union. [St. Louis: Greeley print, co.] 64 p. ports., map. [467
Sumichrast, F. C. de. The making of America. London: P. S. King and son, ltd.
343 p. maps. [458
"An attempt to relate briefly the general outlines of the events which led to the revolt of the thirteen
colonies in America and the manner in which the American nation thereafter developed into the mighty
power which it is to-day." Written by an Englishman in an endeavor to interpret to his fellow Bntons,
the national characteristics and development of the American republic.
Tappan, Eva March. The little book of our country. N. Y.: Pub. for the Educa-
tional bureau, National war work council of Young men's Christian associations by
Association press. 86 p. 14°™. [459
Wallis, Charles W. The American republic: a dramatization of the history of the
United States in six acts. Los Angeles, Cal.: H. A. Sturdy co. 85 p. [460
Weill, Georges. Histoire des Etats-Unis de 1787 a 1917. Paris: Alcan. [6], 216 p.
plates, ports., maps. (Bibliotheque France-Amerique) [461
Text-books, Outlines, etc.
Atkinson, Alice Minerva. An introduction to American history, European beginnings.
Rev. ed. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Ginn and co. xix, 344 p. illus., maps. [462
Beard, Charles Austin, and William Chandler Bagley. A manual to accompany The
history of the American people. N. Y.: Macmillan co. 61 p. [463
Bidwell, Mae Crossman. The Confederation and the Constitution. Hist, outlook,
X (May) 260-262. [464
A plan for five days' work for fourth year high school, with bibliography.
Blaisdell, Albert F., and Francis K. Ball. Pioneers of America. Boston: Little,
Brown, and co. vii, 154 p. plates. [465
"Intended to be a supplementary reader on American history, for use in the fourth and fifth grades."
i Bourne, Henry Eidridge, and Elbert Jay Benton. A history of the United States.
' Boston, N. Y. [etc.] D. C. Heath and co. viii, 563, xliii p. port., illus., maps.
[466
Channing, Edward. A students' history of the United States. 4th rev. ed. N. Y.:
Macmillan. xxxi, 627, xxix p. illus., port., maps. [467
I Connecticut. Board of education. Dept. of Americanization. Information regard-
II ing naturalization, with outline of history and government in the. United States.
I By George M. Lasell. Hartford [Board of education of Connecticut] 45 p. [468
Coulomb, Charles A. Helping the elementary history teacher. Hist, outlook,
X (Nov.) 455-458. [469
Includes a list of questions for teachers, prepared for the elementary public schools of Philadelphia,
"as standardization tests, with the object of directing the teaching into what is beUeved to be the
proper method."
i Donnelly, T. F. A primary history of the United States, for intermediate classes.
N. Y. and Cincinnati: Am. bk. co. 242, xxii p. illus., map. [470
Eggleston, Edward. The new century history of the United States. Rev. and enl.
N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 431, 49 p. illus., ports., maps. [471
Prefatory note signed: George Gary Eggleston.
Estill, Harry Fishbume. The beginner's history of our coimtry. Dallas, . Tex.:
The Southern pub. co. vi, 312 p. illus. [472
Fite, Emerson David. History of the United States. 2d ed., rev. N. Y.: Holt,
xii, 597 p. illus., ports., maps. [473
Grordy, Wilbur Fisk. A history of the United States for schools. New ed. N. Y.,
Chicago [etc.] Scribner. Ixi, 541 p. illus., plates, port., maps. [474
Gruilday, Peter. Outline of an introduction to the study of American church history.
Washington: Priv. ^ print. 13 p. (The Catholic university of America . . .
American church history seminar publications, no. 3) [476
auitteau, William Backus. Our United States; a history. N. Y., Boston [etc.]
j Silver, Burdett and CO. xii, 637, xliv p. illus., plate, maps. [476
Also issued in 2 vols.
30 AMERICAI^ HISTOKICAL ASS0CIATI0:N'.
Harding, Samuel Bannister, and Margaret Snodgrass Harding. Old world back-
ground to American history; an elementary history for the grades or junior high
school. Rev. ed. of "The story of Europe." Chicago and N. Y.: Scott, Foresman
and CO. xx, 378 p. illus., maps. [The Lake history stories] [477
Hart, Albert Bushnell. Essentials in American history (from the discovery to the
present day). N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 600, xlviii p. illus., ports.,
maps. (Essentials in history) [478
1st ed., 1905. 583 p.
Hart, Albert Bushnell. A teacher's manual accompanying the Hart-Bolton American
history maps, by Albert Bushnell Hart, assisted by David Maydole Matteson, and
Herbert Eugene Bolton. Chicago: Denoyer-Geppert co. 116 p. [478a
Hawkins, Albert K. A brief review of United States history, including America's
part in the great war, compiled for candidates for West Point, Annapolis, and the
civil service. [Annapolis, Md.: Capital pub. co.] 159 p. [479
Hockett, Homer C, and Arthur M. Schlesinger. A syllabus of United States history,
1492-1919. 2d rev. ed. Columbus, O. 95 p. [480
Lee, Albert Sherman. U. S. history condensed. Huntington, W. Va.: The author.
64 p. [481
McCarthy, Charles Hallan. History of the United States for Catholic schools. N . Y.,
Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. vi, 478, vii-lx p. illus., ports., maps. [482
Mace, William H., and George Petrie. Mace-Petrie American school history. Chi-
cago and N. Y. : Rand, McNally and co. xi, 466, xiii-lxxix p. illus., ports., maps.
[483
Based in part upon William H. Mace's A school history of the United States, pub. in 1904.
McKlnley, Albert Edward. Illustrated topics for American history. Rev. and
enl. ed. Phila.: McKinley pub. co. [-216] p. illus., maps, facsims. [484
McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham. A history of the American nation. New ed.,
thoroughly rev. and largely rewritten. N. Y. and Chicago: Appleton. xvi, 586,
xliii p. illus., ports., maps. (Twentieth century text-books) [486
McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham, and Claude Halstead Van Tyne. A history of
the United States for schools. N. Y. and Chicago: Appleton. xiii, 503, Ixxii p.
illus., maps. [486
1st edition, 1911. This new edition of 1919 contains two altered chapters and a new one on the events
of the World war.
McMaster, John Bach. A primary history of the United States. Rev. and enl.
N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 250, x p. illus., maps. [487
1st ed., 1901.
Montana. Dept. of public instruction. History and civics. Course of study for
rural schools of Montana, 1919. Prepared by the Department of public instruc-
tion, Helena. Helena, Mont.: Independent publishing co. p. 235-330. [488
O'Hara, John P. A history of the United States. N. Y.: Macmillan. xii, 461 p.
illus., maps. [489
Persinger, Clark Edmund. Student's outline of American history from 1824 to 1919;
second semester of a one-year course for high schools, normal schools and colleges.
Chicago and Lincoln: The University pub. co. 77 p. [490
Beed, Harry E. Syllabus topics in American history for seventh and eighth grades,
with required outline maps and regents questions. Syracuse, N. Y.: Iroquois pub.
CO. 64 p. illus., maps. [491
Regents' questions and answers; American history with civics. Am. educ, XXII
(Jan., May) 231-235, 420-425; XXIII (Dec.) 183-185. [492
Savage, W. J. Forward looking lessons in U. S. history, up-to-date — alive, for seventh
grade. San Francisco, Calif.: Harr Wagner pub. co. 126 p. [493
Steele, Joel Dorman. Barnes's school history of the United States, by Joel Dorman
Steele . . . and Esther Baker Steele. . . . Rev. and enl. N.Y., Cincinnati [etc.]
Am. bk. CO. 400, Ixii p. illus., ports., maps. [494
Earlier editions, 1903 and 191.3.
Stephenson, Nathaniel Wright. An American history. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Ginn
and CO. xi, 604, xlvii p. illus., plates, ports., maps. [49$
WEITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 31
Thompson, Alta E. Plan for a biographical study of Abraham Lincoln. Popular
EDUC, XXXVI (Feb.) 310-311. [496
Thompson, Waddy. A history of the people of the United States. Boston, N . Y. [etc.]
D. C. Heath, xlviii, 523, li p. illus., ports., maps. [497
Thompson, Waddy. A history of the United States. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] D. C.
Heath, x, 526, [2], 62, xxxvii p. illus,, port., maps. [498
1st ed., 1904. The 1919 edition has been carried down to date.
Webster, Hanson Hart. Americanization and citizenship ; lessons in community and
nationalideals for new Americans. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Houghton Mifflin co. 138 p.
illus., ports., maps. [499
Woodburn, James Albert, and Thomas Francis Moran. Elementary American his-
tory and government. After the war edition. N. Y. and Chicago: Longmans,
vu, 517, ix-li p. illus., ports., plates, maps. [600
This ' ' after the war edition " embodies the results of a through revision of the text, as has been neces-
sitated by the changed viewpoint m the interpretation of American history brought about by the war.
Several chapters dealing with the world war have been added.
National Characteristics and Ideals.
Andrews, Matthew Page. English origin of American democracy. Educ. founda-
tions, XXXI (Nov.) 149-153; and Landmark, I (July-Aug.) 419-422, 523-526. [501
Cestre, Charles. Coup d'oeil sur la civilisation am^ricaine. Rev. internat. en-
SEiGNEMENT, XXXIXe anu. (July 15) 247-265, [502
Emphasizes the community of ideals of France and America.
Cestre, Charles. L'idealisme d'action aux Etats-Unis. Rev. synthese hist.,
XXIX, 205-219. [503
Chinard, Gilbert. La doctrine de ram^ricanisme des Puritains au president Wilson.
Paris: Hachette. 90 p. [504
City club of Chicago. Ideals of America; analyses of the guiding motives of con-
temporary American life by leaders in various fields of thought and action. Pre-
pared for the City club of Chicago 1916-1919. Chicago: McClurg. xv, 324p. [505
Contents.— Can America's ideal be consciously shaped? by G. E. Hooker. Ideals in politics, by
F. D. Bramhall. Idealsinlaw, by J. B. Winslow. Idealsinlabor, by J. P. Frey. Ideals of science, by
J, M, Coulter. Ideals in education, by E. C. Moore. Ideals in business, by A. E. Swanson. Ideals in
"society," by Elsie C. Parsons. Ideals in music, by E. Dickinson. Ideals in religion, by G. A. Coe.
Ideals in philosophy, by H. A. Overstreet. Ideals in literature, by R. M. Lovett. Human progress,
by A. B. Pond.
Erskine, John. American character. Fortn. REV.,n. s. CV (May)' 706-722. [506
Hazeltine, Harold Dexter. English influence on American ideals of justice and liberty.
In The America of today; being lectures delivered at the local lectures summer
meeting of the University of Cambridge, 1918. Ed. by Gaillard Lapsley. Cam-
bridge: The Univ. press, p. 3-29. [507
Huizinga, J. Mensch en menigte in Amerika: vier essays over moderne beschavings-
geschiedenis. Haarlem: H. D. Tjeenk Willink en Zoon, 1918. xi, 226 p. [508
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 558-559.
Hunt, Gaillard. The American idea. Cath. world, CIX (June) 289-297. [509
Mathiez, Albert, La democratic franyaise et la democratic am^ricaine. Annales
REVOL., n. s. XI (May) 359-375. [510
Schafer, Joseph. Historic ideals in recent politics. Am. hist, assoc. rep., 1916, I,
457-468. [511
Weulersse, G. La tradition guerriere am^ricaine et I'id^al national am^ricain.
Grande rev., XXIIIe ann. (June) 649-663. [512
Miscellaneous.
% I Evolution of the Stars and Stripes; a storj^ of the origin of Old Glory and how it grew
fi! out of emblems adopted by the American colonists. State service, III (June)
1 ] 59-63. [513
Hastings, George E. Some new evidence on the origin of the Stars and Stripes.
Hist, outlook, X (Apr.) 181-184. 614
S2 AME]aicA:Kr histohical assooiatio:^.
Jusserand, Jean Jules. Brothers in arms, a new edition of "With Americans of past'
and present days," with a new chapter "On Lafayette's birthday." Chautauqua, |
N. Y.: The Chautauqua press, xiii, 350 p. (Chautauqua home reading series)!
[5151
1st ed.— N. Y.: Scribner, 1916.
Paris edition (Hachette & c^e) has title: En Am^rique jadis & maintenant.
Contents.— Dedication. Preface to new edition. Rochambeau and the French in America, from
unpublished documents. Major L'Enfant and the federal city. Washington and the French. Abra-
ham Ivincoln. The Franklin medal. On Lafayette's birthday and the anniversary of the Marne.
From war to peace.
LeRoy, J. Rutgers. Inscriptions on the tombstones of Americans buried in Pere La
Chaise cemetery, Paris , France. Pa. mag. hist., XLIII (July) 251-256. [516 j
Muirhead, James F. America's links with Westminster Abbey. Landmark, 1 1
(May) 273-277. [517 j
Ohlinger, Gustavus. The German conspiracy in American education. N. Y.: '
George H. Doran co. 113 p. [518 !
[Woodman, Thomas G.] A brief history of our flag; its past, present and possible I
future. [Los Angeles: Printed by A. H. Gaarder]. 24 numb, leaves, col. illus. i
[5191
Colonial History to 1763. I
General.
Andrews, Charles M. Colonial folkways; a chronicle of American life in the reign of
the Georges. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 255 p. plates, port. (The j
chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. IX) [520 I
Bedwell, C. E. A. The Middle Temple and America. Landmark, I (Mar.) 145-149. i
[521 :
Traces the association between the members of the Inn and the early settlement of the colonies, and ,
shows how the Middle Temple contributed substantially to embedding the English common law in the
American system of law.
Bieber, Ralph Paul. The Lords of trade and plantations, 1675-1696. Allentown, Pa.:
H. R. Haas and co. 102 p. [622
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Pennsylvania, 1918.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (.luly) 732.
Bolton, Charles Knowles. The founders; portraits of persons born abroad who came
to the colonies in North America before the year 1701, with an introduction, bio-
graphical outlines and comments on the portraits. [Boston] The Boston athen-
aeum. 2 V. ports. (Publications of the Robert Charles Billings fund issued by
the Trustees of the Boston athenaeum, VI) [523
The introduction gives an account of the portraiture of the period .
Bond, Beverley W., jr. The quit-rent system in the American colonies. With an ;
. introduction by Charles M. Andrews. New Haven: Yale univ. press. 492 p. \
(Yale historical publications. Miscellany, VI) [523a {
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 802-804; Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Nov.) 692-693.
Buifington, A. H. British and French imperialism in North America. Hist, out- i
LOOK, X (Dec.) 489-496. ' [524 \
A study of the two chief types of modern imperialism as exhibited in the colonial policy of France
and England in North Americain the 17th and 18th centuries. The colonial policy of France in America
was definite and continuous, its principal feature being the occupation of the interior; that of England
was haphazard and opportunist, her colonial expansion being the natural result of her commercial
expansion.
Crane, Vemer W. The southern frontier in Queen Anne's war. Am. hist, rev., j
XXIV (Apr.) 379-395. [526 '■
"It was on the frontier, in the course of Queen Anne's war, that the conflict was first clearly joined '
for the control of the valley of the Mississippi."
Frothingham, T. G. Ship Bethel. U. S. N. inst. proc, XLV (Oct.) 1695-1697. [526
The ship "Bethel" of Boston, in 1748, captured the Spanish merchant ship "Jesu Maria and
Joseph" during the war between England and Spain.
Kleefisch, J. Untersuchungen zur franzosischen Kolonialgeschichte in Nordamerika.
Diss. Miinster. 1917. 89 p. [526a ;
Diss. Universitat Miinster, Westphaha, Germany.
Kimmel, Herbert. The status of mathematics and mathematical instruction during
the colonial period. School and soc, IX (Feb.) 195-202. [527
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 33
^ I Lane, John E. Daniel Turner and the first degree of doctor of medicine conferred in
* the English colonies of North America by Yale college in 1723. Ann. med. hist.,
^;| II (Dec.) 367-380. [528
lonn, Ella. The French council of commerce in relation to American trade. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., VI (Sept.) 192-219. [529
Deals with the period from 1700 to 1734.
Storer, Malcolm. Admiral Vernon medals, 1739-1742. Mass. hist. soc. proc.
11 LII, 187-276. [530
I "This paper is baaed upon the series of medals struck to commemorate the operations in the West
I Indies during the years 1739-1741 of Vice-Admiral Edward Vernon, namely, the capture of Porto Bello,
the fiasco at Cartagena and the contemplated attack upon Havana." This series is classed among
American medals rather than English, as the actions took place not far from our coasts, and the colo-
nists were vitally interested in the issues over which they were fought.
French and Indian War.
Le combat de I'Atalante k la Pointe-aux-Trembles. Bul. recherches hist., XXV
(Feb.) 58-61. [531
A naval engagement of the French and Indian war, May 16, 1760.
Regional Colonial.
[Arranged geographically]
Andrews, Charles M. The fathers of New England; a chronicle of the Puritan com-
monwealths. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 210 p. plates, ports., map.
(The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. VI) [532
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Contents.— The coming of the Pilgrims. The Bay colony. Completing the work of settlement.
Early New England life. An attempt at colonial union. Winning the charters. Massachusetts
defiant. Wars with the Indians. The Bay colony disciplined. The Andros regime in New England.
The end of an era.
Jemegan, Marcus W. Compulsory education in the American colonies. School
REV., XXVII (Jan.) 24-43. [633
t Contents.— New England (continued).
emorandum on New England [1744] Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXX (Sept.)
265-269. [534
Taken from a collection of manuscripts from the archives of France, v. Ill, p. 211 and following.
Translated from the French by Rev. B. Randolph.
iner, George L. Types of early New England gravestones. R. I. hist. soc. coll.,
XII (Apr.) 33-45. * ' [535
Gravestones of the colonial period.
IWinthrop, Wait Still. A letter written by Cap*. Wait Winthrop from M'. Smiths
j in Narragansett to Gov'. John Winthrop of the colony of Connecticut. Issued at
the General court of the Society of colonial wars in the state of Rhode Island and
Providence Plantations by its governor, Henry Dexter Sharpe . . . and the Council
of the society, August 8, 1919. Providence: Printed for the Society by the Stand-
ard print. CO. 31 numb, leaves. 23^"™. [536
"Printed from the original ms. in the archives of the state of Connecticut."
Describes his participation in an expedition to the Narragansett Indians to negotiate, or compel,
a treaty whereby they should give up to the Bay colony the refugees from the Wampanoags, during
King Philip's war.
Batchellor, Albert S. Qualifications of electors and persons elected to public dfl&ce
under the colonial government. Granite mo., LI (Feb.) 65-69. [637
^pham, George B. An Indian fight on Barbers Mountain. Granite mo., LI (Sept.)
407-411. [638
Indian fight in August, 1708.
|Joston public library. A memorial of the Pilgrims; the presentation to the city of
Boston in Massachusetts of an ancient railing from the city of Boston in Lincoln-
shire. Boston, Mass.: Printed at the Boston public library and issued by the
trustees. [6], 14 p. plates, facsims. [539
l5radford, William. Governor Bradford's letter to Governor Winthrop. Boston
PUB. lib. bul., 4th ser., I (Apr.) 92-94. [640
Letter addressed to Governor Winthrop and the Council of Massachusetts, dated Plymouth> Feb. 6,
1631. It relates to the establishment of a good understanding between the colonies m regard to the
coming and going between the two colonies of indentured servants.
^34 AMEBIC AN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOlir. i
I
Dowse, William Bradford Homer. The Plymouth medallion, 1620-1920. Mass'
msT. soc. PROC, LII, 165-168. [54i
Harris, Eendel. Three letters of John Eliot and a bill of lading of the "Mayflower, 'j
In the Bulletin of the John Rylands library, Manchester [Eng.] v. V, nos. 1 and 21
August 1918 to March 1919. p. 102-110. [64:|
The letters were written in 1652 and 1654, and contain interesting details as to the work of Christian t
ising the Indians. The bill of lading is of goods supplied to John EUot by an English friend who tool
a keen interest in his work among the Indians, and is of special interest as the goods were carried oi
the Mayflower. i
Kennedy, Sinclair. The Pilgrims and next year's tercentenary. Landmark, J
(Aug.) 487-490. [54!!
Macfadyen, D. "The Pilgrims and their history." Spectator, CXXII (Apr. 5
422-423. [54'^
Takes issue with certain statements made in the book of this title, written by Roland Usher, and
published by Macmillan in 1918. \
Morse, Charles. The "Mayflower" tercentenary. Canad. mag., LIU (Sept.)
353-357. [64ij
New Hampshire. House of representatives. Report of the Committee on celebraj
tion of tercentenary centennial of landing of Pilgrims, to the House of representa-i
tives, January 21, 1919. January session, 1919. [Concord] 6 p. [54(1
Charles S. Emerson, chairman. j
The Pilgrims and their history. Spectator, CXXII (Mar. 29) 396-397. [541!
A review of the book with the same title, by Roland G. Usher, N. Y. and London: Macmillan, 19181
Warren, Winslow. Governor Edward Winslow. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LIIJ
323-334. [5481
Weardale, Lord. An Anglo-American festival; the "Mayflower" tercentenary.!
Contemp. rev., CXVI (Nov.) 511-517. [54S[
Wrench, Winifride. Bradford's story of the Pilgrim fathers and how it was retumedi
to America. Landmark, I (June-July) 361-364, 435-439. [56CJ
Story of the tracing of the lost manuscript of Bradford's history to the library of the Bishops of Lon-j
don at Fulham Palace and its return to the governor of Massachusetts in April, 1897. !
Adams, Brooks. The emancipation of Massachusetts; the dream and the reality.!
Rev. and enl. ed. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. vi, 534 p. [6511
First edition, Boston, 1887. i
The preface to the new edition (p. [3]-168) is a statement of the author's present view of the philosophy!
of history.
Contents.— Preface. The commonwealth. The Antinomians. The Cambridgeplatform. Th«l
Anabaptists. The Quakers. .The scire facias. The witchcraft. Brattle church. Harvard college.}
The lawyers. The revolution. I
Rev. m: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 325-326. j
Chase, Levi Badger. The Bay path and along the way. [Norwood, Mass.] Printed';
for the author, xxii, 246 p. illus., plates, maps. [552;
Identifies the location of the old Indian path from the eastern Massachusetts settlements to Cormec-j
ticut, over which the company led by the Rev. Thomas Hooker travelled, with notes on the Indian;
history of the region.
Documents relating to Marblehead, Mass. [1694-1701] Essex inst. hist, coll.,
LV (Jan., July) 78-80, 229-234. [553^
Dow, George Francis, ed. Essex county quarterly court records relating to Topsfield
[1668-1669] Topsfield hist. soc. coll., XXIV, 127-140. [654 1
Cont. from v. XXIII, 1918. |
Dow, George Francis, ed. Topsfield selectmen's records, 1704-1730. Topsfield hist. '
soc. COLL., XXIV, 90-112. [555
Essex CO., Mass. Quarterly court. Records and files of the Quarterly courts ofi
Essex county, Massachusetts, v. VII. 1678-1680. Salem, Mass.: Pub. by the,
Essex institute. 489 p. [556 1
Evans, Conway. Witchcraft in Salem [Massachusetts] Englishwoman, 11th year'
(Sept.) 214-222. [557!
Ford, Worthington Chauncey. Ezekiel Carr6 and the French church in Boston.'
Mass. hist. soc. proc, LII, 121-132. [568 1
Ezekiel Carr^, once minister in the town of La Roche-Chalais, in Dordogne, France, was minister |
of the French Protestant church in Boston in 1690.
1919. 35
Eittredge, George Lyman. Doctor Robert Child, the remonstrant. Cambridge:
J. Wilson and son. 146 p. [659
Reprinted from the Publications of the Colonial society of Massachusetts, v. XXI.
A study of the career of Doctor Robert Child. Includes a discussion of the historic contest between
the Remonstrants and the government of the Massachusetts Bay colony, 1646-1647, which the writer
believes to have been a party affair between the Presbyterians and the Independents for the control of
affairs.
Massachusetts. General court. House of representatives. Journals of the House
of representatives of Massachusetts, 1715-1717. Boston: Massachusetts historical
society, x, 291 p. [660
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct. 1920) 140-141.
Perley, Sidney. Beverly in 1700. Essex inst. hist, coll., LV (Apr.-Oct.) 81-102,
209-229, 273-303. [661
Perley, Sidney. Center of Salem village in 1700. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VII,
33-53. [662
Perley, Sidney. The Plains: part of Salem in 1700. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VII,
97-124. [563
This section is now the central part of Danvers, Mass.
Perley, Sidney. Rial Side: part of Salem in 1700. Essex inst. hist, coll., LV
(Jan.) 49-74. [564
Petition of poor prisoners in Boston jail, 1713. Boston pub. lib. bul., 4th ser., I
(Jan.) 81-83. [566
The jail referred to was the Old prison or Boston jail which stood about where the City Hall annex
is now situated.
Euggles, Theodore Sleeper. Governor William Shirley and his Roxbury mansion.
RoxBURY hist. soc. yr.-bk., 1919, 14-25.
Samuel Sewall, merchant. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LII, 334-340. [567
Items of the period Dec. 6, 1683-Mar. 5, 1698, taken from a volume of printed receipts filled in by
Samuel Sewall, which show his mercantile interests more fully than does his diary.
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. The Boston petitions of 1664. Mass. hist. soc. proc,
Lll, 312-316. [568
Two petitions to the General court signed by many inhabitants of Boston asking for the preservation
of the charter privileges. " They form an interesting group of Boston names, some of which are not
found in Savage's Dictionary, or in any early Boston lists."
Chapin, Howard M. Documentary history of Rhode Island, v. II. Being the
history of the towns of Portsmouth and Newport to 1647 and the court records of
Aquidneck. Providence: Preston and Rounds co. [10], 192 p. illus., plates,
facsims. [669
v. I. History of the towns of Providence and Warwick to 1649 and of the colony to 1647, pub. in 1916.
Chapin, Howard M. Gregory Dexter, master printer. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XII
(Oct.) 105-113. [570
Gregory Dexter came from London to Providence, R. I., in 1644.
Chapin, Howard M. The lands and houses of the first settlers of Providence. R. I.
hist, soc coll., XII (Jan.) 1-8. [571
Strickland, Arthur B. Roger Williams, prophet and pioneer of soul-liberty. Boston,
Chicago [etc.] The Judson press, xx, 152 p. illus., plates, ports., facsims. [672
New Haven. New Haven town records, 1662-1684. Ed. by Franklin Bowditch
Dexter. New Haven: Pub. for the Society. [4], 457 p. (New Haven colony
historical society. Ancient town records, v. II) [573
V. 1, 1649-1662: pub. in 1917.
The records of the town of New Haven prior to 1650, were published, Hartford, 1857, in Records of
the colony and plantation of New Haven, from 1638 to 1649, ed. by C. J. Hoadly.
Eekhof, A. De " Memorie " van Isaack de Rasi^re voor Samuel Blommaert, het oudste
HoUandsche bericht betreffende Nieuw-Nederland en New Plymouth, de kolonie
der "Pilgrim fathers." Nederlandsch arch. v. kerkgeschiedenis, n. s. XV,
245-280. [574
Prints in full for the first time, from the original manuscript in the Rijksarchief at the Hague, the
celebrated report of 1628 of Isaack de Rasi^re to Samuel Blommaert respecting New Netherland. An
English translation of the report was published in the "Narratives of New Netherland, 1609-1664; edited
by J. Franklin Jameson." N. Y.: Scnbner, 1909.
,86 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. j
Goodwin, Maud Wilder. Dutch and English on the Hudson; a chronicle of colonial.
New York. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 243 p. plates, ports., foldJ !
map. (The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. VII) I j
[675!
"Abraham Lincoln edition." '
Leisler: p. 150-164. Privateers and pirates: p. 165-179. The Zenger trial: p. 193-205. Sir William' i
Johnson: p. 218-230. t ,
New York gazette. 1726-1729 [Reproduction] [N. Y.: Issued by the New York j
historical society] 4 v. [576
Photostat reproductions of the New York gazette, nos. 18-211.
New York historical society. Collections for the year 1918. N. Y.: Printed for the!
Society. [6], 304 p. facsimile map. (The John Watts DePeyster publication fund,!
LI) [577|
Contents.— The letters and papers of Cadwallader Golden, v. II, 1730-1742, [
"He is most familiarly known as the tory lieutenant-governor of New York at the outbreak of the*
Revolutionary war." The letters are valuable material for the study of the history of the province. !
The oath of abjuration, 1715-1716. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., Ill (July) 35-40. [578!
An oath of allegiance to King George I, prescribed by the General assembly of the province of New|
York, in 1715. A copy of the original parchment, signed by 125 persons of foreign birth in the colonyi
is here given. !
Seybolt, Robert Francis. The teaching of French in colonial New York city.!
Romanic rev., X (Oct.) 364-376. [579 j
Van Laer, A. J. F., ed. Letters of Nicasius de Sille, 1654. N. Y. state hist, assoc!
JOUR., I (Apr.) 98-108. [680 1
Translations of two letters of Nicasius de Sille, written from New Netherland in 1654. j
Van Laer, A. J. F., ed. Letters of Wouter van Twiller and the director general and|
council of New Netherland to the Amsterdam chamber of the Dutch West India!
company, August 14, 1636. N. Y. state hist, assoc. jour., I (Oct.) 44-50. [581 f
The letters "relate to a period in the history of New Netherland of which comparatively little is
known," and shed new light on the administration of Van Twiller.
Abstracts of New Jersey commissions, civil and military, from liber a. a. a. of com-| _
missions in the secretary of state's office at Trenton [1709-1713] Pa. geneal. soc. i .
PUB., VII, pt. 2 (Mar.) 147-157. [682
Cont. from v. VII, no. 1, March 191S. M 'i
Godfrey, Carlos E. The Dutch trading post. Read before the Trenton historical'
society, March 20, 1919. Trenton, N. J.: The Trenton historical society. 8 p.
illus. [588 1
Carson, Hampton L. The genesis of the charter of Pennsylvania. An address!
delivered before the Law academy of Philadelphia, May 8, 1919. Phila. [Thai
author] 57 p. [583a i
Cribbs, George Arthur. The frontier policy of Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh, Pa. [The \
author] 102 p. [584 !
Contents.— Indian policy, 1682-1800. Indian trade, 1680-1770. The defence of the frontier, 1682- i
1800. '
Dodson, R. Ball. Extracts from an old account book. Pa. mag. hist., XLIII (July) j
269-272. [585 j
Presumably the record of William Ball, the elder, who died in 1740. Contains the record of 1739, and i
affords an interesting insight into the business transactions and household expenditures of a merchant-
adventurer of wealth and position in Philadelphia two hundred years ago.
Eshleman, H. Frank. Items of local interest in the Pennsylvania gazette, 1750 to 1760 M »'
inclusive. Lancaster, Pa. 133-150 p. (Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., v. XXIII, H,.
no. 8) [586 ™^
Fisher, Sydney George. The Quaker colonies; a chronicle of the proprietors of the
Delaware. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 244 p. pi., port., fold. map.
(The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. VIII) [587
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
A nanative of William Penn and the settlement of Pennsylvania, the beginning of New Jersey and of
Delaware.
The French and Indian war: p. 86-107.
Fox, R. Kingston. Dr. John Fothergill and his friends; chapters in eighteenth century
life. London: Macmillan. xxiv, 434 p. ports. [588
Dr. John Fothergill (1712-1780) was a London physician, a man of science, a Quaker and a philan-
thropist, and one who had special relations with the American provinces before and during the war of
separation.
Pennsylvania, the Quaker colony: p. 290-297. Fothergill and Quaker rule in Pennsylvania, 1741 to
1756: p. 29&-313.
WEITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 37
liall Landis, David H. The location of Pequehan. Lancaster, Pa. 69-79 p. map.
k\ (Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., v. XXIII, no. 4) [589
A Shawnee Indian village in Pennsylvania, from 1698 until about 1716.
Moyer, Nevin W. Peter Allen's, a Pennsylvania landmark; the story of a Dauphin
iaj county historic stone edifice, built before June 9, 1729. Altoona: Altoona tribune
CO. 15 p. [689a
otl Sharpless, Isaac. Political leaders of provincial Pennsylvania. N. Y.: Macmillan
oil vii, 248 p. [590
Contents.— Introduction. William Penn. Thomas Lloyd. David Lloyd. James Logan. John
Kinsey. Isaac Norris. James Pemberton. John Dickinson.
tit "The names of the Quaker politicians in this book have been selected with a view of showing the
jj i apphcabilit;^ (or otherwise) to the practical affairs of government of the principles which to some extent
>j|! ruled their lives."
™' Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 510-512; The Review, I (June 7) 85-86.
Mrowne, B. Bernard. The battle of the Severn; its antecedents and consequences,
1651-1655. Md. hist, mag., XIV (June) 154-171. [691
^'! I Howard, McHenry. Some early colonial Marylanders. Md. hist, mag., XIV (Dec.)
No 384-399. [692
''"''' I I. Reverend William Wilkinson, 1612-1663. II. Colonel John Addison, 16 -1707, and some of his
descendants.
Maryland. General assembly. Proceedings and acts of the General assembly of
Maryland, 1733-1736. Pub. by authority of the state under the direction of the
sot,;! Maryland historical society. Bernard Christian Steiner, editor. Baltimore:
[5|i Maryland historical society, xvii, 524 p. (Archives of Maryland, XXXIX) [592a
Spencer, Richard Henry, ed. Extracts from the Dulany papers [1743-1767] Md.
anil I HIST. MAG., XIV (Dec.) 371-383. [693
nil j Letters of Daniel Dulany, the younger [1721-1791] a prominent Marylander of his time. Although a
loyalist he was stronglj'' opposed to the Stamp act.
Andrews, Matthew Page. Comment on the founders of liberty in America. D. A. R.
MAG., LIII (Mar.) 139-143. [694
Notes concerning the leading spirits in the Virginia company and the founders of the first English
colony in America.
, Byrd, William. Letters of William Byrd, first [1690-1691] Va. mag. hist., XXVII
^ (Apr.-July) 167-168, 273-288. [696
Letters written to his London agents. Messrs. Perry and Lane. They are of value to students of trade
relations existing at the time between Virginia and the mother country.
Flippin, Percy Scott. The royal government in Virginia, 1624-1775. N. Y. : Columbia
university; [etc.] 393 p. (Columbia univ. stud., v. LXXXIV, no. 1; whole no.
194) [696
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July) 731-732; Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Nov.) 691-692.
Fox, Luther A. Patriotism of the Germans in the colonial South. Luth. oh. rev.,
Pl i XXXVIII (Jan.-Apr.) 1-17, 160-166. [697
['*' 1 I. In North Carolina. II. In Virginia.
' Jemegan, Marcus W. The educational development of the southern colonies.
j^j. I School REV., XXVII (May-June) 360-376, 405-425. [698
fjjj Contents. — Introduction. Virginia.
j3,s! iTyler, Lyon G, William Howard, the pirate. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal.
- mag., I (July) 36-39. [599
Wilham Howard was quartermaster for Edward Teach, known as Blackboard, the pirate. He came
));() i to Virginia in 1718 where he was tried and condemned as a pirate.
Ml' fTyler, Lyon G., ed. Notes from Barton's colonial decisions. Tyler's quar. hist.
' AND Geneal. mag., I (July-Oct.) 60-67, 115-126. [600
II I. " The object is not to set out the legal aspects of the eases but the family connections."
'^J jVirginia (Colony) General assembly. Council and General court. Minutes of the
^* ! Council and General court— 1622-1629. Va. mag. hist., XXVII (Jan.-July) 33-41,
140-149, 260-272. [601
Cont. from v. XXVI, 1918.
Virginia (Colony) General assembly. Council. Legislative journals of the Council
of colonial Virginia . . . ed. by H. R. Mcllwaine. Richmond, Va. [The Colonial
press, Everett Waddey co.] 1918-19. 3 v. [602
Edited and published by authority of the Library board, Virginia State library.
"This set of volumes . . . contains such of the Journals of the Council, acting as a branch of the General
assembly of colonial Virginia, as the editor has been able to discover. N o j ournal has been found for any
session prior to that beginning the 8th of June, 1780 i. e., [1680.]"— Pref., v. I.
38 AMEEICAIT HISTOKICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Virginia. General assembly. Order of exercises and addresses at the celebration o!
the 300th anniversary of the first law making body on the western hemisphere whict
convened at Jamestown, July 30, 1619. House of delegates, Richmond, August 15,
1919. Jamestown, 1619-1699. Williamsburg, 1699-1780. Richmond, 1780-1919 j
[Richmond? 1919?] 35 p. illus., plates, ports., facsim. [603
Virginia in 1681-82. Va. mag. hist. , XXVII (Jan. , July) 59-61, 326-335. [604
Instructions to Lord Culpeper.
Cont. from v. XXVI, 1918.
Ward, Sir A. W. Shakespeare and the makers of Virginia. London: Pub. for the
British academy by Humphrey MLlford, Oxford university press. 47 p. (The
British academy. The annual Shakespeare lecture, 1919) [605
Ervin, S. J., jr. The provincial agents of North Carolina. James Sprunt hist, pub.,
XVI, no. 2, 63-77.
I
I
Fox, Luther A. Patriotism of the Germans in the colonial South. Luth. ch. rev.,1
XXXVIII (Jan.-Apr.) 1-17, 160-166. [6071
I. In North Carolina. II. In Virginia. '
Bacot, Thomas W. St. John's Berkley. Hug. soc. S. C. trans., XXIV, 27-35. I
[608
One of the seven original Huguenot settlements in the province of Carolina. ;
Governor West's terms as governor. S. 0. hist, mag., XX (Apr.) 147-149. [609
Crane, Verner W. A lost Utopia of the first American frontier. Sewanee rev.,
XXVII (Jan.) 48-61. [610
An account of the attempt made by one Dr. Priber, a German, to set up a communistic republic in
the Cherokee coimtry of the frontier provinces of South Carolina and Georgia. He was arrested by the
English authorities in 1743.
Becker, JerSnimo. Reparaciones historicas; soldados y misioneros espanoles en la
America del Norte. Raza espan., ano I, June number. [611
Beuckman, Frederick. The commons of Kaskaskia, Cahokia and Prairie du Rocher.j
III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Apr.) 405-412. [612]
The commons were tracts of land set aside for the common use of the villagers or parishioners £Qr|
pasturage of their cattle and for fuel and building material, which were established by the Fren&|
government in connection with the villages in the Illinois country.
Brown, Stuart. Old Kaskaskia days and ways. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Apr.) 413-
423. [613
story of the earliest French occupation in Illinois.
Gayarre, Charles. Historical notes on the commerce and agriculture of Louisiana,
1720-1766. La. hist, quar., II (July) 286-291. [614
Hackett, Charles W. New light on Diego de Peiialosa: proof that he never made an
expedition from Santa Fe to Quivira and the Mississippi river in 1662. Miss. Val-
ley HIST, rev., VI (Dec. ) 313-335. [616j
Disproves the authenticity of the "Relacion" claimed to have been written by Father Nicolas dei
Freytas, and which purports to be an account of an expedition made by Peiialosa in 1662, while governor f
of New Mexico, to Quivira and beyond the Mississippi. Quivira is identified as the country north-
east of New Mexico in the present states of Kansas and Oklahoma. ' j
Kenny, Lawrence. Missouri's earliest settlement and its name. St. Louis Cath. hist. ; j
REV., I (Apr.) 151-156. [616 [■
The writer's purpose is to establish as a certainty that there was a French settlement at the mouth of
the Des Peres river in 1706, twenty years prior to any other foundation in Missouri.
Kino, Eusebio Francisco. Kino's historical memoir of Pimeria Alta; a contemporary
account of the beginnings of California, Sonora, and Arizona, by Father Eusebio
Francisco Kino^ s. j., pioneer missionary explorer, cartographer, and ranchman,
1683-1711; pub. for the first time from the original manuscript in the archives of
Mexico; tr. into English, ed. and annotated, by Herbert Eugene Bolton, Cleve-
land: Arthur H. Clark co. 2 v. maps. (Spain in the West; a series of original
documents from foreign archives, v. III-IV) [617
The original of the manuscript here published was discovered by the editor in the Archivo general y
pubUco, at Mexico City, some eleven years ago after it had suffered a century and a half of obUvion. It
contains a complete history of the writer's missionary work and explorations during the years 1683-
1711, and is the principal history of this region during that quarter century.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 340-341; Hispanic Am. hist, rev., IV (Aug. 1921) 491-494.
WBITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 39
Manoir, Faucond du. Concession of Ste Catherine at the Natchez. La. hist, quar.,
II (Apr.) 164-173. [618
Excerpt from a letter written by Mr. Faucond du Manoir, director general of the colony of Ste Cathe-
I I rine, July IRth, 1721, and a letter from Father Poisson, Jesuit missionary in Arkansas, giving details of
Indian customs and of John Law's concession.
Price, William. Records of the Superior council of Louisiana. La. hist, quar.,
II (Jan.-Oct.) 104-118, 193-207, 328-342, 463-485. [619
Index to the judicial reports of early colonial Louisiana, the installment in this number covering the
year 1725.
Thompson, Joseph J. The French in Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (July) 4-45.
[620
Contents.— Discovery and exploration. The French settlements and civilization. French influence
upon early Illinois.
Twitchell, Ralph E. Spanish colonization in New Mexico in the Oiiate and De Vargas
periods. [Santa Fe] 39 p. (New Mex. hist. soc. pub., XXII) [621
A study of the Spanish colonial system during the latter part of the I7th century.
Villiers du Terrage, Marc, baron de, and P. Rivet. Les Indiens du Texas et les deux
expeditions f ran gaises de 1720 et 1721 a la "Baie Saint-Bernard." Soc. Am. Paris
JOUR., n. s. XI, fasc. 2, 403-442. [622
Gives an account of two expeditions sent out by the Compagnie deslndes to establish a post at the
"baie Saint-Bernard," the present Matagorda Bay, in the Gulf of Mexico; the first under the leadership
of the pilot Jean Beranger, set out from Louisiana in 1720; the second, commanded by Bgnard de la
Harpe, left in 1721.
1763-1783.
Sources and Documents.
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the state of Pennsylvania, 1777. Pa. mag. hist., XLIII (Jan.) 81-83. [623
Written from the camp near Trapp, Pa., 8th October, 1777.
Boudinot, Elias. Two letters of Elias Boudinot, commissary of prisoners, 1778. Pa.
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Reproduction of the original document of the "articles of convention." signed by General Burgoyne,
October 16, 1777, when he surrendered to General Horatio Gates at Saratoga, N. Y.
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Baum for the ill-fated expedition at Bennington, Vermont, 1777. N. Y. hist. soc.
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[!: ! Copy of the journal of Major Robert Rogers, commandant and executive officer of trade at Fort Michill-
j imackinac, 176fi-1767. This journal constitutes a "source chapter in northwest history which gives a
true picture of Indian trade and methods."
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Introduction and notes, by E. Alfred Jones.
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40 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
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Reprinted from the Proceedings of the American antiquarian society, n. s. XXIX, pt. 1, Aprl'l
1919. '
A selection from the papers of Aaron Burr which he left in care of Matthew L. Davis, given b I
the latter to Mrs. John Davis, of Massachusetts, in 1839. The letters are of the Revolutionary period
and later. Among them are: letters of Roger Sherman, General Schuyler, Charles Lee, Samuel Chase'
Benjamin Lincoln, William Heath, and William Duer; and an address in French to the inhabitanti
- of Quebec signed by Benedict Arnold, Mar. 4, 1776.
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STATE HIST. ASSOC. JOUR., I (Oct.) 22-43. [63;:
The Presbyterian clergy were leaders in the separatist party at the time of the Revolution. i
Greene, Nathanael. Letter of Major Gen. Nathanael Greene to Dr. John Morgan, 1779;
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Includes a statement in regaro to the condition of the general hospitals in the campaigns of 1775 an('
1776. i
Hand, Edward. Letter of Edward Hand to the Honble Richard Henry Lee, Richard
Law and Daniel Roberdeau, esqr., 1777. Pa. mag. hist., XLIII (July) 280-281!
[63ii
Written from Fort Pitt, Dec. 21, 1777, and giving a report in regard to the arrest of Col. George Morgan]
Indian agent and commissary. I
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To be continued. j
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Le Moy, A. Correspondances bretonnes du xvine siecle; extraits relatifs a la guerr(j
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Drawn from the correspondence of two Bretons living in Paris, M. de la BeUangerais and M. L(i
Prestre de Chateaugiron. '
Reprinted from the Revue de I'Anjou, September, 1918. [
Liberty tree broadside. Boston pub. lib. bul., 4th ser., I (Oct.) 328-329. [
Prints a facsimile of a rare broadside containing a poem relating to the hanging in effigy of Andre\<
Oliver, stamp officer in Boston, on August 14, 1765.
McLellan, Hugh. Captain Job Wright's company of Willett's levies at Ballston ir
1782. N. Y. STATE hist. ASSOC. JOUR., I (Oct.) 13-21. [63£!
Copy of a letter from Captain Job Wright to Governor Clinton, Ballston, Dec. 8, 1781, and several un 1 r
published documents relating to the company. I
Marsan, Jules. Beaumarchais et les affaires d'Amerique; lettres inedites. Parish
Champion. 67 p. [64(,
Composed of 30 letters of Beaumarchais, 1777-1782, with explanatory notes. '
Massachusetts. The acts and resolves, public and private, of the Province of thtj
Massachusetts Bay: to which are prefixed the charters of the province; with his-i
torical and explanatory notes, and an appendix, v. XX., being volume XV of thej
Appendix, containing Resolves, etc., 1777-1778. Boston: Wright and Potter print]
CO., state printers, 1918. 830 p. [641
Miscellaneous letters [1766, 1776, 1784, 1786] Pa. mag. hist., XLIII (July) 262-268.'
[642i
Includes a letter from Dr. Benjamin Rush to Gen. Anthony Wayne, Philadelphia, Sept. 29, 1776.
Morris, Margaret. The Revolutionary journal of Margaret Morris, of Burlington,
N. J., December 6, 1776, to June 11, 1778. Friends' hist. soc. bul., IX, noei
1-2 (May-Nov.) 2-14, 65-75. [643,
Piggott, Sir Francis, and G. W. T. Omond. Documentary history of the armed|
neutralities, 1780 and 1800, together with selected documents relating to the wai,
of American independence 1776-1783 and the Dutch war 1780-1784. London:!
University of London press, xxxviii, 541 p. ("Law of the sea" series — ^v. I) [644j
Part lis devoted to documents relating to the War of American independence 1776-1783 (p. 1-103)
and to the Dutch war (p. 103-376).
Epitome of the documents relating to the first armed neutrality: p. 1-28. ,
The sections relating to the American war consist of documents dealing with the grievances of the
colonies; acts of Parliament; the King's speeches to Parliament; De Vergennes state papers; the French'
treaties, of friendship and commerce, and of alliance; and docmnents which trace the course of politicali
events after the commencement of hostilities between France and Great Britain, including severali
relating to prizes and to the French attitude towards American privateers, and to the attitude of SpaiHj
in regard to England's dispute with her colonies. :
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 41
The Preston papers. Va. mag. hist., XXVII (Jan.-July) 42-49, 157-166, 309-325.
[645
Consist, in the main, of letters exchanged between Col. Wm. Preston, the great Virginia frontier-
fighter, and various civil and military officials, relating to events during the "French and Indian"
and Kevolutionary wars.
The present installment covers the period May 8 to Aug. 30, 1780.
Cont. from v. XXVI, 1918.
Ishuttleworth, Ashton, and I. R. Till. Three letters written by British officers from
Boston in 1774 and 1775. Bostonian soc. proc, ann. meeting, Jan. 21, 1919
12-15. [646
Letters written to John Spencer of Cannon Hall, Yorkshire, England, copied from "Annals of a
Yorkshire house" by A. M. W. Stirling (London, 1911). The letters are from Ashton Shuttleworth,
lieutenant in the Royal artillery, and Major I. R. Till.
Iswem, Earl Gregg, ed. Considerations on the present state of Virginia; attributed
to John Randolph, attorney general; and Considerations on the present state of
Virginia examined, by Robert Carter Nicholas. N. Y.: C. F. Heartman. 83 p.
facsim. (Heartman's historical series, no. 32) [647
Half-title: Virginia and the Revolution. Two pamphlets, 1774.
These pamphlets were issued anonymously in 1774.
General.
Chambers, J. W. How the loss of one empire laid the foundation for another. Unit
SER. MAG., n. s. LVIII (Feb.) 359-368. [648
Points out that upon the loss of one empire, the American colonies, was laid the foundation for the
liberal and greater empire of to-day.
iEprade, William Thomas. England and the birth of the American nation. N. C.
LIT. AND HIST. ASSOC. PROC, 19th aun. sessiou, 77-84. [649
Ichalck de la Faverie, A. La revolution americaine et la revolution frangaise. Soc.
Am. Paris jour., n. s. XI, fasc. 2, 385-401. [650
Ichlesinger, Arthur Meier. The American revolution reconsidered. Pol. sci
QUAR., XXXIV (Mar.) 61-78. [651
Concerned with the political and economic struggle of the period from 1763 to 1774— the fundamental
problem being the reconciliation of centralized imperial control with colonial home rule.
Special.
arrey, Philippe. Le Havre maritime; Beaumarchais et ses armemenfs havrais.
Soc. havraise etudes diverses, recueil des publications, LXXXVe ann.,
1918, 2e trimestre, 219-241. [662
Concerned with Beaumarchais's efforts in behalf of the American colonies, and in particular with
the expeditions sent out by him from Havre to carry supplies for the insvirgents.
eck, Herbert H. The military hospital at Lititz, 1777-78. Lancaster, Pa. 21 p.
plate. (Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., v. XXIII, no. 1) [653
Bcker, Carl. John Jay and Peter Van Schaak. N. Y. state hist, assoc. jour.,
I (Oct.) 1-12. [664
Traces the influences at work which made of Jay an ardent patriot and of Van Schaak a British
loyalist. "The conduct of these two young men makes an interesting study in political psychology
jand in historical interpretation."
>lton, Eeginald Pelham. The military hut-camp of the war of the revolution on
the Dyckman farm, Manhattan. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., II (Jan.) 130-136; III
(Apr.) 15-18. [655
Iton, Reginald Pelham. The "old fort," and camp-site at Richmond, Staten
Island. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., Ill (Oct.) 82-88. [656
Revolutionary fort and camp-site used by the British.
]|nd, Beverley W., jr. The quit-rent system in the American colonies. With an
ntroduction by Charles M. Andrews. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] 492
3. (Yale historical publications. Miscellany, VI) [657
Analyzes the feudal restraints upon land which existed in the colonies, chiefly in the British colo-
lies, and shows how they were eventually eliminated— and how this detail of the colonial land system
vas a contributory cause to the discontent that brought on the Revolution.
Rev, in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 802-804; Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII (Nov.) (
42 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Brandow, John Henry. The story of old Saratoga; the Burgoyne campaign, to which
is added New York's share in the Revolution. 2d ed. Albany, N. Y.: The Bran-n
dow printing co. xxiii, 528 p. illus., plates, ports., fold. maps. [6681
Book III. New York's share in the Revolution: p. [387]-491.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 551-552.
Caron, le chanoine Max. L'Amiral de Grasse. Paris: T^qui. xv, 277 p. port. [669
Carson, Hampton L. Washington at Valley Forge. Pa. mag. hist., XLIII (Apr.)
97-116. [660
Davis, John W. A tribute to Home Tooke. Landmark, I (Aug.) 475-480. [6611
Address written for the occasion of the unveiling of the memorial tablet at Ealing on June 17, 1919,
to John Home Tooke (1736-1812), an English sympathizer with the American cause in the Revolution,
as a recognition of his actions in raising a fund for widows and orphans of American soldiers killed at
Lexington and Concord, on April 19th, 1775.
Depart du corps de Rochambeau pour I'Amerique. Sabretache, XXII (Nov.)
710-715. [662
Diffenderffer, Frank R. The loyalists in the Revolution. [lst-2d papers}- Lan-
caster, Pa. 2 V. (Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., v. XXIII, no. 7, 9) [663
Downing, Margaret B. Washington's associate at Yorktown. Oath, world, CX
(Oct.) 95-103. [664
Comte de Rochambeau.
Fitzpatrick, John C. The invalid regiment and its colonel. D. A. R. mag., LIII
(Nov.) 649-653. [666
An organization composed of disabled officers and soldiers who were found capable of doing guard j
or garrison duty, formed in 1777, and commanded by Colonel Lewis Nicola of Pennsylvania. i
Fitzpatrick, John C. Peace and demobilization in 1783. D. A. R. mag., LIII I
(Mar.) 125-128. [666
Fox, R. Hingston. Dr. John Fothergill and his friends; chapters in eighteenth cen-
tury life. London: Macmillan. xxiv, 434 p. ports. [667
Dr. John Fothergill (1712-1780) was a London physician, a Quaker and a philanthropist, and one
who had special relations with the American provinces before and during the war of separation,
Fothergill and Franklin, 1757 to 1774. Revolt of the American provinces: p. 314-322. The concilia-
tion proposals, 1774, 1775: p. 323-337. The early years of the war of separation, 1775 to 1777: p. 338-347.
Fothergill's work in war-time. 1777 to 1780: p. 348-365. Fothergill and the medical institutions of
America: p. 366-376.
Hattersley, Alan Frederick. The colonies, and imperial federation; an historical
sketch, 1754-1919. Pietermaritzburg: The Times print, and pub. co. 118 p. [668
Taxation without representation: p. 17-31.
Holliday, Carl. Heroines of yesterday; wives and mothers of the American revolu-
tion. Munsey's, LXVI (Mar.) 237-239. [669
Les ideas de Vergennes sur le Canada. Rev. hist, colonies fran^., Vlle ann.,
ler trimestre, 135-137. [670
Regarding his attitude toward an attempt to reconquer Canada at the time of the American revo-
lution.
Jones, E. Alfred. American loyalists in South Wales. Americana, XIII (Apr.)
146-155. [671
La Fayette, comte de. Lafayette in America; the penalty he paid for his democratic
ideas— his personality. Forum, LXI (Feb.) 142-151. [672
Lenotre, G. Un compagnon de La Fayette. Lectures pour tous, 'XXIe ann. M^
(Feb. 1)590-599. [673 ■"«
A sketch of the life of the chevalier de Mor^, who came to America with Lafayette in 1777.
Maclay, Edgar Stanton. A forgotten naval battle of the Revolution. D. A. R. mag.,
LIII (Oct.) 610-613. [674
An engagement which took place in the Bay of Biscay, ofl the port of Nantes, on September 9, 1780.
Maclay, Edgar Stanton. How our infant navy strangled a war horror. U. S. N. inst.
PROC, XLV (Dec.) 2041-2048. [675
Regarding the invention by the British during the Revolution, of "town burning machines," and
the capture by the American cruiser "Lee," on Nov. 29, 1775, of the English ship "Nancy" which was
attempting to smuggle in 50 of these macnines for the tories of America, the British Admiralty having
h
refused to use these machines.
McMaster, John Bach. Liberty loans of the Revolution. In University of Penn-
sylvania. University lectures delivered by members of the faculty in the free
public lecture course, 1918-1919, v. VL Phila., Pa.; Pub. by the University,
p. 233-256. . [676
1919. 43
Merriam, Harold G. Some founders of the American republic. Landmark, I (July)
440-444. [677
Sketches of Patrick Henry, Alexander Hamilton, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and George
Washington.
Morgan, George. The true La Fayette. Phila. and London: Lippincott. 488 p.
plates, ports. [678
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 543-544.
Morrison, A. J. Setting of the Mecklenburg declaration of independence. Texas
REV., V (Oct.) 15-33. [679
O'Brien, Michael J. A hidden phase of American history; Ireland's part in
America's struggle for liberty. N. Y.: Dodd, Mead and co. xv, 36, 37*^-37^
38-533 p. ports., facsims. [680
Appendix: Officers of the American army and navy of the Revolution of Irish birth or descent:
p. 393-441. Non-commissioned officers and enlisted men, named Burke, Connolly, Connor, Doherty,
Kelly, Murphy, McCarthy, O'Brien, O'Neill, Reilly, Ryan, and Sullivan, in the American army and
navy of the Revolution: p. 443-526.
Another edition— N. Y.: The Devin-Adair co.
Hev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 797-799.
Pierce, Grace M. The military organizations of the American revolution. D. A. R.
MAG., LIU (Sept.-Nov.) 530-536, 586-593, 672-677. [681
I. The Continental army— its evolution. II. The army before Boston — its origin and develop-
ment. III. Reorganizing the army.
Rio, Armand. Kosciuszko, I'ami de LaFayette et de Washington. Lectures pour
Tous, XXIe ann. (Apr. 15) 940-947. [682
Boberts, Octavia. With Lafayette in America. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton
Mifflin CO. xi, 293 p. plates, ports. [683
Rogers, Edna Miner. A Connecticut treaty bearer. D. A. R. mag., LIII (Feb.)
80-85. [684
Capt. Robert Niles, who commanded the "Spy" during the Revolution, and was commissioned by
the government to carry to France a copy of the ratification of the treaty of alliance in 1778.
Royaumont, Louis de. La Fayette and Rochambeau au pays de Washington; la
guerre de I'independance americaine, 1776-1783. Grenoble: impr.-editeur J. Rey.
161 p. ports., plates. [686
Siebert, Wilbur Henry. The Tory proprietors of Kentucky lands. Columbus, O.:
F. J. Heer print, co. 26 p. [686
Reprinted from Ohio archaeological and historical quarterly, v. XXVIII, no. 1, January, 1919.
Concerned with the proprietary projects or hostile activities of loyalists in the Kentucky country
during the Revolution. These activities consisted largely in efforts at instigating Indian depredations
against the Kentucky pioneers.
Slaughter, William A. Battle of Iron Works Hill, at Mount Holly, New Jersey,
December, 1776. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. IV, 19-32. [687
Suite, Benjamin. Washington et le Canada. Pays laurentien, III, 1918, 62-63.
[688
Thompson, Joseph J. A chapter in Illinois' finances. III. Cath. hist, rev., II
(July) 74-81. [689
The financing of the Clark project for the conquest of the northwest.
Whitney, George H. Battle of Saratoga famous in history. State service, III
(June) 45-51. [690
Wood, George Clayton. Congressional control of foreign relations during the Ameri-
can revolution 1774-1789. AUentown, Pa.: H. P. Haas and co. x, 140 p. [691
Thesis (PH. d.)— New York imiversity, 1918.
Revolutionary Soldiers: Names.
Blake, Henry N. Harvard soldiers and sailors in the American revolution. Harv.
grab, mag., XXVIII (Dec.) 243-259. [692
Prints a list of Harvard men of the classes of 1735-1782 who served in the Revolution, with brief notice
of their service.
Colonel Frelinghuysen's muster roll of 1778. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (July)
171-175. [693
Copy of the muster roll of the 5th battalion of Somerset county [N. J.] militia, commanded by Colonel
Frederick Frelinghuysen.
59976°— 22 5
44 AMEKICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. 1
Cowing, Elizabeth. Some vital statistics of Revolutionary worthies. N. Y. geneal.'
AND BiOG. REC, L (Jan.) 59-68. [694 j
Death notices of Revolutionary patriots, gleaned from various sources. I
Flagg, Charles A. An alphabetical index of Revolutionary pensioners living in
Maine. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VI (Feb.) 153-157; VII (May, Nov.)|
35-39, 144-150. [696|
Cont. from v. VI, no. 3, 1918. i
Pension records of the Revolutionary soldiers from Connecticut. D. A. R. rep., XXI,
131-299. [696!
"Revolutionary pensioners who served from Connecticut and whose applications are on file in thei
Pension office, Washington, D. C. Copied by Mrs. Amos G. Draper." t
Revolutionary soldiers' graves located. D. A. R. rep., XXI, 82-114. [6971
Soldiers' payroll at Fort Pitt, for January, 1783. Western Pa. hist, mag., II (Apr.) I
125-127. [698 i
Payroll of a detachment from the First Virginia regiment, stationed at Fort Pitt. \
Virginia state troops in the Revolution. (From state auditor's papers, now in state
library). Va. mag. hist., XXVII (Jan., July) 63-67, 336-344. [699
Jan. 9-Feb. 10, 1776.
Cont. from v. XXVI, 1918.
1783-1789,
Hastings, George E. Notes on the beginnings of aeronautics in America. Am. hist.
REV., XXV (Oct.) 68-72. [700
Quotes from letters of 1784-1785 to show the interest in aeronautics manifested by three of the founders i
of the republic, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and Francis Hopkinson. I
HuUu, J. de. Over de opkomst van den Indischen handel der Vereenigde Staten van!
Amerika als mededinger der Oost-Indische compagnie omstreeks 1786-1790.1
BiJDRAGEN tot DE TAAL-, LAND- EN VOLKENKUNDE VAN NeDERLANDSCH-InDIE, I
LXXV, 281-301. [700a;
1789-1829.
Miscellaneous. i
Biddle, Nicholas. The correspondence of Nicholas Biddle dealing with national!
affairs, 1807-1844, ed. by Reginald C. McGrane. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton j
Mifflin CO. xxix, 366 p. plate, ports. [7011
Among the aflairs of importance with which he was identified are.— The purchase of Loviisiana, the ,
War of 1812, the financial and commercial readjustment following the conflict, the establishment of the '
Second bank of the United States, the struggle with President Jackson, the panic of 1837, the Sub- i
Treasury and President Van Buren, the appeal of Texas for annexation, the election of 1840, the rupture !
between Tyler and the Whigs, the Webster- Ashburton treaty, and the preparation for the campaign \
of 1844.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 518-519.
Bixby, George Stephenson. Peter Sailly (1754-1826) a pioneer of the Champlainf
Valley, with extracts from his diary and letters. Albany: The University of the \
state of New York. 94 p. port., facsim. (New York state library. History bulle- ,
tin, no. 12, February 1919) [702 ,
University of the state of New York. Bulletin ... no. 680, February 1, 1919.
in 1785 Peter Sailly, with his family, came from France and settled at Plattsburg. He held numerous ,
offices and took an important part in the events of the War of 1812. |
Corwin, Edward S. John Marshall and the Constitution; a chronicle of the Supreme '
court. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 242 p. plate, ports. (The
chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XVI) [703
Partial contents.— The establishment of the national judiciary. Jefferson's war on the judiciary. ;
The trial of Aaron Burr. The tenets of nationahsm. The menace of state rights.
Dustin, Fred. The Saginaw treaty of 1819 between General Lewis Cass and the '
Chippewa Indians, written for the centennial celebration of the treaty, September |
19th, 1919. Prepared under the direction of the Committee on history and records. ,
. . . [Saginaw, Mich.: Saginaw pub. CO.] 32 p. illus. [704 j
Elliott, T. C. The northern boundary of Oregon. Ore. hist. soc. quae., XX (Mar.) :
25-34. [705 I
Consists mainly of a copy of aletterfrom the governor of the Hudson's Bay company to Lord Canning,
secretary of the foreign office, Dec. 9, 1825, in regard to the settlement of the boundaries of the United i
States and British America.
WKITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, IQ-l^. 45
' Elliott, T. C. The northwest boundaries (Some Hudson's Bay company's correspond-
"1 ence). Ore. hist. soc. quar., XX (Dec.) 331-344. [706
Documents of the years 1825-1826. They are of "specialinterest as showing the intimate connection
of the Hudson's Bay company with the British cabinet in 1825-26," and as showing that "the British
were then concerned only in the trade in this Columbia river country while the attention of the Americans
was already being directed toward occupation and settlements."
Harvey, Oscar Jewell. Royalty in Wyoming Valley nearly a century and a quarter
ago. Wy. hist, and geol. soc. proc, XVI, 185-266. [707
lI I Describes the sojourn of Louis-Philippe, the exiled "citizen king*' of France in America in 1797.
il His tour of the country included a few days in Wilkesbarre, Pa., in July 1797.
k Kenny, Laurence J. The Gallipolis colony. Cath. hist, rev., IV (Jan.) 415-451.
[708
An account of this French colony on the Ohio, as the first successful western Catholic colony.
Munro, Wilfred H. The fifth cruise of the privateer Yankee. R. I. hist. soc. coll.,
XII (July) 76-83. [709
Includes a reprint of the diary of Dr. Joseph Lowe Stevens, surgeon of the privateer Yankee, March
23-July 15, 1814.
* lEenaut, F. P. La question de la Louisiane (1796-1809). Paris [Societe de I'histoire
55! I des colonies franyaises] 242 p. [710
Treats of the diplomatic history of the acquisition of Louisiana.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 552-553.
I Way, Royal B. The United States factory system for trading with the Indians, 1796-
1822. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (Sept.) 220-235. [711
1 Wills, Elbert Vaughan. The case of Doctor Cooper. So. Atlan. quar., XVIII (Jan.)
6-14. [712
Account of the trial, under the alien and sedition laws of 1798, of Dr. Thomas Cooper, in the circuit
court of the United States for the Pennsylvania district in April 1800.
Woodbury, Margaret. Public opinion in Philadelphia, 1789-1801. Durham, N. C:
The Seeman printery. 138 p. [713
Thesis (ph. d.)— Bryn Mawr college.
Reprinted from the Smith college studies in history, v. V.
An analysis of the newspaper and pamphlet literature of the Federalist period as it throws li^ht
upon our poUtical and constitutional development. As a basis for a general history of public opinion
the writer has oflered a local study selecting Philadelphia because it was the seat of the federal govern-
ment at the time.
Contents.— Newspapers and editors. The financial system. Foreign relations. Political parties
War of 1812.
Ermatinger, C. O. The retreat of Proctor and Tecumseh. Ont. hist. soc. pap.,
XVII, 11-21. [714
The retreat of Maj.-Gen. Proctor, commanding the British forces, from Amherstburg, in 1813.
2! jrudson, Katharine B. The British side of the restoration of Fort Astoria. Ore. hist.
m I soc. QUAR., XX (Sept.-Dec.) 243-260, 305-330. [715
{[ Concerning the restoration of Fort Astoria by the British at the end of the War of 1812.
,, iiatour, A. Lacarriere. Historical memoir of the wslt in West Florida and Louisiana,
'I'J 1814-1815. La. hist, quar., II (Apr.) 143-153. [716
, I, I " Written originally in French and translated from the manuscript for the author, by H. P. Nugent,
b* esq., Philadelphia, 1816."
[! 1 Deals with the bombardment and defense of Fort St. Phihp, Jan. 9-18, 1815, during the British at-
tack on New Orleans.
« :,undy's Lane historical society, Welland, Ont. The centenary celebration of the
I battle of Lundy's Lane, July twenty-fifth, nineteen hundred and fourteen. . . .
prfii I Comp. by a committee of the Lundy's Lane historical society. Niagara Falls, Can.:
(T; \ Lundy's Lane historical society. 150 p. plates. [717
I' iIcAfee, Robert Breckinridge. History of the late war in the western country, by
Robert B. McAfee, 1816. Bowling Green, O.: Historical publications co. 591 p.
illus. (maps) (Great American historical classics series) [718
pTallon, John. Siege of Fort Meigs. Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII
[ (July) 280-285. [719
Extract from the Cleveland Herald and Gazette, of June 3, 1840, consisting mainly of an abstract of
a speech deUvered by Col. John O'Fallon, at the raising of the log-cabin in St. Louis, during the famous
, "log cabin campaign!!' of 1840.
>hio in the War of 1812. Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII (July) 286-368.
[720
jl'jiti j Excerpts from the " Truinp of fame," the first newspaper in the Western Reserve, 1812.
" The articles concerning General Hull, his surrender of Detroit, and the attacks upon his loyalty are
specially deserving of notice as showing the popular view entertained at the time."
:eiDtt
46 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASS0CIATI03<r.
1829-1861. i!!
Miscellaneous.
Blount, Bertha. The Apache in the Southwest, 1846-1886. Southw. hist. quar.|
XXIII (July) 20-38. [72
story of the conflict between the United States and the Apache Indians and their final surrendei'
Boucher, Chauncey Samuel. South Carolina and the South on the eve of secession '
1852 to 1860. Wash. univ. stud., humanistic series, VI, no. 2 (July) 79-144. [72:
Contents.— Questions of policy. The Kansas-Nebraska act and its results. Radicals and coi!
servatives. The election of 1860.
Burrage, Henry Sweetser. Maine in the northeastern boundary controversy. [Port
land, Me.] Printed for the state, xiv, 398 p. plates, ports., maps, facsims, [72'
The writer is state historian of Maine.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 367-368.
Cotterill, R. S. Early agitation for a Pacific railroad, 1845-1850. Miss. Valle,
HIST. REV., V (Mar.) 396-414. [72
An account of Asa Whitney's early project.
Expediente relative a la traslacion de los restos de los 50 piratas fusilados a su pais,
Arch. nac. bol., XVIII (July) 369-377. [72{
Relative to the rerooval from Cuba to the United States of the bodies of fifty Americans, who und(|
Col. William Crittenden, took part in the expedition of Gen. Narciso L6pez and were captured and shci
in August 1851. i
Hamlin, L. Belle, ed. Selections from the William Greene papers, II. Cincinnatij
The Abingdon press. 26 p. (Ohio hist, and phil. soc. pub., v. XIV, no. 1) [721
Comprises severalletters written by the Hon. Samuel F. Vinton of GaUipolis, Ohio, to William Greenij
an eminent lawyer of Cincinnati, 1833-1861.
They relate largely to political affairs . [
Hendricks, Sterling Brown. The Somervell expedition to the Rio Grande, 184i|
SouTHW. HIST. QUAR., XXIII (Oct.) 112-140. [721
Punitive expedition against the Mexicans, under command of General Alexander Somervell.
Hobhouse, Stephen. Joseph Sturge, his life and work. London: Dent, x, 196
English author (1793-1859), member of the Society of Friends, who devoted himself to the aboUl
of slavery, in which cause he visited the West Indies in 1837 and the United States in 1841.
Juda, Fanny. California filibusters: a history of their expeditions into Hispanil
America. Grizzly Bear, XXIV (Feb.) 3-6, 15, 19. [72|
Story of the attempt of the French fiUbusters of CaMfornia, Marquis Charles de Pindray, Lepine cj
Sigondis, and Count Gaston Raoul de Raousset-Boulbon to found a colony in Sonora, 1852-1854, th
expedition of William Walker to obtain the independence of Sonora and Baja California for ultimai}
annexation to the United States, 1853-1854, and other similar enterprises. f
Judson, Katharine. Polk and Oregon — with a Pakenham letter. Ore. hist, sod
QUAR., XX (Sept.) 301-302. [73i
Prints a copy of a letter written during the debates in Congress on the Oregon question, by Richad
Pakenham, British ambassador, Washington, March 29, 1846.
Blem, Mary J. Missouri in the Kansas struggle. Miss. Valley hist, rev., exti,
number (May) 393-413. [73j
Landon, Fred. From Chatham to Harper's Ferry. Canad. mag., LIII (Oct.!
441-448. [73|
The story of John Brown's raid, October, 1859. It was in the town of Chatham, Ont., in May ISoij
that the plans were laid for the enterprise. (
Lynch, William O. Popular sovereignty and the colonization of Kansas from 185j
to 1860. Miss. Valley hist, rev., extra number (May) 380-392. [73j
Marcy, William L. Diary and memoranda of William L. Marcy, 1849-1851. Ed,
by Thomas Maitland Marshall. Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr.) 444-462. [73
The poUtical comments in the diary are of interest and value to the historical student. The mein(
randa consist of an account of a visit to Washington in the winter of 1850, and "further remarks on Gei|
Taylor made after his death."
Marcy, William L. Diary and memoranda of William L. Marcy, 1857. [Ed. b;,
Thomas Maitland Marshall] Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July) 641-653. [73.
Deals largely with political affairs of the day at Washington.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 47
3g?» Frederic Austin. The reign of Andrew Jackson; a chronicle of the frontier in
politics. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 249 p. plates, ports. (The
chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XX) [736
Contents. — Jackson the frontiersman. The Creek war and the victory of New Orleans. The "con-
quest" of Florida. The death of "King caucus". The Democratic triumph. The "reign" begins.
The Webster-Hayne debate. Tariff and nullification. The war on the United States bank. The
removal of the southern Indians. The Jacksonian succession.
■»elzer, Louis. A frontier officer's military order book. Miss. Valley hist, rev.,
VI (Sept.) 260-267. [737
An abstract of the order book of Colonel Henry Dodge, containing his orders concerning operations
in present states of the Mississippi Valley, during the years 1832 to 1836.
[•he Potter-Pryor duel. Wis. mag. hist., II (June) 449-452. [738
In April 1860, Representative John Fox Potter, of Wisconsin, was challenged to a duel by Repre-
sentative Roger A. Pryor, of Virginia. The duel, however, never took place.
L proposed league of nations in 1845. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., Ill (Apr.) 8-11. [739
Copy of a petition circulated in 1845. It was undoubtedly the intention of the subscribers to prevent
the crisis of the Mexican trouble as well as to form a "congress of nations".
tippy, J. Fred. Border troubles along the Rio Grande, 1848-1860. Southw. hist.
QUAR., XXIII (Oct.) 91-111. [740
Disturbances along the frontiers of Texas and Mexico subsequent to the Mexican war.
^ippy, J. Fred. The Indians of the southwest in the diplomacy of the United States
and Mexico, 1848-1853. Hispanic Am. hist. rev. , II (Aug.) 363-396. [741
ihippee, Lester Burrill. The federal relations of Oregon. Ore. hist. soc. quar..
XX (Mar.-Dec.) 25-93, 173-218, 261-295, 345-395. [742
Cont. from v. XIX, 1918.
Contents.— The negotiations of 1842-1845. Giving notice. The treaty of 1846. Polk and Oregon.
Territorial organization. The Territory of Oregon.
Mexican War.
uley, R. C. Indiana in the Mexican war. Ind. mag. hist., XV (Sept.-Dec.)
260-292, 293-326. [743
oberts, Brigham Henry. The Mormon battalion; its history and achievements.
Salt Lake City, Utah: The Deseret news, v, 96 p. illus., port., facsim., map.
[744
Describes the march of the Mormon battalion from Fort Leavenworth, Kans., to California, 1846-
1847, and its service in California.
mith, Justin Harvey. The war with Mexico. N. Y.: Macmillan. 2. v. illus.
(maps), plans. [746
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 729-732; Am. jour, internat. law, XIV (Jan. 1920) 293-298;
Hisp. Am. hist, rev., Ill (Aug. 1920) 375-381; Pol. sci. quar., XXXV (Dec. 1920) 646-651.
Slavery.
enjamin Franklin and freedom. Jour, negro hist,, IV (Jan.) 41-50. [746
Extracts from Franklin's writings and letters showing his antagonism to the institution of slavery.
DX, Early Lee. The American colonization society, 1817-1840. Baltimore: The
Johns Hopkins press, vii, 9-231 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. stud., ser XXXVII,
no. 3) [747
i Published also as thesis (ph. d) Johns Hopkins university, 1917.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 726-727.
yde, Anne Bachman. Early efforts to suppress the slave trade and abolish slavery
in the South. Confed. vet., XXVII (Mar.) 83-86. [748
|mdon, Fred. The Anti-slavery society of Canada. Jour, negro hist., IV (Jan.)
33-40. [749
1 The Anti-slavery society of Canada was one of the forms in which the abolition sentiment of the
province of Upper Canada made its contribution to the final settlement of the great issue in the United
States.
jindon, Fred. Canada's part in freeing the slave. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVII,
74-84. [750
A study of the underground railroad and of fugitive slaves in Canada.
jjindon, Fred. Fugitive slave in Canada. Univ. mag., XVIII (Apr.) 270-279.
[750a
Account of the part played by Canada in aid of the fugitive slaves from the United States.
48 AMEBIC AN HISTOKICAL ASSOCIATION.
Lyons, Adelaide Avery. Religious defense of slavery in the North. Trinity coll.
HIST. soc. PAP., XIII, 5-34. [761
Macy, Jesse. The anti-slavery crusade; a chronicle of the gathering storm. New '
Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 245 p. ports. (The chronicles of America
series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXVIII) [752
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Munro, Wilfred H. Account of sales of 106 Africans brought into Charleston, S. C,
on brig Three Sisters, Captain Champlin, of Bristol, October 12, 1807. R. I. hist.
soc. COLL., XII (Jan.) 9-11. [763
Sales account of a "slaver," recently come to light, which testifies to the enormous profits of the |
slave trade.
Notes on slavery in Canada. Jour, negro hist., IV (Oct.) 396-411. [754
"For these documents Mr. Justice Riddell is indebted to Mr, William Smith of the Department of
archives, Ottawa, Canada."
Hidden, William Renwick, The slave in Upper Canada. Jour, negro hist.,
IV (Oct.) 372-395. [765
Reprinted from the Transactions of the Royal society of Canada, May 1919.
Work, M. N. The life of Charles B. Ray [1807-1886] Jour, negro hist., IV (Oct.)
361-371. [766
A Congregational minister of New England, whose chief work was in connection with the anti-slavery
movement, the underground railroad, and as editor of "The Colored American" from 1839 to 1842.
1861-1865.
GeneraL
Abel, Annie Heloise. The American Indian as participant in the Civil war. Cleve- i
land: Arthur H. Clark co. 403 p. port., map, facsims. {Her The slaveholding [
Indians, v. II) [757 j
Treats of the aUiance of the Indians with the Confederacy, and the service of the Indians to the Con- j
federate cause.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 323-324. |
Allen, H. D. The paper money of the Confederate states, with historical data. I
Numismatist, XXXII (Jan.-Feb.) 2-10, 50-56. [758
The American "Republic of Jones" of 1864. Literary digest, LXIII (Dec. 27)
56. [759 H Si
The county of Jones, in Mississippi, seceded from the Confederacy and formed a republic during the |^ .
Civil war. ^l"'
Andrews, Matthew Page. Passage of the Sixth Massachusetts regiment through ^^
Baltimore, April 19, 1861. Md. hist, mag., XIV (Mar.) 60-76. [760
Ashe, Sarah W. The trial of Henry Wirz. N. C. booklet, XVIII (Jan.) 143-156. B^
[761 1^
Bagwell, Alexander. Confederate generals killed in war. Conped. vet., XXVII
(Oct.) 386-387. [762
Bainbridge, Lucy Seaman. Sister Ohio; a memory of the Civil war. Outlook,
CXXII (May 28) 155-157. [763
The writer's personal reminiscences of relief work among the Army of the Potomac as a member of the ,
Ohio relief committee. j
Beauregard, G. T. Note relative to obstructions designed by Col. G. T. Beauregard \
for the Mississippi river at Fort Jackson and Fort St. Philip, La. , in Feb'y 1861. La.
HIST. QUAR., II (Oct.) 451-453. [764 ^
Bradwell, I. G. Battle of Cedar Creek, Va. Conped. vet., XXVII (Nov.) 411-412. ■
[765 ;
Bradwell, I. G. Battle of the Wilderness. Conped. vet., XXVII (Dec.) 458-459. , !
[766 , Is,
Bradwell, I. G. The burning of Wrightsville, Pa. [1863] Conped. vet., XXVII | I ^
(Aug.) 300-301. [767 : Ijj
Chaplain, C. T., and J. M. Keeling. Operations on the Blackwater river. Confed. |
vet., XXVII (Aug.) 304-305. [768 i«
Federal expedition in September 1862 against Franklin, Va., a small town on the Blackwater river. :
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 49
Clark, Walter. The raising, organization and equipment of North Carolina troops
during the Civil war. N. C. booklet, XIX (July) 55-65. [769
The Confederate government. Confed. vet., XXVII (Mar.) 99-102. [770
List of the executive officers and congressmen of the Confederacy.
Coulter, E. Merton. Commercial intercourse with the Confederacy in the Mississippi
valley, 1861-1865. Miss. Valley hist, rev., V (Mar.) 377-395. [771
An account of trading with the enemy.
Crump, Nannie Mayes. The attitude of the southern leaders on the Crittenden com-
promise. Confed. vet., XXVII (Jan.) 12-17. [772
Coins connected with the Confederate states. Numismatist, XXXII (Mar.) 101-104.
[773
Banner, Albert C. Father Bannon's secret mission. Confed. vet., XXVII (May)
180-181. ^ [774
In 1863 President Jefferson Davis sent Father John Bannon on a secret mission to Rome in an effort
to obtain the Pope's recognition of the Confederacy.
Dundas, William Oswald. Blockade running in the Civil war. Bellman, XXVI
(May 31) 606-608. [775
Dunning, W. A. Disloyalty in two wars. Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July) 625-630.
[776
A comparison of the policy of the government in regard to the treatment of disloyal citizens during
the Civil war and the World war.
Dutcher, Salem. The South and the Constitution. Confed. vet,, XXVII (July)
249-252. [777
Controverts the charge that the South fought to destroy the Constitution.
Edwards, John N. Shelby's expedition to Mexico; an unwritten leaf of the war.
Mo. HIST, rev., XIV (Oct.) 111-144. [778
Extracts from the account of "Shelby's expedition to Mexico," written by a participant, John N.
Edwards. It was published at Kansas City, Mo., in 1872, and is now out of print and rare.
Fish, Carl Russell. Back to peace in 1865. Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr.) 435-443.
[779
A study of the poUcy of demobilization in 1865.
Floyd, John B. The battle at Fort Donelson. Tenn. hist, mag., V (Oct.) 154-155.
[780
The report of General Floyd to General A. S. Johnston, Feb. 27, 1862; reproduced from the Daily
Nashville patriot, March 26, 1862.
Fry, A. F. The defensive South. Confed. vet., XXVII (Nov.) 422-425. [781
The writer contends that "the South in the period leading up to and including the war between
the states was ever on the defensive."
Green, B. W. Longstreet at Gettysburg. Confed. vet., XXVII (Feb.) 55-56. [782
Harden, William. The capture of the U. S. steamer "Water Witch" in Ossabaw
Sound, Ga., June 2-3, 1864. Ga. hist, quar.. Ill (Mar.) 11-27. [783
Hatton, C. R. The Valley campaign of 1864. Confed. vet. , XXVII (May) 168-172 .
[784
Hawes, Percy G. Last days of the Army of northern Vira:inia; a courier's recollections
of the last ten days of the war. Confed. vet. , XXVII (Sept.) 341-344. [785
Heathcote, Charles William. The Lutheran church and the Civil war. N. Y., Chi-
cago [etc.] Fleming H. Revell co. 160 p. [786
The first three chapters deal with the history of the church previous to the Civil war, especially as
affected by the slavery agitation.
Hobson, J. A. Richard Cobden, the international man. N. "5?".: Holt. 419 p. port.
[787
Another edition — London: T. F. Unwin.
The Civil war and the Sumner letters: p. 331-386.
Houston, Mollie H. President Davis and General Johnston. Confed. vet., XXVII
(June-Aug.) 216-218, 256-258, 302-304. [788
Hulet, C. C. Federal defense at Spring Hill. Confed. vet., XXVII (Apr.) 138-140.
[789
Hurst, T.M. The battle of Shiloh. Tenn. hist, mag., V( July) 81-96. [790
50 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Jackson, Andrew B . The panic at Washington after the firing on Fort Sumter. Wis.
MAG. HIST., Ill (Dec.) 244-245. [791
A letter written from Washington, April 18, 1861.
Johnson, E. Polk. Secession, north and south. Confed. vet., XXVII (May)
173-176. [792
Kuykendall, Balph S. A California state rights editor. Grizzly bear, XXIV
(Jan.) 3-4. [793
Lovick Pierce Hall, who edited the "Equal rights expositor" at VisaUa, California, 1862-1863.
Leonard, James H. Letters of a Fifth Wisconsin volunteer. Edited bv R. G. Plumb.
Wis. mag. hist., Ill (Sept.) 52-83. ' [794
Letters written by James H. Leonard, co. A, Fifth Wisconsin infantry, during the Civil war.
M'Neilly, James H. A great game of strategy. Confed. vet., XXVII (Oct.)
377-384. [795
Campaign in northern Georgia, Sherman's march to the sea, 1864.
M'Neilly, James H. Under fire at Port Hudson. Confed. vet., XXVII (Sept.)
336-339. [796
Malcolm, Grace M. How Lincoln made political enemies; President Wilson's
fourteen points recall the effect of Lincoln's emancipation proclamation. State
SERVICE, III (Feb.) 28-29. [797
Malone, Bartlett Yancey. The diary of Bartlett Yancey Malone; ed. by William
Whatley Pierson, jr. James Sprunt hist, pub., XVI, no. 2, 3-59. [798
Diary of a North Carolina farmer, who fought in the Confederate army from 1861 to Nov. 7, 1863»
when he was captured and imprisoned at Point Lookout, Maryland, imtil Feb. 24, 1865. |
Meehan, Thomas F. Army statistics of the Civil war. U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XIII, !
129-139. [799
Statistics regarding the nativity of the soldiers serving in the Union army. [
In refutation of the charges made by anti-Catholics regarding the percentage of desertion among i
Irish Roman Catholics in the Civil war. j
Oliver, John W. Draft riots in Wisconsin during the Civil war. Wis. mag. hist., II }
(Mar.) 334-336. [800
Phillips, H. A. Recalling events of Civil war days. State service, III (Aug.)
34-35. [801
"Lowville editor heard Horace Greeley speak at Saratoga Springs — He also met Lincoln and Grant—
The great miUtary parade at Washington."
Pickett, John T. Letter from Colonel John T. Pickett, of the Southern confederacy,
to Senor Don Manuel de Zamacona, minister of foreign affairs, Mexico. Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., II (Nov.) 611-617. [802
Introduction, by Mary Wilhehnine Williams.
Colonel John T. Pickett of Virginia was sent to Mexico as the diplomatic agent of the Confederate
states, early in 1861. The letter here given was written September 16, 1861.
Pratt, Julius W. Naval operations on the Virginia rivers in the Ci\'il war. U. S. N.
INST. PROC, XLV (Feb.) 185-195. [803
Quisenberry, A. C. The Confederate campaign in Kentucky, 1862; the battle of
Perryville. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVII (Jan.) 31-38. [804
Rice, De Long. The story of Shiloh. [Nashville: Brandon print, co.] 64 p.
plates. [805
Battle of Shiloh, 1862.
Kippy, J. Fred. Mexican projects of the Confederates. Southw. hist, quar., XXII
(Apr.) 291-317. [806
The sinking of the Albemarle. Wis. mag. hist., II (June) 452-454. [807
The Confederate ironclad ram "Albemarle" was sunk by a small Union force under command of
Lieut. William B. Cushing, u. s. N., on Oct. 27, 1864.
Spencer, C. R., jr. The morale of the Confederate soldier. Confed. vet., XXVII
(Feb.) 49-52. [808
Stephenson, Nathaniel Wright. The day of the Confederacy; a chronicle of the
embattled South. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] xi, 214 p. plate, ports.
(The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXX) [809
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Stephenson, Nathaniel Wright. The Confederacy, fifty years after. Atlantic,
CXXIII (June) 750-755. [810
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 51
Stone, Henry Lane. "Morgan's men," a narrative of personal experiences, . , .
delivered before George B. Eastin camp, no. 803, United Confederate veterans, at the
Free public library, Louisville, Ky., April 8, 1919. [Louisville: Westerfield-Bonte
CO., incorporated] 36 p. port. [811
Tyler, Lyon G. Judicial murder of Maj. Henry Wirz. Confed. vet., XXVII (May)
178-180. [812
Tyler, Lyon G. The South and self-determination. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII
(Apr.) 217-225. [813
Villiers, Brougham, and W. H. Chesson. Anglo-American relations, 1861-1865.
London: Unwin. vii, 214 p. [814
"Brougham Villiers," pseudonym for Frederick John Shaw.
Examines and explains the causes of friction between Great Britain and the United States during
the Civil war. The Trent affair, the launching of the "Alabama,' and Lincoln's emancipation procla-
mation are dealt with from the point of view of their effect upon opinion in England as illustrated by
contemporary correspondence.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 715-716.
Walmsley, James E. The last meeting of the Confeder-ate cabinet. Miss. Valley
HIST. REV., VI (Dec.) 336-349. [815
Ware, Edith E. Committees of public information, 1863-1866. Hist, outlook, X
(Feb.) 65-67. [816
Concerned with the activities of the Loyal publication society of New York, and a like society in
New England, the New England loyal publication society, and their efforts to cope with disafEection
and sedition in the North.
Wesley, Charles H. The employment of negroes as soldiers in the Confederate
army. Jour, negro hist., IV (July) 239-253. [817
Witherspoon, J. G. Confederate cavalry leaders. Confed. vet., XXVII (Nov.)
414-417. [818
Regimental Histories.
Louisiana infantry. Lea, H. J. With the fourth Louisiana battalion. Confed.
vet., XXVII (Sept.) 339-340. [819
Massachusetts infantry. Wilder, Burt Green. The Fifty-fifth regiment of the
Massachusetts volunteer^ infantry, colored, June 1863-September 1865. 3d ed.
Brookline, Mass.: The Riverdale press. 8 p. [820
<'Third edition, revised, with additions and in simplified spelling, February, 1919."
New York infantry. Morris, Ira K. Sickle's Excelsior brigade, United States
volunteers. State service, III (Aug.) 69-75, (Sept.) 72-77, (Nov.) 63-65. [821
1865-1919.
Miscellaneous.
ALsUey, Roscoe Lewis. America during five years of war, 1914-1919; supplement to
Ashley's "American history." N. Y.: Macmillan. 51 p. [822
varts, William Maxwell. Arguments and speeches of William Maxwell Evarts, ed.,
with an introduction, by his son Sherman Evarts. N. Y.: Macmillan. 3 v. ports.
[823
fFitzhugh, Percy Keese. From Appomattox to Germany; pictures of the great events
in a wonderful half century. N. Y. and London: Harper, xii, 409 p. illus. ports.
[824
Fleming, Walter Lynwood. The sequel of Appomattox; a chronicle of the reunion of
the states. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 322p. ports. (The chronicles
of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXXII) [825
" Abraham Lincoln edition."
Deals with the Reconstruction period.
The trial of President J ohnson: p. 158-173. The Union league of America: p. 174^195.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 519-520.
?ord, Henry Jones. The Cleveland era; a chronicle of the new order in politics. New
Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 232 p. ports. (The chronicles of America
series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XLIV) [826
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
The free silver revolt; p. 171-193.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 520-521.
62 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOlSr.
Parte del c6nsul de Espaiia en Haiti sobre la llegada del vapor "Hornet" a Port-auj
Prince y del canonero espafiol ** Isabel Catolica." Arch. nac. bol., XVIII (July!
420-426. [82'
Some documents of January and February, 1871, relating to the arrival at Port-au-Prince of thi
American filibustering vessel " Hornet."
Paxson, Frederic Logan. The new nation, Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Houghton Mifflin co
[10], 368, [2], xiv p. port., maps, diagrs. (The Riverside history of the Unitec
States . . . [IV]) • [82i
Period covered: 18G5-1919.
1st ed., covering the period 1865-1914, pub. in 1915.
The proceedings of a Mississippi migration convention in 1879. Jour, negro hist, i
IV (Jan.) 51-54. [82S
Taken from the Vicksburg Commercial daily advertiser. May 5, 1879.
Consists of a report of a committee in regard to the causes of the then recent exodus of the colored peopk
to lands in Kansas.
Rhodes, James Ford, History of *the United States from Hayes to McKinley, 1877-
1896. N. Y.: Macmillan. xiii, 484 p. [83C
v. VIII of the writer's History of the United States.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 525-527.
U. S. Congress. Senate. The Senate report on the exodus of 1879. Jour, negro
HIST., IV (Jan.) 57-92. [831
Report of the Select committee, appointed by the Senate to investigate the causes which led to the
migration of the negroes from the southern states to the northern states, 1880.
Williams, William F. The Arctic disaster of 1871. Americana, XIII (Jan.) 103-108.1
[832j
The story of the loss of thirty-two New Bedford whalers in the Arctic in 1871. It is told by "WiUiam F.
Williams, of New Bedford, and contained in the "History of New Bedford," by Zephaniah W. Pease.j
Spanish-American War. I
Coll y Toste, Cayetano. La defensa militar de Puerto Rico por el comandante de in-i
genieros Don Julio Cervera Baviera. Bol. hist. Puerto Rico, ano VI (Jan.) 7-22.!
[833!
Spanish defense of Porto Rico during the war with the United States, 1898. ;
Coll y Toste, Cayetano. La toma de Mayaguez, Guayama y Coamo por los Americanos, J
los preliminares de la paz y la entrega de la capital. Bol. hist. Puerto Rico, anoj
VI (Jan.) 24-32. [834i
Documentos referentes al gobierno militar americano en Puerto Rico. Bol. hist.i
Puerto Rico, ano VI (Mar.-May) 85-128, 129-157. [835 j
Documentos referentes al periodo de la guerra hispano-americana en Puerto Rico. I
Bol. hist. Puerto Rico, ano VI (Jan.-Mar.) 40-64, 65-85. [836 j
Risco, Alberto. La escuadra del almirante Cervera; narracion historica documentada |
del combate naval de Santiago de Cuba. Razon y fe, LIV (May-Aug.) 71-82, 169-
189, 279-293, 425-439; LV (Sept., Oct., Dec.) 21-36, 137-152, 491-498. [837
h
i liii
REGIONAL ( LOCAL ) HISTORY.
General.
Appleton, William Sumner. Destruction and preservation of old buildings in New
England. Art and archaeol., VIII (May) 131-184. [838
Aries, Henri d' . Le frangais en Nouvelle-Angleterre. Rev. nationale, I (Jan. ) 6-18.
[839
Henri d' Aries, pseudonym. Author's real name is Henri Beaud6.
Concerned particularly with the French in Connecticut.
Beginnings of New England. Americana, XIII (July) 215-243. [840
"Abridgement from 'Tercentenary of New England families, 1620-1920,' v. I, lately from press."
Benton, Elbert Jay. EstabHshing the American colonial system in the Old Northwest.
III. hist. soc. trans., for 1918, 47-63. [841
" The problem now essayed is to trace the actual process of establishing the peculiar American mode
of dealing with frontier communities."
The "blizzard" press of Dakota. Wis. mag. hist., II (Mar.) 331-332. [842
Tells of the expedients used in Dakota territory during the winter of 1880-81, to continue the publica-
tion of newspapers in spite of the shortage of paper caused by the cutting off of supplies.
Cannon, Miles. The Snake river in history. Ore. hist. soc. quar., XX (Mar.) 1-23.
[843
Charlottesville, Va. The unveiling of the Lewis-Clark statute at Midway park in the
city of Charlottesville, Virginia, November twenty-one, nineteen hundred nine-
teen . . . being a record of the exercises attending the unveiling; ed. by W. M.
Forrest. [Charlottesville] The city of Charlottesville. 36 p. [844
The Lewis and Clark expedition: an historical discourse, by A. C. Gordon: p. 13-36.
Cox, Nathaniel. Letters of Nathaniel Cox to Gabriel Lewis. La. hist, quar., II
(Apr.) 179-192. [845
The letters cover the period from 1806 to 1809 and give very realistic pictures of the life in those days
along the Mississippi river and in New Orleans.
Cunningham, Charles H., ed. Financial reports relating to Louisiana^ 1766-1788.
Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (Dec.) 381-397. [846
a contribution to the study of the activities of Spain in the Mississippi valley , consistin g of copies of four
financial reports from the province of Louisiana, to be found in the Archivo general de Tndias, Seville.
Dodd, William Edward. The cotton kingdom; a chronicle of the old South. New
Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 161 p. plates, ports., fold. map. (The chroni-
cles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXVII) [847
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Fry, A. F. The South and real Americanism. Conped. vet., XXVII (Sept.) 325-328.
[848
Groodwin, Cardinal. John H. Fonda's explorations in the Southwest [1820-1824]
Southw. hist, quar., XXIII (July) 39-46. [849
" The purpose of this paper is to make known a practically overlooked explorer and trader in the south-
west."
HEimes, George H. Beginnings of Christianity in Oregon. Ore. hist. soc. quar.,
XX (June) 159-172. [850
rones, Howard Mumford. The historical West. Dial, LXVI (May 17) 508-509. [861
Eelley, Hall Jackson. A geographical sketch of that part of North America called
Oregon . . . together with an essay on the advantages resulting from a settlement of
' the territory. 2d ed., enl., with an appendix embracing an account of the expedi-
tion, and directions for becoming an emigrant. Boston: J. Howe, 1831. [Tarry-
town, N. Y.: Reprinted, W. Abbatt, 1919] 104 p. map. (The Magazine of history,
with notes and queries. Extra number — no. 67) [852
ll Oregon territory, by W. J. Snelling; reprinted from New England magazine of April 1832: p. [89]-104,
53
54 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. ;
M'Neilly, James H. Characteristics of the old South. Conped. vet., XXVII (Apr.)
136-138. [853
Muzzey, David Saville. Chapters in southern history. Dial, LXVII (July 12) 16-18.
[854
A review of three of the volumes in the "Chronicles of America series," dealing with the South. They
are — The cotton kingdom, by WilUam E. Dodd; The day of the Confeaeracy, by Nathaniel W. Stephen-
son; and The anti-slavery crusade, by Jesse Macy.
Ogg, Frederic Austin. The Old Northwest; a chronicle of the Ohio Valley and
beyond. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 220 p. plates, ports., map.
(The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XIX) [855
Contents. — Pontiac's conspiracy. "A lair of wild beasts." The Revolution begins. The conquest
completed. Wayne, the scourge of the Indians. The great migration. Pioneer days and ways.
Tecumseh. The War of 1812 and the new West. Sectional cross currents. The upper Mississippi
VaUey.
Porter, David. The North-West coast. Wash. hist, quar., X (Apr.) 149-152. [856
Prints a letter written by Commodore David Porter to James Madison, president of the United States,
October 31, 1815, in which he proposes to undertake a voyage of discovery to the Pacific ocean.
Records, Spencer. Pioneer experiences in Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Ohio, and
Indiana, 1766-1836. Ind. mag. hist., XV (Sept.) 201-232. [857
Kobinson, William Davis. Spanish friars in the Oregon country, 1810-1811. Wash.
HIST. QUAR., X (Apr.) 141-149. [858
Prints an extract from Niles' register. Mar. 10, 1821, which gives a letter written by WiUiam Davis
Robinson, Jan. 15, 1821, deaUng with the discovery and settlement of the Pacific Northwest, and giving
an account of the activities of some Spanish friars in the region of the Oregon country,
Russell, Pearl. Analysis of the Pacific railroad reports [1854-1859] Wash, hist,
QUAR., X (Jan.) 3-16. ' [859
These reports fill 13 volumes^ and contain accounts of the western surveys made shortly after the
discovery of gold and the acquisition of the Mexican cession turned the attention of people to the Pacific
region.
SMppee, Lester Burrill. The federal relations of Oregon. Ore. hist. soc. quar.,
XX (Mar.-Dec.) 25-93, 173-218, 261-295, 345-395. [860
Cont. from v. XIX, 1918.
Contents.— The negotiations of 1842-1845. Giving notice. The treaty of 1846. Polk and Oregon
Territorial organization. The Territory of Oregon.
Skinner, Constance Lindsay. Pioneers of the old Southwest; a chronicle of the dark
and bloody ground. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] xi, 304 p. ports., fold,
map. (The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XVIII)
[861
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
A study of the history of the old Southwest, from its settlement to the beginning of the 19th century.
The passing of the French peril: p. 75-89. King's Movmtain: p. 195-225. Sevier, the state maker:
p. 226-271. i
Thompson, Holland. The new South; a chronicle of social and industrial evolution.
New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 250 p. plates, ports. (The chronicles of
America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XLII) [8g
"Abraham Lincoln edition." ^
Deals with the period from the end of Reconstruction until the present.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct. 1920) 146-147.
Thompson, Joseph J. The French in Illinois. III. Oath. hist, rev., II (July) 4-45. H||
Contents.— Discovery and exploration. The French settlements and civilization. French influence H j,
upon early lUinois.
Thompson, Joseph J. Illinois' first citizen — Pierre Gibault. III. Cath. hist, rev.,
I (Jan.-Apr.) 380-387, 484-494; II (July) 85-95. [864
Contents.— I. Gibault the patriot; the reconquest of Vincennes. II. Gibault the priest.
Turner, Frederick J. Greater New England in the middle of the nineteenth century.
Am. antiq. soc. proc, n. s. XXIX, pt. 2 (Oct. 15) 222-241. [866
"Greater New England may be defined as the region in which people of New England birth and
ancestry lived in such numbers as to make them the most considerable single stock therein."
A study of the significance of the historical movements which accompanied the extension of the
New England element in the first half of the nineteenth century especially into New York and parts
of the north central states.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 55
Alabama.
Alabama. Centennial commission. Alabama day program. A suggestive program
for the use of schools in the appropriate formal observance of the one hundredth
anniversary of the admission of Alabama to the Federal union. December 14,
1819-I)ecember 14, 1919. Issued by the commission. Montgomery, Ala.: The
Brown print, co., state printers. 16 p. [866
Jack, Theodore Henley. Sectionalism and party politics in Alabama, 1819-1842.
Menasha, Wis.: George Banta pub. co. vii, 93 p. [867
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Chicago, 1915.
Owen, Marie Bankhead. Alabama, or the making of a state, wherein are presented
some of the more important events in pioneer life and the transition from territory
to state. Third of a series of historical plays in commemoration of the close of a
century of statehood. Issued by the [Alabama centennial] commission. Mont-
gomery, Ala. : The Paragon press. 46 p. [868
Owen, Marie Bankhead. At old Mobile. Second of a series of historical plays in
commemoration of the close of a century of statehood. Issued by the commission.
Montgomery, Ala. : The Paragon press. 37 p. [869
Owen, Marie Bankhead. The battle of Maubilla. First of a series of historical plays
in commemoration of the close of a century of statehood. Issued by the [Alabama
centennial] commission. Montgomery, Ala. : The Paragon Press. 31 p. [870
Owen, Marie Bankhead. De Soto and the Indians. First of a series of children's
plays in commemoration of the close of a century of statehood. Issued by the
Alabama centennial commission. Montgomery, Ala. : The Paragon press. 18 p.
[871
Owen, Marie Bankhead. How Bienville saved Mobile. Second of a series of
I children's plays in commemoration of the close of a century of statehood. Issued
by the Alabama centennial commission. Montgomery, Ala.: The Paragon press.
25 p. [872
Alaska.
ij Andrews, C. L. Reindeer in Alaska. Wash. hist, quae., X (July) 171-176. [873
j Bamum, Francis. The Catholic missions in Alaska; a compendium of their history
from the foundation until 1900. U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XIII, 87-100. [874
Arizona.
I Bobinson, Will H. The story of Arizona. Phoenix, Ariz.: Berryhill co. 458 p.
. plates, map. [875
Westergaard, Waldemar. Senator Bard and the Arizona-New Mexico statehood con-
troversy. So. Cal. HIST. soc. PUB., XI, pt. 2, 9-17. [875a
Arkansas.
i United daughters of the confederacy. Arkansas division. Historical Arkansas.
Compliments of the Memorial chapter, U. D. C, Little Rock, Arkansas. [Little
Rock: Democrat printing and lithographing CO., 1919?] 36 p. illus., ports. [876
California.
Beasley, Delilah L. The negro trail blazers of California; a compilation of records from
the California archives in the Bancroft library at the University of California, in
Berkeley; and from the diaries, old papers and conversations of old pioneers in the
state of California. Los Angeles, Cal. [Times mirror printing and binding house]
317 p. ports. [877
Bepler, Doris West. Bits of San Francisco history since the American flag was raised
there in 1846. Grizzly Bear, XXV (Sept.) 16. [878
§6 AMEKICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. I
I
Bolton, Herbert E., ed. The Iturbide revolution in the Californias. Hispanic Am.'
HIST. REV., II (May) 188-242. [879!
Copies of documents found in the Archivo general y publico, Mexico City. They record the steps '
by which the temporary Iturbide regime wasinstalled in the two CaUfornias in 1822, and are illustrative !
of one phase of the ' ' guerra de independencia' as it affected two frontier Spanish provinces.
California. Historical survey commission. The care and use of the county archives!
of California. By Owen C. Coy, director and archivist. Publication of the Cali-
fornia Historical survey commission. Sacramento: California state printing office.
viii, 92p. [880,
John F. Davis, chairman. I
This study is a reprint of pt. I of the Guide to the county archives of California. j
California. Historical survey commission. Guide to the county archives of Cali-i
fornia. By Owen C. Coy, director and archivist. Sacramento [The Commission] |
[xi], 622 p. maps. [881 1
Chapman, Charles Edward. Effects of geography upon California history. .Grizzly '
Bear, XXV (May) 3-4. [882 ;
Chapman, Charles Edward. The name "California;" its origin and application.!
Grizzly Bear, XXV (Dec.) 3-5. [883 i
Collins, A. Harvey. At the end of the trail; the Mormon outpost of San Bernardino'
valley. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, pt. 2, 65-81. [883a i
[Denison, Bill] The letter of a '49er; now first printed from the original with fore- \
word by Oscar Wegelin. N. Y.: Priv. print. 10 p. [884 \
Letter signed: Bill Denison; dated: San Francisco, Jan. 14. 50. I
Dickson, Lucile E. The founding and early history of Anaheim, California. So. I
Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, pt. 2, 26-37. [884a |
Fages, Pedro. An historical, political, and natural description of California. By 1
Don Pedro Fages. Translated by Herbert I. Priestley. Cath. hist, rev., IV 1
(Jan.) 486-509; V (Apr.) 71-90. [885 |
One of the earliest descriptions of California extant written by one of the participants in the first i
expedition of Spaniards to Monterey, in 1769. The original manuscript, dated Nov. 20, 1775, is in the i
Mexican archives, Museo nacional. It was written as a continuation to the two previously printed i
works on the G^lvez expedition.
Forbes, Alexander. California: a history of Upper & Lower California from their |
first discovery to the present time, comprising an account of the climate, soil, |
natural productions, agriculture, commerce, &c. A full view of the missionary ■■
establishments and condition of the free & domesticated Indians, with an appendix ;
relating to steam-navigation in the Pacific. Reprinted page for page, . . . from ;
the original edition, pub. by Smith, Elder & co., London, 1839, and to which is \
added a new index. San Francisco, Cal.: T. C. Russell. 10a, xvi, 372 p. illus., \
plates, port., map. [886 I
Forbes, Mrs. A. S. C. El camino real, the historic old trail of California. D. A. R. 1
MAG., LIII (Dec.) 730-734. [887 i
Jones, Thomas R. In California, fifty years ago, General Winn made first attempt |
to organize native sons. Grizzly Bear, XXV (June) 16-17. [888 |
An early attempt to organize the Order of the Native sons of the Golden West. ;
Jones, Thomas R. January [-December] in California fifty years ago. Grizzly )
Bear, XXIV (Jan.-Dec.) 7, 17 [etc.] [889
A series of articles in each number of the magazine, with various paging. {
Kuykendall, Ralph S. Early history of Yosemite Valley, California. Washington: i
Gov. print, off. 12 p. [890
At head of title: Department of the interior. National park service.
" Reprint of an article published in the Grizzly Bear (oflBcial organ Native sons and native daughters
Golden West) July, 1919.*'
Kuykendall, Ralph S. Genesis of the *'Alta California." Grizzly Bear, XXIV
(Mar.) 8-9, (Apr.) 5-6. [891
Early newspaper of California.
Mansfield, George C. Butte, the story of a California county. [Oroville, Calif.:
Oroville register print] 40, v p. [892
General Bidwell, pioneer and builder: v p. at end.
Miller, George. A trip to Death Valley [1869] So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, pt. 2,
56-64. [892a
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 57
Prudhomme, Charley. Leon Victor Prudon (Prudhomme) being the record of one
of California's earliest pioneers. Grizzly Bear, XXV (Nov.) 2. [893
A Frenchman who came to California from Louisiana in 1835.
San Francisco. Committee of vigilance. Papers of the San Francisco Committee
of vigilance of 1851, III. Minutes and miscellaneous papers, financial accounts
and vouchers. Ed. by Mary Floyd Williams. Berkeley, Cal.: University of Cali-
fornia, xvi, 906 p. plates, map, chart. (Acad. Pacific coast hist, pub., v. IV) [894
V. I of the Papers was pub. in 1910, as v. I, no. 7 of the Publications of the Academy of Pacific coast
history; v. II in 1911, as v. II, no. 2 of the Publications [etc.]
Thayer, Mabel R. California pioneer journalists from 1846 to 1857. So. Cal. hist.
see. PUB., XI, pt. 2, 38-52. [894a
Wright, Corrine King. The conquest of Los Angeles. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI,
pt. 2, 18-25. [894b
The capture of Los Angeles by theAmerican forces in 1846.
Colorado.
! Maxwell, Emma Eliza. Outline of Colorado history and civil government, including
city and county of Denver. [Denver: Deal and Reed] 20 p.
Connecticut.
Connecticut. Adjutant-general's office. Record of service of Connecticut men in
the army, navy and marine corps of the United States in the Spanish- American
war, Philippine insurrection and China relief expedition from April 21, 1898, to
July 4, 1904. Comp. by authority of the General assembly, January session, 1915,
: under the direction of the adjutant general. Hartford, Conn.: Case, Lockwood
and Brainard co. 222 p. ports. [895a
j Brigadier General George M. Cole, adjutant general.
Connecticut. General assembly. Centennial committee. State of Connecticut;
the one hundredth anniversary of the first meeting of the General assembly, under
i the present constitution and the second general legislative reunion. The Capitol
Hartford, Wednesday, May 7, 1919. Comp. by William Harrison Taylor, secretary
of the Centennial committee. Hartford: Pub. by the state. 188 p. illus., plates,
ports. , facsim. [895b
Connecticut towns in the order of their establishment since 1819; with the origin of their names: p.
177-178.
jimonds, Jesse Rupert. A history of the First church and society of Branford,
Connecticut, 1644-1919. New Haven, Conn.: Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor co.
viii, 191 p. plates, ports. [896
Delaware.
odney, Richard S. Historic notes relating to New Castle, Delaware. Phila.
GEOG. soc. BUL., XVII (Oct.) 138-142. [897
District of Columbia.
brnard, Job. Early days of the Supreme court of the District of Columbia. Co
LUMBIA HIST. SOC. EEC, XXII, 1-35. ^"'
prton, Wilfred Mason. The road to Washington. Boston: R. G. Badger. 197 p.
I plates, ports., maps. [899
A story describing Washington landmarks and giving facts concerning the British invasion and
capture of the city in 1814.
ark, Allen C. General John Peter Van Ness, a mayor of the city of Washington,
his wife, Marcia, and her father, David Burnes. Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXII,
125-204. [900
ark, Allen C. General Roger Chew Weightman [1787-1876] a mayor of the city of
Washington. Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXII, 62-104. [901
'ans, George Whitfield. The birth and growth of the Patent office. Columbia
HIST. soc. rec, XXII, 105-124. ^"'
58 AMERICA:!^ HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION".
Fry, Smith D. School history of the Capitol building at Washington. Washingto
D. C. 130 p. port. [9(i
Noel, F. Regis, and Margaret Brent Downing. The court-house of the District
Columbia. [Washington, D. C: Press of Judd and Detweiler] 105 p. illue
plates, ports. [9(
Proctor, John Clagett. Christian Hines [1781-1874] author of "Early recollections ;
Washington city," with notes on the Hines family. Columbia hist. soc. rec'
XXII, 36-61. [9(1
Florida.
I
Brevard, Caroline Mays. A history of Florida, by Caroline Mays Brevard, wii
questions, supplementary chapters and an outline of Florida civil governmer
by H. E. Bennett. N. Y. and Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 275, xv p. illus. '
[91.
Doggett, Carita. Dr. Andrew Turnbull and the New Smyrna colony of Florid:
[Florida: The Drew press] 212 p. port., plates. [9(!
Georgia.
Erskine, John. The decision of Judge John Erskine in the case Ex parte Williai
Law, under the "attorney's test oath act." Ga. hist, quae.. Ill (Sept.) 10,'
130. [9i|
Among the early reconstruction measures adopted was a law requiring all lawyers seeking to pract i
their profession in the XJ. S. courts to take an oath known as the "attorney's test oath." The easel
hand, tried in a Georgia court, resulted in the decision that the law was unconstitutional. |
Felton, Rebecca Latimer, * * Mrs. W. H. Felton. ' ' Country life in Georgia in the days 1
my j^outh, also addresses before Georgia legislature, woman's clubs, womeri
organizations and other noted occasions. Atlanta, Ga.: Printed by Index priii
CO. 299, [3] p. port. [9i
Goetchius, Henry R. Columbus, Ga., and General Henry L. Benning. Ga. msi
QUAR., Ill (Mar.) 3-10. [9|
Harden, William. The case of George Mcintosh. Ga. hist, quae., Ill (Sept.) 13
145. [9
Howells, W. D. Savannah twice visited. Harper's, CXXXVIII (Feb.) 319-332.
[9
McLeod, Mrs. Hugh, (Rebecca Lamar) The loss of the steamer Pulaski. Ga. his
QUAR., Ill (June) 63-95. [9
The steam packet "Pulaski" of Savannah was wrecked on June 14th, 1838.
Illinois.
Alvord, Clarence W. The centennial history of Illinois. III. hist. soc. trans., i
1918, 74-82. [9
Bancroft, Edgar A. Illinois — the land of men. III. hist. soc. trans., for 191
31a-311. [9
Beaubien, Frank G. The Beaubiens of Chicago. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Jul
96-105. [9
Belting, Paul E. The development of the free public high school in Illinois to 18(
Springfield: Illinois state historical society journal. 206 p. [9
Reprinted from the Illinois state historical society jovu-nal, v. XI, no. 3, Oct. 1918, and no. 4, Jan. 191
Benden, Edwin. Historical sketch of the Baptist denomination in Livingston count
Illinois. III. hist. soc. jour., XI, no. 3 (Oct. 1918) 410-413. [9
Cole, Arthur Charles. The era of the Civil war, 1848-1870. Springfield: Illinois cei
tennial commission. [14], 499 p. ports., maps. (Illinois centennial publicatioi;
pub. by authority of the Illinois centennial commission. The centennial historv
Illinois, C. W. Alvord, editor-in-chief, v. Ill) [9
Rev. in; Am, hist, rev., XXV (Oct.) 123-124.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 59
Eckenrode, H. J. Virginia in the making of Illinois. III. hist. soc. trans., for 1918,
31-37. [920
Graham, James M. Catholic heroes of Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Jan.)
!| 294-302. [921
! Hamilton, Oscar B., ed. History of Jersey county, Illinois. Chicago: Munsell pub.
CO. [18], 664 p. plates, ports., map. [922
Happel, Frederick L. Illinois centennial celebration, under auspices of Illinois
Catholic historical society. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Jan.) 277-285. [923
Hough, Frances L. History of Pulaski county Episcopal church. III. hist. soc.
jour., XI, no. 3 (Oct. 1918) 418-421. [924
Illinois. Secretary of state. Counties of Illinois: their origin and evolution, with
twenty-three maps showing the original and the present boundary lines of each
county of the state. Comp. and pub. by Louis L. Emmerson, secretary of state.
[Springfield: Illinois state journal CO., state printers] 67 p. maps. [925
Jamison, Isabel. The first official Thanksgiving in Illinois. III. hist. soc. jour.,
XI, no. 3 (Oct. 1918) 370-378. [926
Johnson, Allen. Illinois in the democratic movement of the century. III. hist. soc.
trans., for 1918, 38-46. _ [927
"Abraham Lincoln was the greatest contribution of Illinois to the democratic movement of the
century."
Kirkland, Caroline, ed. Chicago yesterdays; a sheaf of reminiscences. Chicago:
Daughaday and co. vi, 310 p. port. [928
A collection of articles by various writers.
Lewis, E. B. Illinois pioneer days. Litchfield, 111. [The author] 80 p. [928a
Lindley, Robert. The Cannon-Stark Indian massacre and captivity. Edited by Milo
Custer. III. hist. soc. jour., IX, no. 4 (Jan.) 587-591. [929
McLean, John. One hundred years in Illinois (1818-1918), an account of the develop-
ment of Illinois in the first century of her statehood. Chicago: Peterson linotyping
CO. 298 p. port. [930
Includes several chapters on Pullman , Illinois.
I Madden, Margaret. Catholic women of Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Jan.)
j 286-293. [931
j Memories of the Fort Dearborn massacre; who was David Kennison? III. Cath.
I hist, rev., II (July) 50-60. ' [932
MiUer, Amos. Lawyers of Montgomery county, Illinois. III. hist. soc. jour., XI,
II no. 3 (Oct. 1918) 379-385. [933
Mills, Andrew H. 1818-1918. A hundred years of Sunday school history in Illinois.
III. HIST. soc. trans., for 1918, 93-196. [934
Moores, Charles W. The interest Indiana holds in historic Illinois. III. hist. soc.
II trans., for 1918, 64-73. [935
Bobinson, Mabel Hall. History of Christ church, Carlyle, Illinois. III. hist. soc.
jour., XI, no. 3 (Oct. 1918) 414-417. [936
Protestant Episcopal church.
Thompson, Joseph J. The Irish in early Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Oct.)
223-238. [937
Tillson, Christiana Holmes. A woman's story of pioneer Illinois. Ed. by Milo Milton
Quaife. Chicago: R. R. Donnelley and sons co. xxi, 169 p. ports. (The Lake-
side classics, [v. XVII]) [938
First edition privately printed in 1873 with title: Reminiscences of early life in Illinois by our mother.
Indiana.
Buley, R. C. Indiana in the Mexican war. Ind. mag. hist., XV (Sept.-Dec.) 260-
292, 293-326. [939
Bums, Lee. The national road in Indiana. Indianapolis: C. E. Pauley and co.
p.[209]-237. illus. (Indiana hist. soc. pub., v. VII, no. 4) [940
59976°— 22 6
60 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIfT.
Dunn, Jacob Piatt. Indiana and Indianans, a history of aboriginal and territorial i
Indiana and the century of statehood. Chicago and N. Y. : The American historical i
society. 5 v. illus., ports. [941
Medical history of Indiana's first century, by G. W. H. Kemper, -with "Historical references": v. IT,
p. 787-859.
V. III-V: Biographical.
Hodges, Mrs. Laura Fletcher. Early Indianapolis. Indianapolis: C. E. Pauley
and CO. [1919?] 27 p. (Ind. hist. soc. pub., v. VII, no. 5) [942
Iglehart, John E. The coming of the English to Indiana in 1817 and their Hoosier
neighbors. Ind. mag. hist., XV (June) 89-178. [943
Account of the settlement in southern Indiana of emigrants from England, beginning in 1817, and
of their influence in the development of the state.
Indiana. Dept of conservation. Turkey Run state park: a history and description.
The Department of conservation, state of Indiana, 1919. [Indianapolis: W. B. Bur-
ford, contractor for state printing and binding] 48 p. illus., ports., plate. [944
Indiana. Historical commission. The Indiana centennial, 1916: a record of the
celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of Indiana's admission to statehood,
ed. by Harlow Lindley, secretary Indiana historical commission. IndianapoUs:
The Indiana historical commission. 441 p. illus., plates, ports. (Indiana historical
collections) [946
Sherwood, Henry Noble. Indiana state aid for negro deportation. Miss. Valley
msT. REV., extra number (May) 414-421. [946
Stewart, Ernest D. The Populist party in Indiana. Ind. mag. hist., XV (Mar.)
53-74. [947
Cont. from v. XIV, 1918. ^
Wilson, George Robert. The Dubois county settlement stone. 47 p. [947a
On December 31, 1919, the writer of this sketch presented to the commissioners of Dubois county a
stone marker for the place of the first settlement in Dubois county.
Wilson, George Robert. Early Indiana trails and surveys. Indianapolis: C. E.
Pauley and co. p. [349]-457. illus. (maps) (Ind. hist. soc. pub., v. VI, no. 3)
[948
Woollen, William Watson. Reminiscences of the early Marion county bar. Indian-
apolis: 0. E. Pauley and co. [1919?] p. [185]-208. (Ind. hist. soc. pub., v. VII,
no. 3) [9^
Iowa.
Fairchild, D. S. History of medicine in Iowa. Ia. state med. soc. jour., IX
(Apr., June, Aug.) 108-119 180-187, 265-268. [950
Title varies.
Gallaher, Ruth A. Fort Des Moines in Iowa history. Iowa City, la.: State his-
torical society of Iowa. 36 p. (Iowa and war, no. 22, April 1919) [961
"A sketch of three army establishments, each of which reflected the military needs of the times."
Goodwin, Cardinal. The American occupation of Iowa 1833 to 1860. Ia. jour.
HIST., XVII (Jan.) 83-102. [962
" The purpose of this paper is to summarize the settlement of Iowa between the years 1833 and 1860."
Ingham, William H. Ten years on the Iowa frontier. [Des Moines? Ia.] pamphlet.
illus., plates, ports. [963
Address: Mrs. Harvey Ingham, Des Moines, la. ^
A contribution to Iowa pioneer history.
Upham, Cyril B. Historical survey of the militia in Iowa, 1838-1865. Ia. jour.
HIST., XVII (July) 299-405. [964
Kentucky.
Anderson, Kitty. Soldiers' Retreat, a historical house and its famous people. Ky.
msT. soc. REG., XVII (Sept.) 67-77. [956
Soldiers' Retreat is about ten miles east of Louisville.
Cotterill, R. S. Early railroading in Kentucky. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVII (Jan.)
55-62. [966
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 61
EUwanger, Ella Hutchison. Oxmoor — its builder and its historian. Ky. hist. soc.
REG., XVII (Jan.) 9-21. [967
Alexander Scott Bullitt, the biiilder of this estate, moved to Kentucky in 1783.
Ellwanger, Ella Hutchison. Shakertown, its present and its past. Ky. hist. soc.
RES., XVII (Sept.) 31-43. [968
Kinkead, Elizabeth Shelby. A history of Kentucky. N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Am.
bk. CO. 288 p. illus., ports., maps. [969
On cover: Revised edition. 1st ed., 1896.
Reminiscences of Kentucky and her early patriots. From reports of committees,
Istsess. 29th Cong., v. 2, 1845-46. Report no. 403, p. 22-25. Tyler's quar. hist.
AND GENEAL. MAG., I (July) 26-30. [960
Taylor, Philip Fall. Calendar of surveys made for officers and soldiers of the French
and Indian war found in the Kentucky land office. In the Year book of the Society
of colonial wars in the commonwealth of Kentucky, 1917. Published by the
Society [1918 ?] p. 67-136. [961
Index of persons in "Earliest surveys of land in Kentucky": p. 127-136
Louisiana.
Arthur, Stanley Clisby. The emblematic bird of Louisiana. La. hist, quar.,
II (July) 248-257. [962
Barret, Charles. Celebration of the founding of New Orleans. La. hist, quar.,
II (July) 258-267. [963
Address by Charles Barret, consul general of France, delivered in French, before the Louisiana his-
torical society, December 20, 1918, with translation by Grace King.
Bispham, Clarence Wyatt. Fray Antonio de Sedella. La. hist, quar., II (Jan.,
Oct.) 24-37, 369-392. [964
A Capuchin priest who came to Louisiana in 1780, and was for many years cur6 of the cathedral at
New Orleans. During the Spanish regime he came into conflict with the governor and with certain
ecclesiastical authorities.
Bispham, Clarence Wyatt. New Orleans, a treasure house for historians. La. hist,
quar., II (July) 237-247. [965
Bonham, Milledge L., jr. The flags of Louisiana. La. hist, quar., II (Oct.) 439-
446. [966
Concerning Hiram Power's statue of Washington made for the state of Louisiana
before the Civil war and destroyed by fire in New Orleans during the Louisiana
I state fair in 1872. La. hist, quar., II (July) 272-275. [967
Copy of the Telegraphe. La. hist, quar., II (July) 292-302. [968
II Copy of the July 21, 1804, number of a paper called the Telegraphe, published in New Orleans. This
number contains a copy of a Fourth of July oration (1804) by M. P. Derbigny, with an English trans-
lation.
jCJruzat, Heloise Hulse. The Ursulines of Louisiana. La. hist, quar., II (Jan.)
5-23. [969
The Ursulines in New Orleans during French colonial days and later.
Uusachs, Gaspar. Lafitte, the Louisiana pirate and patriot. La. hist, quar., II
(Oct.) 418-438. [970
Jean Lafitte, the "corsair of the Gulf," who established a smuggling depot at Barataria, near New
Orleans, about 1811. He rendered valuable service in the defense of New Orleans in 1814, and was
subsequently pardoned by the U. S. government.
Jusachs, Gaspar. Petitions for concessions of islands of Caillou and Timbalier, and
order of survey. La. his r. quar., II (July) 303-306. [971
Documents of 1787-1830 relating to these islands south of Louisiana.
Dart, Henry Plauch6. The archives of Louisiana. La. hist. quar. , II (Oct. ) 349-467.
[972
)e Grange, Joseph H. Historical data of Spanish Fort. La. hist, quar., II (July)
268-271. [973
Spanish Fort was built in 1770 by Baron de Carondelet; it bore the name of Fort San Juan, but was
later called Spanish Fort because it was built by the Spanish governor.
)ejan, Victorin. Louisiane-autrefois. La. hist, quar., II (July) 307-317. [974
An English translation by Heloise H. Cruzat is also given— "Manon Lescaut the real versus the
ideal." Identifies the "Manon Lescaut" of the Abb6 Provost's story as one Manon Porcher, who was
transported to Louisiana in 1718.
62 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
De La Vergne, H. J. Louisiana. La. hist, quar., II (Apr.) 174-176. [975 j
Kerr, C. M. Highway progress in Louisiana. La. hist, quar., II (Jan.) 56-71. [976 |
Louisiana historical and biograpMcal association. "Louisianians and their state;";
a historical and biographical text book of Louisiana; its notable men and leading '
institutions. Louisiana historical and biographical association. D. D. Moore, \
president and editor. . . . [New Orleans?] 144 numbered leaves, ports. [977 i
Advertising matter: 1. 119-144. {
Pontalba, Joseph Xavier de. Letters, in journal form, written to Don Estevan Miro, |
ex-governor of Louisiana, by Don Joseph Xavier de Pontalba, in 1792. Translated '
by Heloise Hulse Cruzat. La. hist, quar., II (Oct.) 393-417. [9^f
Written from New Orleans.
Renshaw, Henry. Jackson square [New Orleans] La. hist, quar., II (Jan.) 38-46.
[979 1
Renshaw, James A. The lost city of Lafayette. La. hist, quar., II (Jan.) 47-55.
[980 1
Incorporated in 1833, and coHSOlidated with New Orleans in 1852.
Tompkins, Florence Cooney. Women of the sixties. La. hist, quar., II (July)!
282-285. [9|l|
Maine.
Burrage, Henry Sweetser. Maine in the northeastern boundary controversy. [Port- i
land, Me.] Printed for the state, xiv, 398 p. plates, ports., maps, facsims. [982 1
The writer is state historian of Maine.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 367-368.
[Document] relating to the early history of Brewer, Maine [1786] Sprague's jour.
Maine hist., VII (May) 20-22. [9
Hatch, Louis Clinton. Maine; a history. Centennial ed. Editor-in-chief, Loms!
Clinton Hatch . . . assisted by members of Maine historical society and other
writers. N. Y.: The American historical society. 3 v. [984]
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 512-513.
Hatch, Louis Clinton. The beginnings of prohibition. Americana, XIII (Oct.)!
323-335. [985 |
"This narrative is from advance sheets of 'History of Maine,' by Louis C. Hatch."
Hull, John T. The old Eastern cemetery in Portland, Maine. Sprague's jour.
Maine hist., VII (Aug.) 79-80. [986
Keene, Carter B. The evolution of the American postal service; something about |
its history in Maine. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VII (Nov.) 123-131. [987
Massachusetts. General court. Resolves passed by the Massachusetts legislature,
1818-20, relating to Maine. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VII (Aug.) 95-98.
[988
Noyes, David. Norway, Maine; fragmentary notes from David Noyes, History of
Norway, published in 1852. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VII (May- Aug.)
24-27, 82-85. [989
Oxford county gleanings (from old Massachusetts registers) Sprague's jour. Maine
hist., VI (Feb.) 162-165. [990
Sprague, John Francis. Aroostook war volunteers. Sprague's jour. Maine hist.,
VI (Feb.) 147-152. [991
Lists of volunteers in the Aroostook war, found in reports of the captains of the companies, taken from
papers in the state Land office.
Waterman, Charles E. Shaker communities of Maine. Sprague's jour. Maine
msT., VI (Feb.) 139-146. [992
Maryland.
Ashe, Samuel A. Memories of Annapolis. So. Atlan. Quar., XVIII (July) 197-
210. [993
Battle of Long Island. Md. hist, mag., XIV (June) 110-120. [994
Report of a committee of the Maryland historical society, appointed to investigate the records with
a view to establishing the personnel composing the "Maryland four hundred" who, at the battle of
Long Island, Aug. 27, 1776, checked the British advance during the successful retreat of Washington's
main army.
1919. 63
Keidel, George C. Catonsville articles. Md. hist, mag., XIV (Dec.) 400-402. [995
List of articles relating to the history of Catonsville, written by George C. Keidel.
Key, Rebecca. A notice of some of the first buildings, with notes of some of the
early residents [of Annapolis] Md. hist, mag., XIV (Sept.) 258-271. [996
Maryland Mstorical societies. Dedication of the H. Irvine Keyser memorial building.
Md. hist, mag., XIV (Mar.) 1-32. [997
Building presented to the Maryland historical society as a memorial to H. Irvine Keyser of Baltimore.
Includes. — The society as the custodian and publisher of the archives of Maryland, by Emerson C.
Harrington. Maryland history and the Maryland historical society, by Bernard C. Steiner.
Nicholson, James M. Mrs. B. I. Cohen's fancy dress party, Thursday, February 2,
1837. Md. hist, mag., XIV (Dec.) 348-358. [998
Letter from James M. Nicholson, Baltimore, Feb. 3, 1837, describing the ball, and giving a list of
Bhodes, Harrison. Annapolis and Annapolitans. Harper's, CXXXVIII (Apr.)
641-654. [999
Shepherd, Henry E. Recollections of Frederick, Md. Conped. vet., XXVII (May)
167-168. [1000
Mainly of the Civil war period.
Massachusetts.
Amherst, Mass. Amherst petition on the embargo, 1808. Mass. hist. soc. proc,
LII, 161-163. [1001
Copy of the address of the inhabitants of the town of Amherst, to the President of the United States,
August 30, 1808, respecting the embargo.
Presented by J. Franklin Jameson.
Armstrong, Thomas H. Glimpses of lower Main street. Waltham hist. soc. pub.,
1, 21-30. [1002
Armstrong, Thomas H. Piety Corner and Pond End schools; characteristics and
teachers. Waltham hist. soc. pub., I, 46-50. [1003
Bentley, William. From Rev. Dr. William Bentley's diary. Danvers hist, soo,
COLL., VII, 94r-96. [1004
Danvers, Mass., May 15-Nov. 18, 1785.
Bodfish, Annie W. A few facts relating to Main street. Nantucket hist. Assoc.
PROC, XXV, 25-27. [1006
fBoston. Old South church. Our heritage, Old South church, 1669-1919. [Nor-
wood, Mass.] Imprinted for the Old South society by the Plimpton press. 94 p.
plate. [1006
Old South church, 1669-1884, by G. A. Gordon: p. 13-72. The ministry of George A. Gordon, by
A. E. Dunning; p. 73-93.
iBoston. Old South church. The two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the foimd-
I ing of the Old South church (Third church, 1669) in Boston. [Norwood, Mass.]
' Imprinted for the Old South society by the Plimpton press, ix, 138 p. [1007
The historical discourse, by Rev. G. A. Gordon: p. 25-84.
[Burbank, Alfred Stevens] Guide to historic Plymouth; localities and objects of-
interest. Plymouth, Mass.: A. S. Burbank. 96 p. illus. [1008
iurrill, Ellen Mudge. Lynn in our grandfathers' time. Lynn hist. soc. reg.,
XXI, 36-108. [1009
obum, Frederick W. Art and literature in Lowell. Americana, XIII (Oct.)
33e-366. [1010
"From advance sheets of a history of that city by Mr. Frederick W. Cobum (Lewis hist. pub. co.,
N.Y.)."
)ow, George Francis. Newspaper items relating to Topsfield, copied from Salem
newspapers [1871-1873] Topsfield hist. soc. coll., XXIV, 113-126. [1011
Cent, from v. XXIH, 1918.
Griant, Frank] comp. The history of the celebration of the two hundred and fiftieth
anniversary of the incorporation of the town of Westfield, Massachusetts, August 31,
September 1, 2, 3, 1919, and appendix with reminiscences of the last half-century.
[Concord, N. H.: Printed by the Rumford press] xiv, 239 p. plates, ports.,
facsims. [1011a
64 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Gratz, Henry Howard. The Burns centenary, 1859. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LII
153-159. [1012
The writer gives an account of his visit to Boston in 1859 to attend the celebration of the centennial
anniversaiy of the birth of Robert Burns.
Henderson, Helen Weston. A loiterer in New England. N. Y.: George H. Doran
CO. 445 p. plates, ports., map. [I013
Limited to localities in Massachusetts.
Hines, Ezra D. Some thoughts in connection with the old Ipswich road. Dan- {
VERS msT. soc. COLL., VII, 29-32. [1014
Hussey, Roland Bunker. The original Quaker hearse. Nantucket hist. Assoc, i
PROC, XXV, 28-36. [1015
Lane, Ellen E. Seventy-five years ago. Waltham hist. soc. pub., I, 7-15. [1016
Lane, Ellen E. Weston street and thereabouts. Waltham hist. soc. pub., I, 16-20.
[1017
Mann, Moses W. How did Medford get its name? Medpord hist, reg., XXII
(Apr.) 21-25. [1018 '
Mann, Moses W. In another corner of Medford. Medpord hist, reg., XXII
(Apr.) 25-37. [1019
Historical account of a part of Medford which borders on Somerville. ;
Mann, Moses W. Medford a century ago. Medford hist, reg., XXII (Dec.)
65-75. [1020
Mann, Moses W. The Medford library building. Medpord hist, reg., XXII j
(Jan.) 1-7. [1021 |
Mann, Moses W. Scraps of paper. Medpord hist, reg., XXII (July) 45-53. [1022 I
Extracts from old manuscripts relating to the history of Medford. 1
Massachusetts. The acts and resolves, public and private, of the Province of the \
Massachusetts Bay: to which are prefixed the charters of the province; with his- !
torical and explanatory notes, and an appendix, v. XX, being volume XV of i
the Appendix, containing Resolves, etc., 1777-1778. Boston: Wright and Potter i
print. CO., state printers, 1918. 830 p. [1023 i
Massachusetts. Dept. of public health. Fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the ;
State board of health of Massachusetts. State department of public health, Eugene \
R. Kelley,.M. D., commissioner. [Boston?] [271]-333 p. plates, tables. [1023a
Newhall, Charles. The Dan vers post office; its establishment and history. Dan- '.
vers hist. soc. coll., VII, 1-21. [1024 \
Newspaper items relating to Danvers [1766-1774] Danvers hist. soc. coll., VII, |
22-28. [1026 I
Nutt, Charles. Beginnings of Worcester, Massachusetts. Americana, XIII (Jan.) '
1-20. [1026 I
Abridged from the " History of Worcester and its people," by Charles Nutt, now in press.
Partridge, George F. History of the town of Bellingham, Massachusetts, 1719-1919. '
[Bellingham] Pub. by the town. [6], 221 p. plates, ports., map. [1027 i
Peirson, Joseph Edward. Historical scenes in the Berkshire Hills, from Connecticut '
to Vermont and over the Mohawk trail, by Joseph E. Peirson; comp. by W. S.
Weld. [Pittsfield, Mass.: Berkshire life insurance CO.] [26] p. illus. [1028 ?
Plummer, Edgar Holmes, ed. Westfield's quarter millennial anniversary official
souvenir . . . Published in connection with the 250th anniversary of the founding :
of the town of Westfield, Massachusetts, under the supervision of the Souvenir
program committee, William F. Lyman, chairman. Westfield, Mass.: Westfield's
250th anniversary association. 144 p. illus., ports. [1029 ,
Preston, Samuel. Recollections by Samuel Preston; written for the Salem village
gazette, Dec. 8, 1869. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VII, 125-130. [1030
Rantoul, Robert S. Three hundred years of Beverly. Essex inst. hist, coll.,
LV (Apr.) 103-110. [1031
Read, Charles F. The Brimmer school, 1844-1911, comprising in part a history of the i
school written by Charles J. Prescott in 1888. Bostonian soc. proc. , ann. meeting,
Jan. 21, 1919, 31-46. [1038
f
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 65
Eoxbury's historical landmarks. Roxbury hist. soc. yr.-bk., 1919, 9-12. [1033
Sanderson, Edmund L, Piety Corner and Pond End schools; history and description.
Waltham hist. soc. pub., I, 31-50. [1034
Simmons, James Raymond. The historic trees of Massachusetts. Boston: Marshall
Jones CO. xxi, 139 p. plates. [1036
State street trust company, Boston. Other merchants and sea captains of old Boston;
being more inforniation about the merchants and sea captains of old Boston who
played such an important part in building up the commerce of New England, to-
gether with some quaint and curious stories of the sea. Boston, Mass.: Printed for
the State street trust co. vii, 70 p. illus., ports., facsim. [1036
Stiles, Chester D. A history of the town of Westfield. Compiled for the public
schools from Greenough's History of Westfield in the Annals of Hampden county
and other sources. Westfield, Mass.: J. D. Cadle and co. 50 p. [1037
Stone, James Edward. Register of the Charlestown men in the service during the
Civil war, 1861-1865. Boston: Old Charlestown school boys association. iv,[210]p.
[1038
Various pagings.
Tapley, Harriet S. Physicians of Danvers. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VII, 56-58.
[1039
Brief biographical sketches.
Cont. from v. VI, 1918.
Thayer, William Roscoe. George Washington in Cambridge. Mass. hist. soc. proc. ,
LII, 146-148. [1040
Quotes from the journal of Dr. Benjamin Waterhouse, passages dealing with General "Wasliington's
life in Cambridge, and throwing evidence on the authenticity of the Elm as a historic monument.
Topsfield. School committee. Regulations for the public schools in Topsfield — 1843.
TOPSPIELD hist. soc. COLL., XXIV, 71-75. [1041
Warren, Nathan. Development of the south side. Waltham hist. soc. pub., I,
51-60. [1042
Wendell, Barrett. A gentlewoman of Boston, 1742-1805. Am. antiq. soc. proc,
n. s. XXIX, pt. 2 (Oct. 15) 242-293. [1043
An account of Catherine Wendell, daughter of John and Elizabeth (Quincy) Wendell, and notes
regarding other members of the Wendell family.
Worcester bank and trust company. Some historic houses of Worcester; a brief account
of the houses and taverns that fill a prominent part in the history of Worcester,
together with interesting reminiscences of their occupants. Illustrated with repro-
ductions of rare prints and photographs. [Worcester] Printed for Worcester bank
and trust co. vii, 71 p. illus. [1044
Michigan.
Command, John R. The story of Grosse He. Mich. hist, mag., Ill (Jan.) 126-132.
[1046
Pox, George M. The Edward K. Warren foundation of Three Oaks, Michigan. Mich.
hist, mag., Ill (July) 431-444. [1046
One of the objects of the foundation is the support of the Chamberlain memorial museum for the
collection of historical and pioneer articles.
Gagnieur, William F. Some place names in the upper peninsula of Michigan and
elsewhere. Mich. hist, mag., Ill (July) 412-419. [1047
Ivey, Paul Wesley. The Pere Marquette railroad company; an historical study of the
growth and development of one of Michigan's most important railway systems.
Lansing: Michigan historical commission, p. [207J-461 p. map, tables, diagrs.
(Michigan historical publications. University series, v. V [pt. 2]) [1048
Johnson, Ida Amanda. The Michigan fur trade. Lansing: Michigan historical com-
mission, xii, 201 p. maps. (Michigan historical publications. University
series, v. V [pt. 1]) [1049
Kilborn, Russell D . The Michigan railroad commission, Mich. hist. mag. , III (July)
445-472. [1050
McCutcheon, O. E. President Andrew Johnson at Albion; personal recollections.
Mich. hist, mag., Ill (Oct.) 530-539. [1061
66 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Merritt, D. H. History of the Marquette ore docks. Mich. hist, mag., Ill (July) ;
424-430. [1052 I
Naegely, Henry E. Lewis Cass and the treaty of 1819. Mich. hist, mag., Ill (Oct.) i
610-616. [1053 '
Address delivered at the centennial celebration of the Saginaw Indian treaty of 1819, at Saginaw,
Sept. 19, 1919.
O'Brien, Frank A. Borgess hospital at Kalamazoo. Mich. hist, mag., Ill (Apr.) j
231-234. [1054 |
Robinson, O. W. Recollections of Civil war in the copper country. Mich. hist. mag.
Ill (Oct.) 598-609. [1055
Sawyer, Alvah L. The forests of the upper peninsula and their place in history.
Mich. hist, mag., Ill (July) 367-383. [1056
Sherman, PnineUa Janet. Past-presidents of the Michigan authors' association.
Mich. hist, mag.. Ill (Oct.) 575-583. [1057
Sketches of Hon. Chase S. Osborn and Louis James Rosenberg.
Stone, John W. Marquette county and the upper peninsula of Michigan. Mich,
hist, mag., Ill (July) 341-360. [1058
Van Der Werker, Nettie Idell Schepeler. History of earliest Ann Arbor. [Ann Arbor, \
Mich.: N. I. and E. B. Van Der WerkerJ 48 p. illus. (incl. ports.) [1059 I
Contains advertising matter. i
Wood, Norman B. Indian wars and warriors of Michigan. Mich. hist, mag., Ill 1
(Oct.) 547-563. [1060 j
Minnesota. \
Densmore, Benjamin. Benjamin Densmore's journal of an expedition on the frontier. ;
Minn. hist, bul., Ill (Nov.) 167-209. [1061 \
Written in December 1857, shortly after the writer's return from a trip to Otter Tail Lake, then on the I
extreme frontier of settlement in Minnesota. ,
Goodwin, Cardinal. The movement of American settlers into Wisconswi and Minne- ;
sota. Ia. JOUR. mST., XVII (July) 406-428. [1062
Eussell, Arthur Joseph. Brief glimpses of unfamiliar Loring park aspects, wherein an
account is given of interesting and memorable events which have happened in this
valley, with agreeable inquirendos into the lives of certain of its pioneers . . .
Minneapolis; L. H. Wells. 181 p. plates, ports., map. [1063
Shortridge, Wilson P. Henry Hastings Sibley and the Minnesota frontier. Minn,
hist, bul., Ill (Aug.) 115-125. [1064
"The aim of this paper has been not only to sketch the life of Sibley as a type, but also to attempt to
portray the gradual evolution of society and industry in the upper Mississippi country."
Vamey, Herbert C. The birth notices of a state. Minn. hist, bul., Ill (May) 66-86.
[106S
From a file of the New Hampshire Patriot and state gazette of the year 1849, the writer has extracted
items relating to the territory of Minnesota established in 1849. _^
Mississippi.
Butts, Alfred Benjamin. Public administration in Mississippi. Jackson, Miss.: Mis-
sissippi historical society. 278 p. chart. (Miss. hist. soc. pub., ed. by Dunbar
Rowland. Centenary ser., v. Ill) [1066
Weston, James E. Texas annexation sentiment in Mississippi, ] 835-1844. Southw.
.^{^Jm' QUAR., XXIII (July) 1-19. [1067
8:^011 »*. .
, f Missouri.
1 WfliilamO. The followers of Duden. Mo. hist, rev., XIV (Oct.) 29-73. [1068
' ^tory of some of the Germans who having read Duden's "report," were induced to emigrate to
;' Missouri, drawn f ropi their diaries and letters, of 1833.
Bek,; William G. Gottfried Duden's ' ' report, ' ' 1824-1827. Translated by William G.
^ ,Eek. , iMp. hist, REV., XIII (Jan.-Apr.) 157-181, 251-281. [1069
X^OjCont.from v. XII-XIII, 1918.
Summary of a book published in German in 1829, giving an account of conditions in Missouri, "which
was the direct cause of German immigration into Missouri during the thirties and forties of the last
century."
I
m.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 67
Bratton, S. T. Inefficiency of water transportation in Missouri — a geographical factor
in the development of railroads. Mo. hist, rev., XIV (Oct.) 82-88. [1070
Britton, Rollin J. Early days on Grand River and the Mormon war. Mo. hist, rev.,
XIII (Jan.-July) 112-134, 287-310, 388-398; XIV (Oct.) 89-110. [1071
Also published in the Journal of history, v. XII (Apr.-Oct.) 18&-212, 339-355, 465-474.
Klem, Mary J. Missouri in the Kansas struggle. Miss. Valley hist, rev., extra
number (May) 393^13. [1072
loeb, H. W. One hundred years of medicine in Missouri. Mo. hist, rev., XIV
(Oct.) 74-81. [1073
Oliver, Robert Burett. History of the state flag of Missouri. Mo. hist, rev., XIII
(Apr.) 226-231. [1074
PMlips, John F. The lawyer in Missouri one hundred years ago. Mo. hist, rev.,
XIII (July) 377-387. [1075
Shoemaker, Floyd C. Missouri's centennial. Mo. hist, rev., XIII (July) 399-405.
[1076
iViles, Jonas. The capitals and capitols of Missouri. Mo. hist, rev., XIII (Jan.-
Apr.) 135-156, 232-250. ' [1077
White, John Barber. The Missouri merchant one hundred years ago. Mo . hist, rev . ,
XIII (Jan.) 91-111. [1078
"Trade and conuuercialism were the chief factors in drawing the first settlers to Missouri."
Montana.
Grant, Madison. Early history of Glacier national park, Montana. Washington:
Gov. print, off. 12 p. [1079
At head of title: Department of the interior. National park service.
Trexler, H. A. Flour and wheat in the Montana gold camps, 1862-1870; a chapter in
pioneer experiences and a brief discussion of the economy of Montana in the mining
days. Missoula, Mont.: Dunstan print. CO. 20 p. [1080
Wilson, M. L. The evolution of Montana agriculture in its early period. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., extra number (May) 429-440. [1081
Nebraska.
Alexis, Joseph. Swedes in Nebraska. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX, 78-85. [1081a
Anderson, Mrs. E. At Bellevue in the thirties. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX, 72-77.
[1082
Cunningham, Ebenezer E. An incident of the impeachment of Governor Butler.
Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX, 159-162. [1083
Letter written by Ebenezer E. Cunningham, who was president of the senate during the impeachment
trial of Governor Butler, in 1871.
Gaston, W. L., and A. R. Humphrey. History of Custer county, Nebraska; a narrative
of the past, with special emphasis upon the pioneer period of the county's history,
its social, commercial, educational, religious and civic development from the early
days to the present time. Lincoln, Neb. : Western pub. and engraving co. 1175 p.
illus., ports. [1084
rilmore, Melvin Randolph. Some Indian place names in Nebraska. Neb. hist. soc.
pub., XIX, 130-139. [1086
Hlmore, Melvin Randolph. The true Logan Fontenelle. Neb. hist. soc. pub.,
XIX, 64-71. [1086
A half-breed of the Omaha tribe in Nebraska. He is " of considerable historical importance by virtue
of his position as go-between for the two races," and in 1854 he accompanied, as interpreter, the seven
chiefs of the Omaha tribe when they went to Washington to make the treaty of cession of their lands to
the United States.
treen, James, and others. Incidents of the Indian outbreak of 1864. Neb. hist.
soc. pub., XIX, 1-28. [1087
Contents.— Freighting on the Plains— Plum Creek massacre, by James Green. The massacre at Oak
Grove ranch, from memoranda of Captain Edward B. Murphy. The battle of the Little Blue. John
Gilbert's accoimt of the Little Blue tragedy.
68 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION, f
i
Gwyer, William Augustus. Reminiscences of William Augustus Gwyer. Neb. hist. '
soc. PUB., XIX, 168-185. [1088 !
Reminiscenes of pioneer life in Nebraska, the writer having settled there in 1856. !
Hrbkova, Sarka B. Bohemians in Nebraska. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX, 140-158.
[1089
Johnston, David M. Nebraska in the fifties. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX, 186-196.
[1090 ,
MoGrew, Kittie. Women of territorial Nebraska. By Mrs. Kittie (Samuel W.) |
McGrew. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX, 95-102. [1091
Sheldon, Addison Erwin. History and stories of Nebraska. Lincoln, Chicago [etc.] i
The University pub. co. xii, 315 p. illus., ports., maps, facsims. [1092
Shumway, Grant L. First settlement of the Scotts Bluff country. Neb. hist. soc.
pub., XIX, 103-113.
Watkins, Albert. The beginning of Red Willow county. Neb. hist. soc. pub.,
XIX, 29-63. [1094
Watkins, Albert. Contested elections of delegiates to Congress from Nebraska. Neb.
hist. soc. pub., XIX, 197-328. [1095
Consists largely of excerpts from the official record (U. S. 36th Cong., 1st sess. H. R. misc. doc. no. 12)
of the Daily-Estabrook contest, 1860. Affords "very useful and interesting information about the
population of the frontier counties of the territory and the manner of conducting elections in them."
Watkins, Albert. Three military heroes of Nebraska. Neb. hist, and rec. pioneee
days, II (Oct.) 2-3, 5. [1096
General Philip Kearny, Lieutenant Caspar Collins, and General Stephen W. Kearny. |
Watkins, Albert. Why Fort Atkinson was established. Neb. hist, and rec i
PIONEER days, II (July) 4-5. [1097 |
Concerned with the military history of the West, Indian warfare, etc., during the early 19th century, i
Wilhite, Sarah E. (Crook). Earliest settlers in Richardson county. Neb. hist. 1
soc. PUB., XIX, 126-129. [1098 i
New Hampshire.
Kingsbury, Frank B., and Mrs. James E. Harvey. Surry anniversary, 1769-1919.
Granite mo., LI (Dec.) 529-550. ' [1099
Lyford, James O. New Hampshire's financial history. Granite mo., LI (Mar.)
81-84. [1100
Pillsbury, Hobart. New Hampshire's memorial at Valley Forge. Granite mo., LI
(July) 283-286. [1101
Tilton, Asa Currier. Literary and debating societies in New Hampshire towns and
academies. Granite mo., LI (July) 306-318. ^ [1102
TTpham, George B. Early town boundaries in western New Hampshire. Granite
MC, LI (Nov.) 500-504. [1103
Weeks, John W. A White Mountain centenary. Granite mo., LI (Aug.) 331-344.
[1104
The 100th anniversary of the opening of the Crawford bridle path to the summit of Mt. Washington.
Whitcher, William F. History of the town of Haverhill, New Hampshire. [Con-
cord, N. H.: The Rumford press] ix, 781 p. plates, ports., plan, facsim. [1104a
New Jersey.
Andrews, Frank D. Charles Pheneas Lord, sixth mayor of Vineland. Vineland
hist, maq., IV (Oct.) 67-68. [1106
Andrews, Frank D. Elias Doughty, fourth mayor of Vineland. Vineland hist.
MAG., IV (Apr.) 30-31. [1106
Andrews, Frank D. Oliver D. Graves, fifth mayor of Vineland. Vineland hist.
MAG., IV (July) 48-49. [1107
Atkinson, Mary J. Some happenings in early New Brunswick. Somerset co.
hist, quar., VIII (Jan.) 23-33. [1108
Chiefly of the period immediately before and during the Revolutiou.
i;
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 69
Branchburg township voters, 1866. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (Jan.) 37-40.
[1109
A list of the voters.
Cleary, John J. Trenton's historical assets. Read before the Trenton historical
society, March 20, 1919. Trenton, N. J.: The Trenton historical society. 10 p.
[1110
Collins, Varnum Lansing. Guide to Princeton, the town, the university. Princeton,
N. J.: Princeton university press. 107 p. [1111
Condit, Mrs. Benjamin Smith. The story of Beverwyck. N. J. hist. soc. proc,
n. s. IV, 128-141. [1112
Conwell, Joseph A. Albro S. Brown, third mayor of the borough of Vineland [1820-
1890] Vineland hist, mag., IV (Jan.) 5-6. [1113
Davis, T. E. Roll of Somerset (Solomon's) lodge, no. 1, F. and A. M., 1787-1829.
Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (July) 165-171. [1114
De Mott, John J. Dirck Low's public business. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII
(Apr.-July) 87-93, 175-180. [1115
Notes from the records kept by Dirck Low, a citizen of Neshanic. They contain much of value in
showing family relationships, occupations, current prices, etc., in colonial and revolutionary days.
Honeyman, A. Van Doren. The "Somerville messenger" ninety-two years ago.
Somerset co. hist, quar., Till (Jan.) 75-78. [1116
An early newspaper in New Jersey.
Landis, Charles K. Journal of Charles K. Landis, founder of Vineland [Apr. 19-May
26, 1868] Vineland hist, mag., IV (Jan.-Oct.) 1-4, 21-24, 41-44, 63-66. [1117
Newark, N. J. Free public library. Newark's last fifteen years, 1904-1919. The
story in outline. [Newark] 54 p. [1118
Compiled by the staff of the Newark Free public library.
Porter, Elbert S. Recollections of Somerville, circa 1835-'42. Somerset co. hist,
quar., VIII (July) 161-164. [1119
Eichardson, William H. William Leverett Dickinson [1819-1883] an appreciation;
prepared as a souvenir of the Dickinson centenary celebration by the people of
Jersey City, November 25th, 1919. [Jersey City] The Jersey City print, co.
71 p. illus., port., facsims. [1120
Schenck, Garret C. Early settlements and settlers of Pompton, Pequannoc and
Pompton Plains. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. IV, 44-87. [1121
Shriner, Charles Anthony. Four chapters of Paterson history: I. The war for inde-
pendence. II. The early white settlers. III. Struggle for industrial supremacy.
IV. Municipal administration. Paterson, N. J.: Lout and Overkamp pub. co.,
printers. 101 p. illus., plates, maps, plans. [1122
"Intended for use in the school room."
Smith, T. J. Historical address delivered at the centennial celebration of the Cum-
berland county medical society at the Cohanzuk country club, Oct. 7, 1919. Med.
soc. N. J. JOUR., XVI, 432-438. [1123
Somerset civil list, 1688-1799. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (Jan.-Apr.) 33-37,
119-123. [1124
List of officials of Somerset county.
Somerset innholders, 1778-1799; from the court minutes. Somerset co. hist.
QUAR., VIII (Oct.) 277-283. [1126
Stewart, Frank H. A brief account of Woodbury Creek dam. [Woodbury, N. J.]
8 p. [1126
Vineland's early settlers, 1861-1865. Vineland hist, mag., IV (Jan.-July) 5,
25-26, 45-47. [1127
New Mexico.
Clancy, Frank W. Reminiscences of territorial days. In the Minutes of the New
Mexico bar association, thirty-third annual session, Clovis, New Mexico, Sep-
tember 2 and 3, 1919. p. 47-60. [1128
Reminiscences of the bench and bar of New Mexico in territorial days.
70 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Downing, Margaret B. San Job^ de Acoma. Cath. world, CVIII (Mar.) 784-:
794. [1129
ff
Historical sketch of the Church of San Jos6 at Acoma, New Mexico, established by Fray Juan Ra- 1
mirez, in the early 17th century. ;
James, George Wharton. The mission-Pueblo architecture of New Mexico. Over- I
LAND, 2d ser., LXXIII (Apr.) 383-388. [1130 i
Kead, Benjamin Maurice. A treatise on the disputed points of the history of Newi
Mexico. Santa Fe, N. M.: B. M. Read. 18 p. [1181
Twitchell, Ralph Emerson. Spanish colonization in New Mexico in the Oiiate and j
De Vargas periods. [Santa Fe] 39 p. (Historical society of New Mexico. [Pub-
lications] no. 22) [1132
A study of the Spanish colonial system during the latter part of the 17th centuiy .
Westergaard, Waldemar. Senator Bard and the Arizona-New Mexico statehood
controversy. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, pt. 2, 9-17. [1132a
New York.
Armbruster, Eugene L. The Ferry road on Long Island. N. Y. [Printed by G.
Quattlander] 40 p. illus. (incl. maps). • [1133
Bank of the Manhattan company. A collection of more than four hundred autographs i
of leading citizens of New York at the close of the eighteenth century, reproduced in 1
facsimile from the signatures of the original subscribers in the capital stock of the '
Manhattan company as signed by them in the original subscription book April 20 j
and 22, 1799, commemorating the one hundred and twentieth anniversary of the I
Bank of the Manhattan company, 1799-1919. N. Y.: Bank of the Manhattan com-
pany. 3 p., facsims.: 16 leaves. 44''™ [1134
Brandow, John Henry. The story of old Saratoga; the Burgoyne campaign, to which
is added New York's share in the revolution. 2d ed. Albany, N. Y.: The Bran- \
dow print, co. xxiii, 528 p. illus,, plates, ports., maps. [1135 i
Revised and enlarged edition.
New York's share in the revolution: p. 387-491.
Coles, Mrs. Selleck E. Historical sketch of the Washington headquarters. Pub- I
lished by the White Plains chapter of the Daughters of the American revolution,
pamphlet, illus. [1136
Drowne, Henry Russell. A sketch of Fraunces tavern and those connected with its
history. N. Y.: Fraunces tavern. 23 p. illus., map. [1137
In 1904 Fraunces tavern was purchased by the Sons of the revolution.
Glass, Charles B. Chelsea and its mill. Dutchess co. hist. soc. yr. bk., 25-27.
[1138
Hall, M. F. Scenery and history on a state trail; Great Western turnpike across New
York dates back before the Revolution. State service. III (Sept.) 51-54. [1139
Holliday, Carl. New York prices eighty years ago. State service, III (Nov.)
60-62. [1140
"High cost of living worried the inhabitants long before the Civil war— Price of land then and now
in the metropoUs."
Job seekers at Albany a century ago; Washington Irving of Rip Van Winkle fame,
was an applicant for a state clerkship — tells of his experience at the capital in
private letters. State service. III (Feb.) 45-48. [1141
Malcolm, James. Old time newspapermen at capitol; how they reported the legis-
lative sessions twenty-five and thirty years ago. State service, III (Mar.)
40-48. [1142
Penfield, Lida Scovil. Stories of Oswego; tales of the early days told to the children
of the Oswego normal training school. [Oswego, N. Y.] Made in the Normal
print shop by the students. 26 p. illus., plates. [1143
Boot, E. W. Some unprinted minutes of the Albany Common council. N. Y. state
hist. ASSOC. JOUR., I (Jan.) 43-47. [1144
Prints a copy of a minute and report, of the year 1823, upon a proposed law to regulate theatrical
exhibitions and other shows in the city of Albany. They are indicative of the ' ' tendency of Americans
in general, after the Revolution, to emerge from provincialism, and the reaction of New Englanders in
particular, during the same period, against the social bigotry of an earlier age."
1919. 71
Byan, Walter S. Home of many eminent New Yorkers; little village of Peterboro,
where Gerrit Smith conducted his "underground railroad," sent out into the world
many famous men. State service, III (Oct.) 62-63. [1145
Sauer, Carl O. The role of Niagara Falls in history. Hist, outlook, X (Feb.)
57-65. [1146
Discussed under the following five headings; the first two, Food supply and Portage, deal with the
French and Indian regime; the remaining three sections are concerned with the FaUs as " Part of inter-
national boundary, Scenic attraction, and Power development."
Sherman, George H., and George S. Van Vliet. Original Dutchess county settle-
ments. Dutchess co. hist. soc. yr. bk., 21-24. [1146a
List of names of original settlements in Dutchess county, some of which have entirely disappeared.
Skinner, Charles Rufus. Governors of New York from 1777 to 1920. Albany:
J. B. Lyon co., printers. 3 p. [1147
A list of the governors, with brief records of important dates in the life of each.
Taxpayers in Warrensburg, N. Y., 1814, 1816. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg.,
LXXIII (Apr.) 103-104. [1148
From a copy of the assessment rolls.
Vogt, Berard. A pioneer Mennonite settlement in northern New York. Eccles.
EEV., LX (Feb.) 166-176. [1149
A settlement of Amish Mennonites from Alsace-Lorraine in what is now the township of Croghan,
New York, in 1830 and years immediately following.
Vosbnrgh, Royden Woodward. History of the First church of Coxsackie. [N. Y.:
The author?] pamphlet. [1150
Vosburgh, Royden Woodward. History of the Reformed church of Niskayuna,
New York. [N. Y.: The author ?J pamphlet. [1161
Walsh, James Joseph. History of medicine in New York, three centuries of medical
progress. N. Y. : National Americana society. 5 v. plates, ports., facsims.
[1152
Wendell, James A. Historic spots in the Empire state. State service. III (Nov.)
26-28. [1153
North Carolina.
Boyd, William K. Federal politics in North Carolina 1824-1836. So. Atlan. quae.,
XVIII (Jan.-Apr.) 41-51, 167-174. - [1154
Bradbeer, William West. North Carolina state currency (From Confederate and
southern state currency). N. C. booklet, XIX (July) 36-46. [1155
Gobbel, Luther Lafayette. Militia in North Carolina in colonial and revolutionary
t times. Trinity coll. hist. soc. pap., XIII, 35-61. [1156
istory of North Carolina. Chicago and N. Y.: Lewis pub. co. 6 v. illus. (incl.
chart, maps, facsims., coats-of-arms), plates, ports. [1157
Contents.— v. I. The colonial and revolutionary periods, 15S4-1783, by R. D. W. Connor, v. II.
The federalperiod, 1783-1860, by W. K. Boyd.v. III. North Carolina since 1860, by J. G. de R. Ham-
ilton. V. IV-VI. North Carolina biography, by special staff of writers.
oskins, Joseph A. Bruce's Cross Roads. N. C. booklet, XIX (July) 51-54. [1158
Brace's Cross Roads, now Summerfleld.
North Dakota.
{Arnold, H. V., pub. The early history of Ransom county, including references to
Sargent county, 1835-1885. Larimore, N. D.: Printed by H. V. Arnold, 1918. 74
p. (Publisher's booklet, no. 20) [1158a
Lounsberry, Clement Augustus. Early history of North Dakota; essential outlines
of American history. Washington, D. C: Liberty press, xv, 645 p. plates,
ports., maps. [1159
"Part one, ' Early history of North Dakota,' was published in 1913, and three years later was merged
into 'North Dakota history and people' ... in connection with two volumes of biographical sketches.
The historical features embraced in that work, with added matter and illustrations, are now presented
in four parts, complete in one volume." — Publisher's pref.
72 AMEKICAN HISTOBICAL ASSOCIATION.
Ohio.
Bunnell, A. H. Celebrities of old Western Reserve; birthplace of William Dean
Howells, Joshua Giddings and B. F. Wade described by a native. State service,
III (Nov.) 17-20. [1160
Jefferson, Ohio.
Cook, Huldah Florence. The Magyars of Cleveland, with a brief sketch of their
historical, political and social back grounds. [Cleveland] Under the direction of 1
the Cleveland Americanization committee, Mayor's advisory war committee, j
31 p. illus. (incl. ports., map). [1161 ;
Doyle, John Hardy. A story of early Toledo; historical facts and incidents of the j
early days of the city and environs. Bowling Green, O.: C. S. Van Tassel. 135 p.
port. ^ [1162 [
Ewing, Thomas. Address at Marietta, Ohio, 1858. Edited by C. L. Martzolff. ,
Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII (Apr.) 186-207. [1163 j
Address 'iat the celebration of the "seventieth anniversary of the first landing of our pioneer fathers !
on the shores of Ohio, in the North Western territory." !
Hamlin, L. Belle, ed. Selections from the Hatch papers, I. Cincinnati: The \
Abingdon press. 32 p. (Ohiohist. and phil. soc. pub., v. XIV, nos. 2and3) [1164 1
Contents.— a return for Columbia township pr Daniel Reeder, assesr, August 22nd, 1796. The !
diary of Major WiUiam Stanley, 1790-1810. i
The tax report contains 282 "names of early pioneers of Columbia. The diary of Major Stanley who '
came to Cincinnati in 1790 gives a picture of pioneer life in Ohio. i
Martzolff, Clement L. Lutheranism in Perry county, Ohio. Ohio archaeol. and i
HIST. ouAR., XXVIII (Oct.) 375-395. [1165 I
Ohio in the War of 1812. Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII (July) 286-368.
[1166 ;
Excerpts from the "Trump of fame," the first newspaper in the Western Reserve, 1812. j
Peeke, Hewson L. Charles Dickens in Ohio in 1842. Ohio archaeol. and hist, i
QUAR., XXVIII (Jan.) 72-81. [1167
Eandall, Emilius O. The heroic in Ohio history. Ohio law bul., LXIV (Mar. 3)
71-75. [1168
Bandall, Emilius O. High lights in Ohio literature. Ohio archaeol. and hist.
QUAR., XXVIII (July) 255-279. [1169 ;
Sandusky county pioneer and historical association. Yearbook. Fremont, Ohio i
[The association] 88 p. illus. [1170 |
Contains proceedings of the reunion of September 6, 1919, of the annual meetings, and historical and j
biographicalsketches. \
Oklahoma.
Wood, R. E. History of the acquisition of the different classes of state and school
lands of Oklahoma. Historia, VIII (Oct.) 14-15. [1171
Oregon.
Fisher, Ezra. Correspondence of the Reverend Ezra Fisher, pioneer missionary of
the American Baptist home mission society in Indiana, Illinois, Iowa and Oregon;
ed. by Sarah Fisher Henderson, Nellie Edith Latourette, Kenneth Scott Latourette.
[Portland, Or. J 492 p. [1172
Reprinted from Quarterly of the Oregon historical society, v. XVII, XIX-XX, 1916, 1918-1919.
Letters written from Oregon City, 1847 to 1857.
Holman, Frederick Van Voorhies. Qualities of the Oregon pioneers. An address
at the unveiling of the statue, "The pioneer," on the campus of the University of
Oregon, at Eugene, Oregon, May 22, 1919. Portland, Or. 14 p. [1173
Reprmted from the Quarterly of the Oregon historical society, v. XX (Sept.) 235-242.
Homer, John B. Oregon, her history, her great men, her literature. Corvallis, Ore.:
Press of the Gazette- times. [The author] 408 p. illus. , ports. [1174
" War edition."
Scott, Leslie M. History of the narrow gauge railroad in the Willamette valley.
Ore. hist. soc. quar., XX (June) 141-158. [IHfi
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 73
Pennsylvania.
Babcock, Charles A. Venango county, Pennsylvania, her pioneers and people,
- embracing a general history of the county . . . and a genealogical and biographical
record of representative families. Chicago: J. H. Beers and co. 2 v. illus.,
plates, ports. [1176
Baily, Joshua L., jr. Old milestones about Philadelphia. Friends' hist. soc. bul. ,
IX, no. 2 (Nov.) 46-62. [1177
Bartlett, Marguerite G. The chief phases of Pennsylvania politics in the Jacksonian
period. Allentown, Pa. : H. R. Haas and co. viii, 150 p. [1178
Thesis (ph. d.)— Universitj'^ of Pennsylvania.
Kev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 750-751.
[Barton, Thomas] The beginnings of artificial roads in Pennsylvania, by Charles I.
Landis. Lancaster, Pa. p. 99-108. (Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., v. XXIII,
no. 6) [1179
Reprint, from the Pennsylvania gazette of Febraary 20, 1772, of an article by Rev. Thomas Barton,
signed, "Clericus," having title: Observations on the improvement of public roads, occasioned by a
petition to Assembly for a turnpike-road from Philadelphia to Wrights-Ferry on Susquehanna . . .
A letter from the author to Thomas Penn, dated April 28, 1773, is appended.
Bedford, George R. Some early recollections. Wy. hist, and geol. soc. proc,
XVI, 1-107. [1180
Recollections of local conditions and bits of local history.
Sudd, Henry. Citizen Genet's visit to Philadelphia. Read before the City history
society of Philadelphia, Wednesday, January 29th, 1918. Phila.i The Society,
p. 39-67. (City history society of Philadelphia. Philadelphia history, v. II,
no. 3) [1181
Campbell, Jane, comp. San Domingo refugees in Philadelphia. Comp. from the
d'Orlic-Rodrigue papers. Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXX (Mar.-Dec.) 83-91,
177-188, 227-256, 309-330. [1182
Papers of the years 1840-1873, taken from a collection in the possession of the American Catholic his-
torical society, comprising the family papers of some of the refugees from San Domingo, who sought
safety in the United States from the negro insurrection at the end of the 18th century.
The papers deal chiefly with two families, the d'OrUcs and the Rodrigues.
Cont. from v. XXIX, 1918.
Jelebration of the one hundred and twenty-fifth anniversary of the incorporation of
Pittsburgh as a borough. Western Pa. hist, mag., II (July) 133-148. [1183
Contents.— Addresses, by Charles W. Dahlinger, S. B. McCormick, Harold M. Irons, Thomas A.
Dunn, and H. J. "Webster.
lohen, Charles J. The origin of Carpenters' hall, Philadelphia, with incidents of the
neighborhood. Phila. numismat. and antiq. soc. proc, XXVIII, 123-166. [1184
owan, John P. Fortifying Pittsburgh in 1863. Western Pa. hist, mag., II (Jan.)
59-64. [1186
ribbs, George Arthur. The frontier policy of Pennsylvania. Western Pa. hist.
MAG., II (Jan.-July) 5-35, 72-106, 174-198. [1186
Among the subdivisions of this article are— Indian policy, 1682-1800; Indian trade, 1680-1770; The
Quaker's attitude toward war; and Frontier forts.
ahlinger, Charles W. A place of great historic interest; Pittsburgh's first burying-
ground. Western Pa. hist, mag., II (Oct.) 205-236. [1187
jThe burying-ground of the First Presbjlierian church.
ahlinger, Charles W. St. Thomas' Protestant Episcopal church of Washington
county; the first church in western Pennsylvania. Western Pa. hist, mag., II
[(Apr.) 69-71. [1188
kris, John Thomson. Seeing Pennsylvania. Phila. and London: Lippincott. 349
p. plates, maps. [1189
eilman, U. Henry. The genesis of "Der Pihwie" with reminiscences of its author
the Rev. Henry Harbaugh, d. d. Lebanon co. hist. soc. pap., VII, no. 11, 377-
385. [1190
"Der Pihwie" is a Pennsylvania-German idyl, written in 1862,
ostetter, Albert K. The early silk industry of Lancaster county. Lancaster, Pa.
27-41 p. (Lancaster co. hist. soc. pap., v. XXIII, no. 2) [1191
74 AMEKICAN HISTOKICAL ASSOCIATION.
Joyce, John St. George, ed. Story of Philadelphia. [Phila.: Rex printing houseii
617 p. illus. , ports. , maps. [1192!
Kuhns, Oscar. Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, families from the Canton of Zurich,!
Switzerland. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VIII (Oct.) 36-38. [liggl
Kuhns, Oscar. Some Lancaster county families from the Canton of Berne, Switzer-^
land. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VIII (Oct.) 39-41. [1194-fil
Macfarlane, James. The Pennsylvania canals. Western Pa. hist, mag., II (Jan.]|
38-51. [1196;
Moyer, Nevin Wilberforce. Peter Allen's, a Pennsylvania landmark; the story of a;
Dauphin county historic stone edifice, built before June 9, 1729. With an intro-;
duction by Henry W. Shoemaker. Altoona, Pa.: Tribune print [1919?] [13] p,|
plate. [1197
The house described is situated in Paxton township.
The population of Pittsburgh and contiguous territory, including the names of heade
of families as shown by the United States census of 1790. Western Pa. hist, mag.,!
II (July) 161-173. [1198
Selections from the correspondence of Colonel Clement Biddle [1788-1799] Pa. mag.:
hist. , XLIII ( Jan.-July) 53-76, 143-162, 193-207. [11991
Cont. from v. XLII, 1918. I
Shenk, H. H., ed. Letters of Hon. John Strohm [1817-1848] Outline of John Strohm'ei
career in Congress, by H. Frank Eshleman. Lancaster, Pa. 47-64 p. (Lancasterj
CO. hist. soc. pap., XXIII, no. 3) [1200
Thayer, Horace E. Pittsburgh authors. Western Pa. hist. mag. , II (July) 149-160.J
[1201|
Wagenseller, George W., comj>. Snyder county annals, v. I. A collection of all|
kinds of historical items affecting Snyder county from the settlement of the firsti
pioneers in this section, to the names of the soldiers in the world war, 1917-19. j
Middleburgh, Pa.: TheMiddleburghpost. 364 p. illus. [1202]
Pages 1-96 originally issued in three parts of 32 pages each, with title: Snyder county annals, no. 1-3.,
Rhode Island.
Chapin, Howard M. Early house lots in the east part of the town of Warwick. R. I.I
hist. soc. coll., XII (Oct.) 129-136. [1203|
Chase, Jacob. Recollections of Jacob Chase; a paper read before the Newport histor-'
ical society at the regular quarterly meeting, November 18, 1918, by Lloyd M.
Mayer. Newport, P. I. 15 p. (Bulletin of the Newport historical society, no 28)
[1204
Summary of the " Recollections" written by Jacob Chase of Lawton's Valley, in 1882.
Curtis, Harold B-. The tenement on Conimicut. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XII (July)!
65-74. [1205
The ''tenement on Conimicut" was the name used to designate a proprietary share of land along the
highway into Conimicut, in what is now the town of Warwick. The author traces the title from the
original grant of Thomas Thorncraft in about 1650 down to the present owners.
Preston, Howard W. The confiscated estates of Joseph Wanton. R. I. hist. soc.
COLL., XII (Oct.) 101-103. [1206
A loyalist of Newport.
Preston, Howard W. The old North school house. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XII (Apr.)
45-46. [1207
School house at Providence, R.I.
Slmitldre, Pierre Eugene du. Du Simiti^re's notes on Newport in 1768. R. I. hist.
soc. COLL., XII (Apr.) 47-52. [1208
Extracts relating to Rhode Island from his manuscript journal of a trip from Boston to Newport in
1768.
Straight, Charles Tillinghast. The Gettysburg gun. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XII
(Apr.) 53-56. [1209
A gun of the 1st Rhode Island light artillery, used at the battle of Gettysburg, and now preserved at
the State house. Providence.
M
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 75
South Carolina.
Boucher, Chauncey Samuel. South Carolina and the South on the eve of secession,
1852 to 1860. Wash. univ. stud., humaiiistic series, VI, no. 2 (July) 79-144. [1210
Historic old southern home. Conped. vet., XXVII (Apr.) 126-130. [1211
Hillcrest, the home of the Anderson family of South Carolina, near Sumter.
Knight, Edgar W. Reconstruction and education in South Carolina. So. Atlan.
QUAE., XVIII (Oct.) 350-364. [1212
Manigault, Ann. Extracts from the journal of Mrs. Ann Manigault, 1754-1781.
With notes by Mabel L. Webber. S. C. hist, mag., XX (Jan.-Oct.) 57-63, 128-141,
204-212, 256-259. [1213
Salley, Alexander Samuel, jr. The introduction of rice culture into South Carolina.
Columbia, S. C: Printed for the Commission by the State co. 23 p. (S. C. hist,
com. bul., no. 6) [1213a
Salley, Alexander Samuel, jr. Parris Island, the site of the first attempt at a settle-
ment of white people within the bounds of what is now South Carolina. Columbia,
S. C: Printed for the Commission by the State company. 9 p. port., facsim.
(S. C. hist. com. bul., no. 5) [1214
Describes the history of Parris Island from the Port Royal settlement of the Huguenots down to
its recent use as a training ground for marines.
Smith, Henry A. M. The Ashley river; its seats and settlements. S. C. hist, mag.,
XX (Jan.-Apr.) 3-51, 75-122. . [1215
Smith, Henry A. M. The upper Ashley; and the mutations of families. S. C. hist.
MAG., XX (July) 151-198. [1216
Account of the settlements along the upper part of the Ashley river.
Walker, Cornelius Irvine. Guide to Charleston, S. C; with brief history of the city
and a map thereof. Charleston, S. C: Walker, Evans and Cogswell co. 130 p.
map. [1217
South Dakota.
Robinson, Doane {. e. Jonah Leroy. A brief history of South Dakota. N. Y., Cin-
cinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 232 p. illus. [1218
Tennessee.
The architecture of Nashville. Am. inst. arch, jour., VII (Apr.) 159-161. [1219
A Davidson county political circular, 1843. Tenn. hist, mag., V (Oct.) 195-196.
Issued by a committee of the-Whig county convention.
Davis, Victor M. Historical Knoxville. Univ. of Tenn. mag., L (Dec.) 90-93.
[1221
Dyer, Gustavus Walker. A school history of Tennessee. Chattanooga, Tenn.,
Chicago, 111. [etc.] National bk. co. viii, 279 p. illus., ports. (National history
series) [1222
An early temperance society at Nashville. Tenn. hist, mag., V (Oct.) 142-144.
[1223
Reprint of an article from the National Banner, published at Nashville, October 10, 1829, describing
the organization of a temperance society.
Fain, J. Tyree. Some confusing statements in Ramsey's "Annals" and other his-
torians. Tenn. hist, mag., V (Apr.) 28-37. [1224
The annals of Tennessee, by J. G. M. Ramsey, published in 1853.
Gay, William H. Lincoln's assassination: how Nashville heard the news. Tenn.
hist, mag., V (Apr.) 38-39. [1225
McGee, Gentry Hichard. A history of Tennessee from 1663 to 1919, for use in schools.
[Rev. ed.] N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 320j xl p. illus. (incl. ports.,
maps). [1226
59976"— 22 7
76 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION-. j
Eeynolds, Louise Wilson. Tax list of Greene county, state of Tennessee, for the
year 1783. D. A. R. mag., LIII (Apr.) 196-203. [122'
Sevier, John. Journal of John Sevier. [Edited by John H. DeWitt] Tenn. hist
MAG., V (Oct.) 156-194. [1228|
Founder and first governor of Tennessee. The journal covers the period 1790-1815 and is theintimatt!
story of much of his daily private life and, to some extent, his public services. I
Williams, Samuel C. Henderson and company's purchase within the limits oi
Tennessee. Tenn. hist, mag., V (Apr.) 5-27. [12961
Concerned with the significance of the treaty of purchase negotiated on March 17, 1775, by Richard 1
Henderson and his associates with the Cherokee Indians. ;
Texas. I
Barker, Eugene C, ed. Minutes of the ayuntamiento of San Felipe de Austin, 1828- j
1832. SouTHW. HIST. QUAE., XXII (Jan.-Apr.) 272-278, 353-359; XXIII (July-!
Oct.) 69-77, 141-151. [1230^
Cent, from v. XXII, 1918. i
Binkley, William Campbell. The last stage of Texan military operations againsts
Mexico, 1843. Southw. hist, quae., XXII (Jan.) 260-271. [123ll
One phase of the Texan struggle for independence, that is the series of operations carried on by War-
field and Snively in the northwestern part of the territory to which the Texas government had laid!
claim. I
Carter, Robert Goldthwaite. Massacre of Salt Creek prairie and the cow-boy's verdict. 1
Washington, D. C: Gibson bros., printers. 48 p. [1232J
Massacre of white settlers by Kiowa Indians at Salt Creek prairie in June 1871.
Christian, Stella L. The history of the Texas federation of women's clubs. Pub. byi
authority of the Texas federation of women's clubs. Houston: Dealy-Adey-Elginj
CO. X, 398 p. [1232a I
Hatcher, Mattie Austin, translator. Texas in 1820. Southw. hist, quar., XXIII |
(July) 47-68. [12331
Consists of two documents. I. Report on the barbarous Indians of the province of Texas, by Juan |
Antonio Padilla. II. Instructions which the constitutional ayuntamiento of the city of San JFernando i
de Bexar draws up in order that its provincial deputy may be able to make such representations, take'
such steps, and present such petitions as may be conducive to the happiness, development, and pros- 1
perity of its inhabitants.
McKitrick, Reuben. The public land system of Texas, 1823-1910. Madison, 1918.1
172 J), map. (Bulletin of the University of Wisconsin, no. 905. Economics and I
political science series, v. IX, no. 1) [1234 1
Manning, Wentworth. Some history of Van Zandt county. Des Moines: The Home- 1
stead CO. 220 p. illus., plates, ports. [1235
B-aht, Carlysle Graham. The romance of Davis Mountains and Big Bend country; a
history. El Paso: The Raht books co. [6], 381 p. plates, ports., double map
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Salado Alvarez, V. La independencia de Tejas y la esclavitud. Reforma soc,
VIII (Aug. 1916) 46-61. [1237
Smith, Ruby Cumby. James W. Fannin, jr., in the Texas revolution. Southw. '
hist, quar., XXIII (Oct.) 79-90. [1338
Svenskarne i Texas i ord och bild, 1838-1918, ett historiskt-biografiskt arbete samladt '
och utgivet af Ernest Severin, redigeradt och utarbetadt af dr. Alf. L. Scott, '
pastor T. J. Westerberg; granskadt och ofversedt af red. J. M. Ojerholm. [Austin,
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Winston, James E. Texas annexation sentiment in Mississippi, 1835-1844. Southw.
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Utah.
Gottfredson, Peter, ed. History of Indian depredations in Utah. [Salt Lake City:
Press of Skelton pub. co.] 352 p. plates, ports. [1241
Jenson, Andrew. Origin of western geographic names, associated with the history of
the "Mormon" people. Utah geneal. and hist, mag., X (Jan.-Oct.) 1-16, 81-85,
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i
1919. 77
Vermont.
Eoyalton, Vt. Church of baptised bretherin. The Church of baptised bretherin,
Royalton, Vermont; a record of its meetings, conferences and councils for the years
1790 to 1806; from the original manuscript. Woodstock, Vt.: The Elm tree press.
71 p. [1242a
Virginia.
Caroline county personal property list, 1783. Wm. and Mary quae., XXVII (Jan.)
154-163. [1243
Cumberland co., Va. Committee of safety. Proceedings of the Committees of safety
of Cumberland and Isle of Wight counties, Virginia, 1775-1776. Edited by H. R.
Mcllwaine. Richmond: Davis Bottom, superintendent of public printing. 54 p.
[1244
Printed as part of the report of the Virginia state library for the year ending September 30, 1918.
Forster, J. W. L. The flag of Virginia. Art and arghaeol., VIII (July) 233-235.
[1245
Goodwyn, Mrs. W. Samuel, comp. Greensville county, Virginia, militia lists [1799-
1815] Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII (Jan.) 176-184. [1246
Cont. from v. XXVII, October 1918.
List of ofiacers recommended and qualified for the mihtia of Greensville county, Virginia, 1782-1815.
Judicial district for western Virginia. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag., I
(July) 31-34. [1247
Account found among the papers of Gov. Thomas Walker Gilmer. Consists of the proceedings and
resolutions of the General assembly of Virginia creating a judicial district in Virginia west of the Alle-
ghany mountains, in 1818.
M'Neilly, James H. Virginia— a tribute. Conped. vet., XXVII (Mar.) 94-96. [1248
A tribute to the historic achievements of Virginia, and her contribution to the service of the country
in every crisis.
Morrison, A. J. Virginia works and days, 1814-1819. So. Atlan. quar., XVIII
(Jan.) 24-35. [1249
A study of educational, reUgious, and economic conditions.
Page, Thomas Nelson. Address at the three hundredth anniversary of the settlement
at Jamestown. Richmond, Va.: Whittet and Shepperson, printers. 28 p. [1250
Retrocession of Alexandria to Virginia. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag., I
(Oct.) 73-86. [1261
Copy of House report no. 325, 29th Congress, 1st session, Feb. 25, 1816.
Richmond light infantry blues, of Richmond, Virginia. From Ruddy and Duval's
"U. S. Military magazine," Philadelphia, October, 1841. Tyler's quar. hist.
AND geneal. mag., I (July) 1-17. [1252
Tyler, Lyon G. Fredericksburg in Revolutionary days. Wm. and Mary quar.,
XXVII (Jan.-Apr.) 164-175, 248-257. [1253
Washington.
Boening, Rose M. History of irrigation in the state of Washington. Wash. hist,
quar., X (Jan.) 21-45. [1254
Deals with the state epoch of canal building.
Cont. from v. IX, 1918.
Parrar, Victor J. Pioneer and historical societies in the state of Washington. Wash,
hist, quar., X (Jan.) 46-52. [1255
Farrar, Victor J., ed. The Nisqually journal. Wash. hist, quar., X (July) 205-230.
[1256
Journal kept by the superintendent of the Puget Sound agricultural company, a subsidiary of the
Hudson's Bay company, at Fort Nisqually, March-September, 1849.
Hlmes, George H. Tyrrell's name should be saved. Wash. hist, quar., X (July)
182-184. [1257
Contends that the name "Tyrrell's prairie" should be substituted for "Hawk's prairie," as Tyrrell
and not Hawk was the first settler in the region.
78 AMERICAl^ HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Meany, Edmond S. Origin of Washington geographic names. Wash. hist, quae.,
X (Jan.-July) 53-56, 102-109, 190-204. [125£
Cont. from v. IX, 1918.
Contents.— Grays Harbor- Kellett Ledge.
Meyers, J. A. Jacques Raphael Finlay. Wash. hist, quae., X( July) 163-167. [1258
" The records would show that Jacques Kaphael Finlay was the first explorer on the headwaters o:,
the Columbia river in the Flathead section and the Spokane country."
Monument for Indian war heroes. Wash. hist, quar., X (July) 177-181. [1260l
Account of the unveiling ceremonies at the monument to Indian war heroes who fell near the present
site of Auburn on December 4, 1855.
United States geographic board. Decisions on Washington place names. Wash,
hist, quar., X (July) 185-189. [1261
I
West Virginia.
Atkinson, George Wesley, ed. Bench and bar of West Virginia. Charleston, W. Va. :|
Virginian law book co. xxvi, 543 p. ports. [1262
Page, Rosewell. The West Virginia debt settlement. In the Report of the thirtieth;
annual meeting of the Virginia state bar association, . . . May 15th, 16th and 17th,*
1919. Ed. by John B. Minor, of the Richmond bar. [Richmond, Va.: Richmond!
press, printers] p. 260-288. [1263
The history of the West Virginia debt: p. 260-265.
Randolph, Isaac Fitz. Reminiscences of Salem and its surroundings in pioneer days,
by Isaac Fitz Randolph; ed., with annotations, by Corliss Fitz Randolph. New
Milton, W. Va.: F. F. Randolph. 13 p. port. [1264;
Wisconsin.
Baird, Henry S., and Chauncey Kellogg. Constitutional convention letters. Wis.
mag. hist., Ill (Sept.) 88-93. [1265
Two letters written from Madison in 1848.
Barton, A. O. Wisconsin's oldest courthouse. Wis. mag. hist., II (Mar.) 332-334.
[1266
Bracklin, James. A tragedy of the Wisconsin pinery. Wis. mag. hist., Ill (Sept.)
42-51. [1287
Story of a clash between Indians and white men in 1864, told by James Bracklin, who was superintend-
ent of logging and log-driving for the Knapp-Stout lumber company of Menominee.
Conley, P. H. The early history of Lafayette county. Wis. mag. hist., II (Mar.)
319-330. [1268
Early history of West Point. Wis. mag. hist.. Ill (Dec.) 238-240. [1269
Evans, J. H. General Grant and early Galena. Wis. -mag. hist., Ill (Sept.) 84-86.
[1270
Recollections of Mr. J. H. Evans, of PlattevLlle, written out by J. H. A. Lacher, after an interview
with Mr. Evans.
Goodwin, Cardinal. The movement of American settlers into Wisconsin and Mnne-
sota. lA. JOUR. HIST., XVII (July) 406-428. [1271
Hoffman, John. The Dutch settlements of Sheboygan county. Wis. mag. hist., II
(June) 464-466. [1272
Hoist, Christian A., ed. The Wisconsin capitol; official guide and history. 2d ed.,
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Kellogg, Louise Phelps. The story of Wisconsin, 1634-1848. Wis. mag. hist., II
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I. Physical and pohtical geography. II. The red men and the fur trade. III. The days of the lead
miners. IV. Territorial foimdations and development.
Leach, E. W. More light on Colonel Utley's contest with Judge Robertson. Wis.
mag. hist., Ill (Dec.) 251-253. [1276
Levi, Elate E. Early advertising policy of the Racine Advocate. Wis. mag. hist.,
Ill (Sept.) 87-88. [1276
1,
WEITINGS ON" AJVIEKICAN" HISTORY, 1919. 79
The Little brown church in the vale. Wis. mag. hist., II (Mar.) 340-342. [1277
The church at Bradford, Wisconsin, about which William S. Pitts wrote the song, "The Little brown
church in the vdle."
McManus, James H. A forgotten trail. Wis. mag. hist., Ill (Dec.) 139-152. [1278
A trail from the southern part of Michigan to the shore of Lake Superior, first traversed in 1842 by
the Rev. Alfred Bunson, sub-Indian agent for the Bad River band of Chippewa Indians, and his com-
panions.
Morgan, Appleton. Early Racine and Judge Pryor. Wis. mag. hist., Ill (Dec.)
250-251. [1279
Morgan, Appleton. Recollections of early Racine. Wis. mag. hist., II (June)
431-444. [1280
Sherman, Althea Rosina. Historical sketch of the park region about McGregor,
Iowa, and Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. [Cedar Rapids, la.: Torch press] 31 p.
illus., map, plates. [1281
Reprinted from Iowa conservation, v. Ill, nos. 1 and 2.
Skinner, Alanson. Some Menomini Indian place names in Wisconsin. Wis.
ARCHEOL., XVIII (Aug.) 97-102. [1282
Titus, W. A. Historic spots in Wisconsin. Wis. mag. hist.. Ill (Dec.) 184-188. [1283
Contents. — Portage, the break in a historic highway.
The two miles of low land that separate the Fox from the Wisconsin river, known from the days of
the early traders and explorers as "the portage."
Wisconsin. State historical society. The pioneer drug store of the Wisconsin His-
torical museum. Madison: The Society. 11 p. illus., plates. (Its Handbook
no. 10) [1284
The Wisconsin state forest reserve. Wis. mag. hist., II (June) 461-463. [1285
Wyoming.
Bartlett, I. S. The true story of the Lost Cabin mines. Wy. hist. soc. miscel-
lanies, 29-30. [1286
Chaplin, W. E. Some of the early newspapers of Wyoming. Wy. hist, soc, mis-
cellanies, 1-24. [1287
Gordon, John H. Wheatland colony. Wy. hist. soc. miscellanies, 25-28. [1288
Hebard, Grace Raymond. The history and government of Wyoming; the history,
constitution and administration of affairs. 8th ed. San Francisco: C. F. Weber
CO. 285 p. illus., plates, ports., map. - [1289
Kelly, Hiram B. Letter written for Cheyenne industrial club by Mr. Hiram B.
Kelly. Wy. hist, soc. miscellanies, 50-54. [1290
Describes his pioneer experiences in Wyoming.
BIOGRAPHY.
Comprehensive.
American biography; a new cyclopedia. Comp. under the editorial supervision of
a notable advisory board, v. V-VI. N. Y.: Pub. under the direction of the American
historical society. 2 v. ports., plate. [1291
Bastide, Charles. Portraits d'Amerique. Paris: Renaissance du livre. [7], 80-141
p. ports. (Collection America [VIII]) [1292
Contents.— Theodore Roosevelt. Taft. Elihu Root. Le s6nateur Lodge. Robert Lansing. Le
colonel House.
Bradford, Gamaliel. Portraits of American women. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton
Miffin CO. X, 276 p. ports. [1293
Contents.— Abigail Adams. Sarah Alden Ripley, Mary Lyon. Harriet Beecher Stowe. Mar-
garet Fuller Ossoli. Louisa May Alcott. Frances Elizabeth Willard. Emily Dickinson.
Originally published serially in the Atlantic monthly.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 513-514.
Brawley, Benjamin. Women of achievement. Chicago: Woman's American Bap-
tist Home mission society. 92 p. [1294
Biographies of five women of the negro race, Harriet Tubman, Nora Gordon, Meta "Warrick Fuller,
Mary McLeod Bethune, and Mary Church Terrell.
Groetzinger, Thomas. Heroes of national history. Phila.: Franklin publishing and
supply CO. 269 p. illus. (inch ports.) [1295
Higgins, James. Stories of great heroes, discoverers, explorers and christianizers
of America. N. Y.: Macmillan co. xv, 142 p. illus., map. [1296
Contents,— Christopher Columbus. Americus Vespucius. John Cabot. Vasco Nunez de Balboa.
Rev. Bartholomew Las Casas. Ponce de Leon. Hernando Cortez. Ferdinand Magellan. Ferdinand
de Soto. Francisco Pizarro. Rev. Luis Cancer, o. s. d. John Verrazano. James Cartier. Peter
Menendez. Rev. Peter Martinez, s. J. Sir Francis Drake. Rev. Peter de Corpa, o. s. f. Appendix.
Topical index.
Intended as an elementary text-book in the Catholic schools.
Hill, Edwin C, ed. The historical register; a biographical record of the men of our
time who have contributed to the making of America. N. Y.: E. C. Hill, iii,
199 p. ports. [1297
Humphrey, Grace. Women in American history. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill
CO. [8], 222 p. [1298
Contents.— Pocahontas. Anne Hutchinson. Betsy Ross. Mary Lindley Murray. Molly Pit-
cher. Martha Washington. Jemima Johnson. Sacajawea. Dolly Madison. Lucretia Mott. Har-
riet Beecher Stowe. Juha Ward Howe. Mary A. Livermore. Barbara Fritchie. Clara Barton.
Epilogue. Bibliography. Index.
Lincoln, Natalie Sumner. Engraved portraits of American patriots, made by Saint
Meminin 1796-1810. D. A. R. mag., LIII (Apr.) 220-227. [1299
Cont. from v. LI, 1917.
Metcalf, Henry Harrison, ed. One thousand New Hampshire notables; brief bio-
graphical sketches of New Hampshire men and women, native or resident, promi-
nent in public, professional, business, educational, fraternal or benovelent work.
Ed. and comp. by Henry Harrison Metcalf, assisted by Frances M. Abbott. Con-
cord, N. H.: The Rumford print, co. viii, 558 p. ports. [1300
Morris, Charles. Heroes of discovery in America. 2d ed., rev. and enl. Phila.
and London: Lippincott. 365 p. plates. [1301
1st edition, 1906.
Contents.— Leif the Lucky. Christopher Coltmibus. Americus Vespucius. TheCabots. Balboa.
Ponce de Leon. The voyages of Cortereal and Verrazano. Ferdinand Magellan. Ferdinand Cortes.
Francisco Pizarro. Cabeza de Vaca. Francisco de Orellana. Hernando de Soto. Francisco de
Coronado. Jacques Cartier. Jean Ribot. Martin Frobisher. Sir Francis Drake. Sir Humphrey
Gilbert. Sir Walter Raleigh. Bartholomew Gosnold. John Smith. Henry Hudson. Samuel de
Champlain. James Marquette. Robert de la Salle. Lemoyne d'lberville. Sieur de Verendrye.
Vitus Bering. The Hudson Bay company. Washington and Gist. Daniel Boone. Jonathan Carver.
Ledyard and Gray. Lewis and Clark. Zebulon M. Pike. Stephen H. Long. John C. Fremont.
The saving of Oregon and the adventures of Dr. Whitman. The gallant explorers of the frozen seas.
Robert E. Peary.
80
WRITINGS ON- AMERICAIT HISTORY, 1919. 81
Morris, Charles. Heroes of progress in America. 2d ed., rev, and enl. Phila. and
London: J. B. Lippincott. 372 p. plates, ports., facsim. [1302
1st edition, 1906.
Contents.— Roger "Williams. John Eliot. William Penn. James Oglethorpe. Benjamin Frank-
lin. Patrick Henry. Samuel Adams. Thomas Jefferson. Robert Morris. Alexander Hamilton.
John Adams. Eli Whitney. Robert Fulton. John Jacob Astor. Stephen Girard. John Marshall.
Henry Clay. Daniel Webster. John C.Calhoun. Samuel F. B. Morse. Cyrus W. Field. Elias
Howe. Cyrus H. McCormick. Charles Goodyear. DeWitt Clinton. Horace Wells. William Lloyd
Garrison. Wendell Phillips. Charles Sumner. LucretiaMott. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Susan B.
Anthony. Dorothea Dix. George Peabody. Peter Cooper. Abraham Lincoln. William H. Seward.
James G. Blaine. Horace Greeley. John Ericsson. Thomas A. Edison. Frances E. Willard. Clara
Barton. Andrew Carnegie. Booker T. Washington. Theodore Roosevelt.
Boss, C. Stuart. Two American types that left their stamp on Victorian history.
Victorian hist, mag., VII (July) 126-134. [1303
George Francis Train, a merchant of Boston, who was in Melbourne, Australia, from 1853 to 1856,
and John S. Cheney of Manchester, Conn., who was in Victoria from 1853 to 1864.
Two Georgia patriots: Abraham Baldwin [1754-1807] and James Jackson [1748-1806]
Ga. hist, quae., Ill (Dec.) 169-176. [1304
Individual.
[Arranged alphabetically by subject]
Adams. Becker, Carl. The education of Henry Adams. Am. hist, rev., XXIV
(Apr.) 422-434. [1305
A review of "The education of Henry Adams: an autobiography. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton
Mifflin CO., 1918."
. Crotliers, Samuel McChord. Education in pursuit of Henry Adams.
Yale rev., VIII (Apr.) 580-595. [1306
Frewen, Moreton. The autobiography of Henry Adams. 19th cent.,
LXXXV (May) 981-989. [1307
Andrews, Frank D. Riley M. Adams and his journal. Vineland hist.
MAG., IV (Jan.-Oct.) 10-15, 33-36, 56-60, 74-78. [1308
"A journal of Riley M. Adams, cadet of A. L. S. & M. academy [American literary, scientific and
military academy] Norwich, Vt., from 18th August 1824."
Agassiz. Paton, Lucy Ellen. Elizabeth Gary Agassiz [1822-1907] a biography.
Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. viii, 423 p. plates, ports. [1309
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 556-557.
Alexander. Sterling, Mass. Proceedings of the town meeting at Sterling, Mass.,
July 14, 1919; presentation of portrait of Lord Stirling. [Sterling? Priv. print, by
Mary E. Butterick, 1919?] 70 p. port. [1309a
"Bibliography concerning [William Alexander, 1726-1783] Lord Stirling": 1 leaf at end.
Anderson. General Robert Anderson [1805-1871] Americana, XIII (Oct.)
414-424. [1310
The defender of Fort Sumter.
Armstrong. Ewing, Robert. Portrait of General Robert Armstrong [1792-1854]
Tenn. hist, mag., V (July) 75-80. [1311
Arnold. Tompkins, Hamilton Bullock. Benedict Arnold [1615-1678] first governor
of Rhode Island. Newport, R. I. 24 p. illus. (Newport hist. soc. bul., no. 30)
[1312
Bagby. Pollard, Henry R. Edward Bagby [1842-1864] Confed. vet., XXVII
(Dec.) 453-458. [1313
Baldwin. Baldwin, Simeon E. Life and letters of Simeon Baldwin [1761-1851]
New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor co. vi, [4], 503 p. ports., plates,
map. [1314
An active participant in political and other public affairs hi Connecticut; he was a member of the
FederaUst party, for two years a member of Congress, and judge of the Supreme court of errors of Con-
necticut for a number of years.
Rev. in: Aia. hist, rev., XXV (Oct.) 142.
Ball. Bates, George Williams. Dan. H. Ball: the pioneer lawyer of Marquette,
the nestor of the Michigan bar, a review of his life and character. Mich. hist.
MAG., Ill (Apr.) 247-274. [1315
82 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATIOlsr. !
Barbour, Francis. Francis Barbour to Lucy Elisabeth Barbour. Mass. hist, soc
PROC, LII, 278-281. [1316
Letter written from New York, June 29, 1834, which gives a picture of life in that city.
Barlow. Squires, Vernon P. Joel Barlow — patriot, democrat, and man of letters |
[1754-1812] Univ. of No. Dak. quar. jour., IX (July) 299-302. [1317 '
Barney. A hero of two wars. D. A. R. mag., LIII (Oct.) 596-601. [laig
Commodore Joshua Barney, u. s. n., 1759-1818. i
Barton. Pleadwell, F. L. William Paul Crillon Barton, surgeon, U. S. navy, I
a pioneer in American naval medicine (1786-1856). Ann. med. hist., II, 267-30l! '
[1319 i
Bathrick. Ellsworth R. Bathrick (late a representative from Ohio) Memorial '
addresses delivered in the House of representatives of the United States, Sixty-fifth
Congress, second session. Proceedings in the House February 10, 1918. Pro-
ceedings in the Senate January 4, 1918. Prepared under the direction of the
Joint committee on printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 44 p. port. (65th
Cong.,3dsess. House. Doc. 1854) [132o
Beanes. Magruder, Caleb Clark. Dr. William Beanes [1749-1829] the incidental
cause of the authorship of the Star-spangled banner. [Washington] p. 207-225. :
plates. [1321 ■
From Records of the Columbia historical society, v. XXII, 1919.
An incident of the British invasion of Maryland, August 1814. It was to secure the release of Dr.
Beanes that Francis Scott Key visited the British fleet where he was detained during the bom- i
bardment of Fort McHenry. ,
Beauregard. Beauregard, B. T. A sketch of General G. T. Beauregard. La. \
HIST. QUAR., II (July) 276-281. [1322 j
Written by his son. 1
— Duffy, James E. General Beauregard [1818-1893] In Professional memoirs, \
Corps of engineers, United States army and Engineer department at large, v. XI, I
May 1919. Washington; Engineer school, Washington barracks, p. 348-350. '
[1323 I
Belding, Lyman. Autobiographical sketch by Lyman Belding [1829-1917] of some |
of his life experiences, to which is added an appreciation of his work in ornithol- I
ogy, by Walter K. Baker, in the Condor, of Eagle Rock, Cal. Wr. hist, and i
geol. soc. PROC, XVI, 127-184. [1324
Benbury. Haywood, Emily Byan Benbury. Thomas Benbury— a brigadier general
of the American revolution. N. C. booklet, XVIII (Jan.) 134-142. [1325
BiDDLE. Bates, William Nickerson. Nicholas Biddle's journey to Greece in 1806.
Phila. numismat. and antiq. soc. PROC, XXVIII, 167-183. [1326
BiDWELL. Bidwell, Annie E. K. The character of John Bidwell; two letters written
by his widow, Mrs. Annie E. K. Bidwell. So. Cal. hist. soc. pub., XI, pt. 2,
53-55. [1326a
Booth. Matthews, Brander. Memories of Edwin Booth; personal recollections o^
the most distinguished tragedian of the American stage. Munsey's, LXVII
(July) 240-250. [1327
Side-lights on Booth in Oklahoma. Historia, VIII (Oct.) 1-5. [1328
Seeks to establish the identity of one David E. George who lived for many years la Oklahoma, and
John Wilkes Booth.
Bradley. Campbell, David. Captivity of John Bradley. Wm. and Mary quar.,
XXVII (Apr.) 242-243. [1329
Letter written to General Andrew Jackson, June 29, 1843, asking his interposition with President
Santa Anna of Mexico, to obtain the liberation of John Bradley who was a prisoner in the Castle of
Perote in Mexico.
Brough. Birthplace of John Brough. Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII
(July) 369-374. [1330
John Brough was born in Marietta, Ohio, in 1811.
Broussard. . . . Robert F. Broussard (late a senator from Louisiana) Memorial
addresses delivered in the Senate and the House of representatives of the United
States, Sixty-fifth Congress, third session. Proceedings in the Senate January
26, 1919. Proceedings in the House January 26, 1919. Prepared under the
direction of the Joint committee on printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 106 p.
port. (65th Cong., 3d sess. Senate. Doc. 451) [1331
im. 83
Bbown. General Jacob Brown not "a fighting Quaker." Friends' hist. soc. bul.
IX, no. 1 (May) 32-34. [1332
General Jacob Brown of the War of 1812.
Bull. McGee, Mrs. Anita Newcomb. Colonel John Bull (1731-1824) A prelimi-
nary study. [San Francisco: Priv. print.] [8] p. [1333
Burr. Ford, Worthington Chauncey. Some papers of Aaron Burr. Worcester,
Mass.: The Society. 88 p. [1333a
Reprinted from the Proceedings of the American antiquarian society, n. s. XXIX, pt. 1, April 1919.
A selection from the papers of Aaron Burr, including letters of the Revolutionary period, and later,
to 1818.
Morris, Ira K. Last days of Aaron Burr described. State service, III
(Oct.) 29-34. [1334
Capstick. John H. Capstick (late a representative from New Jersey) Memorial
addi'esses delivered in the House of representatives of the United States, Sixty-fifth
Congress, second session. Proceedings in the House May 19, 1918. Proceedings
in the Senate March 18, 1918. Prepared under the direction of the Joint committee
on printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 68 p. port. (65th Cong., 3d sess.
House. Doc. 1855) [1336
Carnegie. Bonclgre, Jean. Andrew Carnegie. Larousse mensuel, IV (Oct.)
909-910. [1336
Brainerd, Lawrence. Memoir of Andrew Carnegie. New Eng. hist, and
geneal. REG., LXXIII (Oct.) 243-245. [1337
Escott, T. H. S. Andrew Carnegie. Contemp. rev., CXVI (Sept.) 283-285.
[1338
Holt, Hamilton. The Carnegie that I knew. Indep., XCIX (Aug. 23)
252-253. [1339
1 Carney. Treacy, Gerald C. Andrew Carney, philanthropist [1794-1864] U. S.
Cath. hist, rec, XIII, 101-105. [1340
ICarroll. Carroll, Charles, Extracts from the Carroll papers. Md. hist. mag.
.1 XIV (June-Dec.) 127-154, 272-293, 358-371. [1341
Mainly the correspondence between Charles Carroll and his son, August 30, 1771, to March 20, 1773.
Cont. from v.XIII, 1918.
j Chase. Schlesinger, Arthur Meier. Salmon Portland Chase [1808-1873] undergrad-
I uate and pedagogue. Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII (Apr.) 119-161.
[1342
Hitherto unpublished letters of Chase, with connecting narrative.
CoDMAN. Morse, John Torrey, jr. Colonel Charles Russell Codman. Mass. hist.
soc. PROC, LII, 87-95. [1343
Cody. Cody, Louisa Frederici. Memories of Buffalo Bill, by his wife, Louisa
Frederici Cody, in collaboration with Courtney Ryley Cooper. N. Y. and Lon-
don: Appleton. 325 p. port. [1344
WiUiam Frederick Cody, 1845-1917.
lOoMSTOCK. Daniel Webster Comstock (late a representative from Indiana) Memorial
j addresses delivered in the House of representatives and the Senate of the United
States, Sixty-fifth Congress, third session. Proceedings in the House February 17,
1918. Proceedings in the Senate March 2, 1919. Prepared under the direction of
the Joint committee on printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 56 p. port.
(65th Cong., 3d sess. House. Doc. 1851) [1345
jUllum. Livermore, W. R. George W. Cullum [1809-1892] In Professional
memoirs, Corps of engineers, United States army and Engineer department at
large, v. XI, July 1919. Washington: Engineer school, Washington barracks.
p. 443-446. [1346
3uTBUSH. Smith, Edgar F. James Cutbush, an American chemist, 1788-1823.
Phila., Pa.: Lippincott. [8], 94 p. [1347
Davidson. James H. Davidson (late a representative from Wisconsin) Memorial
addresses delivered in the House of representatives and the Senate of the United
States, Sixty-fifth Congress, third session. Proceedings in the House February
16, 1919. Proceedings in the Senate March 2, 1919. Prepared under the direction
of the Joint committee on printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 57 p. port.
(65th Cong., 3d sess. House. Doc. 1857) [1348
84 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. {
Davis. Dent, Thomas. David Davis of Illinois [1815-1886] — a sketch. Am. law
REV., LIU (July) 535-560. [1349
Sprunt, James. George Davis. N. C. lit. and hist. Assoc, proc, 19th'
ann. session, 15-21. [1350
Attorney-general of the Confederate states; died in 1896.
Depew. Grant, Crosby L. When Depew was secretary of state. State service,
III (July) 12-18. [13611
Chauncey M. Depew was secretary of state at Albany before the Civil war.
DoNGAN. Wyatt, Euphemia Van Rensselaer. Thomas Dongan, first Catholic
governor of New York. Cath. world, CIX (Aug.) 662-676. [1352 1
Elmore. Allen, H. D. The treasurer of the Confederate states of America. Numis-i
MATiST, XXXII (Apr.) 145-147. [1353 1
Edward C. Elmore. . 1
a j
Endecott. Fowler, Samuel P. Governor Endecott an horticulturalist. Danvers!
HIST. soc. COLL., VII, 78-85. [1354'
"Written for the New England Farmer, September, 1852. i
Fenwick. O'Daniel, V. F. Cuthbert Fenwick — pioneer Catholic and legislator ofl
Maryland. Cath. hist, rev., V (July) 156-174. [1355J
FiNDLEY. Ewing, Robert M. The life and times of William Findley [1741-1821] |
Western Pa. hist, mag., II (Oct.) 240-251. [13561
Fisher. Honeyman, A. Van Doren. Hendrick Fisher — the real German- American!
[1697-1778] Somerset CO. hist. QUAR., VIII (Jan.) 1-17. [13571
Prominent citizen of Somerset county, N.J. j
FiTz. Walcott, Henry Pickering. Memoir of Reginald Heber Fitz [1843-1913] |
Mass. hist. soc. proc, LII, 104-116. [1358 1
Forrest. Miller, A. N. An episode in the boyhood of General Forrest. Tenn.i
hist, mag., V (July) 129-131. [1359]
Foster. Livermore, W. B. John Gray Foster [1823-1874] In Professional memoirs,
Corps of engineers. United States army and Engineer department at large, v. XI,
Mar. 1919. Washington: Engineer school, Washington barracks, p. 249-252.
[1360 1
Francis. Stevens, Walter B. David R. Francis, ambassador and plenipotentiary!
to Russia. Mo. hist, rev., XIII (Apr.) 195-225. (Missourians abroad-no.}
6) [1361 j
Franklin. Mignet, Frangois Anguste. Franklin; traduccion y pr61ogo de Mario|
Garcia Kohly. Madrid: Editorial Pueyo. 237 p. [13621
Frietchie. Landis, John H.. A Lancaster girl in history. Lancaster, Pa. 85-94
p. port. (Lancaster CO. hist. soc. pap., V. XXIII, no. 5) [1363
Mrs. Barbara (Hauer) Frietchie, 1766-1862, the "Barbara Frietchie" of Whittier's poem.
Gallinger. Jacob Harold Gallinger (late a senator from New Hampshire) Memorial
addresses delivered in the Senate and House of representatives of the United States,
Sixty-fifth Congress, third session. Proceedings in the Senate January 19, 1919.
Proceedings in the House January 19, 1919. Prepared under the direction of the
Joint committee on printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 133 p. port. (65th
Cong.,3dsess. Senate. Doc. 454) [1364
Gardner. [Gardner, Mrs. Constance (Lodge)] Augustus Peabody Gardner, major,'
United States National guard, 1865-1918. Cambridge: Priv. print, at the River- 1
side press. [6], 25 p. port. [1365;
Gibault. Thompson, Joseph J. Illinois' first citizen-Pierre Gibault. III. Cath.,
HIST, rev., I (Jan.-Apr.) 380-387, 484-494; II (July) 85-95. [1366
Giddings. Long, Byron R. Joshua Reed Giddings, a champion of political freedom
[1795-1864] Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII (Jan.) 1-47. [1367 1
GiRARD. Henry, H. T. The funeral of Stephen Girard. Am. Cath. hist, soc.i
REC. , XXX (June) 97-114. [1368|
Examines the evidence regarding the funeral of Stephen Girard, in re the question as to whether he
' ' I Catholic church.
received the last rites of the Catholic church.
._M.
1919. 85
GiBARD. Henry, H. T. A legend of the dying Girard. Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec.
XXX (Mar.) 75-82. [1369
The -writer concludes that the statement sometimes made that Stephen Girard received the rites of
the Catholic church immediately before his death is not authenticated.
GooDELL. Waters, Thomas Franklin. Memoir of Abner Cheney Goodell, jr.
[1831-1914] Mass. HIST. soc. PROC, LII, 38-43. [1370
I Goodman. Morley, Sylvanus Griswold. Joseph Thompson Goodman [1838-1917]
Am. anthrop., n. s. XXI (Oct.) 441-445. [1371
Gresham. Gresham, Mrs. Matilda. Life of Walter Quintin Gresham, 1832-1895.
Chicago: Rand, McNally and co. 2 v. ports. [1372
Life of the secretary of state under President Cleveland, written by his widow.
Habersham. Stevens, William Bacon. A sketch of the life of James Habersham,
president of His Majesty's council in the province of Georgia, Ga. hist, quae,,
III (Dec.) 151-168. [1373
(Harris. Mott, Hopper Striker. Edward Doubleday Harris [1839-1919] N. Y.
geneal. and bigg. EEC., L (July) 209-211. [1374
Hawkins. Dilnot, Frank. My most interesting American. In his The New
America. N. Y.: Macmillan. p. 95-107. [1375
A sketch of General Rush C. Hawkins, who raised and commanded the N. Y. Zouaves in the Civil
war.
Haynes. Morse, W. H. Lemuel Haynes [1753-1833] Jour, negro hist., IV
(Jan.) 22-32. [1376
AnegroCongregationalministerin New England.
Says. Fleming, George Thornton. Life and letters of Alexander Hays [1819-1864],
brevet colonel United States army, brigadier general and brevet major general
United States volunteers. Ed. and arranged with notes and contemporary history
by George Thornton Fleming from data compiled by Gilbert Adams Hays, Pitts-
burgh, Pa. viii, 708, [16] p. plates, ports. [1377
3elgesen. Henry T. Helgesen (late a representative from North Dakota) Memo-
{ rial addresses delivered in the House of representatives of the United States, Sixty-
fifth Congress. Proceedings in the House March 10, 1918. Proceedings in the
Senate April 11, 1917. Prepared under the direction of the Joint committee on
j printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 42 p. port. (65th Cong., 3d sess.
1 House. Doc. 1850) [1378
rENRY. Lyons, Elizabeth Henry. Red Hill, the historic home of Patrick Henry.
D. A. R. MAG., LIII (July) 416-421. ■ [1379
Tucker, Henry St. George. Patrick Henry and St. George Tucker. Univ.
OP Penn. law REV., LXVII (Jan.) 69-74. [1380
Note calling attention to the antipathy which St. George Tucker entertained toward Patrick Henry.
PBURN. Briggs, John Ely. William Peters Hepburn [1833-1916] Iowa City,
la.: The State historical society of Iowa, xv, 469 p. ports. (Iowa biographical
series. Ed. by Benjamin F. Shambaugh) [1381
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 735-736.
ERBERT. Smith, Emma Frances Lee. Personal recollections of a noble man
[Hilary A. Herbert] Confed. vet., XXVII (July) 246-248. [1382
iGGiNSON. Henry Lee Higginson [1834-1919] Nation, CIX (Nov. 22) 654-655.
[1383
ILL. Ebenezer J. Hill (late a representative from Connecticut) Memorial ad-
dresses delivered in the House of representatives of the United States, Sixty-fifth
Congress, second session. Proceedings in the House March 8, 1918. Proceedings
in the Senate September 27, 1917. Prepared under the direction of the Joint
committee on printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 57 p. port. (65th Cong.,
3d sess. House. Doc. 1852) [1384
IbiiLiDAY. Kom, Anna Lee Brosius. Major Benjamin HoUiday, 1786-1859, founder
of Missouri Intelligencer and Boone's Lick Advertiser. Mo. hist, rev., XIV
(Oct.) 16-28. [1385
ouston. Sam Houston in Indian Territory. Historia, VIII (July) 1-4. [1386
OWE. Un inventeur; comment a reussi Elias Howe, inventeur de la machine k
coudre. Inventions illustrees (Paris) XXIe ann. (Dec). [1387
86 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Hubbard. DeLestry, Edmond L. Lucius Frederick Hubbard, ninth governor i
Minnesota [1836-1913] Western mag., XIV (July) 36-38. (State builders j
the West) [13 1
Hughes. William Hughes (late a senator from New Jersey) Memorial address;
delivered in the Senate and the House of representatives of the United Statcj
Sixty-fifth Congress, third session. Proceedings in the Senate January 26, 19]!
Proceedings in the House February 23, 1919. Prepared under the direction of tlj
Joint committee on printing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 96 p. port. (65 1
Cong., 3d sess. Senate. Doc. 450) [131
Hull. Stewart, Charles W. El comodoro Isaac Hull [1775-1843] Inter- Americ;
III (July) 115-118. [13|
HusTiNG. Paul 0. Husting (late a senator from Wisconsin) Memorial address!
delivered in the Senate and the House of representatives of the United States, Sixt !
fifth Congress. Proceedings in the Senate March 2, 1919. Proceedings in the Hou \
February 23, 1919. Prepared under the direction of the Joint committee on prii:'
ing. Washington [Gov. print, off.] 60 p. port. (65th Cong., 3d sess. Senatl
Doc. 447) [13!!
Jackson. Jackson, Russell Leigh. Dr. Hall Jackson. Americana, XIII (Jarl
94-102. [1311
Celebrated New Hampshire surgeon, b. 1739, d. 1797.
Jacobi. Villard, Oswald Garrison. Abraham Jacobi — the last of the forty-eightei
Nation, CIX (July 19) 74-75. [ISi
Tbe last of the group of German Americans who emigrated to the United States in 1848.
Jefferson. Charpentier, John. Thomas Jefferson h Paris. Rev. bleue, LV!
(May 17) 311-313. [ISjj
Christian, John T. The religion of Thomas Jefferson. Rev. and exposito]!
XVI (July) 295-307. [1351
Patton, John S. Thomas Jefferson's contributions to natural history. NaI
URAL HIST., XIX (Apr.) 405-410. [13{!
"His effort sent out the Lewis and Clark exploring party into the unknown West— recognition aii
honor are given today to the expedition's leader, Meriwether Lewis." |
Also pub. in the University of Virginia alumni bulletin, 3d ser,, XII (Aug.) 409-415. I
Ruliere, H. Thomas Jefferson. Wetensch. Bladen, I (Feb.) 129-158. [isd
Johnson. Delaplaine, Edward S. The life of Thomas Johnson. Md. hist. mag|
XIV (Mar.-June, Dec.) 33-56, 173-203, 329-348. [ISE,
Thomas Johnson, 1732-1819, first governor of Maiyland, and active supporter of the Revolutionaij
cause. I
Johnston. Battle, Kemp Davis. Life and services of Colonel Jonas Johnston [174(i
1779] N. C. booklet, XVIII (Apr.) 178-187. [13£|
Jones. Haywood, Marshall De Lancey. Calvin Jones, physician, soldier and fre*!
mason, 1775-1846, being an account of his career in North Carolina and Tennesse(i
[Oxford, N. C] Press of Oxford orphanage. 31 p. port., plates. [UC-
From the Proceedings of the Grand lodge of North Carolina, a. d. 1919.
Reprint issued by James W. Jones, BoUvar, Tennessee.
Also pubhshed in the North CaroUna booklet, XIX (July) 3-35.
Rosenbloom, J. An appreciation of Henry Bence Jones (1814-1873). Am
MED. HIST., II, 262-264. [140.
William Atkinson Jones (late a representative from Virginia) Memorii
addresses delivered in the House of representatives of the United States, Sixty-fift
Congress. Proceedings in the House February 16, 1919. Proceedings in the Senatj
April 17, 1918. Prej)ared under the direction of the Joint committee on printing;
Washington [Gov. print, off.] 126 p. port. (65th Cong., 3d sess. House. Do('
1856) [140[
King. Brush, Edward Hale. Rufus King, a Revolutionary statesman [1755-182';i
D. A. R. MAG., LIII (Jan.) 30-33. [140!
Knapp. Knapp, Henry E. General John Holly Knapp [1791-1837] Wis. mag. hist!
II (Mar.) 337-340. [140
Le Due. Ives, Gideon S. William Gates Le Due [1823-1917] Minn. hist, bul., II
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Lee. Robinsonj. Leigh. The soul of Lee. Confed. vet., XXVII (Aug.) 293-299.
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Lincoln. Chapman, John Jay. Lincoln and Hamlet. No. Am. rev., CCIX (Mar.)
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Corson, O. T. Loyalty as exemplified in Abraham Lincoln. Ohio educ.
MO., LXVIII (Jan.) 7-15. [1409
— — Grierson, Francis. Abraham Lincoln, the practical mystic. London: Lane.
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Hapgood, Norman. Washington and Lincoln. Dial, LXVIII (Aug. 9) 92-93.
[1410
Higgins, Lucy Porter. A sketch of Abraham Lincoln's mother. Americana,
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Nancy Hanks Lincoln.
HoUiday, Carl. Lincoln's God. So. Atlan. quar., XVIII (Jan.) 15-23.
[1412
A study of Lincoln's attitude toward God.
Lincoln centennial association. Addresses delivered at the celebration of the
one hundred and eighth anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln, under the
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the association. 108 p. [1413
Lincoln's first levee. III. hist. soc. jour., XI, no. 3 (Oct. 1918) 386-390.
[1414
Contemporary newspaper account of the first levee given by the president elect at his home in Spring-
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Lowden, Frank O. Lincoln, the American. Boston, Mass., February 12,
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Printed by authority of the state of Illinois.
McFadden, L. E. Abraham Lincoln; his education and moral courage.
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The poetical cult of Lincoln. Nation, CVIII (May 17) 777. [1417
Potez, Henri. Abraham Lincoln. Rev. hebdomadaire, XXVIIIe ann.
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Rare Lincolniana no. 14. ... Tarrytown, N. Y.: Reprinted, W. Abbatt.
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[1419
Contents.— Memorial address at St. John, N. B. (1865) by C. M. Ellis. From "Trans-Atlantic
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Shirley, Ralph. A short life of Abraham Lincoln. Illustrated American ed.
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Contents.— The Lincoln genealogy. Chronology of the life of Lincoln. Lincoln papers. Abraham
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Concluded from the Journal of American history, v. XI, no. 3, 1917.
[jIvingstgn. Thomas, William S. Henry Livingston [1748-1828] Dutchess co.
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CiOVERiNG. Kellen, WiUiam Vail. Memoir of Henry Morton Levering [1840-1918]
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88 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Lyman. Eliot, Charles William. Memoir of Arthur Theodore Lyman [1832-1915
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McAdoo. Hemphill, James C. William Gibbs McAdoo. No. Am. rev., CCX (July i
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McKiNLEY. Skinner, Charles K. Story of McKinley's assassination. State servI
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McNair. Brown, Edward. Alexander McNair [1775-1826] first governor of Missouri ^
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Marshall. Kelley, Margaret A. James W. Marshall; life and reminiscences of Cali^
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Beveridge, Albert Jeremiah. The life of John Marshall. Boston and N. Y. i
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Contents. — I. Frontiersman, soldier, lawmaker, 1755-1788. II. Politician, diplomatist, statesman!
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Martiau. Thomas, John L. Martian. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag. j
I (July) 52-57. [143s|
"Nicholas Martiau probably came to Virginia in 1623 and became the progenitor of George Washing '
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Martin. Charles Martin (late a representative from Illinois) Memorial addresseti
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[14341
Mason . Mason, Robert C . George Mason of Virginia [1725-1792] citizen, statesman,:
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Fish, Frank L. Jeremiah Mason [1768-1848] Am. law rev., LIII (Mar.)i
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Meyer. Howe, M. A. De Wolfe. George von Lengerke Meyer [1858-1918] his lifej
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Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIV (May 1920) 345-348; The Review, II (Mar. 27, 1920) 308-309. '
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The first Jew to receive the degree of Master of Arts from Harvard college, who was for forty yearsj
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Montgomery. Goodpasture, Albert V. Colonel John Montgomery. Tenn. hist.I
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Served under George Rogers Clark in the conquest of the Northwest during the Revolution, and latere
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Morgan. New York state archeological association. Lewis H. Morgan chapter.i
The Morgan centennial celebration at Wells college, Aurora, being an account of the
proceedings and the text of the addresses delivered by Professor Roliand B. Dixon, |
President Kerr D . MacMillan, and Arthur C . Parker. Rochester, N . Y . : Lewis H. ,
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''The Lewis Henry Morgan memorial comjnittee was formed early in the year 1918 for the purpose of]
erecting a suitable tablet to the memory of Lewis H. Morgan, the distinguished ethnologist and sociolo-,
gist. The year 1918 marked the centennial anniversary of the birth of Dr. Morgan."
Nash. Hart, Warren W. Timothy Nash [b. 1740] Appalachia, XIV (June) 383-390.
Discoverer of the Crawford Notch, in 1771.
n
1919. 89
Nelson. DeLestry, Edmond L. Knute Nelson, twelfth governor of Minnesota and
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[1442
Olmsted. Stone, Rufus Barrett. Arthur George Olmsted [1827-1914] son of a Penn-
sylvania pioneer; boy orator of Ulysses; for the freedom of the slave ; defense of the
Union; development of the northern tier; citizen, jurist, statesman. Phila.:
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Ordway. Johnson, Thomas S. Moses Ordway, pioneer Presbyterian missionary
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Page. Alderman, Edwin A. Walter Hines Page [1855-1918] Univ. of Va. alumni
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. Mims, Edwin. Walter Hines Page: friend of the South. So. Atlan. quar.,
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Sedgwick, Ellery. Walter Hines Page [1855-1918] World's work,
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Rev. in: Am. liist. rev., XXV (July 1920) 732-734.
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Noted American orator.
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(Jan.) 253-265. [1461
Prints a series of documents from the Indian office at Washington, 1826-1832, relating to the later
life of Nathaniel Pryor, the Virginia-Kentuckian who was a member of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
ichmond, William Henry. Recollections of ninety-five years in Connecticut and
the anthracite regions of Pennsylvania. Jour. Am. hist., XIII (Apr.) 257-272.
[1462
Concluded from v. XI, no. 3, 1917.
90 AMERICAl^ HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOl!^.
1
5rica] f
RiTNER. Biddle, Edward William. Governor Joseph Ritner [1780-1869]; historical
address . . . read before the Hamilton library association, Carlisle, Pa., Octobei
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RoBBiNS. Edward Everett Robbins (late a representative from Pennsylvania'
Memorial addresses delivered in the House of representatives of the United States!
Sixty-fifth Congress, third session. Proceedings in the House February 16, 1919'.
Proceedings in the Senate January 27, 1919. Prepared under the direction of the'
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Cong., 3d sess. House. Doc. 1860) [14641
Robertson. Hoss, E. E. The father of Tennessee. Meth. quar. rev., LXVIII!
(Oct.) 591-611. [1465!
General James Robertson, 1742-1814. j
B-obinson, David. David Robinson to William Preston. Mass. hist. soc. proc '
LII, 163-164. [1466i
Letter written from Boston, Nov. 5, 1761. From the Preston papers in the State historical society 1
of Wisconsin.
Rodman. Cannon, Mrs. Jolin S. Rear Admiral Hugh Rodman. Ky. hist, soc !
REG., XVII (Sept.) 57-63. [1467i
Rodney. Gratz, Simon. Thomas Rodney [1744-1811] Pa. mag. hist., XLIIll
(Jan.-Oct.) 1-23, 117-142, 208-227, 332-367. [1468|
Prominent Delaware patriot during the Revolution. Consists mainly of transcripts of letters vmttenl
during the period 177(>-1804. They give interesting details of his journey to what was then the fari
West, and information about life in Mississippi Territory, and the chief political events occuring there, !
Roosevelt. Abbott, Ernest Hamlin. Theodore Roosevelt. France-Etats-Unis'
I (Mar.) 106-110. [14691
Abbott, Lawrence F. Impressions of Theodore Roosevelt. Garden City,!
N. Y.: Doubleday, Page and co. xvii, 315 p. plates, ports. [1470[
Abbott, Lawrence F. New facts about Theodore Roosevelt. World's
4
WORK, XXXVIII (July-Aug.) 264-273, 400-414. [147l|
Facts about his political career. I
Abbott, Lawrence F. Some impressions of Theodore Roosevelt. Outlook,
CXXI (Jan. 15) 93-96. [1472!
Abbott, Lyman. Theodore Roosevelt. Outlook, CXXI (Jan. 15) 91-92.
[1473'
Akeley, Carl E. Theodore Roosevelt and Africa. Natural hist., XIX;
(Jan.) 12-14. [1474;
Beers, Henry A. Roosevelt as man of letters. Yale rev., VIII (July)i
694-709. [14761
Has been reprinted in his " Four Americans," New Haven, Conn.: Pub. for the Yale review by the?
Yale university press, p. 7-31. A Spanish translation is printed in Inter-America, III (Nov.) 206-214. '
Bishop, Joseph Bucklin. Theodore Roosevelt and his time; shown in hisj
own letters. Scribner's, LXVI (Sept.-Dec.) 257-275, 385-408, 515-533, 650-
662. [1476
Among the subjects discussed are the Russian Japanese treaty, and the war with Spain
Buffalo. Citizens. Theodore Roosevelt, born October 27, 1858, died Jan-j
uary 6, 1919. Report of memorial meeting held at Elmwood music hall, Buffalo.
N. Y., Wednesday, January 8, 1919, at the hour of his funeral at Oyster Bay.;
[Buffalo: Printed by J. W. Clement co.] 15 p. port., plate. [1477
Burroughs, John. Theodore Roosevelt; his Americanism reached in to the
marrow of his bones. Natural hist., XIX (Jan.) 5-7. [1478 1
Carman, Travers D. Campaigning with Theodore Roosevelt. Outlook,
CXXI (Jan. 29) 181-182. [1479 ,
Century association, Theodore Roosevelt; memorial addresses delivered!
before the Century association, February 9, 1919; resolutions adopted February
9, 1919. N. Y.: Printed for the Century association. 74 p. port. [1480
Addresses of Elihu Root, Rev. W. T. Manning, G. H. Putnam, H. C. Lodge, John Burroughs, C. E
Akeley, Talcott Williams.
Cheney, Albert Loren. Personal memoirs of the home life of the late Theo-
dore Roosevelt as soldier, governor, vice president, and president, in relation to
Oyster Bay. Washington, D. C: The Cheney pub. co. xxiv, 132 p. plates,
ports., facsim. [1481
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 91
Roosevelt. Cornwell, John J. Theodore RooBovelt the American. An address by
Governor John J. Cornwell at a joint memorial session of the Legislature of West
Virginia, Burlew theatre, Charleston, West Virginia, February 9, 1919. [Charles-
ton] 12 p. [1482
Corson, O. T. Theodore Roosevelt, the loyal American. Ohio educ.
MO., LXVIII (Mar.) 86-93. [1483
Curtis, Natalie. Mr. Roosevelt and Indian music; a personal reminiscence.
Outlook, CXXI (Mar. 5) 399^00. [1484
Curtis, Natalie. Theodore Roosevelt in Hopi-land ; another personal reminis-
cence. Outlook, CXXIII (Sept. 17) 87-88, 92-93. [1485
The dedication of Mount Theodore Roosevelt; staff correspondence from
Travers D. Carman, containing a tribute by Major-General Leonard Wood. Out-
look, CXXII (July 16) 428-432. [I486
Depew, Chauncey M. Theodore Roosevelt. N. Y. geneal. and biog.
EEC, L (Apr.) 97-107. [1487
Dewey, John. Theodore Roosevelt. Dial, LXVI (Feb. 8) 115-117. [1488
Drinker, Frederick E., and Jay Henry Mowbray. Theodore Roosevelt, his
life and work. Phila., Pa.: National pub. co. xi, 13-471 p. illus., plates, ports.
[1489-90
Drouilly, Georges. Roosevelt, professeur d'energie. Lectures pour tous.
XXIe ann. (Feb. 15) 669-676. [1491
Egan, Maurice Francis. Theodore Roosevelt in retrospect. Atlantic?
CXXIII (May) 676-685. [1492
Explorers' club. Theodore Roosevelt; memorial meeting at the Explorers'
club, March 1, 1919. [N.Y.: Explorers' club] 31 p. [1493
Garland, Hamlin. My neighbor, Theodore Roosevelt. Everybody's, XLI
(Oct.) 9-16, 94. [1494
Gilder, Joseph B. Mr. Roosevelt as a letterwriter. Bellman, XXVI (Jan.
25) 103-104. [1496
Griffith, William, td. The- Rooi^evelt policy; speeches, letters and state
papers, relating to corporate wealth and closely allied topics, by Theodore Roosevelt.
N. Y.: Current literature pub. co. 3 v. ports. (Roosevelt, his life, meaning
and messages, v. I-III) [1496
Vol. Ill has title: Newer Roosevelt messages, speeches, letters and magazine articles dealing
with the war, before and after, and other vital topics.
Hagedorn, Hermann. Theodore Roosevelt; a biographical sketch. [N. Y.]
Priv. print., Roosevelt memorial exhibition committee, Columbia university. 44,
[2] p. illus., ports. [1497
Hard, William. Theodore Roosevelt, a tribute. Portland, Me.: T. B.
Mosher. 13 p. [1498
First printed in the New republic for January 25, 1919, under the title, Roosevelt now.
Hedges, Job Elmer. The personality and the philosophy of Theodore
Roosevelt. Jour. Am. hist., XIII (July) 326-334. [1499
[Henderson, Daniel Maclntyre] "Great-heart"; the life story of Theodore
Roosevelt, by Niel Maclntyre [pseud.'] N . Y. : W. E . Rudge. [12], 242 p. plates,
ports. [1600
Hervier, Paul-Louis. Theodore Roosevelt. Nouv. REV.,'4me ser., XXIX
(Feb. 1) 237-240. [1501
Hoover, Herbert. Roosevelt and the public conscience. Jour. Am. hist..
XIII (July) 309-311. [1602
House, Roy Temple. The story of Theodore Roosevelt. Normal instruc-
tor, XXVIII (Oct.) 39-40. [1503
Howland, Harold. Theodore Roosevelt and his times. Indep., XCVII (Jan.
18)83-84. [1504
Iglehart, Ferdinand Cowle. Theodore Roosevelt: the man as I knew him.
N. Y.: The Christian herald. 442 p. plates, ports. [1605
i°— 22 ^8
92 AMERICAN HISTOKICAL ASSOCIATION.
I
Roosevelt, Jordan, David Starr. Personal glimpses of Theodore Roosevelt.
Natural hist., XIX (Jan.) 15-16. [1606
Jusserand, Jean Jules. Personal memories of Theodore Roosevelt. Jour. I
Am. hist., XIII (July) 320-325. [1607 '<
Lewis, William Draper. The life of Theodore Roosevelt. With an introduc-
tion by William Howard Taft. Phila. and Chicago: John C. Winston co. xxiv,
17-480 p. plates, ports. [1508
Lodge, Henry Cabot. Address of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts
in honor of Theodore Roosevelt, ex-president of the United States, before the
Congress of the United States, Sunday, February 9, 1919. Washington: Gov. print,
off. 56 p. ([U. S.] 65th Cong., 3d sess. Senate. Doc. 384) [1509
Lodge, Henry Cabot. Theodore Roosevelt. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton
Mifflin CO. 45 p. [1610
Originally published as Senate document no. 384, 65th Congress, 3d session, under title: Address
of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge ... in honor of Theodore Roosevelt . . . before the Congress of the
United States . . . February 9, 1919. See no. 1509, above.
Lowden, Frank O. Theodore Roosevelt. [Printed by authority of the state
of Illinois] [Springfield, 111.: Illinois state journal co., state printers] 5 p. [1511
Matthews, Brander. Theodore Roosevelt as a man of letters. Munsey's,
LXVI (Mar.) 252-257. [1612
Matthews, Brander. Roosevelt as a practical politician. Outlook, CXXII
(July 16) 433-435. [1613
Mayor des Planches, E. Reminiscenze di T. Roosevelt. Nuova anto- i
LOGiA, anno LIV (Jan. 16) 214-225. [1614
Medrano, Higinio J. Teodoro Roosevelt. Estudiante latino-americano
I (Jan.) 140-142. [1516
Metcalfe, Victor H. Personal recollections of Theodore Roosevelt. Gal.
UNIV. CHRON., XXI (Apr.) 139-144. [1616
Moireau, A. Roosevelt. Larousse mensufl, IV (Nov.) 952-953. [1617
Morgan, James. Theodore Roosevelt, the boy and the man. New ed.,
with new chapters . . . N. Y.: Macmillan. xi, 350 p. plates, ports.
[1618
New Mexico. Legislative assembly. Theodore Roosevelt memorial service,
by the fourth Legislative assembly of the state of New Mexico in the Saint Francis
auditorium, Museum of New Mexico, at Santa Fe, February 9th, 1919. Palacio,
VI (Feb. 22) 65-78. [1619
New York. Legislature. A memorial to Theodore Roosevelt. Authorized
by Legislature February twenty-first, nineteen hundred nineteen. [Albany:
J. B. Lyon co., printers] 131 p. port. [1580
Address of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge ... in honor of Theodore Roosevelt . . . before the Congress
of the United States, Sunday, February 9, 1919: p. [87]-131.
Osbom, Henry Fairfield. Theodore Roosevelt, naturalist. Natural
HIST., XIX (Jan.) 9-10. [1621
Parker, Alton B. Roosevelt's Americanism. Jour. Am. hist., XIII (July)
314-316. [1622
Payne, Frank Owen. More Roosevelt sculptures. Art and archaeol.,
VIII (July) 197r202. [1623
Payne, Frank Owen. Theodore Roosevelt in sculpture. Art and
archaeol., VIII (Apr.) 109-113. [1624
Peary, Robert E. Roosevelt — the friend of man. Natural hist., XIX
(Jan.) 11. [1526
Pinchot, Gifford. Roosevelt, the man of abundant life. Natural hist.,
XIX (Jan.) 17-18. [1626
Putnam, George Haven. Theodore Roosevelt, boy and man. Rev. of rev.
LIX (Feb.) 153-155. [1627
Ranck, Edwin Carthy. What Roosevelt did for art in America. Art and
archaeol., VIII (Oct.) 291-293. [1628
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 93
Roosevelt. Boosevelt, Theodore. Theodore Roosevelt; an autobiography. N. Y.:
Macmillan. xii, 647 p. illus., ports., facsims. [1629
Rev. in: The Review, II (Mar. 13, 1920) 255.
Roosevelt, Theodore. Theodore Roosevelt's letters to his children; ed. by-
Joseph Bucklin Bishop. N. Y.: Scribner. x, 240 p. ports., illus., double facsim.
[1630
Roosevelt as candidate for president. Rev. of rev., LIX (Feb.) 162-164.
[1531
Boosevelt intimately considered. Nation, CIX (Nov. 20) 688-690. [1532
A review of several recent books on Roosevelt.
Roosevelt permanent memorial national committee. Memorials to Roose-
velt; a book of suggestions. ... N. Y : Roosevelt permanent memorial national
committee. 65 p. illus., port., plates. [1533
Roosevelt the man of rare courage. State service, III (Jan.) 35-38. [1634
Root, Elihu. Theodore Roosevelt. No. Am. rev., CCX (Dec.) 754-758.
[1536
Russell, Thomas Herbert. Life and work of Theodore Roosevelt, typical
American, patriot, orator, historian, sportsman, soldier, statesman and president.
[Chicago: Homewood press] 447 p. illus. (incl. facsims , music) plates, ports.
[1636
"With an introduction by MerAtt Starr. A special tribute by Major-General Leonard Wood; also
special articles and tributes of respect by many leaders in public hfe, intimate friends and political
associates of the former President."
Sewall, William Wingate. As I knew Roosevelt. By ''Bill" Sewall.
Forum, LXI (May) 537-550. [1537
Sewall, William Wingate. Bill Sewall's story of T. R. With an introduc-
tion by Hermann Hagedorn. N. Y. and London: Harper. [14], 115 p. plates,
ports., facsims. [1638
Shaw, Albert. Theodore Roosevelt. Rev. of rev., LIX (Feb.) 156-160.
[1539
Sherman, Stuart P. Roosevelt and the national psychology. Nation,
CIX (Nov. 8) 599-605. [1640
Skinner, R. P. Theodore Roosevelt — a personal tribute. Landmark,
I (Feb.) 75-77. ■ [1641
Stefansson, Vilhjalmur. Colonel Roosevelt as explorer. Rev. of rev.,
LIX (Feb.) 165-166. [1642
Stone, James Samuel. Theodore Roosevelt; a sermon commemorative,
preached in St. James's church, Chicago, on Sunday, January 12, 1919. Chicago:
Daughaday and co. 21 p. [1543
Thayer, William Roscoe. Chapters of Roosevelt's life. No. Am. rev.
CCX (July-Nov.) 48-57, 222-234, 339-355, 512-521, 663-677. [1644
Thayer, William Roscoe. Theodore Roosevelt; an intimate biography.
Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. xiii, [6], 474 p. plates, ports., facsim.
[1646
Rev. m: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 306-307.
■ Theodore Roosevelt. Inter-America, II (Mar.) 327-332. [1646
Theodore Roosevelt. Jour, educ, LXXXIX (Apr. 3) 367-372. [1647
"From the School bulletin. "
Theodore Roosevelt. Spectator, CXXII (Jan. 11) 29-30. [1648
Theodore Roosevelt: in memoriam; [articles by John Burroughs, Henry
Fairfield Osborn, Robert E. Peary, Carl E. Akeley, Gifford Pinchot, and others].
31 p. illus., plates. [1549
Reprinted from the January, 1919, number of Natural history, the Journal of the American museum
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94 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION". f
^■
Roosevelt. Thwing, Eugene. The life and meaning of Theodore Roosevelt
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A Rhode Island physician of the Revolutionary period, who acted as surgeon to Arnold's expedition
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I
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American captain who served in the Chilean navy, 1817-1819 and 1822-1847.
GENEALOGY.
General.
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N. Y. GENEAL, AND BiOG. REC, L (Jan.) 4-6. [1620 j
Report of committee on heraldry, submitted by the chairman, John Ross Delafield. j
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Bowman, George Ernest. Latham-Washburn. Mayfl. desc, XXI (Jan.) 40-42. ;
[1623 ;
Prints copies of two Plymouth county deeds, 1706/7, and 1714. j
Bulloch, Joseph Gaston Baillie. A history and genealogy of the families of Bayard, j
Houston of Georgia, and the descent of the Bolton family from Assheton, Byron and '
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Crone, Frank L . Some Pennsylvania Dutch genealogies. Ind. mag. hist. , XV (Mar.) i
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Brief genealogical accounts of the Crone, Switzer, Weaver, and Steel families.
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Werner, Charles J. Genealogies of Long Island families; a collection of genealogies
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Individual Families. '^
Abell. Abell, Horace Avery, and Lewis Parker Abell. The Abell family of America,
[n. p.] 109 leaves, plate (coat of arms). [1630
Consists of type-written sheets fastened together in binder.
Allcott. Flagg, Charles AUcott. Some notes regarding descendants of Daniel and
Elizabeth (Dutton) Allcox of Waterbury and Colebrook, Conn,, including the All-
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Bartlett. The estate of James Bartlett [1701-1722/3] Mayfl. desc. , XXI (July) 131-
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• The will of Thomas Bartlett [1758] Mayfl. desc, XXI (Oct.) 167-170.
[1632
Bassett. Bassett and allied families. Americana, XIII (July) 275-284. [1633
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1919. 99
Belden. Belden and allied families. Americana, XIII (Oct.) 393-400. [1634
Bennett. Bowman, George Ernest. Capt. Peter Bennett's will [1749] and the estate
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Benson. [Benson, Ernest Leon] A pioneer family [Benson] [Burlington, Wis.]
8 p. [1635a
"Introductory" signed: Ernest L. Benson.
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Bradford. Bowman, George Ernest. Lieut. Ephraim Bradford's will [1741] Mayfl.
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Brereton. Brereton, John. Brereton; a family history. San Francisco: J. Brere-
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Brockway. Brockway and allied families. Americana, XIII (Oct.) 385-392. [1639
Brown. Brown, George Tilden. John Browne, gentleman, of Plymouth (and one
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The estate of Noah Brown of Attleborough, Mass. Mayfl. desc. , XXI (July)
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Noah Brown, d. 1776.
Bull. Bull, James Henry. Record of the descendants of John and Elizabeth Bull,
early settlers in Pennsylvania. 1674 to 1919. San Francisco, Calif. : The Shannon-
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Colonel John Bull (1731-1824) A preliminary study: by Mrs. Anita Newcomb McQee, M. D.: p. 315-
320.
Butler. Butler, Henry Langdon. Tales of our kinsfolk, past and present; the
story of our Butler ancestors for ten generations from 1602 to 1919. N. Y. : Print.
for private distribution. 509, [2], viii p. illus., ports., facsims., geneal. tables, coat
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Contains also the Morris, Mercier, Stryker, Scudder, and Keen families.
Gary. [Harrison, Fairfax] The Virginia Carys; an essay in genealogy. N. Y.:
Priv. print.. The De Vinne press, xxix, 194 p. plates, ports., maps, facsims.,
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Introduction signed: F. H. [i. e. Fairfax Harrison]
Chickering. Torrey, Frederic Crosby. One branch of the Chickering family, and
the complete ancestry of Mary Chickering Nichols. Lakehurst, N. J. 31 p. map,
geneal. tab. [1644
I Christophers. Totten, John R. Christophers family. N. Y. geneal. and bigg,
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Clowes. Werner, Charles J. The Clowes family of Long Island. N. Y. geneal.
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Coggeshall. Genealogical research in England. New Eng. hist, and geneal.
REG., LXXIII (Jan.) 19-32. [1647
Genealogical notes regarding the family of Coggeshall.
CooKE. Jacob Cooke's will [probated 1747] Mayfl. desc, XXI (Jan.) 42-44,
[1648
Cowan. Sellers, Julia E. A chronological genealogy of James Cowan, sr., and his
descendants. Lebanon, O.: Bell press, 43 p. [1649
uddeback. Cuddeback, Williani Louis. Caudebec in America; a record of the
I descendants of Jacques Caudebec, 1700 to 1920. N. Y.: T. A. Wright. 276 p.
plates, ports., plans, maps, fold, geneal. tab. [1650
Caudebec in Normandy, France; p. [233]-238.
CuRzoN. Pleasants, Jacob Hall. The Curzon family of New York and Baltimore,
and their English descent. Baltimore [Priv. print.] ix, 75 p, plate, ports., fold,
geneal. tables. [1651
CusHiNG. Will of Rev, Caleb Cushing [1748/9] Essex inst. hist, coll,, LV (Apr.)
111-112. [1662
r
100 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
V
CusHMAN. Lieutenant Josiah Cushman's will [1742] Mayfl. desc, XXI (July),
102-104. [16531
Danielson. Danielson-Lockwood families. Americana, XIII (Apr.) 198-207. [1654 1
Delano. Delano-Hitch families. Americana, XIII (July) 300-305. [1665
Deming. Deming and allied families. Americana, XIII (July) 285-291. [1656
Dowley. The Dowley-Esterbrook families. Americana, XIII (Apr.) 186-192. [1657
Duer. Duer and allied families. Americana, XIII (July) 292-299. [1658
Edwards. Strother, Henry. Hon. John Edwards and John Edwards, gentleman; i
first two John Edwardses in Bourbon co., Ky. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVII (Jan.) !
47-52. [1659 j
Genealogical notes. i
Elton. Elton family record. Vineland hist, mag., I (Jan.) 15-18. [1660
EwiNG. Ewing, Presley Kittredge, and Mary Ellen (Williams) Ewing. The Ewing
genealogy with cognate branches ; a survey of the Ewings and their kin in America.
[Houston: Hercules print, and book co.] xiv, 185, xlv p. plates, ports., coats of
arms. [1661
Fales. Fales, De Coursey. The Fales family of Bristol, Rhode Island; ancestry of i
Haliburton Fales of New York. Privately printed. [Boston: T. R. Marvin and |
son, printers] 332 p. plates, ports. [1662 I
TheHaliburtonfamily by Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton . . . Reprinted with additions and [
changes from the New England historical and genealogical register for January, 1917: p. 159-217.
Felch. Pettingell, Frank Hervey. Felch [pedigree] N. Y. geneal. andbiog. rec, |
L (Jan.) 85-87. [1663 ]
Fuller. Fuller, William Hyslop. Genealogy of some descendants of Thomas Fuller !
of Woburn. To which is added Supplements to volumes i, ii, iii, previously comp. j
and published. [Palmer? Mass.] Printed for the compiler. 271 p. plates, ports.,
col. coat of arms. [1664
On cover: Fuller genealogy [v.] IV.
Gardiner. Robinson, Caroline. The Gardiners of Narragansett; being a genealogy
of the descendants of George Gardiner, the colonist, 1638, by Caroline E. Robinson
. . . ed. with notes and index, by Daniel Goodwin. Providence: The editor, vii,
313 p. port. plan. [1665
Totten, John R. The Kidd-Gardiner ''cloth of gold " and "pitcher." N. Y.
geneal. and biog. rec, L (Jan.) 17-25. [1666
In 1699, Captain William Kidd, of pirate fame, presented to John Gardiner, of Gardiner's island, a
piece of cloth of gold and a pitcher. In tracing +he history of this heirloom the writer has given a genea-
logical account of the Gardiner and allied families.
Gilbert. Capt. Nathaniel Gilbert's will [probated 1765] Mayfl. desc, XXI (July)
117-120. [1667
Gilman. Noyes, Emily Hoflfman (Oilman) "Mrs. Charles P. Noyes." A family
history in letters and documents, 1667-1837, concerning the forefathers of Winthrop
Sargent Gilman, and his wife Abia Swift Lippincott, ed. with notes by their daugh-
ter Mrs. Charles P. Noyes. St. Paul, Minn.: Priv. print. 2 v. plates, ports.,
facsims., coat of arms. [1668
Gold. Osborn, Henry Fairfield. Gold [pedigree] N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, L
(July) 229-231. [1669
Goodwin. Goodwin and allied families. Americana, XIII (Jan.) 55-68. [1670
Gray. Bowman, George Ernest. Dr. Thomas Gray's will [1723] Maytl. desc,
XXI (Oct.) 156-158. [1671
Capt. Thomas Gray's will [probated 1721] Mayfl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 84-88.
[1672
The will of John Gray of Kingston, Mass. [probated 1732] Mayfl. desc, XXI
(Apr.) 62-64. [1673
Greene. Bates, Louise Prosser. John Greene of Newport and Narragansett. R. I.
hist. soc. coll., XII (Jan.) 15-26. [1674
Genealogical account.
1919. 101
Grymes. Grymes of ''Brandon" & c. Va. mag. hist., XXVII (Apr.-July) 184-187,
403-413. [1676
Genealogical notes.
Guilford. Guilford, Helen Morrill. Guilford genealogy. Minneapolis, Minn. 68 p.
[1676
GusHEE. The will of Abraham Gushee of Raynham [probated 1783] and his son
Abraham's estate. Maypl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 81-84. [1677
Hatch. Hannah Hatch's three husbands, Japhet Turner, Ebenezer Tinkham, and
Capt. Ichabod Tupper. Mayfl. desc, XXI (July) 97-101. [1678
Hannah Hatch, b. Feb. 15, 1681/2.
Haverfield. Taylor, Wallace. A genealogy and brief history of the Haverfield
family of the United States, one of the pioneer settlers of Jefferson county, Ohio,
later Harrison county. [Oberlin, O. : Press of the News print .co.] x, 316 p. [1678a
Hicks. Starbird, Charles M. Notes on the Hicks family. Sprague's jour. Maine
HIST., VII (Nov.) 156-159. [1679
HiGGiNBOTHAM. Swccncy, William Montgomery. Higginbotham family of Vir-
ginia; addenda and corrigenda. Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII (Apr.) 294-298.
[1680
Hill. Hill and allied families. Americana, XIII (Jan., Oct.) 69-80, 367-384.
[1681
Howland. Bowman, George Ernest. Jabez Howland's estate [1732] Mayfl.
desc, XXI (Oct.) 145-151. [1682
Bowman, George Ernest. Seth Howland's estate [1729] Mayfl. desc,
XXI (Oct.) 179-184. [1683
Huntington. Huntington family papers. Topsfield hist, soc coll. XXIV,
76-89. [1684
Jenkins. Webber, Mabel L. Descendants of John Jenkins, of St. John's Colleton.
S. C. HIST. MAG., XX (Oct.) 223-251. [1685
Kendall. Clemens, William Montgomery. The Kendall family in America.
Hackensack, N. J.: W. M. Clemens. 24 p. [1686
Kennedy. Kennedy, Russell. Genealogical descendants of David and Jane
Greacen Kennedy. 1783-1919. 2d ed. Pittsburgh, Pa. [1919?] geneal. table.
102 X 46 <'^- fold, to 35 «°i- [1686a
Kneass. Magee, Anna J. Brief memorial of the Kneass family of Philadelphia.
Pa. geneal. soc pub., VII, no. 2 (Mar.) 107-126. [1687
Knight. Family record of Jonathan Knight, in the possession of Walter H. Blake,
Vineland, N. J. Vineland hist, mag., IV (Apr., Oct.) 37-38, 78-80. , [1688
Kuykendall. Kuykendall, George Benson. History of the Kuykendall family
since its settlement in Dutch New York in 1646 . . . Portland, Ore.: Kilham
stationery and print, co. 645 p. illus., ports. [1689
"With genealogy as found in early Dutch records, state and government documents; together with
sketches of colonial times, old log cabin days, Indian wars, pioneer hardships, social customs, dress
and mode of living of the early forefathers."
Leach. Leach and allied families. Americana, XIII (Apr.) 177-185. [1690
Loring. Anna (Alden) Loring's will [probated 1804] Mayfl. desc, XXI (July)
126-128. [1691
Lovelace. Pleasants, J. Hall. The Lovelace family and its connections. Va.
MAG. hist., XXVII (July) 393-403. [1692
Ludlow. Gordon, William Seton. Gabriel Ludlow (1663-1736) and his descend-
ants. [N. Y.] 44 p. pi., ports. [1693
Reprinted from the New York genealogical and biographical record, v. L (Jan.- Apr.) 34-55, 134-156.
McClary. McClary and allied families. Americana, XIII (Oct.) 401-413. [1694
Makepeace. The will of William Makepeace of Taunton [probated 1737] and the
estate of his son-in-law Emanuel Williams of Taunton. Mayfl. desc, XXI (July)
135-142. [1695
Massie. William Hassle's will [1793] Wm. and Mary quar., XXVII (Apr.)
244-246. [1696
102 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
.1,
Mitchell. Bowman, George Ernest. Jacob Mitchell's estate [1675] Maypl
DESC, XXI (Oct.) 185-186. [1697
Nichols. Nichols, Leon Nelson. The Nichols families in America. N. Y. [The I
compiler] 16 p. [1698
Orendorff. Custer, Milo. Orendorff genealogy. Bloomington, 111, 6 p.
I
Peck. English ancestry of Joseph Peck of Rehoboth. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XII'
(Oct.) 121-126. [17001
Peery. The Peery genealogy; data furnished by Edwin H. Peery and Joseph S.
Peery. Arranged by Annie Lynch. Utah geneal. and hist, mag., X (Jan.)
17-29. [1701
Pemberton. Osborn, Henry Fairfield. Pemberton [pedigree] N. Y. geneal.
AND biog. rec, L (July) 236-237. [1702'
Perkins. Perkins, Emily Ritchie. The Perkins family, a sketch of intercolonial
migration. Pa. geneal. soc. pub., VII, no. 2 (Mar.) 163-178. [1703 i
Post. Post-Hiller families. Americana, XIII (Jan.) 81-88. [1704 i
Ttie Long Island family of Post.
Putnam. Barnard, Job. Genealogical sketch of the Andrew Putnam family.
Comp. ... for the Chautauqua county historical society, 1916. (Partly revised.
1918) Conneaut, O.: The Conneaut print, co. 29 p. [1705
Redman. Beatty, Joseph M., jr. The Redman family of Philadelphia. Pa. mag. J
hist., XLIII (July) 279-280. [1706 |
Richmond. Bowman, George Ernest. Ebenezer Richmond's will [1729] Mayfl. !
DESC, XXI (Oct.) 186-189. [1707 '
Col. Silvester Richmond's will [probated 1754] Mayfl. desc, XXI (Jan.)
12-18. [1708
The estate of Col. Silvester Richmond. Mayfl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 54-56.
[1709
The will of Samuel Richmond of Taunton, Mass. [1736] Mayfl. desc, XXI
(Jan.) 44-46. [1710
Robinson. Genealogy and family register of George Robinson, late of Attleborough,
Mass., with some account of his ancestors, comp. by one of his sons, in 1829. Hal-
lowell: Glazier, Masters <& co., printers, 1831. Boston, Mass.: Reprinted by
C. E. Goodspeed and co. 36 p. [1711
Sargent. Mann, Charles Edward. The Sargent family and the old Sargent homes.
Lynn: F. S. Whitten. 64 p. [1712
4.t head of title: " Cape Ann in story, legend and song. Section five."
ScoTT. Holman, Mrs. Mary Lovering. The Scott genealogy. Comp. by the author
for Harriett Grace Scott. Boston, Mass. 402 p. plates, ports. [1713
Contents.— pt. I. Descendants of John Scott of Roxbury, Massachusetts, pt. II. Ancestral lines of
Harriett Grace Scott. Appendix: Benjamin Scott of Braintree, Massachusetts. Benjamin Scott of
Rowley, Massachusetts. Joseph Scott of Rowley, Massachusetts.
Seymour. Richard Seymour of Hartford and Norwalk, Conn., and some of his
descendants. New Eng. hist, and geneal reg., LXXIII (Jan.) 6-18. [1714
Cont.from v. LXXII, 1918.
Shuey. Shuey, D. B. History of the Shuey family in America from 1732 to 1919.
2d ed. Gallon, O.: The author. 381 p. [1715
Simmons. Simmons, Frederick Johnson. A genealogy of a few lines of the Simmons
family of Maine and Massachusetts, descendants of Moses Simmons (Moyses Symon-
son) "Fortune," 1621. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VII (Nov.) 135-143. [1716
Smith. [Perkins, Henry Esban] A record of the family of Roswell Smith, son of
Steel Smith of Farmington, Conn., Windsor, Vermont, and other localities, with
residence of descendants, so far as is known to date. [Washington, D. C] 47 p.
port., geneal. table. [1717
Sale, Nancy Jane Leaverton. Illinois descendants of Edward Smith, an
English soldier in the Revolutionary war who deserted and joined the American
army. III. hist. soc. jour., XI, no. 3 (Oct. 1918) 400-407. [1718
191». 103
SopER. Bowman, George Ernest. Capt. Oliver Soper's will [probated 1821] Mayfl.
DESC, XXI (Jan.) 10-12. [1719
SouTHWORTH. Capt. Ichabod Southworth's estate and the will of his widow Esther
[probated 1760] Maypl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 73-76. [1720
_ The wills of Lieut. Nathaniel Southworth [probated 1710/11] and his son
Constant [probated 1705] Maypl. desc, XXI (Jan.) 24-28. [1721
Standish. The wills of David Standish [probated 1795] and his widow Hannah
[probated 1803] Maypl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 71-73. [1722
Stratton. The Stratton-Ensign family. Americana, XIII (Apr.) 193-197. [1723
Stroud. Stroud, Alonzo Bibb. The Strouds; a colonial family of English descent.
Lakeland, Fla.: The Child printery. 263 p. plates, ports., coats of arms. [1724
Sturges. Osbom, Henry Fairfield. Sturges [pedigree] N. Y. geneal. and biog.
REC, L (July) 234-236. [1725
SwADNER. Evans, Grace Radcliff. John Swadner and his descendants. Decatur,
111. [32] leaves. [1726
Autographed from t3rpe-writteii copy.
Talmage. Talmage, Robert Swartwout. The Major Thomas Talmage family narra-
tive. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (Jan.-Apr.) 18-23, 81-87. [1727
I Cont. from V. VII, 1918.
Taylor. The wills of John Taylor of Boston [probated 1720] and Rev. John Taylor
of Milton [probated 1749] Maypl. desc , XXI (July) 121-124. [1728
TiBBiTTS. Coons, William Solyman. The Tibbitts or Tibbetts family, descendants
of George Tippett of Yonkers, N. Y. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, L (Oct.)
354-364. [1729
Tisdall. Bowman, George Ernest. The estates of John Tisdall of Taunton and his
son John. Maypl. desc, XXI (Jan.) 29-35. [1730
Abstracts of entries on the original Plymouth colony court orders and Plymouth colony wiUs and
inventories, relating to the settlement of the estates of John TisdaU (d. 1675) and John Tisdall, jr. (d.
1677).
Trabue. Trabue, Alice. The genealogy and history of the Trabue family. Ky.
hist, soc REG., XVII (May) 47-60. [1731
Ungrich. Ungrich-Littell. Americana, XIII (July) 311-316. [1732
Van Arsdale. Honeyman, A. Van Doren. The Van Arsdale family — Pluckemin
line. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (Apr.) 96-119. ■ [1733
Van Dusen. Van Deusen, Albert H. Van Dusen records. N. Y. geneal. and
biog. REC, L( Jan.) 68-7 L [1734
Van Liew. Van Liew, Elizabeth. Descendants of Cornelius Van Liew, of Three-
Mile Run. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (Jan.-Apr.) 41-48, 93-96. [1735
Wadsworth. Deacon John Wadsworth's estate. Maypl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 89-93.
[1736
John Wadsworth of Duxbury, d. Nov. 12, 1716.
Waite. Moiiarty, G. Andrews, jr. Thomas Waite of Portsmouth, R. I., and some
of his descendants. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (Oct.) 291-304.
^ [1737
Walker. Eldredge, Mrs. Jane Jennings. Descendants of John Walker, of Gringley-
on-the-Hill, Nottingham, England, [n. p.] 12 p. ports. [1738
Ward. Osbom, Henry Fairfield. Ward [pedigree] N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec,
L (July) 231-234. [1739
Ward family. Wm. and Mary quar. , XXVII (Jan.-Apr. ) 185-199, 258-293.
[1740
Warner. Warner, Lucien Calvin, and Mrs. Josephine Genung Nichols. The
descendants of Andrew Warner. New Haven, Conn,: Tuttle, Morehouse and
Taylor co. viii, 804 p. illus. (incl. ports., coats of arms, facsims.) [1741
Warren. Richard Warren's wife and children. Mayfl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 76-80.
[1742
Richard Warren, d. Jan. 23, 1696/7.
— Samuel Warren's estate. Mayfl. desc, XXI (July) 104-106. [1743
Samuel Warren, of Middleborough, b. Mar. 7, 1682/3.
104 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Webb. Cooch, Mary Evarts (Webb). Ancestry and descendants of Nancy AUyn
(Foote) Webb, Rev. Edward Webb, and Joseph Wilkins Cooch, by Mary Evarts !
(Webb) Cooch (Mrs. J. Wilkins Cooch) Printed for private distribution. Wil- i
mington, Del.: Star pub. co. 157 p. illus., plates, ports., coats of arms. [1744
Contents.— pt. I. Nancy Allyn (Foote) Webb. pt. II. Rev. Edward "Webb. pt. III. The Cooch I
and Wilkins lineage. j
West. West, George M. William West of Scituate, R. I., farmer, soldier, states- \
man. St. Andrews, Fla. : Panama City pub. co. 32 p. plate. [1745
Genealogical data.
Wilson. The Wilson-Henry family. Somerset co. hist, quar,, VIII (Jan.)
53-56. [174e \
FamUy of Rev. Peter Vanoy Wilson, born in Amwell township, 1750.
WiNSLOW. Bowman, George Ernest. Sarah Winslow's three husbands, Myles
Standish, Tobias Payne, and Richard Middlecott, with the four estates. Mayfl.
desc, XXI (Jan.) 1-10. [1747
Wright. Hoppln, Charles Arthur. Some descendants of Richard Wright, gentle- |
man, of London, England, and Northumberland, Virginia, 1655. Tyler's quar. [
hist, and geneal. mag., I (Oct.) 127-141. [1748 i
Isaac Wright's will [probated 1766] Mayfl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 53-54. [1749 i
Wyckoff. Wyckoff, Jacob. Family of Peter Claeson, ancestor of all the Wyckoffs. i
Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (Jan.) 49-53. [1750 |
Regional Genealogy, Vital Records, etc. |
i
Albany co., N. Y. Albany co., N. Y. Early records of the city and county of j
Albany and colony of Rensselaerswyck. v. 4. (Mortgages 1, 1658-1660, and
Wills 1-2, 1681-1765.) Translated from the original Dutch, by Jonathan Pearson;
revised and edited by A. J. F. Van Laer. Albany: The University of the state
of New York. 220 p. [1751
At head of title: The University of the state of New York. New York state library. History bul-
letin, 11.
Allegheny co., Pa. Wood, Mary Ellison. Abstracts of wills and administrations
of Allegheny county, Pennsylvania [1803-1809] Pa. geneal. soc. pub., VII,
no. 2 (Mar.) 136-146. [1752
Andover, Mass. Poore, Alfred. A genealogical-historical visitation of Andover,
Mass., in the year 1863. Essex inst. hist, coll., LV (Jan.) 75-77. [1753
Cont. from v. LIV, 1918.
Auburn, Me. Cemetery inscriptions at Auburn and Turner, Me. New Eng.
HIST. AND geneal. REG., LXXIII (July) 233-235. [1754
Bakersfield, Vt. Inscriptions in the cemetery at East Bakersfield, Vt. New
Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (July) 186-206. [1766
Barnstable co., Mass. Unrecorded Barnstable county deeds [1744, 1757, 1760]
Mayfl. desc, XXI (July) 133-134. [1756
Belfast, Me. Vital records of Belfast, Maine, to the year 1892. v. II. Marriages
and deaths. Editor, Alfred Johnson. [Portland?] Pub. under authority of the
Maine historical society. 671 p. [1756a
V. I, containing records of births, pub. in 1917.
Berwick, Me. Records of the Society of Friends at Berwick (North Berwick) Me.
New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (Jan.-Apr.) 43-51, 124-128. [1757
Contents.— Marriage certificates, 1802-1868. Records of the Berwick monthly meeting: 1, 1802-1832.
Cont. from v. LXXII, 1918.
Brookline, Mass. Cummings, Harriet Alma, comp. Burials and inscriptions in
the Walnut street cemetery of Brookline, Massachusetts; with historical sketches
of some of the persons buried there. Brookline hist. soc. proc, ann. meeting,
Jan. 30, 1919, 15-34. [1768
Canaan, N. Y. Becords of the Congregational church and society of New Canaan
at Canaan Four Corners in the town of Canaan, Columbia county, N. Y. Tran-
scribed by the New York genealogical and biographical society; ed. by Royden
Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, iii, 136 numb, leaves, facsims. 36
X 28icm. [1769
Autographed from type-written copy.
I
1919. 105
Catskill, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church of Catskill in the town of
Catskill, Greene county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and
biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city.
X, 239 numb, leaves, facsims. 36 x 28cm. [1760
Autographed from type-written copy.
Charleston, S. C. Webber, Mabel L., comp. Marriage and death notices from
the Charleston Morning post and daily advertiser [1786-1787] S. C. hist, mag.,
XX (Jan.-Oct.) 52-56, 142-146, 213-219, 260-263. [1761
— Webber, Mabel L., comp. The register of Christ Church parish [1723-17591
S. C. HIST. MAG., XX (Jan.-Oct.) 64-71, 123-127, 199-203, 252-255. [1762
Cont. from the July 1918 number.
CoLRAiN, Mass. Early vital records of Colrain, Mass. New Eng. hist, and geneal.
REG., LXXIII (Oct.) 246-260. [1763
CoxsACKiE, N. Y. Records of the First Reformed church of Coxsackie in West
Coxsackie, Greene county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and
biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city.
3v. fronts. 36 x 28cm. [1764
Autographed from type-written copy.
District of Columbia. Marriage licenses of the District of Columbia, 1801-1820.
Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VIII (Apr.) 27-31. [1765
Fleming, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church at the Owasco
Outlet in the town of Fleming, Cayuga county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New
York genealogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh.
New York city, viii, 61 numb, leaves. 36 x 28^cm. [1766
With this is bound: Records of the Reformed Dutch church of Owasco . . . N. Y., New York city,
1919.
Autographed from type-written copy.
Florida, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church of Florida, in
the village of Minaville, town of Florida, Montgomery county, N. Y. Preceded
by the records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church of Duanesburgh, 1798-1804.
Transcribed by the New York genealogical and biographical society; ed. by Royden
Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, viii, 189 numb, leaves. 36 x 28|cm.
[1767
Autographed from type-written copy.
Records of the United Presbyterian church in the town of Florida, Mont-
\ gomery county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and biographical
I society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, iv, 24 numb,
leaves. 36 x 28icm. [1768
With Johnstown, N. Y. St. John's Episcopal church. Records . . . New York city, 1919.
I Autographed from type-written copy.
[Frederick, Md. Gruber, Michael Alvin. Tombstone inscriptions, Frederick, Md.
Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VIII (Apr.) 19-26. [1769
jROVELAND, Mass. Poore, Alfred. A genealogical-historical visitation of Grove-
land, Mass., in the year 1863. Essex inst. hist, coll., LV (Oct.) 241-248. [1770
Hagerstown, Mj)'. Gruber, Michael Alvin. Tombstone inscriptions, Hagerstown,
Md. Nation, geneal. soc. QUAR., VIII (Apr.) 1-16. [1771
fARWiCH, Mass. East Harwich, Mass., gravestone records from the Methodist
cemetery. Mayfl. desc, XXI (Apr.) 49-52. [1772
iLLSBOROUGH, N. J. Ncandcr, John. Hillsborough (Millstone) Reformed church
baptisms [1807-1815] Somerset go. hist, quar., VIII (Apr.-July) 132-137,
184-193. [1773
Cont. from v. VII, 1918.
Iuntington, N. Y. Genealogical data found in the printed records of the town of
Huntington, Long Island, N. Y. [1680-1757] N. Y. geneal. and bigg, rec, L
(Jan.-Apr.) 72-76, 127-133. [1774
pswiCH, Mass. Ipswich vital records, 1749-1849. Essex inst. hist, coll., LV
(Jan.-Apr.) 33-48, 129-160. [1776
These records are not included in the Ipswich vital records, published in 1910.
w
106 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
IspwicH, Mass. Vital records of Ipswich, Massachusetts, to the end of the year'
1849. Salem, Mass.: Essex institute, 1910-19. 3 v. [1776
Alphabetical indexes to the manuscript records of the tov.Ti, supplemented by information from i
church registers, cemetery inscriptions and other sources. |
Contents.— V. I. Births, v. II. Marriages and deaths, v. III. Baptisms, marriages and deaths, i
Jefferson, Me. Early vital records of Jefferson, Me. [1808-1817] NewEng.histI
AND GENEAL. REG., LXXIII (Apr.-July) 87-103, 165-185. [1777 I
Johnstown, N. Y. Records of St. John's Episcopal church in the village of Johns- 1
town, Fulton county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and'
biographical society. Ed. by Hoyden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city.
viii, 123 numb, leaves. 36 x 2%^"^. [1778 i
Autographed from type- written copy. i
With tills is bound: Records of the United Presbyterian church in Florida . . . N. Y. New York '
city, 1919.
Kent go., Del. Lord, Charles W., jr. Early marriages, births and deaths from
Kent county, Delaware, deed books. Pa. geneal. soc. pub., VII, no. 2 (Mar.)
158-162. [1779
Knowlton, N. J. Knowlton, Warren county, N. J., records of the first German
and English congregation [1785-1810] N. J. hist. soc. proc., n. s. IV, 88-107.
[1780 I
Cont. from V. Ill, 1918. I
Mount Desert, Me. Records of the first church of Mount Desert, Maine, 1792-1867. '
New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (Oct.) 279-291. [1781 ;
Nassau, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church in the town of |
Nassau, Rensselaer county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical i
and biographical society; ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, j
iii, 144 numb, leaves. 36 x 28J^°^. [1782 I
Autographed from type-written copy. j
New England. Ancestral heads of New England families. Americana, XIII
(July-Oct.) i-x V , X vii-xxxii . [1783
Contents.— Abbe-Brighton.
New Scotland, N. Y. Records of the Presbyterian church of New Scotland in the
town of New Scotland, Albany county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York
genealogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh.
New York city, iii, 108 numb, leaves. 36 by 28^°^. [1784
Autographed from type-written copy.
Includes baptisms and births, 1787-1873, and marriages, 1807-1808, 1837-1845, 1858-1867.
New York city. Baptisms of the First Presbyterian church, N. Y. city, 1804-1809.
N. Y. hist. soc. bul., II (Jan.) 116-129. [17^
Cont. from v. II, 1918, p. 62. - ^'■
New York state. Scisco, L. D. Mohawk valley householders in 1800. N. Y.
geneal. and biog. rec, L (Jan., July-Oct.) 26-33, 274-284, 307-316. [1786
Cont. from v. XLIX, 1918.
Records of the towns of Northampton, Broadalbin, Charlestown, Amsterdam, Florida, Mayfield,
and Salisbury.
Niskayuna, N . Y. Records of the Protestant Reformed Dutch church of Niskayuna,
in the town of Niskayuna, Schenectady county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New
York genealogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh.
New York city, vi, 112 numbered leaves. 36 by 28i<'™. [1787
Autographed from type-written copy.
Orange co., Va. Scott, W. W. List of marriages in Orange county [1796] Va.
MAG. hist., XXVII (Jan., July) 68, 345-348. [1788
Cont. from v. XXVI, 1918.
OwAsco, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church of Owasco in the village
and town of Owasco, Cayuga county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genea-
logical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New
York city, v, 33 numb, leaves. 36 x 28i«°^. [1789
With Fleming, N. Y. Reformed Protestant Dutch church at the Owasco Outlet. Records . . .
New York city. 1919.
Autographed from type-written copy.
I
I
WBITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 107
Philadelphia, Pa. Friends,' Society of. Early minutes of Philadelphia monthly
meeting of Friends [1715-1719] Pa. geneal. soc. pub., VII, no. 2 (Mar.) 179-191.
[1790
Cont. from V. VII, no. 1, March 1918.
PiscAT AQUA VALLEY, N. H. Piscataqua pioneers, 1623-1775; register of members
and ancestors; John Scales, ed. Dover, N. H. [Press of 0. F. Whitehouse] 212 p.
illus. [1791
Published by the society of Piscataqua Pioneers, of Dover, N. H.
PiscATAWAY, N.J. Plscataway, New Jersey, marriage and death records; from the
townregister, 1668 to 1805. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. IV, 33-43. [1792
Plymouth, Mass. Plymouth, Mass., vital records. Mayfl. desc, XXI (Jan., Oct.)
19-23, 162-166. [1793
Cont. from v. XX, 1918.
Plymouth colony. Plymouth colony vital records [1675-1686] Mayfl. desc, XXI
(Jan.-Oct.) 36-40, 56-62, 107-112, 152-156. [1794
PoMFRET, Conn. Inscriptions in the Wappaquians burial ground, Pomfret, Conn.,
1723-1861. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (Apr.) 105-124. [1796
Prince George's co., Md. Marriage licences in Prince George's county, Mary-
land, 1777-1824. New Eng. h^ist. and geneal. reg., LXXIII (Apr.-Oct.)
134-154,217-232,261-279. [1796
Readington, N.J. Beadington church baptisms from 1720. Somerset co. hist.
QUAR., VIII (Jan.-Apr.) 65-74, 137-149. [1797
Cont. from V. VII, 1918.
This installment c overs the period 1819-1837.
Rotterdam, N. Y. Schenectady county cemetery records . . . arranged and type-
written by Charlotte Taylor Luckhurst. [Schenectady?] 61 leaves. 28 x 22"°!.
[1798
Autographed from type-written copy.
"These records were taken from the cemetery surrounding the Second Reformed Dutch church of
Rotterdam, Schenectady co., New York."
Salisbury, Mass. Hoyt, David W. Additions and corrections for The old families
of Salisbury and Amesbury, Massachusetts, supplemental to those ending on page
1037, volume iii. Providence, R. I. [The compiler] p. 1057-1097. [1798a
"The old families of SaUsbury and Amesbury, Massachusetts" (3 v.) was pubUshed at Providence,
1897-1917.
5chenectady, N. Y. Inscriptions in the First Presbyterian churchyard, Schenec-
tady, N. Y. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (Apr.) 128-133. [1799
pix-MiLE Run, N.J. Six-Mile Run Dutch Reformed church. Six-Mile Run church
baptisms, 1743-1805. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII (Apr.-Oct) 123-132,
211-230, 264-277. [1800
Somerset co., N. J. Early recorded wills in Somerset — from 1804. Somerset co.
hist, quar., VIII (Jan., July) 62-65, 180-183. [1801
Cont. from v. VII, 1918.
Somerset county marriages, 1795-1879. Somerset co. hist, quar., VIII
(Jan., July-Oct.) 56-61, 193-211, 283-317. [1802
Contents.— R-Z.
Cont.fromv. VII, 1918.
omersworth, N. H. Tate, Joseph. The diary of Master Joseph Tate of Somers-
worth, N. H. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (Oct.) 304-315. [1803
"In this 'diary' Master Tate entered the family records of the inhabitants of Somersworth from about
1740 to the middle of the Revolutionary war."
tamford district. Conn. Abstract of probate records for the district of Stamford,
county of Fairfield, and state of Connecticut, 1729-1802, by Spencer P. Mead,
[n. p.] 425 numb, leaves. [1804
Autographed from type-written copy.
Includes the towns of Greenwich, Ridgefield and Stamford. The town of Stamford included during
part of the above period the town of Darien and part of the town of New Canaan.
tephentown, N. Y. Burials in the Baptist cemetery, Stephentown, N. Y. New
Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIII (July) 207-216. [1806
59976°— 22 9
108 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. |
Stillwater, N. Y. Records of the First Congregational church of Stillwater in th
town of Stillwater, Saratoga county, N. Y., and the First Presbyterian church o'
Stillwater, in the town and village of Stillwater, Saratoga county, N. Y. Tran
scribed by the New York genealogical and biographical society; ed. by Roydei
Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, viii, 129 numb, leaves. 36x28Jcm. [180(
Autographed from type-written copy.
Stratham, N. H. Deaths in Stratham, N. H,, 1777-1826. New Eng. hist, an:
GENEAL. REG., LXXIII (Jan.) 62-77. [180'.
Tolland, Conn. Connecticut cemetery inscriptions. Copied by Joel Nelson Eno
New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg,, LXXIII (Jan.) 32-43. [180J'
Contents.— Tolland, South cemetery.
Cont. from V. LXXII, 1918. |
Vineland, N. J. Siloam cemetery inscriptions. Vineland hist, mag., IV (Jan.-'
Apr.) 18-20, 39-40. [180£
Contents. — Caldwell-Doughty.
Vital records of Vineland, N. J. [1864-1868] Vineland hist. mag. , IV (Jan.-!
Oct.) 7-9, 28-30, 49-55, 68-74. [1810
Virginia. CuUeton, George. Virginia gleanings in England. Va. mag. hist,
XXVII (Jan.-July) 50-58, 150-156, 289-308. [1811
Vischer Ferry, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church of Amity, in the;
village of Visscher's Ferry, town of Clifton Park, N. Y. Transcribed by the New';
York genealogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh.!
New York city, iii, 71 numbered leaves. 36 x 28j cm. [1812.
With Niskauna, N. Y. Protestant Reformed Dutch church. Records of the Protestant Reformed j
Dutch church of Niskayuna . . . New York city, 1919. L
Autographed from type- written copy. ' ' I
Wawarsing, N. Y. Vosburgh, Royden Woodward, ed. Records of the Reformed!
Dutch church of Wawarsing. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, L (Jan.-Oct.) 7-16,
168-183, 243-273, 365-391. [1813 1
Register of baptisms, 1745-1851. !
Westchester go., N. Y. Bristol, Theresa Hall. Westchester county, N. Y., mis-[
cellanea. N. Y, geneal. and biog. rec, L (July) 240-242. [1814'
Wilmington, Del., Wilmington, Del. Holy Trinity church. Catalogue and errata!
of the records of Holy Trinity (Old Swedes) church, as translated by Horace Burr. '
Published by the Historical society of Delaware, 1919. Wilmington, Del. : Press of i
Charles L. Story co. 166 p. ([Del. hist. soc. pap.] no. IXa) [1815 ;
The first volume of Records of Holy Trinity (Old Swedes) church, Wilmington, Del., from 1697 to j
1773, was published in 1890 and forms no. IX of the Papers of the Historical society of Delaware.
Worcester go., Md. List of decedents in un-indexed bond book in office of the I
register of wills, Snow Hill, Worcester county, Maryland, 1667-1742. Pa. geneal. ;
soc. PUB., VII, no. 2 (Mar.) 192-194. [1816 i
Wyoming valley, Pa. Bamford, Eleanor McCartney. Elder Davis Dimock; record I
of baptisms, marriages, and vital statistics, compiled and edited from his diaries. ;
Wy. hist, and geol. soc. proc, XVI, 267-303. [1817 |
Records of 1803 to 1858.
I
II
I L
11
MILITARY AND NAVAL HISTORY.
Ashe, Samuel A. Memories of Annapolis. So. Atlan. quae., XVIII (July) 197-
210. [1818
The writer entered the Naval academy in September, 1855.
Davies, George E. Robert Smith and the Navy. Md. hist, mag., XIV (Dec.) 305-
322. [1818a
Secretary of the navy from 1801-1809.
The early years of the Marine corps. Marine corps gazette, IV (Sept.) 259-267.
[1819
Fish, Carl Russell. Back to peace in 1865. Am. hist, rev., XXIV (Apr.) 435-443.
[1820
A study of the policy of demobilization in 1865.
Fiske, Bradley Allen. From midshipman to rear-admiral. N. Y.: Century co. x,
694 p. illus., plates, ports. [1821
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct. 1920) 122-124.
[Francis, Augustus Theodore] comp. History of the 71st regiment, N, G., N. Y.,
American guard. [N. Y.] The Veterans association, 71st regiment, N. G., N. Y.
xii, 900 p. ports. [1822
"Compiler of the present volume. Brevet Brigadier General Augustus Theodore Francis."— Editorial
foreword, signed George Edward Lowen.
Gobbel, Luther Lafayette. Militia in North Carolina in colonial and revolutionary
times. Trinity COLL. hist. soc. PAP., XIII, 35-61. [1823
Maclay, Edgar Stanton. The religious side of navy life. D. A. R. mag., LIII (Jan.)
25-29. [1824
Morris, Charles. Heroes of the army in America. 2d ed., rev. and enl. Phila. and
London: Lippincott. 354 p. plates, ports. [1825
1st edition, 1906.
Morris, Charles. Heroes of the navy in America. 2d ed., rev. and enl. Phila. and
London: Lippincott. 347 p. plates, port. [1826
1st edition, 1907.
Parry, Edward Abbott. The pension system in the United States. Jour. soc. comp.
legis., 3d ser., I (Oct.) 247-250. [1827
A brief history of the system.
Pratt, Julius W. Naval operations on the Virginia rivers in the Civil war. U. S. N.
iNST. PROC, XLV (Feb.) 185-195. [1828
Smith, Paul Tincher. Militia of the United States from 1846 to 1860. Ind. mag. hist.
XV (Mar.) 20-47. [1829
Sweeney, W. Allison. History of the American negro in the great world war, his
splendid record in the battle zones of Europe, including a resume of his past services
to his country in the wars of the revolution, of 1812, the war of the rebellion, the Indian
wars on the frontier, the Spanish- American war, and the late imbroglio with Mexico.
[Chicago: Printed by Cuneo-Henneberry co.] xx, 21-307 p. plates, ports. [1830
Teignmouth, Lord [Henry Noel Shore]. When the United States were impotent
at sea. Unit. see. mag., n. s. LIX (Sept.) 401-408. [1830a
Concerned with the condition of the American navy in the early 70' s.
Tompkins, Avery. Demobilization, past and present. Infantry jour., XVI (Aug.)
93-100. [1831
Treats of demobilization after all our wars, since and including the Revolution.
Upham, Cyril B . Historical survey of the militia in Iowa, 1838-1865. Ia. jour. hist. ,
XVII (July) 299-405. [1832
The militia in the United States: p. 299-313.
Wilkes, Laura Eliza. Missing pages in American history, revealing the services of
negroes in the early wars in the United States of America, 1641-1815. [Washington,
D. C: Press of R. L. Pendleton] 91 p. [1833
Williams, Charles Richard. On the history of discipline in the navy. U. S. N. inst.
PROC. , XLV (Mar. ) 355-376. [1834
Also published in the D. A. R. magazine, LIII (Nov.) 657-671.
Williams, Dion. War decorations. U.S.N, inst. proc. , XLV (Apr. ) 493-535. [1835-6
A summary and description of all war decorations authorized by our government during the wars and
campaigns since 1776, together with accounts of decorations authorized by foreign governments.
109
POLITICS, GOVERNMENT, AND LAW.
Diplomatic History and Foreign Relations.
Anglo-American relations in commemoration of the tercentenary of Sir Walter Raleigh.
N. 0. LIT. AND HIST. ASSOC. PROC, 19th ann. session, 23-146. [1837 i
Co^^TENTS.— Explanatory note. Introductory, by James Sprunt. Ralegh and British imperialism, I
by Edwin Greenlaw. Sir Walter Ralegh as a man of letters, by Frank Wilson Cheney Hersey. Ra- ;
leigh's place in American colonization, by Charles M. Andrews. England and the birth of the American -
nation, by William Thomas Laprade. The converging democracies of England and America, by Wil- i
liam E. Dodd. Anglo-American diplomatic relations during the last half-century, by Charles H. Lever- ■
more. Social and political ideals of the English-speaking peoples, by George Armstrong Wauchope. i
Benson, Adolph, Burnett. Our first unsolicited treaty. Am. Scandinavian rev., VII i
(Jan.) 43^9. [1838 [
Treaty between Sweden and the United States, signed at Paris, April 3, 1783. i
Benton, Elbert J. The spirit of Washington's foreign policy. Review, I (Oct. 11) ■
469-471. [1839 ]
Borah, William E. Washington's foreign policy. D. A. R. mag., LIII (Apr.) 187-191. '
[1840 i
Burpee, Lawrence J. A successful experiment in international relations. Ottawa: j
.The King's printer. 13 p. [1841
An address deUvered before the Victorian club of Boston on February 17th, 1919.
Account of the history of the International j oint commission between Canada and the Umted States,
created in 1909. !
Cap6-B,odriguez, Pedro. The relations between the United States and Porto Rico
past, present and future. Am. jour, internat. law, XIII (July) 483-525. [1842
Cont. from v. X, 1916.
Chung, Henry. The oriental policy of the United States. With introductory note by
Jeremiah W.Jenks. N.Y., Chicago [etc.] Fleming H. Revellco. 306p. maps.
[1843
An historical study.
Drascher, Wahrhold. Das Vordringen der Vereinigten Staaten im westindischen
Mittelmeergebiet; eine Studie iiber die Entwicklung und die Methoden des ameri-
kanischen Imperialismus. Hamburg: L. Fried erichsen und co., 1918. [8], 105
p. map. [1843a
Fish, Carl E-ussell. American diplomacy. 3d ed., rev. N. Y.: Holt, xi, 551 p.
maps. (American historical series. General editor: 0. H. Haskins) [1844
Fish, CarlRussell. Anintroductiontothehistory of American diplomacy, London:
Society for promoting Christian knowledge; N. Y.: Macmillan. 63 p. (Helps for
students of history, no. 19) [1845
Fish, Carl Bussell. The path of empire; a chronicle of the United States as a world
power. New Haven: Yale univ. press; Toronto: Glasgow, Brook and co.; London:
Humphrey Milford, Oxford univ. press, ix, 305 p. ports. (The chronicles of
America series, Allen Johnson, editor, v. XLVI) [1846
Contents.— The Monroe doctrine. Controversies with Great Britain. Alaska and its problems,
Blaine and Pan-Americanism. The United States and the Pacific. Venezuela. The outbreak of the
war with Spain. Dewey and Manila Bay. The blockade of Cuba. The preparation of the army.
The campaign of Santiago de Cuba. The close of the war. A peace which meant war. The open
door. The Panama canal. Problems of the Caribbean. World relationships. Bibliographical note.
Index.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 555-556.
Fite, Emerson D. Keeping peace with Canada. Century, XC VIII (Sept.) 701-706.
[1847
A review of our relations with Canada since the disarmament agreement of 1817.
France-Amerique. Souvenir de I'amitie franco-americaine, 1773-1918. Album.
Texteet illustrations. Paris: Impr.-editeur B. Sirven. 52 p. [1848
Fried, Alfred Herman. Die Bestrebungen der Yereinigten Staaten fiir Ausbau und
Festigung einer zwischenstaatlichen Ordnung (1794-1917) Haag, 1917. 52, [4] p.
(Nederlandsche Anti-oorlog raad. Capita selecta, no. 2) [1849
110
WHlf^GS O^ AMEMCAi? msfORY, 1919. HI
Gibbons, Herbert Adams. The evolution of the foreign policy of the United States
since the Spanish- American war. New world, I (May) 119-134. ]1850
Gosling, T. W. Yorktown day, October 19; the debt of America to France. Hist.
OUTLOOK, X (Oct.) 377-381. [1851
Traces briefly the indebtedness of America to France in respect to aid in the war of the Revolution.
discovery, exploration and settlement, the Panama canal, literature, philosophy, science and art, and
moral aid.
[Griffin, Appleton Prentiss Clark] Ratification of treaties; methods and procedure
in foreign countries relative to the ratification of treaties, also extracts from the
executive Journal of the Senate relative to proceedings in cases of treaties rejected
by the Senate. Washington: Gov. print, off. 280 p. ([U. S.] 66th Cong., 1st
sess. Senate. Doc. 26) [1853
Extracts from the executive Journal of the Senate relative to proceedings in cases of treaties rejected
by the Senate: p. 83-280.
Keim, Jeannette. Forty years of German- American political relations. Phila.:
Printed by W. J. Dornan. iv, [5J-378 p. [1852a
Thesis (ph. d.) — University of Pennsylvania.
Deals with the period from 1870 to about 1910.
Germany and the Monroe doctrine: p. 273-303.
Lapradelle, A. de, Les Etats-Unis dans le monde. France-Etats-Unis, I^'^ ann.
(Jan.) 15-18. [1853
Shows how the American commonwealth while remaining true to her traditional home and foreign
policy has gradually widened its sphere of action.
Latane, John Holladay. From isolation to leadership; a review of American foreign
policy. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page and CO. 215 p. [1854
Lechartier, Georges. Intrigues et diplomatics k Washington (1914-1917). Paris:
Plon-Nourrit. viii, 302 p. plates, ports., facsim. [1855
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 527-528.
I Levermore, Charles H. Anglo-American diplomatic relations during the last half-
century. Hist, outlook, X (Nov.) 436^46. [1856
Lockey, Joseph Byrne. Significacion del Panamericanismo. Reforma soc, XV
(Sept.) i-xxx. [1857
McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham. America and Britain. N. Y.: E. P. Button,
ix, [3], 221 p. [1858
" Of the papers here printed, four were originally given as lectures at the University of London in May,
1918 . . . thefifthpaper was read before the Royal historical society and has been printed in the Amer-
ican political science review." — Pref.
Contents. — America's entry into the war. British and American relations, pts. i-n. The Monroe
doctrine. The background of American federalism.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July) 740-741.
Marriott, J. A. R. The foreign policy of the United States. Edinburgh rev.,
CCXXIX (Apr.) 345-362. [1859
Melvin, Frank Edgar. Napoleon's navigation system; a study of trade control during
the continental blockade. N. Y.: Appleton. xv, 449 p. [1860
The author's doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, but not published as a thesis.
Contains material on the commercial system of Napoleon as it affected the United States, or was in
turn influenced by America. A main feature of the writer's thesis is that the determining factor in the
economic strife of Napoleon with England was the position of the United States as the chief neutral.
Partridge, G. E. Some history that might have happened. Review, I (July 19)
217-218. [1861
A consideration of the course of events that might have followed an American invasion of Mexico in
1865, as was strongly urged by Grant, in dealing with the Maximihan affair.
Poe, Elisabeth Ellicott. The peace treaties of the United States. D. A. R. mag.,
LIII (Jan.-Feb.) 10-17, 91-96. [1862-3
Renaut, F . P . Le premier conflit colonial hispano-americain ; la navigation du Missis-
sippi, 1783-1795. Rev. etudes hist., LXXXVe ann. (Jan.) 44-68. [1864
By treaty of October 27, 1795, the freedom of navigation on the Mississippi river was estabhshed and
the right of deposit at New Orleans conceded to American citizens.
Renaut, F. P. La question de la Louisiane (1796-1809). Paris [Societe de I'histoire
des colonies frangaises] 242 p. [1865
Treats of the diplomatic history of the acquisition of Louisiana.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 552-553.
Rippy, J- Fred. The Indians of the Southwest in the diplomacy of the United States
and Mexico, 1848-1853. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 363-396. [1866
112 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Roz, Firmin. L'amiti^ traditionnelle de la France & des Etats-Unis d'apr^s un livre
recent. France-Etats-Unis, I (Jan.) 19-24. [1867
Based on the book entitled "En Am^rique, jadis et maintenant, par J. J. Jusserand," Paris, 1918.
Bueda, Julio E. Pan Americanism: its political and economic aspects. Inter-
America, II (Feb.) 145-153. [1868
Scholefield, Guy H. The Pacific, its past and future; and The policy of the great
powers from the eighteenth century. London: John Murray, xii, 346 p. maps.
[1869
A brief history of the policy of the great powers in the Pacific.
Spain and America: p. 179-186.
Sears, Louis Martin. Jefferson and the law of nations. Am. pol. sci. rev., XIII
(Aug.) 379-399. [1870
Slosson, Edwin E. The battle that never was fought; the conflict of Germany and
the United States over Samoa. Indep., XCVII (Mar. 8) 330-331. [1871
Teignmouth, Lord, (Henry Noel Shore). British protection of American shipping
in the Mediterranean, 1784-1810. Unit. ser. mag., n. s. LXX (Dec.) 169-178.
[1872
Calls attention to the fact that in the early years of the republic commerce with the Lerant ports
under the jurisdiction of Tui-key was conducted under British supervision and protection. Concerned
with difficulties with Algeria and Turkey during this period.
Treaty between the French republic and the United States, concerning the cession of
Louisiana, signed at Paris the 30th of April, 1803. La. hist, quar., II (Apr.) 139-
142. [1873
Copy of the treaty.
Treaty between the United States and Spain concerning the cession by Spain to the
United States of East and West Florida, proclaimed February 22, 1821, and signed
by James Monroe and John Quincy Adams. La. hist, quar., II (Apr.) 154-163.
Copy of the treaty. [1874
Villiers, Brougham, and W. H. Chesson. Anglo-American relations, 1861-1865.
London: T. F. Unwin. vii, 214 p. [1875
"Brougham Villiers," pseudonjon for Frederick John Shaw.
Wood, George Clayton. Congressional control of foreign relations during the American
revolution 1774-1789. Allentown, Pa.: H. R. Haas and co. x, 140 p. [1876
Thesis (PH. D.) — New York university, 1918.
Wrong, George M. Relations during the last hundred years between the United
States and Canada. Hist, outlook, X (Jan.) 5-8. [1877
Monroe Doctrine.
Calderon, Ignacio. The Pan-American union and the Monroe doctrine. Jottr.
internat. relations, X (Oct.) 133-137. [1878
Duval, Maurice. Doctrine de Monroe; principe directeur constant de la politique
exterieure des ifetats-Unis. Larousse mensuel, IV (May) 788-789. [1879
Ferrara, Orestes. La doctrina de Monroe y la liga de las naciones. Reforma soc,
XIII (Apr.) 308-312. [1880
Hasenclever, Adolf. Die Bedeutung der Monroedoktrin fiir die amerikanische
Politik der Gegenwart. Halle a. S.: M. Niemeyer, 1918. 28 p. (Auslands-
studien an der Universitat Halle- Wittenberg . . . Hft. 5) [1881
Hockett, H. C. The Monroe doctrine and the league of nations. Ohio hist, teach.
. jour., no. 13, 45-55. [1888
Levermore, Charles H. What the Monroe doctrine has been, is, and may be. League
OF NATIONS MAG., V (Apr.) 221-239. [1883
Llorens, E. L. Monroismus-Panamerikanismus; einzige berechtigte Ubersetzung aue
dem Spanishchen von A. Strube. Hamburg, 1918. 80 p. [1884
Lyra, Heitor. Pan Americanism in Brazil prior to the declaration of Monroe. Inter-
America, III (Dec.) 67-68. [1885
It is the writer's purpose to show that the so-called Pan American or inter-American doctrine did
not originate with Monroe, but that it was of Brazilian origin.
1919. 113
M6»co y la doctrina Monroe. Rev. mex. derecho internac, I (June) 176-218.
[1886
Peyralbe, E. Politique ext6rieure des Etats-Unis: la doctrine de Monroe. Ecole,
Xe ann. (June 20). [1887
Pollard, A. F. The Monroe doctrine. History, n. s. IV (Apr.) 1-13. [1888
Pollard, A. F. The Monroe doctrine and its transformation. In The sea common-
wealth, and other papers, ed. by A. P. Newton. London and Toronto: J. M. Dent
and sons. p. 49-68. [1889
The same article as no. 1888 above.
ISowe, L. S. La doctrina de Monroe y la politica exterior de los Estados Unidos.
Puerto Rico, I (May) 3-32. [1890
Constitutional History and Law.
America's debt to England; the Anglo-Saxon nations and their constitutions con-
sidered. Canada law jour., LV (Jan.) 1-11. [1891
Points out that the foundations of our political liberty and representative government are of Anglo-
Saxon origin.
Atwood, Harry F. The birthday of our Constitution. Const, rev.. Ill (Jan.) 20-25.
[1892
A plea for the observance of the anniversary of September 17th, 1787, as "Constitution day." «
Beck, James M. Washington's supreme achievement. Const, rev.. Ill (July)
131-145. [1893
A study of the Constitution.
"Washington's great work, the American commonwealth, remains, and will remain as long as his
people are faithful to his ideals and principles of government."
Buffington, Joseph. Benjamin Franklin and the Constitution. Const, rev., Ill
(July) 157-167. [1894
iBurnett, Edmund C. 1919 in the light of 1788. Hist, outlook, X (Apr.) 171-174.
[1895
Discusses the Ukeness wliich the controversy over the league of nations bears to the contest over the
Constitution.
3orwln, Edward S. John Marshall and the Constitution; a chronicle of the Supreme
court. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 242 p. plate, ports. (The
chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XVI) [1896
Rev. in: Pol. sci. quar., XXXIV (Dec.) 686-688.
iarley, John Eugene. The obligation to ratify treaties. Am. jour, internat.
LAW, XIII (July) 389-405. [1897
Contains a section detailing the "Instances of refusalto ratify treaties."
laynes, George H. The conciliatory proposition in the Massachusetts convention
of 1788. Am. antiq. soc. proc, n. s. XXIX, pt. 2 (Oct. 15) 294-311. [1898
A comparison of the problem which engaged the U. S. Senate in 1919, in regard to the ratification of
the peace treaty, and that which confronted the conventions of the several states after the draft of the
federal Constitution had been submitted for approval. Treats particularly of the impasse which seemed
to have been reached by the beginning of the year 1788, and the "conciliatory proposition," the accept-
ance of which by the Massachusetts convention pointed the way of escape.
David Jayne. The birthday of the Constitution. Review, I (Sept. 13) 381-
383. [1899
iimt, Gaillard. How the Constitution saved the Revolution. Const, rev., Ill
(Apr.) 95-99. [1900
lunting, Warren B. The obligation of contracts clause of the United States Consti-
tution. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins press, x, 120 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. stud.,
eer. XXXVII, no. 4) [1901
Mainly devoted to a discussion of the historical and legal basis of the Dartmouth college decision.
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIV (Nov. 1920) 719-722.
reigs, William Montgomery. The relation of the judiciary to the Constitution.
N. Y.: Neale pub. co. 248 p. [1902
> Traces the evolution of the doctrine of judicial review of legislation from the colonial days,when the
ground wasprepared and the seed planted. It is the writer's opinion that it was expected and intended
I by the Federal convention and the publicists of the day that the judiciary should exercise this function.
114 AMEKICAK HISTOEICAI. ASSOCIATIOl^.
71
Scott, James Brown. Judicial settlement of controversies between states of tli(
American union; an analysis of cases decided in the Supreme court of the Unitecl
States. Oxford: The Clarendon press, xiii, 548 p. (Publications of the Carnegiel
endowment for international peace. Division of international law, Washington
D. C.) [19oal
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 345-347; Am. jour, internat. law, XIV (Oct. 1920) 683-692 !
The Review, II (Jan. 17, 1920) 58-59. \
Scott, James Brown. Notes de James Madison sur les debats de la Convention fed^-l
rale de 1787 & leur relation a une plus parfaite societe des nations; tr. par M. A.j
de Lapradelle. Paris: Editions Bossard. xx, 160 p. [1904;
Trickett, William. Marbury v. Madison; a critique. Am. law rev., LIU (Sept.)i
737-748. [19051
In this decision the Supreme court of the United States, for the first time, subordinated the Con- 1
gress of the United States by assuming the right to declare its legislative void. 1
Wright, Quincy. The constitutionality of treaties. Am. jour, internat. law ,
XIII (Apr.) 242-266. [1906
Politics.
Bartlett, Marguerite G. The chief phases of Pennsylvania politics in the Jacksonian i
period. Allentown, Pa.: H. R. Haas and co. viii, 150 p. [1907 1
Thesis (ph. d.) — University of Pennsylvania. !
Among the subjects treated are the struggle over the Second bank of the United States, the "Ameri- 1
can system" in all its amplifications, including the protective tariff, and the state constitutional con- 1
vention of 1838. i
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 750-751.
Boyd, William K. Federal politics in North Carolina 1824-1836. So. Atlan. quae.,
XVIII (Jan.-Apr.) 41-51, 167-174. [1908 '
Conger, John L. South Carolina and the early tariffs. Miss. Valley hist, rev.,
V (Mar.) 415-433. [1909 1
A study in the political history of South Carolina— the opposition to the tariffs of 1820, 1824, and j
1827. "The tariff issue shows vividly the quick change from an intense nationaUstic attitude to a deep ,
and abiding sectionaUsm." !
Corbin, John. From Jefferson to Wilson. No. Am. rev., CCX (Aug.) 172-185. [1910 i
Draws a parallel between the political ideals and theories of Jefferson and those of President Wilson. I
Fox, Dixon Ryan. The decline of aristocracy in the politics of New York. N. Y.:
Columbia university, Longmans, Green and co., agents, xiii, 460 p. illus.,
ports., maps. (Columbia uni v. stud., v. LXXXVI; whole no. 198) [1911
Published also as thesis (ph. d.) Columbia university, in 1918.
"How an aristocracy of birth was changed to one of money and was often ousted from control, how
FederaUsts became Clintonians and Clintonians turned to Whigs, is to be the theme of the following I
pages." cf. Foreword.
A study of the period from 1800 to the forties.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 725-726.
Fox, Dixon Ryan. The Washington benevolent society. Columbia univ. quar.,
XXI (Jan.) 27-37. [1912
A secret political society formed by the Federalists in New York in 1808.
Greene, Jerome D. Some aspects of recent party history in the United States. In
The America of today; being lectures delivered at the local lectures summer meeting
of the University of Cambridge, 1918. Cambridge: The University press, p. \
125-156. [1913 I
A brief survey of party history since the Civil war. |
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Hepburn, A. Barton. New York and the national banking system. N. Y. state
HIST. ASSOC, jour., I (Jan.) 38-42.
Moody, John. The masters of capital; a chronicle of Wall street. New Haven: Yale |
univ. press; [etc.] ix, 234 p. ports. (The chronicles of America series, Allen j
Johnson, editor ... v. XLI) [2024 I
Contents. — The rise of the house of Morgan. Morgan and the railroads. The ironmasters. Stand- |
ard oil and Wall street. The steel trust merger. Harriman and Hill. The apex of "high finance." i
The panic of 1907 and after. Wall street and the world war.
Noel, F. Regis. A history of the bankruptcy law. Washington, D. C: Charles H. [
Potter and CO. 209 p. [2025 (
Bantouptcy legislation in the colonies and states prior to the constitutional convention: p. 33-66. :
The constitutional convention of 1787: p. 67-84. Includes also a review tif federal legislation in regard
to bankruptcy under the Constitution.
Rogers, Howard O. The lottery in American history. Americana, XIII (Jan.)
40-54. [2026
Savings bank of Newport, Newport, R. I. One hundred years of the Savings bank of
Newport; glimpses at the past of an old town, together with brief accounts of some of
the men who have filled a part in the bank's history and in the town affairs. [Bos-
ton] Printed for the Savings bank of Newport. 48 p. illus., ports. [2027
Society for savings in the city of Cleveland. Three score years and ten; the story of the
rise of the Society for savings and its progress through seven eventful decades.
Pub. in commemoration of the seventieth anniversary of the Society for savings in
the city of Cleveland. [Cleveland: The Gaxton co.] 45 p. illus., ports. [2028
Venn, Theodore Joseph. U. S. three dollar gold pieces, large United States cents,
United States half cents, U. S. bronze two-cent pieces; a series of four monographs
on obsolete United States coinage. Chicago, 111,; R, Thomas. 72 p.
1919. 123
Labor.
American federation of labor. American federation of labor; history, encyclopedia,
reference book, prepared and pub. by authority of the 1916 and 1917 conventions.
Washington, D. C. 515, v p. col. pi., facsims., diagrs. [2030
Foreword signed: William C. Roberts, compiler.
Brissenden, Paul Frederick. The I. W. W. ; a study of American syndicalism. N . Y. :
Columbia university; [etc.] 432 p. (Columbia univ. stud., v. LXXXIII; whole
no. 193) [?031
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 324-325.
Orth, Samuel Peter. The armies of labor; a chronicle of the organized wage-earners.
New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] ix, 279 p. plate, ports. (The chronicles of
America series, Allen Johnson, editor . . . v. XL) [2032
"Abraham Lincoln edition."
Libraries; Societies; Institutions.
A brief sketch of the Public library of the city of Boston. Boston pub. lib. bul., 4th
ser., I (July) 193-200. [2033
Landis, Charles I. ''The Juliana library company in Lancaster." Pa. mag. hist.,
XLIII (Jan.-July) 24-52, 163-181, 228-250. . [2034
Contains a copy of the charter of the company, dated Oct. 22, 1763, and of the catalogue issued in 1766.
Ohio state library centennial. Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXVIII (Jan.)
96-114. [2035
The State library and its founder [Governor Thomas Worthington] address by Daniel J. Ryan: p.
98-107.
Potter, Alfred Claghorn. Burning of Harvard college library in 1764. Boston pub.
lib.^bul. , 4th ser., I (July) 201-202. [2036
Extract from AKred Claghorn Potter's The library of Harvard university, 3d edition, 1915.
Tyler, Lyon G. The Virginia state library. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag.,
I (July) 18-25. [2037
Barratt, Norris S., and Julius F. Sachse. Freemasonry in Pennsylvania, 1727-1907,
as shown by the records of Lodge no. 2, F. and A. M., of Philadelphia, from the year
A. L. 5757, A. D. 1757. v. Ill, covering period 1813-1855. Phila. 463 p. illus.
[2038
V.I, 1908. V. II, 1909.
Two important features are the treatment of the anti-masonic movement, 1826-1840, and the masonic
career of Stephen Girard.
Indiana historical society. Minutes of the society, 1886-1918. Indianapolis: C. E.
Pauley and co. p. 461-581. {Its Publications, v. VI, no. 4) [2039
Noble, Lucy Seward. National society of the United States Daughters of 1812, state
of Michigan. Mich. hist, mag., Ill (July) 361-366. [2040
Patterson, Burd S. The Historical society of Western Pennsylvania; its history,
objects and achievements. Western Pa. hist, mag., II (Jan.) 1-4. [2041
Sachse, Julius F. The history of Masonic Knights Templar in Pennsylvania, 1797-
1919. Phila. [The author] xvi, 220 p. illus. [2041a
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. The society's diploma of membership. Mass. hist. soc.
PROC, LII, 95-99. [2042
Diploma of membership issued by the Massachusetts historical society in 1834.
Life and Manners.
kndrews, Charles M. Colonial folkways; a chronicle of American life in the reign
of the Georges. New Haven: Yale univ. press; [etc.] x, 255 p. plates, port.
(The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. IX) [2043
Calhoun, Arthur Wallace. A social history of the American family from colonial
times to the present. Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark co., 1917-19. 3 v. [2044
Contents.— I. Colonial period. II. From independence through the Civil war. III. Since the
Civil war.
y. Ill, rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July) 700-701.
59976°— 22 10
124 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. j
I
Christian, Stella L., ed. The history of the Texas federation of women's clubs, ed. i
and comp. by Stella L. Christian (Mrs. Wm. Christian) pub. by the authority of the I
Texas federation of women's clubs. [Houston, Tex.: Dealy-Adey-Elgin co., I
printers] x, 398 p. ports. [2046 j
The early preparation of coffee. Wis. mag. hist., II (Mar.) 353-356. [2046 t
Notes regarding prices of coffee at different times, and remarks on early methods of preparing coffee, j
Sweetzer, Kate Dickinson. The American girl: 1719-1919. D. A. R. mag., LIII I
(Sept.) 519-528. [2047 1
Philanthropy. '
Steiner, Bernard Christian. An outline history of the Maryland state school for the |
deaf, with acts of the Baltimore City council in behalf of the deaf, previous to the
founding of the institution. Based upon a history of the "Maryland school for
the deaf and dumb," published in 1884, by Charles W. Ely . . . and revised to
date by Ignatius Bjorlee. Frederick, Md.: Printed at the school. 31 p. plates. |
ports. [2048 \
Population and Race Elements.
!
Alexis, Joseph. Swedes in Nebraska. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX, 78-85. [2049 '
Blegen, Theodore C. The competition of the northwestern states for immigrants, i
Wis. mag. hist.. Ill (Sept.) 3-29. [2050 I
Brawley, Benjamin. A short history of the American negro. Rev. ed. N. Y.:
Macmillan. xvii, 280 p. [2051 1
Fiirstenwarther, Moritz von. Auszug aus der Schrift: "Der Deutsche in Nord- i
Amerika" (1818). Deutsch-Am. Geschichtsblatter, XVII, 416-458. [2052 j
Report of his mission to America to investigate immigration conditions, particularly of immigra i
tion from Germany. |
Hrbkova, Sarka B. Bohemians in Nebraska. Neb. hist. soc. pub., XIX, 140-
158. [2053 i
Iglehart, John E. The coming of the English to Indiana in 1817 and their Hoosier
neighbors. Ind. mag. hist., XV (June) 89-178. [2054
Concerned with the settlement in Indiana of emigrants from England in 1817 and the following years.
Imes, William Lloyd. The legal status of free negroes and slaves in Tennessee.
Jour, negro hist., IV (July) 254-272. [2055
Johnson, Franklin. The development of state legislation concerning the free negro.
N. Y. vi, 207 p. [2056
PubUshed also as thesis (ph. d.) Columbia university, 1918.
Deals with the laws enacted by each of the states of the United States and by the federal government
prior to 1917, which specifically relate to the negro in freedom.
Kohler, Max James. An important European mission to investigate American
immigration conditions and John Quincy Adams' relation thereto (1817-1818).
[Chicago: University of Chicago press] 27 p. [2057
Also pubhshed in Deutsch-Am. Geschichtsblatter, XVII, 393-415.
The mission of Moritz von Fiirstenwarther, under the patronage of the Baron von Gagern. Relates
mostly to German immigration.
Malcom, M. Vartan. The Armenians in America. Boston and Chicago: The Pil-
grim press, xxvi, 142 p. illus., map. [2068
A sketch of the history, Ufe and activities of the Armenians in the United States.
Morton, Richard Lee. The negro in Virginia politics, 1865-1902. [Charlottesville?
Va.] 199 p. maps. [2059
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Virginia, 1918.
PubUshed also as one of the Phelps Stokes papers of the University of Virginia.
Thompson, Joseph J. The Irish in early Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Oct.)
223-238. [2060
Wesley, Charles H. Lincoln's plan for colonizing the emancipated negroes. Jour,
negro hist., IV (Jan.) 7-21. [£061
191». 125
Printing and Publishing.
Edgar, William C. An old timer and other journalistic memories. Bellman,
XXVI (June 28) 712-719. [2062
Concerning early American weekly journals which have ceased publication, with particular refer-
ence to "The Illustrated news," a New York publication of the year 1853.
J, Weeden, printer. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XII (July) 75-76. [2063
Note regarding the identity of the printer of a broadside issued at Newport, R. I., in 1780, a repro-
duction of which was printed in the Rhode Island historical society collections, for January 1919.
Kennedy, Fronde. Russell's magazine. So. Atlan. quae., XVIII (Apr.) 125-
144. [2064
A magazine published at Charleston, 1857-1860, and described as "another depository for Southern
genius, and a new incentive, as we hope, for its active exercise."
Oldest daily newspaper in America; New York Globe celebrates its 125th anniver-
sary. State service, III (Feb.) 30-32. [2065
Pruvost, RenS. La presse aux Etats-Unis: son organisation et son role dans la vie
nationale. Rev. synthese hist., XXIX, 63-88. [2066
Sargent, George H. The centenary of the Andover press; the work of a pioneer
printer whose imprints now rank among the rarities sought by book collectors [Eben-
ezer Chase] Granite mo., LI (July) 287-295. [2067
Stephens, Edwin William. The Missouri intelligencer and Boon's Lick advertiser;
a brief history of the first American newspaper west of St. Louis. Columbia, Mo.
18 p. illus., plates. (The University of Missouri bulletin, v. XX, no. 9. Jour-
nalism series, no. 18) [2068
Also pubUshed in the Missouri historical review, XIII (July) 361-371.
Published in connection with the celebration, by the Missouri press association, of the 100th anni-
versary of the founding of the paper.
RELIGIOUS HISTORY.
General.
Bastide, Charles. La religion & lea eglises. Paris: Renaissance du livre. [3], 220-
286 p. ports., plates. (Collection America [X]) [2069
Buckham, John Wright. Progressive religious thought in America; a survey of the
enlarging Pilgrim faith. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. ix, 352 p.
[2070
Contents.— Introduction: Horace Buslmell and the liberators. Theodore T. Munger: the new
theology defined and related. George A. Gordon: the new theology universahzed. William J. Tucker:
the new theology in action . Egbert C. Smyth and the Andover theology. Washington Gladden and the
social theology. Newman Smyth and later representatives of theological progress. Conclusion: the
future of theology in America.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 556.
Duclos, Phe. Histoire du protestantisme frangais au Canada et aux Etats-Unis.
Paris: Fischbacher. 2 v. [2071
Edwards, Martha L. Religious forces in the United States, 1815-1830. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., V (Mar.) 434-449. [2072
Good, James I. The first Protestant confessions of faith in America. Presbyterian
HIST. soc. JOUR., X (Mar. -June) 13-16, 49-56. [2073
The first one was composed, in 1557, at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in the French colony sent out to Brazil
under Admiral Villegagnon, in 1555.
Himes, George H. Beginnings of Christianity in Oregon. Ore. hist. soc. quar.,.
XX (June) 159-172. [2074
Matthews, Albert. Early Sunday schools in Boston. Cambridge: J. Wilson and son,
p. [259J-285. [2076
** Reprinted from the Publications of the Colonial society of Massachusetts, v. XXI."
Rejntiier, Jean. La vie religieuse aux Etats-Unis, d'apres les notes de voyage de
Jean Reynier [1913] Rev. synthese hist., XXIX, 103-123. [2076
Introductory note, by Henry Bargy.
ZoUman, Carl. Religious liberty in the American law. Mich, law rev., XVII
'Mar.-Apr.) 355-377, 456-478. [2077
Particular Denominations.
[Arranged alphabetically by denominations]
Baptist.
Burnett, James J. Sketches of Tennessee's pioneer Baptist preachers, being, inci-
dentally, a history of Baptist beginnings in the several associations in the state; . . .
First series (v. I) Nashville, Tenn.: Press of Marshall and Bruce co. 567 p.
ports., plates. [2078
Lewis, Frank Grant. A sketch of the history of Baptist education in Pennsylvania.
Chester, Pa.: J. Spencer, inc., for Crozer theological seminary. 42 p. [2079
Reprinted as a monograph, from the Bulletin of Crozer theological seminary for October, 1918.
Lewis, Frank Grant. Twentieth anniversary exercises of Emmanuel Baptist church,
Chester, Pa., February 16 to 19, 1919, with a History of the church from its begin-
ning as a mission. Chester, Pa.; Duncan-Thynge print, co., for Emmanuel Bap-
tist church. 29 p. illus. [2079a
Catholic.
Berth, Silas. The Franciscans in southern Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Oct.)
161-174. [2080
Bishops and priests, who at various epochs served in Maine, and are now dead.
Maine Cath. hist, mag., VIII, no. 1 (Oct.) 62-71, [208X
J2a
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 127
Chapman, Charles E. A great Franciscan in California: Fermfn Francisco de
Lasuen. Cath. hist, rev., V (July) 131-155. [2082
Father Lasuen went to California in 1768 when the Franciscans took over the missions in succession
to the Jesuits.
Destruction of the Charlestown convent; stories of the outrage from contemporaneous
newspaper files. U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XIII, 106-119. [2083
Burning of the Ursuline convent at Charlestown, Mass., on August 11, 1834, by an anti-CathoUc mob.
Du Bourg, Louis William, bishop. Correspondence of Bishop du Bourg with Propa-
ganda [1816, 1819] St. Louis Cath. hist, rev., I (Jan.-July) 127-145, 184-196,
300-311. [2084
Relates to Catholic affairs in Louisiana.
Engelhardt, Zephyrin. Florida's first bishop; Rt. Rev. Juan Juarez, o. f. m. Cath.
hist, rev., IV (Jan.) 479-485. [2085
Presents evidence to show that the Franciscan missionary, Father Juan Judrez, actually received
the nomination as bishop, in 1527, although he was never consecrated.
Garraghan, Gilbert J. Beginnings of the Holy Family parish, Chicago, 1857-1871.
III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Apr.) 436-458. [2086
Garraghan, Gilbert J. Bishop Brut^ and the mission of Chicago. St. Louis Cath.
HIST, rev., I (July) 201-214. [2087
Simon WiUiam Gabriel Brut^ de Remur, appointed bishop of the diocese of Vincennes, which com-
pnsed the states of Indiana and IlUnois, in 1834.
Garraghan, Gilbert J. St. Regis seminary. Cath. hist, rev., IV (Jan.) 452-478.
[2088
St. Regis seminary at Florissant, near St. Louis, the first Catholic Indian school, 1823-1831.
Historical sketch of the first public mass in Boston. Am. Cath. hist, rec, XXX
(Dec.) 331-333. [2089
Reprinted from the Catholic herald, Nov. 14, 1833.
Holweck, F. G. The Arkansas mission under Rosati. St. Louis Cath. hist, rev.,
I (July) 243-267. [2090
Deals with the period 1831-1840.
The House of the Good Shepherd in St. Paul, a retrospect of fifty years. Acta et
dicta, V, no. 2 (July 1918) 206-229. [2091
Hynes, Robert. The old church at Cahokia. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Apr.)
459-463. [2092
Kenny, Laurence J. The first American nun in this country. III. Cath. hist,
rev., I (Apr.) 495^99. [2093
Mary Turpin, of Kaskaskia, 111., in religion Sister Martha, Ursuline nun.
Letters selected from the Cathedral archives, Philadelphia [1843-1849] Am. Cath.
hist, rec, XXX (Dec.) 339-357. [2094
Lydon, P. J. Notes on the history of the diocese of Duluth. Acta et dicta, V,
no. 2 (July 1918) 238-288. [2095
Maine Catholic historical magazine, v. VIII, no. 1, October 1919. Portland, Me.:
Maine Catholic historical society. 71 p. [2096
A collection of documents and other material relating to the history of the church in Maine.
Meehan, Thomas F. Catholic literary New York, 1800-1840. Cath. hist, rev., IV
(Jan.) 399-414. [2097
Pauwelyn, Cyril. The beginnings and growth of the Catholic church in the state of
Montana. Acta et dicta, V, no. 2 (July 1918) 230-237. [2098
Peek, Fanny Morton. A Roman consul of the nineteenth century. U. S. Cath.
hist, rec, XIII, 61-83. [2099
Giovaimi Battista Sartori, the first Papal consul in America.
Purcell, J. B. Bishop Purcell's journal, 1833-1836. Cath. hist, rev., V (July)
239-256. [2100
Account of his administration of the diocese of Ohio.
Quarter, William. History in the Annals of the Leopoldine association; state of
church in the diocese of Chicago — Quincy. an example of the growth of the church.
III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Jan.) 372-379. ' [2101
Letter of Bishop William Quarter, d.d., to the Leopoldine association in Vienna, Chicago, Nov.
27, 184G
128 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. j
I
Rothensteiner, John. Archbishop Eccleston of Baltimore and the Visitandines' j
foundation at Kaskaskia. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Apr.) 500-509. [2102!
The first western convent and academy of the Visitation was founded at Kaskaskia, in 1833. I
Rothensteiner, John. Father Charles Nerinckx [1761-1824] and hie relations to the I
diocese of St. Louis. St. Louis Cath. hist, rev., I (Apr.) 157-175. [2103 i
Rothensteiner, John. The northeastern part of the diocese of St. Louis under i
Bishop Rosati. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Oct.) 175-195. [2104
Rothensteiner, John. Paul de Saint Pierre, the first German- American priest of the i
West. Cath. hist, rev., V (July) 195-222. [2106 \
Father Paul de Saint Pierre (or Heil'genstein?) who was successively pastor of Cahokia, 1785-1789, j
St. Genevieve, 1789-1797, and of St. Gabriel's at Iberville, 1804-1826. I
Ryan, Edwin A. Ecclesiastical jurisdiction in the Spanish colonies. Cath. hist, j
REV., V (Apr.) 3-18. [2106 \
A study of the diocesan government of those states in the southwest which at one time formed a
part of the Spanish dominions, namely: Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California. |
Saint Joseph's cathedral, Manchester, N. H. St. Joseph's cathedral celebration of ]
fiftieth anniversary of dedication, 1869-1919. Manchester, N. H. 42 p. [2107 '
Souvay, Charles L. Episcopal visitation of the diocese of New Orleans, 1827-1828. I
St. Louis Cath. hist, rev., I (July) 215-230. [2108 '
Souvay, Charles L. The Lazarists in Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Jan.) 303- |
319. [2109
Souvay, Charles L. Questions anent Mother Seton's conversion. Cath. hist, rev.,
V (July) 223-238. [2110
Thompson, Joseph J. The church in Illinois in the transition period; the change '
from French to English and from English to American jurisdiction. III. Cath. i
hist, rev., I (Jan.) 320-338. [2111
Thompson, Joseph J. The development of the church (1844 to 1919). III. Cath.
Hirr. REV., II (Apr.) 424-435. [2112
The fourth and last of a series of articles on the history of the Catholic church in Illinois.
Troesch, Helen. The first convent in Illinois; reminiscences of Sister Mary Josephiae
Barber. III. Cath. hist, rev., I (Jan.) 352-371. [2113
Vallette, Marc F. The vicariate apostolic of Arizona forty years ago. Am. Cath.
QUAR. REV., XLIV (Oct.) 616-633. [2114
Zurbonsen, A. A bit of history of the Franciscans in Illinois; why they emigrated
from Germany. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (July) 46-49. [2115
Church of the New Jerusalem.
Hay, H. Clinton. The centennial of the church in Boston. New-Church rev.,
XXVI (Jan.) 75-98. [2116
Congregational .
Henniker, N. H. Congregational church. 1769-1919. One hundred and fiftieth
anniversary of the Congregational church, Henniker, N. H., June 7th and 8th, 1919.
Manchester, N. H.: Williams print, co. 88 p. [2116a
Simonds, J. Rupert. A history of the First church and society of Branford, Con-
necticut, 1644-1919. New Haven, Conn.: Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor co. viii,
191 p. plates, ports. [2117
Disciples of Christ.
Jennings, Walter Wilson. Origin and early history of the Disciples of Christ. Cin-
cinnati: The Standard pub. co. 344 p. [2118
Also published as the writer's thesis (ph.d.)— University of Illinois.
Refers especially to the period between 1809 and 1835.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 129
Dutch Reformed.
Briickbauer, Frederick. The kirk on Rutgers farm. N. Y.: Fleming H. Revell co.
133 p. illus. (incl. ports.) [2119
Dutch Reformed church, founded in 1817, originally known as the Market Street church.
Friends.
Dewees, Watson W. Early history of Ohio yearly meeting. [Phila. : Friends' book
store] 51 p. [2120
Contains also an account of the old Mount Pleasant school, from its beginning in 1837 to its close in
1875.
Penney, Norman. Life and letters of Jean de Marsillac. Friends' hist. soc. jour.,
XVI, no- 3, 81-90. [2121
Cont. from page 22.
This installment deals with the period of his life (1795-1798) spent among Friends in and near Phila-
delphia.
Thomas, Allen C. A history of the Friends in America, by Allen C. Thomas, assisted
by Richard Henry Thomas. 5th ed., rev. and enl. by Allen C. Thomas. Phila.:
John C. Winston co. 285 p. (Pennsbury series of modern Quaker books) [2122
Lutheran.
AUeman, H. C. A hundred years of the General synod. Luth. quar., XLIX
(Jan.) 27-36. [2123
An address delivered on the occasion of the centennial celebration of the General synod, in New
York, Nov. 12, 1918.
Clutz, J. A. The United Lutheran church in America. Luth. quar., XLIX
(Jan.) 1-22. [2124
Traces the steps in the movement, during the last fifty years, which led to the organization in New
York city, Nov. 14-18, 1918, of the United Lutheran church in America, formed from the union of three
general bodies of the church.
Dapp, Charles Frederick. History of Zion's or Old Organ church, with a record of
baptisms and biographical sketches of former pastors, founded by Muhlenberg in
1743. With introduction by the Rev. T. E. Schmauk. Spring City, Pa.: The
Inter-borough press, xvi, 253 p. plates, port., facsims. [2125
Zion's evangelical Lutheran church, East Pikeland, Chester co., Pa.
Heathcote, Charles William. The Lutheran church and the Civil war. N. Y.,
Chicago [etc.] Revell. 160 p. [2126
Hildebrand, Jesse Richardson, comp. Church of the Reformation: a brief history
of the congregation in connection with the fiftieth anniversary. 1869-1919. [Wash-
ington, D. C] 31 p. plates, ports. [2127
Church of the Reformation, Lutheran, Washington, D. C.
Hiller, A. History of the first ten years of the synod of New York [1908-1918] Luth.
quar. , XLIX (Apr. ) 247-268. [2128
Keidel, George Charles. The Catonsville Lutheran church: a sketch of its origin.
Washington, D. C: Priv. print, ii, 12 p. [2129
Kline, Marion J. The genesis of the General synod. Luth. quar., XLIX (Jan.)
44-60. [2130
Martzolff, Clement L. Lutheranism in Perry county, Ohio. Ohio archaeol. and
hist, quar., XXVIII (Oct.) 375-395. [2131
Richards, J. W. A history of St. Luke's Evangelical Lutheran church and school.
Phila.: Pub. by the Congregation. 100 p. illus. [2131a
Mennonite.
Vogt, Beraid. A pioneer Mennonite settlement in northern New York. Eccles.
rev., LX (Feb.) 166-176. [2132
A settlement of Amish Mennonites from Alsace-Lorraine in what is now the township of Croghan,
New York.
130 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Methodist.
Ransom, John J. Wanderings of the proviso. Meth. quar. rev., LXVIII (Apr/
272-280. [2133
Traces the history of the "proviso" as adopted by the General conference of the Methodist Episcopal
church, in 1808 and in 1838. An historical study in church legislation. I
Mormon.
I
Campbell, Duncan. Decatur district. Jour, hist., XII (Jan.-July) 41-64, 232-248,1
356-371. [2134
Report of the local historian, 1899-1900.
Jensen, J. Charles. Pottawattamie district. Jour. hist. , XII (Jan.) 18-41, 213-232.
[2136
Report of the local historian, 1870-1876.
La Rue, William Earl. The foundations of Mormonism; a study of the fundamental!
facts in the history and doctrines of the Mormons from original sources. With
introduction by Alfred Williams Anthony. N. Y. [etc.] Rev ell. 243 p. port. :
[2136 ;
"The author honestly believes that Mormonism is false in its fundamental claims and deceptive in I
its character." cf . Preface. !
Smith, Heman C. Distinguished women. Jour, hist., XII (Jan., July) 93-110, '
282-294. [2137 j
Sketches of distinguished women of the Reorganized church of Jesus Christ of Latter day saints. I
Contents.— Lucy Mack Smith [1776-1855]. Emma Hale Smith [1804-1879J. j
Smith, Heman C. Official statements of President Joseph Smith [1861-1890] Jour,
hist., XII (Jan.-Oct.) 2-17, 130-155, 296-338, 400-447. [2138 I
Cont. from v. XI, 1918. ^ |
Presbyterian. !
Ford, H. P., contrib. Old deed of the Lewes Presbyterian church. Presbyterian !
hist. soc. jour., X (Mar.) 42-43. ' [2139
Deed of the Presbyterian church at Lewes, Delaware, May 13, 1707.
Fox, Dixon Ryan, ed. Minutes of the Presbytery of New York, 1775-1776. N. Y.
state hist. ASSOC. JOUR., I (Oct.) 22-43. [2140
The Presbyterian clergy were leaders in the separatist party at the time of the Revolution. The
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History of the Presbyterian church, Buffalo Cross Roads, Union county. Pa. Histor-
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[2142
McKinney, William Wilson. Eighteenth century Presbyterianism in western
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Middletown, Ohio. First Presbyterian church. A history of the life and work of
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Written during the period of his evangelical work in the "Chenango country," New York state.
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l'
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY.
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Conference on the organization of a university center for higher studies in Washington.
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Cunliffe, John W. American universities : their beginnings and development. In
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FitzHugh, Thomas, ed. Letters of Thomas Jefferson concerning philology and the
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Elimmel, Hej:bert. The status of mathematics and mathematical instruction during
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Historical and critical study.
Regional.
Jelting, Paul Everett. The development of the free public high school in Illinois to
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Thesis (ph. d.)— Columbia university, 1919. '
Reprinted from the Illinois state historical society journal, v. XI, no. 3, Oct. 1918, and no. 4, Jan. 1919.
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jarber, John P. The centennial anniversary of the public schools of Philadelphia
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I'ernegan, Marcus W. Compulsory education in the American colonies. School
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Contents.— New England (continued).
emegan, Marcus W. The educational development of the southern colonies. School
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Contents.— Introduction . Virginia.
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133
134 AMERICAIT HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
!
Knight, Edgar W. Reconstruction and education in South Carolina. So. Atla |
QUAE., XVIII (Oct.) 350-364. [21i
Lewis, Frank Grant. A sketch of the history of Baptist education in Pennsylvanil
Chester, Pa.: J. Spencer, inc., for Crozer theological seminary. 42 p. [21l|
Reprinted as a monograph, from the Bulletin of Crozer theological seminary for October, 1918. j
Morrison, A. J. First meeting of the Educational association of Virginia. Va. jou '
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Held at Petersburg, December 29, 1863. I
Morrison, A. J. Four revolutions and Virginia education. Texas rev., IV (Jan'
120-140. [218':
Musselman, H. T. The story of a great public school system. Texas school jour I
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The history and growth of the Houston (Texas) public school system.
Seybolt, Robert Francis. The act of 1795 for the encouragement of schools and thi
practice in Westchester county. Albany: The University of the state of New Yorll
32 p. tables. ([New York (State) State historian] New York state local historj
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Seybolt, Robert Francis. The teaching of French in colonial New York city. Rci
MANIC REV., X (Oct.) 364-376. [218!
Particular Institutions. |
Batchelor, George. More reminiscences of '66. Harv. grab, mag., XXVII (June
529-533. [219il
Reminiscences of Harvard college by a member of the class of 1866. |
Biddle, Edward. Girard college. Phila. numismat. and antiq. soc. proc, XXVIII!
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Includes a copy of a paper written by Nicholas Biddle, apparently in 1843, giving a record of therisj
and progress of Girard college. '
Blake, Henry N. Harvard in the War of 1812. Harv. grad. mag., XXVII (June*
525-528. [219Si
List of the Harvard men who served in the War of 1812. i
Brown, Percy W. The sojourn of Harvard college in Concord. Harv. grab. mag.
XXVII (June) 497-509 . [219S
Owing to the presence of the Continental troops in Cambridge, the classes of Harvard college were helc
in Concord during 1775-1776.
California. University. The semicentenary celebration of the founding of the Uni-
versity of California, with an account of the Conference on international*elations.
1868-1918. Berkeley [University of California press] xx,563p. plates. (Semi-
centennial pu jlications of the University of California, 1868-1918) [2194
Garraghan, Gilbert J. The beginnings of St. Louis university. St. Louis Oath.
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Harvard college. Class of 1869. Eleventh report of Class of 1869 of Harvard college,
June 1919, fiftieth anniversary. Cambridge: Riverside press. 316 p. plate,
port.,facsim. [2196J
Harvard college. Class of 1894. Harvard college. Class of 1894, twenty-fifth anniver-!
sary report, 1894-1919. Norwood, Mass. : Priv. print, for the class by the Plimpton'
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Iowa Wesleyan college. Historical sketch and alumni record of Iowa Wesley an college.'
Mount Pleasant, la.: Alumnalassociationof Iowa Wesleyan college. 444 p. ports, i
Jones, Plummer F. Two historic colleges. Rev. of rev., LX (Sept.) 295-301. [2199
WiUiarn and Mary college and Hampden-Sidney college.
Kelsey, Bayner Wickersham. Centennial history of Moses Brown school, 1819-1919.
With an introduction by Rufus Matthew Jones. Providence, R. I.: Moses Brown
school, xviii, 178p. plates, ports. [2300
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Oct.) 143.
WRITIITGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 135
Larzelere, Claude S. The Central Michigan normal school at Mt. Pleasant. Mich.
HIST. MAG., Ill (Apr.) 235-246. [2201
[lippincott, Horace Mather. The University of Pennsylvania, Franklin's college;
being some account of its beginnings and development, its customs and traditions
and its gifts to the nation. Phila. and London: Lippincott. 248 p. plates.,
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\Iorrison, Robert J. Memoranda relating to the college. Wm. and Mary quae.
XXVII (Apr.) 230-243. [2203
Professor Robert J. Morrison edited the second edition of the Historical catalogue of the college in 1859,
and these memoranda are taken from his notes attached to a copy of the catalogue to be found in the
State library.
ilorse, Charles R. History of the University and literary societies to 1836. Univ. of
Tbnn. mag., L (Dec.) 107-115. [2204
Febraska. University. Semi-centennial anniversary book. The University of Ne-
braska, 1869-1919. Lincoln: The University. 144 p. ports. [2205
•earson, Harlan C. Two Dartmouth letters. Granite mo., LI (Oct.) 420^22.
[2206
Includes a letter of Judge John Harris, July 31, 1820, and one of Moody Currier, Nov. 2, 1832, of interest
in connection with the coming loOth anniversary of the founding of Dartmouth college.
;ead, Charles F. The Brimmer school, 1844-1911, comprising in part a history of the
school written by Charles J. Prescott in 1888. Bostonian soc. proc, ann. meeting,
Jan. 21, 1919, 31^6. [2207
The Brimmer school, Boston, Mass.
iordan, D. J. University of St. Mary of the Lake. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Oct.)
135-160. [2208
ale college. Class of 1873. Fourth supplement to the history of the Yale class of
1873 (Academic) August 1, 1919. By Frederick J. Shepard, class secretary, p.
633-759. plate, ports. [2 209
Biography.
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XXVII (Jan.) 101-108. [2210
Contents.— Edward Kidder Graham [1876-1918J by Archibald Henderson. Kirby Flower Smith, by
T. S. Duncan.
EiMSTRONG. Lane, Franklin K. Armstrong's contribution to education. So.
WORKMAN, XLVIII (Mar.) 106-112. [2211
^RNARD. Steiner, Bernard Christian. Life of Henry Barnard, the first United
Statescommissionerof education, 1867-1870. Washington: Gov. print, off. 131 p.
([U. S.] Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1919, no. 8) [2212
At head of title: Department of the interior . . .
Reminiscences of Henry Barnard, by David N. Camp: p. 129-131.
lAHAM. North Carolina, University. Edward Kidder Graham, 1876-1918. Ral-
eigh: Edwards and Broughton print, co. 38 p. (Univ. of N. C. rec, no. 162)
[2213
Contains addresses by H. H. Williams, R. D. W. Connor, C. A. Smith, and N. W. Walker.
jpcK. Lewis, Ivey F. William Harry Heck, 1879-1919, professor of education in the
iCFniversity of Virginia. Univ. op Va. alumni bul., 3d ser., XII (Aug.) 357-37,9.
i [2214
CNT. Charles William Kent [1860-1917] professor of English literature, University
)f Virginia. Univ. of Va. alumni bul., 3d ser., XII (Jan.) 3-45. [2215
li-NSFiELD. Livermore, W. R. Tared Mansfield [1759-1830] In Professional mem-
oirs. Corps of engineers. United States army and Engineer department at large, v.
?I, Jan. 1919. Washington: Engineer school, Washington barracks, p. 123-127.
[2216
I ,XCY. Hungerpiller, J. G. A sketch of the life and character of Jonathan Maxcy,
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f the University of South Carolina, no. 58, July 1917) [2217
Second president of Brown university, and first president of the University of South Carolina,
136 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Northrop, Cyrus. ''Reminiscences." Minn, alumni wkly., XIX (Oct. 27) 13-:!
(Nov. 24) 13-32. [22 1
Reminiscences of President Northrop of the University of Minnesota. |
Ogden. Fisher, Isaac. Ogden: the negro's friend. So. workman, XL VIII (Jur I
279-283. [22!
Robert Curtis Ogden, 1836-1913. |
Kirkland, James Hampton. Ogden: the statesman-educator. So. worI
MAN, XLVIII (June) 284-288. [22l
Smith, Wilton Merle-. Ogden: the man. So. workman, XLVIII (Jun'
274-278.
Peyton. Chamberlain, Bernard P. Major Moses Green Peyton, proctor of t]
University of Virginia, 1867-1897. Univ. of Va. alumni bul., 3d ser., XII (Au|
397-400. [22i
Pickering. Metcalf, Joel H. Edward Charles Pickering. Harv. grad. mac!
XXVII (June) 516-520. [22:1
Professor of astronomy at Harvard. i
RoYCE. Liges, Georges. Le professeur Royce. France-Etats-Unis , I (Ma^i
216-217. [22i|
Slattery, Charles Lewis. Josiah Royce. Outlook, CXXI (Jan. 15) ll^i
115.
Taylor. Haight, Elizabeth Hazelton. The life and letters of James Monroe Tayloj
the biography of an educator [1848-1916] N. Y.: Dutton. xi, 391 p. plate
ports. [22s!
Dr. Taylor was president of Vassar college from 1886 to 1914. |
Tucker, William Jewett. My generation; an autobiographical interpretation, b{
William Jewett Tucker, president emeritus of Dartmouth college. Boston an
N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. xiv, 464 p. ports., plates, map. [222J
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 557-558. ;
FINE ARTS AND LITERATURE.
Fine Arts; General.
Ii llBiddle, Edward. Early American portrait painters, including local annals con-
nected with a number of them. Phila. numismat. and antiq. soc. proc. , XXVIII
69-87. [2228
k ICarroU, Dana H. American portraiture. Scribner's, LXVI (Oct.) 511-514. [2229
Concerned with the development of early American portraiture.
Caye, Roger. Decorative wood-carving in colonial and post-colonial America. Arts
and decoration, XI (Aug.) 178-179. [2230
Coburn, Frederick W. Art and literature in Lowell [Mass.] Americana, XIII
(Oct.) 336-366. [2231
"From advance sheets of a history of that city bv Mr. Frederick "W. Coburn (Lewis hist. pub. co.,
N. Y.)."
Coffin, Lewis A., jr., and Arthur C. Holden. Brick architecture of the colonial period
in Maryland & Virginia. N. Y.: Architectural book pub. co. 29 p. illus., 118
plates. [2232
Uottman, George S. Forerunners of Indiana art. Ind. mag. hist., XV (Mar.) 15-19.
[2233
:!ousins, Frank, and Phil M. Riley. The colonial architecture of Salem. Boston:
Little, Brown and co. xxiii, 282 p. cxxvii plates. [2234
Novell, Alwyn T. An architectural monograph on Old Chatham & neighbouring
dwellings south of the Berkshires, with text by Alwyn T. Gov ell; prepared for
publication by Russell F. Whitehead. [St. Paul: White pine bureau] 13, [3]
p. illus. (The white pine series of architectural monographs, v. V, no. 5) [2235
ISberlein, Harold Donaldson. An architectural monograph on the seventeenth
century Connecticut house, with text by Harold Donaldson Eberlein; prepared
for publication by Russell F. Whitehead. [St. Paul: White pine bureau] 13,
[3] p. illus. (The white pine series of architectural monographs, v. V, no. 1) [2236
berlein, Harold Donaldson. Early colonial types and their lessons to present-day
house-builders. Arts and decoration, XI (Sept.) 224-225. [2237
iske, Kimball. The beginnings of sculpture in colonial America. Art and
archaeol., VIII (May) 185-189. [2238
reber, Jacques. L' architecture aux Etats-Unis. Rev. synthese hist., XXIX,
189-204. [2239
alsey, R. T. H. William Savery, the colonial cabinet-maker and his furniture.
Arts and decoration, X (Feb.) 201-203, 237-238. [2240
unter, H. Chadwick. The American Indian in painting. Art and archaeol.,
VIII (Mar.) 81-96. [2241
;lby, William. Notes on American artists. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., II (Jan.) 138-143;
III (Apr.-Oct.) 24-31, 63-67, 97-102. [2242
Extracts from New York newspapers of the period from 1755 to 1785.
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1792-1793. Am. inst. arch, jour., VII (Jan., Mar., May, Aug., Dec.) 8-12, 98-102,
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"The first important architectural competition in the United States."
I Contents. ~III-IV. Competitors and their designs: The Maryland builders— Jacob Small, Abram
Faw, Leonard Harbaugh, Philip Hart, Charles Wintersmith, James Diamond. V. The Virginia
puilders— Samuel Dobie, John Collins, Robert G. Lamphier.
bran, William Edgar. An architectural monograph on the settlements on the
eastern end of Long Island, with text by Wm. Edgar Moran, prepared for publi-
cation by Russell F. Whitehead. [Saint Paul: White pine bureau] 16 p. illus.
I'.The white pine series of architectural monographs, v. V, no. 2) [2244
137
138 AMEKICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Price, Charles Matlack. An architectural monograph on historic houses of Litch-
field, with text by C. Matlack Price, prepared for publication by Russell F. White- 1
head. [Saint Paul: White pine bureau] 16 p. illus. (The white pine series of
architectural monographs, v. V, no. 3) [2245
Robinson, Albert Gardner. Old New England doorways. N. Y.: Scribner. 21 p. i
plates. [2246 1
Some early American samplers. Art in America, VII (Oct.) 248-250. [2247 j
Van Dyke, John Charles, American painting and its tradition, as represented by '
Inness, Wyant, Martin, Homer, La Farge, Whistler, Chase, Alexander, Sargent. '
N. Y. : Scribner. x, 270 p. plates, ports. [2248 I
Wadsworth atheneum and Morgan memorial. The early plate in Connecticut churches '
prior to 1850, collected by the Connecticut society of the colonial dames of America, '
catalogued by Florence PauU Berger; exhibited in the Morgan memorial, Hartford,
Connecticut, May 1919. [Hartford?] [12] p. [2249
Fine Arts: Biography.
Anderson. Keller, George. A plea for the recognition of Charles Frederick Ander- i
son as the designer of the wings of the national capitol. Am. inst. arch. jour.
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Borglum. Ende, Amelia von. Gutzon Borglum. Am. -Scandinavian rev., VII
(Sept.) 353-359. [2251
Feke. Park, Lawrence. Feke's portrait of Brigadier-General Samuel Waldo. Art
in America, VII (Aug.) 216-222. [2252
Robert Feke, early Newport portrait painter, whose portrait of Gen. Samuel Waldo (1695-1759)
is in the Walker art gallery at Bowdoin college.
Russell. Bennett, Estelline. Russell the western painter. Bellman, XXVI
(May 10) 514-518. [2253
Charles M. Russell, painter of the old West.
Story. Brathwaite, William Stanley. William Wetmore Story: sculptor-poet [1819-
1895] Bellman, XXVI (Feb. 15) 182-184. [2264
Literature: General.
American literature from Thoreau to O. Henry. Spectator, CXXII (Apr. 26) 529-
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A review of "The Cambridge history of American literature, ed. by WiUiam Peterfield Trent [and
others] v. II. N. Y.: Putnam; Cambridge, Eng.: University press, 1918."
Bastide, Charles. La litterature & les arts. Paris: Renaissance du livre. [5], 150-
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A history of literature and art in America.
Batault, Georges. Tocqueville et la litterature americaine; notes et documents pour
la philosophie de I'histoire. Mercure de France, CXXXV (Sept. 15) 248-261.
[2257
Bosc, R. Mark Twain et I'humour americain. Rev. synthese hist., XXIX,
181-187. [2258
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Boynton, Percy H. A history of American literature. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Ginn and '
CO. V, 513p.- [2259 j
Intended for a text-book. ;
Bradsher, Earl L. The money returns of American authorship. Bookman, XLIX ,
(June) 429-433. [2260 '
Begins with the early years of the 19th century .
Bronson, Walter Coclirane. A short history of American literature. Rev. and enl. !
Boston, N. Y. [etc.] D. C. Heath, ix, 490 p. [2261 \
Partial bibUography of colonial and revolutionary literatiire: p. 432-444.
Chinard, Gilbert. L' esprit national dans la poesie americaine. Rev. synthese
HIST., XXIX, 161-179.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 139
Colby, Elbridge. Early American comedy. [N. Y.] The New York public library.
11 p. [2263
Reprinted from the Bulletin of the New York public library of July 1919.
Ellsworth, William Webster. Some literary reminiscences. Bookman, XLIX
(June, Aug.) 409-418, 669-671. [2264
Reminiscences of American literary history from about 1870 to the present day.
Garcia Cisneros, Francisco. Movimiento artlstico en los Estados Unidos. Pan Am.
UNidNBOL., XLVIII( Jan.) 33-41. [2265
Contents.— III. Lapoesia.
Qoggio, Emilio. The dawn of Italian culture in America. Romanic rev., X (July)
250-262. [2266
"Inspite of this utter lack of Italian conquest, colonization and emigration, Italian culture began to
penetrate into this country at an early date and exercised a marked influence upon the leading American
writers."
Homblow, Arthur. A history of the theatre in America from its beginnings to the
present time. Phila. and London: Lippincott. 2 v. plates, ports., facsims.
[2267
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 554-555.
Howe, M. A. De Wolfe. The Atlantic monthly and its makers. Boston: The
Atlantic monthly press. 106 p. illus. , ports. [2268
Leroux, Emmanuel. Le developpement de la pensee philosophique aux Etats-Unis.
Rev. SYNTHi;sE hist., XXIX, 125-149. [2269
Contents.— Le puritanisme originel— Jonathan Edwards. Changement dans les conditions et dans
les esprits; Le d^isme; L'unitansme. Le mouvement transcendentaUste— Ralph Waldo Emerson.
L'influence allemande; Josiah Royce. WilUam James, psychologue et m^taphysicien. Caract^ris-
tiques de la philosophie am^ricaine.
Matthews, Brander. American magazines. Bookman, XLIX (July) 533-541.
[2270
A brief historical review of the development of the more important of our magazines.
O 'Sullivan, Vincent. En marge de la litt^rature americaine. Mercure de France,
CXXIV (July 1) 5-21. [2271
O'SuUivan, Vincent. La litterature americaine. Mercure de France, CXXXI
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Pattee, Fred Lewis. Americanism thru American literature. Educ. rev., LVII
(Apr.) 271-276. [2273
Declares that American literature should henceforth be taught as an interpretation of American
Ufe, not merely as a graceful accomplishment.
Payne, Leonidas Warren, jr. History of American literature. Chicago and N. Y.:
Rand, McNally and co. viii, 416 p. illus., ports. [2274
Intended for the use of high school students. The plan has been to treat briefly the colonial and
revolutionary periods, and to treat in more detail the important literary movements and figures of
the nineteenth century.
Issued in 2 editions— one containing x, 376 p.; the other containing vhi, 416 p.; the additional material
being a Chronological chart of chief 19th century American literatxire writers, Suggestions for outside
reading and special study courses in American literature, and Suggested subjects for essays.
Sweetser, Kate Dickinson. Dining with Dickens at Delmonico's; an illustrious
friendly relations assembly as revealed in the contents of an old trunk. Bookman,
XLIX (Mar.) 20-28. [2275
Describes a farewell dinner to Dickens given by the New York press on April 18, 1868.
Literature: Regional.
Meehan, Thomas F. Catholic literary N.ew York, 1800-1840. Cath. hist, rev., IV
(Jan.) 399-414. [2276
Page, Rosewell. Virginia authors. Va. jour, educ , XII (Jan. , Mar. , June) 184-187,
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Randall, Emilius O. High lights in Ohio literature. Ohio archaeol. and hist.
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Tilton, Asa Currier. Literary and debating societies in New Hampshire towns and
academies. Granite mo., LI (July) 306-318. [2279
59976°— 22 11
140 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Literature: Biographical and Critical.
Beers, Henry Augustin. Four Americans: Roosevelt, Hawthorne, Emerson, Whit-
man. New Haven, Conn. : Pub. for the Yale review by the Yale university press.
90 p. [2280
Reprinted from the Yale review.
Contents.— Roosevelt as a man of letters. Fifty years of Hawthorne. A pilgrim in Concord. A
wordlet about Whitman.
Santayana, George. Two American philosophers, William James and Josiah Royce.
In The America of today; being lectures delivered at the local lectures summer
meeting of the University of Cambridge, 1918. Ed. by Gaillard Lapsley. Cam-
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Seitz, Don C. Artemas Ward (Charles Farrar Browne) a biography and bibli-
ography. N. Y. and London: Harper. [16], 338 p. illus., plates, ports., facsims.
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Waterman, Charles E. Something about Artemus Ward. Sprague's jour.
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arts and sciences, v. I, pt. iv) [2288
A tribute to the memory of Dr. Joseph Rodman Drake, the Bronx poet, on the ninety-sixth anni-
versary of the first publication of his characteristically American poem "The American flag".
The Bronx of today and the land it was a hundred years ago, bv Douglas Mathewson: p. 59-63.
Drake as a poet, by John Erskine: p. 63-71. Joseph Rodman Drake, his ancestry, bj' Charles de Kay:
p. 84-88. Bibhography of the writings of Dr. Joseph Rodman Drake and some references to works relat-
ing to him, by Victor Hugo Paitsits: p. 93-117.
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Irving, Washington. The journals of Washington Irving (hitherto unpublished)
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This edition is limited to 430 copies printed for members only.
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With selections from the poems.
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of the birth of James Russell Lowell, poet, scholar, diplomat, born in Cambridge,
Mass., February 22, 1819, died in Cambridge, August 12, 1891; held under the
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Ruud, Martin B . James Russell Lowell : an American university man, Univ.
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142 AMEBIC Al^ HISTOEICAJL ASSOCIATION.
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the poet from infancy to manhood. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill co. [14], 425 p
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LAND, 2d ser., LXXIV (Dec.) 468-470. [232(1
Mary EulaUe (Fee) Shannon, 1824-1854. }
Thompson. Patton, John S. John R. Thompson [1823-1873] a Virginia poet with i|
brilliant record of unrecognized services. Univ. or Va. alumni bul., 3d ser., XI"
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Enrico Davide Thoreau (Henry David Thoreau). !
Kilbourne, Frederick W. Thoreau and the White Mountains. AppalachiaI
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— Lafontaine, A. Henri Thoreau, un exemple de la culture f ranco-americaine j
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A southern poet, 1829-1867. |
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Banham, Arthur. Walt Whitman. Holborn rev., n. s. X (Oct.) 433-443.
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Cairns, William B. Walt Whitman. Yale rev., VIII (July) 737-754. [2337J
De Tocqueville and Whitman. Nation, OIX (Nov. 22) 655.
Erskine, John. Walt Whitman. Conference donnee le 10 juin 1919 a Dijonj
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Firkins, O. W. Walt Whitman. Review, I (May 31) 56-58. [2340
Guehenno, Jean. Whitman, Wilson et I'esprit moderne. Rev. Paris
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Hult, Gottfried Emanuel. Whitman once more. Univ. of No. Dak. quae.
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Kirkland, Winifred. Americanization and Walt Whitman. Dial, LXVI
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Martinez Plee, Manuel. El Whitmanismo en Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico,
REVISTA mensual (San Juan) I (May) 43-50. [2344
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ano VII, t. XXVIII (Oct.) 20-37. [2345
Noguchi, Yone. Whitmanism and its failure. Bookman, XLIX (Mar.) i
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The prose writings of Walt Whitman. Spectator, CXXII (June 7) 724-726.
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Romig, Edna Davis. Walt Whitman, 1819-1919. Outlook, CXXII (May|
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IJ.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 143
Whitman. Thayer, William Roscoe. Personal recollections of Walt Whitman.
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Thayer, William Roscoe. Reminiscencias personales acerca de Walt Whit-
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Translation of an article in Scribner's, June 1919. See no. 2349, above.
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Wyatt, Edith Franklin. Whitman and Anne Gilchrist. No. Am. rev., CCX
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142 p. port. (Poetry & life series; general editor: W. H.Hudson, [no.] 29) [2353
With selections from the poems.
Music.
Cox, John Harrington. "John Hardy." Jour. Am. folk-lore, XXXII (Oct.)
505-520. [2363a
Regarding the origin of the song "John Hardy."
HoUiday, Carl. American folk-songs. Sewanee rev., XXVII (Apr.) 139-150, [2364
Leinheuser, Lawrence. America's pioneer war songs. Cath. educ. rev., XVII
(Feb.-Mar.) 65-75, 157-167. [2365
Begins with the songs of the colonial period.
Putnam, Natalie Alden. Edward MacDowell, reminiscenes and romance. [Los An-
geles: United print, co.] 69 p. port. [2366
Sonneck, Oscar George Theodore. Francis Hopkinson, the first American poet-com-
poser, and our musical life in colonial times. Address . . . The Historical society
of Pennsylvania . . . Pennsylvania society of the colonial dames of America,
Committee on historical research. Wednesday evening, November 12th, 1919.
[Phila.?] 8 p. [2357
Science.
Lane, John E. Daniel Turner and the first degree of doctor of medicine conferred in
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Miller, William Snow. Horace Green and his probang. Johns Hopkins hospital
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One of the interesting episodes connected with the history of American medicine is associated with the
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PUB. LIB. BUL., XXIII (Sept.) 547-554. [2360
A selection from a collection of autograph letters covering the period 1756-1880, contained in the New
York public library. They have value for the history of American medical and surgical practice and for
the history of the sciences of chemistry, botany, mineralogy, astronomy, etc.
Pleadwell, F. L. William Paul Crillon Barton, surgeon, U. S. Navy, a pioneerin Amer-
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Smith, Edgar Fahs. Chemistry in old Philadelphia. [Phila.] Printed by the J. B.
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Notes regarding two southern botanists, the Rev. M. A. Curtis and H. W. Ravenel, which are of in-
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Walsh, James Joseph. History of medicine in New York, three centuries of medical
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" Volumes IV-V: Biographical."
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"Deals more fully than any of its predecessors with the economic organization of the grain trade in
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MacPhail, Andrew. Article nineteen, Univ. mag., XVIII (Oct.) 311-326.
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Offers a proposal that Canada should take advantage of article nineteen of the League of nations
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Concerned with the British North America act and the Provincial constitutions.
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Historical facts: p. 417-437.
146 AMEEICAIT HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
I
Toronto. Ontario provincial museum. Thirty-first annual archaeological report, |
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Also published in The School (Toronto) VIII (Oct.) 103-106. |
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A sketch of the history of the official agencies of the Dominion of Canada and the Canadian provinces '
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" It is the purpose of this paper to call attention to just a few of the interesting chapters in Canadian j
history, with the hope that it may stimulate some to a serious study of our hitherto neglected neighbor i
to the north." j
The writer believes this to be the psychological moment to launch in our colleges new courses on the (
history of Canada. i
Wrong, George M. Relations during the last hundred years between the United I
States and Canada. Hist, outlook, X (Jan.) 5-8. [2406 ]
Discovery to 1763.
Bourlamaque, Frangois Charles, chevalier de. Un m^moire de M. de Bourlamaquo
sur le Canada [1762] Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Sept.-Oct.) 207-276, 289-
305. [2406
A report on Canada, hitherto unpublished.
Bufangton, A. H. British and French imperialism in North America. Hist, out-
look, X (Dec.) 489-496. [2407
A study of the two chief types of modem imperiaUsm as exhibited in the colonial policy of France
and England in North America in the 17th and 18th centuries. The colonial policy of France in America
was definite and continuous, its principal feature being the occupation of the interior; that of England
was haphazard and opportunist, her colonial expansion being the natural result of her commercial
expansion.
Canada. General staff. Historical section. A history of the organization, develop-
ment, and services of the military and naval forces of Canada, from the peace of
Paris in 1763, to the present, v. I. Ottawa [The Historical section of the General
staff] 148 p. [2408
Contents.— The local forces of New France. The mihtia of the Province of Quebec, 1763-1775.
Caron, Ivanhoe. Pierre Gauthier de Varennes de la Verendrye et ses fils. Canada
FRANp., II (Apr.) 170-182. [2409
Le combat de I'Atalante k la Pointe-aux-Trembles. Bul. recherches hist., XXV
(Feb.) 58-61. [2410
A naval engagement oflE Pointe-aux-Trembles, May 16, 1760.
Couillard-Despres, A. Observations sur I'histoire de I'Acadie frangoise (de M.
Moreau— 1873). Montreal [Priv. print.] 150 p. [2411
Address the author, M, I'abb^ Couillard-Despres, cur6 at Frehshburg, Missisquoi coimty, Province
of Quebec.
Published-serially in the Revue canadienne, n. s., t. XXII-XXIV, 1918-1919.
A critical review and refutation of the viewpoint presented in the "Histoire de I'Acadie frangoise
de 1598 h, nib, par M. Moreau," pub. at Paris in 1873. The work of M. Moreau is concerned mainly
with the conflict between the rival Acadians, d'Aulnay and La Tom-, and pleads the cause of d'Aulnay,
whose memory he seeks to avenge.
Rev, in: Canad. hist, rev., I (June 1920) 208-209.
WEIWI^GS OlT AMERICA!? HISTORY, 191^. 14?
Dumas, sieur de. M^moire sur les limites du Canada. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXV (Feb.) 50-57. [2412
Dated Paris, le 5 a\Til 1761.
The writer was a French officer who served under Montcalm at Quebec.
Ferron, Th6r6se. Essai sur un vieil historien de ki Nouvelle France. Rev. tri-
MESTRiELLE CANAD., (Dec.) 418-437. [2413
A sketch of the historian Charlevoix.
Girault, Arthur. The colonial tariff policy of France. Ed. by Charles Gide. Ox-
ford: Clarendon press; London [etc.] Humphrey Milford, 1916. viii, [2], 305 p.
(Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of economics and his-
tory) [2414
Chap. I (p. 11-41) "The ancient regime: exclusion" deals with the commerce of the Antilles and
New France, and the East Indian trade.
Le gouvernement frangais et le Canada en 1760. Rev. hist, colonies fran^., Vile
ann., 2e trimestre, 332-334. [2415
Groulx, Lionel Adolphe. La naissance d'une race. Conferences prononcees a
I'Universite Laval (Montreal, 1918-1919). [Montreal] Biblioth^que de L'Action
franyaise. 294 p. [2416
Contents.— Le colon venu de France. LemiMeu. L'6tablissement dela colonie (1.-2. partie). La
race nouvelle. App.: Tableau de I'abb^ Lortie.
Eev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept. 1920) 307-308.
Groulx, Lionel Adolphe. Le peuplement de la Nouvelle-France. Rev. trimes-
TRIELLE CANAD., (Aug.) 145-149. [2417
A study of French immigi'ation into New France.
Hallam, Mrs. W. T. The first Protestant missionary in Canada. [Toronto] 14 p.
[2418
Reprinted from the Canadian churchman.
Sketch of the life of the Rev. Thomas Wood, a Church of England missionary sent by the Society
for the propagation of the Gospel to Nova Scotia, in 1752.
Hayne, Margaret P. Acadia (Reconstruction of a lost chapter of American history).
Cath. world, CVIII (Mar.) 795-808. [2419
A review of "Acadie; reconstitution d'un chapitre perdu de Thistoire d'Amerique, par Henri d' Aries
[pseud.] [Edouard Richard] " Boston, 191&-1918.
L'histoire des colonies f ran raises d'Amerique dans la biblioth^que de Sir Thomas
Phillipps. Rev. hist, colonies fran^., Vile ann., 4e trimestre, 310-318. [2420
Brief notice of those manuscripts of the late Sir Thomas Phillipps on sale at auction in June 1919
which relate to the French Antilles, New France, Acadia, and Newfoundland., drawn from a catalogue
of the Ubrary published at London, by Sotheby, Wilkinson and Hodge.
Kleefisch, J. Untersuchungen zur franzosischen Kolonialgeschichte in Nordamerika.
Diss Munster, 1917. 89 p. [2420a
Diss. Universitat Miinster, WestphaUa, Germany.
Locke, George H. When Canada was New France. Toronto: J. M. Dent and sons.
154 p. plates. [2421
Written for yoimg people.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept. 1920) 308-309.
Marault, Olivier. Dollier de Casson. Rev. trimestrielle (Feb.) 361-370. [2422
A Sulpician priest who was the first civil engineer and the first architect in Montreal.
yiassicotte, E. Z. Comptes de chirurgiens montrealais au 18feme si^cle. Bul.
recherches hist., XXV (Oct.) 316-320. [2423
klassicotte, E. Z. Les incendies a Montreal sous le regime frangais. Bul. re-
cherches hist., XXV (July) 215-218. [2424
ilassicotte, E. Z. L'inventaire des biens de Lambert Closse [1662] Bul. recher-
ches hist., XXV (Jan.) 16-31. [2425
Lambert Closse was one of the early colonists of Montreal, and the inventory of his goods throws
I light on the life and customs of the day.
kassicotte, E. Z. Louis Tantouin ou Pitatouin de la "Touche." Bul. re-
I cherches HIST., XXV (Apr.) 127-128. [2426
Louis Tantouin, sieur de La Touche.
Iassicotte,E.Z. Montreal sous le regime frangais; repertoire des arrets, edits, mande-
ments, ordonnances et reglements, conserves dans les archives du Palais de justice
de Montreal, 1640-1760. Montreal: G. Ducharme. 140 p. [2427
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (June 1920) 20&-208.
"A most useful addition to our series of calendars of documents bearing on the French regime."
148 amebica:!^ historical association. ]
I
Massicotte, E. Z. Nicolas de Mouchy; notaire royal k Montreal. Bul. recherchiJ
HIST., XXV (Mar.) 83-89. [245
Massicotte, E. Z. TJne ordonnance in^dite sur Montreal [27^me septembre 167l'
Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Feb.) 63-64. [24s|
Massicotte, E. Z. Le sieur de Bourchemin, ses noms, son age, sa noblesse. Bu]'
RECHERCHES HIST., XXV (July) 210-214. [243
FranQois de Mulieze, sieur de Bourchemin.
La mission du P. Menard chez les Hurons (1660-1661). Rev. hist, colonies PRANf
Vile ann., 3e trimestre, 161-164. [2431-
Jesuit missionary to the Hurons.
O'Riordan, P. Father Isaac Jogues, s. j. Month, CXXXIV (Sept.) 224-234. [243
Le P. Le Jeune, s. j., au portage du Temiscouata (1633-1634). Rev. hist, colonie
FRANg., Vile ann., ler trimestre, 158-162. [243,
Pnid'homme, L. A., and others. Le chevalier de la V^rendrye. Canada franc. i
III (Dec.) 276-295. [243'
Contents.— Autour du fort St-Charles, by L. A. Prud'homme. Le chevalier de la V^rendrye, b:
A. H. de Tr^maudan. Communication, by Pierre Georges Roy. |
Memoranda regarding two debatable points concerning the chevalier de la Verendrye— first, as t ,
which of the four sons of Pierre Gauthier de Varennes was "le chevaUer de la Verendrye"; and second, b ;
whom were the remains of Jean-Baptiste de Varennes and le Pere Aulneau recovered.
Quebec (Province) Provincial archives. Inventaire des ordonnances des intendanti
de la Nouvelle-France, conservees aux Archives provinciales de Quebec. Pai!
Pierre-Georges Roy. Beauceville: "L'Eclaireur," Miteur. 2 v. (Archives de lf|
province de Quebec [I-II]) [243(!
Un Eecollet de la Baumette, missionaire au Canada. L'Anjou hist., XX^ ann. (Sept.\
103-108. [2436a;
Le pere Jean Dolfean, a R^collet missionary from La Baumette-les- Angers, in Canada from 1615 td
1621. I
Roy, Pierre Georges. Charles- Joseph Amyot Vincelotte [1665-1735] Bul. re-'
cherches hist., XXV (Oct.) 306-315. [24371
Roy, Pierre Georges. Mathieu Amyot Villeneuve. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI
(Nov.) 321-331. [24381
Came to New France in 1635. i
Roy, Pierre-Georges. Les officiers d'etat-major des gouvernements de Quebec,!
Montreal et Trois-Rivieres sous le regime irangais; notes biographiques. Rev.;
CANAD., n. s. XXIII (Jan.-June) 51-55, 130-141, 218-224, 299-301, 360-375, 439-456;'
XXIV (July-Dec.) 53-61, 131-138, 210-220, 286-302, 366-378, 442-458. [2439'
Cont. from v. XXII, 1918.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Les ordonnances des six premiers intendants de la Nouvelle-
France. Bul. recherches hist., XXV (June- July) 161-174, 193-205. [2440
A calendar of all the known ordinances of the intendants Jean Talon, Claude de Bouteroue, Jacciues
Duchesneau, Jacques de Meulles, Jean Bochart Champigny, and Frangois de Beauhamois, 1655-1705.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Le projet de conquete de la Nouvelle-York de M. de Calli^res
en 1689. Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Jan.-Feb.) 3-15, 33-50. [2441
Gives the texts of original documents containing the recommendations of M. de Calliferes, governor
of Montreal, for the project.
Cont. from v. XXIV, 1918.
Roy, Pierre Georges. La seigneurie du Cap Saint-Claude ou Vincennes. L^vis.
46 p. [2442
Reprinted from the Bulletin des recherches historiques, XXV (Mar.-Apr.) 65-82, 97-104.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Le sieur Canon ou Kanon. Bul. recherches hist., XXV
(July) 206-209. [2443
Regarding the Sieur Canon or Kanon who played an important role during the siege of Quebec in 1759.
Roy, Pierre Georges. Le sieur de Vincennes, fondateur de I'lndiana, et sa famille.
Quebec: Charrier etDugal. xv, 365 p. [2444
Regarding the identity of the military officer who was the first commandant at "The Fort," or
Vincennes.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 63-64.
Roy, Regis. Les associes anoblis de la Compagnie de la Nouvelle-France. Bul. I
recherches hist., XXV (July) 219-220. [2446 '
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 149
Koy, Regis. Les compagnons de Cartier. Bul. recherches hist., XXV (May)
155-157. [2446
The companions of Cartier on his second voyage.
Boy, R6gis, Denonville. Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Aug.) 239-242. [2447
Jacques-Ren6 de Brisay, marquis de Denonville, governor of Canada from 1685 to 1689.
Silvy, Ph-e. Le vieux Quebec en 1709. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIII (July)
232-235. [2448
Suite, Benjamin. Au Nipigon, 1727. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIII (May) 133-138.
A study of the explorations, and of the fur trade with the Indians, in the Lake Superior region.
Suite, Benjamin. Les Bouguignons en Canada. Rev. canad., n. s. XXIV (Dec.)
438-441. [2460
Notes regarding the number of colonists from Burgundy that came to New France from 1653 to 1770.
Suite, Benjamin. Le pays des fourrures. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIII (Jan.)
23-30. [2451
A study of French exploration and fur trade in the Northwest.
Tremaudan, A. H. de. A propos des fibres La V^rendrye. Canada pran^., II
(Mar.) 109-117. [2452
Corrects some en-ors commonly made in regard to the discoveries of La V^rendrye and his sons.
Vallette, Marc F. Jacques Cartier. Am. Cath. quar. rev., XLIV (Jan.) 40-51.
[2453
1763-1867.
Boucher de la Bniere, Montarville. Le due de Kent; a quelle date faut-il assigner
son depart definitif du Canada? Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Dec.) 367-376.
[2464
Establishes the exact date of the duke's departxire from Halifax in 1798.
Boyd, John. Sir Georges-Etienne Cartier. Traduction par Sylva Clapin. Mon-
treal: Beauehemin. 485 p. [2465
Enghsh edition— Toronto: Macmillan, 1914.
Canada. General staff. Historical section. A history of the organization, develop-
ment, and services of the military and naval forces of Canada, from the peace of
1 Paris in 1763, to the present, v. I. Ottawa [The Historical section of the General
staff] 148 p. [2456
Contents. — The local forces of New France. The miUtia of the Province of Quebec, 1763-1775.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (June 1920) 210-212.
Carleton, Guy. Lettre du gouverneur Carleton au ministre Hillsborough. Bul.
j recherches HIST., XXV (Apr.) 123-126. [2457
Written from Quebec, March 15, 1769, describing conditions in the province.
Chapais, Thomas. Cours d'histoire du Canada, t. I. 1760-1791. Quebec: Gar-
neau. vii, 328 p. [2458
Vol. I of a series of four volumes covering the history of Canada under British rule.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept. 1920) 314-316.
oventry, George. A contemporary account of the rebellion in Upper Canada, 1837
by the late George Coventry, esq., with notes by William Renwick Riddell. Ont.
HIST. soc. PAj>., XVII, 113-174. [2469
SUiott, T. C. The northern boundary of Oregon. Ore. hist. soc. quar., XX (Mar.)
25-34. [2460
Consists mainly of a copy of a letter from the governor of the Hudson's Bay company to Lord Canning,
secretary of the foreign office, Dec. 9, 1825, in regard to the settlement of the boundaries of the United
States and British America.
Sosselin, Auguste. La constitution de 1791 et le clerge canadien. Canada franq.,
I II (May) 286-293. - [2461
^es id6es de Vergennes sur le Canada. Rev. hist, colonies pran^., VII*' ann., 1«^
trimestre, 135-137. [2462
Regarding his attitude toward an attempt to reconquer Canada at the time of the American revo-
lution.
landon, Fred. The Anti-slavery society of Canada. Jour, negro hist., IV (Jan.)
j 33-40. [2463
The Anti-slavery society of Canada was one of the forms in which the abolition sentiment of the
province of Upper Canada made its contribution to the final settlement of the great issue in the neigh-
3oring country.
150 AMEKICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
London, Fred. Canada's part in freeing the slave. Ont. hist, soc. pap., XVII i
74-84. [2464
Mainly a study of the underground railroad and of fugitive slaves in Canada.
Landon, Fred. The fugitive slave in Canada. Univ. Mag., XVIII (Apr.) 270-279 t
[24648 j
Account of the part played by Can ad a in aiding the fugitive slaves from the United States. |
Lovekin, L. A. M. The Cartier memorial. Canad. mag., LIV (Nov.) 13-22. [246S|
Monument in honor of the memory of Sir George Etienne Cartier.
Maseres, Francis. The Maseres letters, 1766-1768. Ed. with an introduction,!
notes, and appendices by W. Stewart Wallace. Toronto: University of Torontcl
library, Oxford university press, Canadian branch. 135 p. (Univ. of Torontci
studies. History and economics [v. Ill, no. 2]) [2466
Letters of Francis Maseres, attorney-general of the province of Quebec from 1766 to 1769, who "played j
no small part in the events and deUberations which culminated in the Quebec act". Most of the letters'
are addressed to Fowler Walker, the London agent of the British merchants in Quebec, and throw light i
on British administration in Canada. •
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 559; Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 69-71. I
Massicotte, E. Z. Les Chasseurs; societe politique secrete de 1837-38. Bul. |
RECHERCHES HIST., XXV (Sept.) 282-283. [2467!
Mezy, sieur de. Lettre de Monsieur de Mezy a Monsieur de Tracy. Bul. recherche a !
HIST., XXV (Aug.) 237-238. [24681
Written from Quebec, April 26, 1765. ■
Morison, John Lyle. British supremacy & Canadian self-government, 1839-1854.'
Glasgow: J. MacLehose and sons, xi, 369 p. port. [2469
Also pub. at London: MacLehose. 380 p. 1
*'By far the most important contribution of the volume is the series of vitally human studies of the*
four Canadian governors-general from 1839 to 1854 — Sydenham, Bagot, Metcalfe, and Elgin — la their!
different contributions to the development of responsible government in practice." Rev. in: Canad.
hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 77-80. \
Notes on slavery in Canada. Jour, negro hist., IV (Oct.) 396-411. [247ot
"For these documents Mr. Justice Riddell is indebted to Mr. WilUam Smith of the Department of |
archives, Ottawa, Canada." I
Pope, Sir Joseph. The story of confederation. In The Canada year book, 1918. |
Ottawa: J. de L. Tache, printer to the King. p. 1-13. [24711
At head of title: Canada. Dominion bureau of statistics. ,
Riddell, William Renwick. The slave in Upper Canada. Jour, negro hist., IV |
(Oct.) 372-395. [2472 1
Reprinted from the Transactions of the Royal society of Canada, May 1919. <
Staton, Frances M. Some unusual sources of information in the Toronto reference!
library on the Canadian rebellions of 1837-8. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVII, 58-73. '
[2473 ;
Suite, Benjamin. Melanges historiques; etudes ^parses et inedites de Benjamin i
Suite; comp., annotees et pub. par Gerard Malchelosse. t. II-IV. Montreal:'
G. Ducharme. 3 v. port. [2474 1
1. 1, 1918. j
Contents.— t. II. La formation des grands lacs. Les Rochelais et le Canatla. Jean Verrazano. ,
Le siege du Long-Saut. Premieres connaissances du Mississippi. La famiUe de Billy. Pompe a feu '
aux Trois-Rivieres. Un intendant de la Nouvelle- France (Champ igny). Les Canadiens aux Illinois
au xvine siecle. First parhament of Upper Canada, t. III. Histou-e de la pomme de tene. Ver- j
saiUes. Les arpents de neige. Le Forillou. Charles Thomas. Bom-geois de la Compagnie du Nord- I
Quest. Voyageurs et hommes de cages. Marches des Trois-Rivieres. Essai de commerce avec les j
Antilles (1866). Cap Rouge, t. IV. Sir Georges-Etienne Cartier.
Suite, Benjamin. Sir Georges-Etienne Cartier. Par Benjamin Suite. Augments I
et publie par Gerard Malchelosse. Montreal: G. Ducharme. 103 p. (Melanges ;
historiques . . . de Benjamin Suite, v. IV) [2475
" Cartier' s chief monument remains, however, the part he played in creating the Canadian federa- i
tiou." Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 83-85.
Suite, Benjamin. Washington et le Canada. Pays laurentien. III, 1918,
62-63. [2476
Wallace, W. S. The first Canadian agent in London. Canad, mag., LII (Apr.) ,
1037-1040. [2477
An EngUsh barrister named Fowler Walker, who was appointed by a number of merchants of Quebec
and Montreal to be their agent in London, in April 1765.
.y.
WKITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 151
War of 1812.
Ennatinger, C. O. The retreat of Proctor and Tecumseh. Ont. hist. soc. pap.,
XVII, 11-21. [2478
The retreat of Maj.-Gen. Proctor, commanding the British forces, from Amherstburg, in 1813.
lundy's Lane historical society. The centenary celebration of the battle of Lundy's
Lane, July twenty-fifth, nineteen hundred and fourteen. Niagara Falls, Can.:
Lundy's Lane historical society. 150 p. plates. [2479
Includes a short account of the battle by R. W. Geary, president of the Society.
1867-1919.
Auclair, Elie J. Sir Wilfred Laurier. Rev. canad., n. s. XXIII (Mar.) 161-175.
[2478a
Boyd, John. John Reade [1837-1919] an appreciation of the "dean of Canadian
letters". Canad. mag., LIII (May) 74-77. [2480
Cameron, A. Kirk. Sir Wilfred Laurier. Queen's quar., XXVI (Apr.) 420-431.
[2481
David, L. O. Laurier; sa vie, ses oeuvres. Beauceville: L'Eclaireur limitee.
268 p. [2482
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 85-86.
Hassard, Albert R. Rev. Dr. George Douglas [1825-1894] Canad. mag., LIV (Dec.)
180-184. (Great Canadian orators, V) [2483
McArthur, Peter. Sir Wilfred Laurier. London, Toronto [etc.] J. M. Dent and sons.
[4], 183 p. port. [2484
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 86-87.
Skelton, Oscar Douglas. Life and letters of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Century,
XCVIII (Oct.) 721-736; XCIX (Nov.-Dec.) 35-46, 264-279. [2485
Willison, Sir John. Reminiscences, political and personal. Toronto: McClelland
and Stewart. 351 p. ports. [2486
Includes chapters on ' ' Race and religion in Canada ' ' and ' ' Laurier and the empire."
Also pub. in the Canadian magazine, v, LI-LIII, 1918- 1919.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 87-88.
Regional History.
New Brunswick.
McKeown, H. A. Address of Chief Justice H. A. McKeown at the unveiling of the
Hardy tablet. New Brunswick hist. soc. coll., X, 136-142. [2487
A tablet in memory of Elias Hardy, an early loyahst citizen of St. John.
Millidge, J. W. Reminiscences of St. John from 1849 to 1860. New Brunswick
HIST. soc. COLL., X, 126-135. [2488
Murdoch, William. The Saint John suspension bridge. New Brunswick hist. soc.
COLL., X, 104-125. [2489
Raymond, W. O. Elias Hardy, councillor-at-law. New Brunswick hist. soc. coll.,
X, 57-66. [2490
An abridgement of the article by the same writer entitled "A radical and a loyahst" printed in the
Transactions of the Royal society of Canada, 3d ser., v. XIII. See no. 2492.
Raymond, W. O. Peter Fisher [b. 1782] the first historian of New Brunswick. New
Brunswick hist. soc. coll., X, 5-56. [2491
Raymond, W. O. A radical and a loyalist; a biographical sketch of Elias Hardy,
barrister-at-law at Saint John, N. B., 1784-1799. Royal soc. Canad. trans., 3d
eer., XIII, sec. 2, 91-101.
1 Raymond, W. O. Robert Cooney [d. 1870] first historian of northern and eastern New
Brunswick. New Brunswick hist. soc. coll., X, 67-85. [2493
Waterbury, D. H. Retrospective ramble over historic St. John. New Brunswick
hist. soc. coll., X, 86-103. [2494
152 AMEKICAIT HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. ;
Nova Scotia.
Dalhousie college. Centenary committee. One hundred years of Dalhousie college
1818-1918. Halifax: The Centenary committee. 61 p. illus. [249fi
Eaton, Arthur Wentworth Hamilton. Chapters in the history of Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Americana, XIII (Jan., July) 21-39, 253-274. [2496J
Contents.— XIII. HaKfax defences. XIV. Halifax harbour and its famous traditions. ,
Cont. from v. XII, 1918.
Gildas, N. Acadiana; Monseis;neur M.-F. Richard. Canada franp., I (Jan.) 326-'
332; II (Mar., June) 118-131^ 354-367. [2497
Contents.— Monseigneur Richard et I'education. Monseigneur Richard et la colonisation.
Logan, J. D. A political Bayard, Canad. mag., LIII (Aug.) 336-341. [2498
Hon. G. H. Murray, who for twenty-three years has been Prime Minister of Nova Scotia.
Province of Quebec.
Auclair, filie J. Les fetes du monument Cartier a Montreal. Rev. canad., n. s.
XXIV (Oct.) 241-263. [2499
Audet, Francis J. L'annee de la grande noirceur. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIII
(Sept.) 296-299. [2500
An atmospheric phenomenon, the "dark days," which occurred in Quebec in October 1785. ;
Beaudouin, Giistave. Nos vieilles 6glises. Rev. nation ale, I (Feb.) 33-48. [25011
Beaulieu, J. A. Nos premiers professeurs de droit a Laval de Montreal. Rev. canad. i
n. s. XXIII (Apr.) 261-275. [2602 |
L'Universit^ Laval, Montreal.
Bouffard, Jean. La frontiere entre la province de Quebec, et la colonic de I'ile Terre- !
neuve, sur la cote du Labrador. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIII (Jan.) 7-10. [2503 |
Bouffard, Jean. Origine de la propriete privee dans la province de Quebec. Canada 1
PRAN9., Ill (Sept.-Oct.) 26-37, 93-99. [2504 [
Contents.— a vant la Compagnie des Cent-Associes. Depuis la Compagnie des Cent Associes, 1627 k \
1663. La Compagnie des Indes occiden tales, 1664 a 1674. Depuis I'estinction de la Compagnie des Indes
occidentales jusqu'a la cession du pays a F Angleterre, 1674 a 1760. Regime de la propri6t6 privee sous la ;
domination anglaise ou mode de concession des terres depuis 1760. ;
Bourbonniere, Avila. La mutualite: ce qu'elle a ete; ce qu'elle est; ce qu'elle sera. '■
Montreal: G. Ducharme. 185 p. [2506 j
An account of mutual aid societies in the province of Quebec. |
Dionne, N.E. Lemalde la Bale Saint-Paul. Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Dec.) I
376-379. [2606 ]
a disease which broke out in Saint Paul's Bay in 1773. •
Le docteur Liveright Pluze. Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Nov.) 332-333. [2507 i
Surgeon at Riviere Quelle, 1789-1813. !
Gerin-Lajoie, Marie-J. Marguerite Bourgeois, la fern me des oeuvres. Rev. trimes-
trielle canad., (June) 200-207. [2508
Foimder of the Congr6gation de Notre Dame, in Montreal.
Gosselin, Auguste. Le Due de Kent a Quebec en 1791. Canada pran?., II (June)
368-378. [2609
Gosselin, David. M. le cure Forgues, ancien procureur du seminaire de Quebec.
Canada fran?., II (Mar.) 142-151. [2610
Hill, Hamnett P. Robert Randall and the Le Breton Flats; an account of the early
legal and political controversies respecting the ownership of a large portion of the
present city of Ottawa. [Ottawa: James Hope and sons] 62 p. ports., plans.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Mar. 1920) 81-83. [2611
JoUiff e, Percival. Andrew Hunter Dunn, fifth bishop of Quebec ; a memoir. London:
Society for promoting Christian knowledge, xiv, 200 p. [2512
An English clergyman who was bishop of Quebec from 1892 to 1914.
Lapalice, O . Les organistes et maitres de musique k Notre-Dame de Montreal. Bul.
recherches hist., XXV (Aug.) 243-249. [2513
LeVasseur, N. Le bassin du grand fleuve Mackenzie; localisation et superficie — ^his-
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WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 153
Magnan, Hormisdas. Les drapeaux arbores dans la province de Quebec. Bul.
EECHERCHES HIST., XXV (May) 129-149. [2515
Magnan, Hormisdas. Notes historiques sur le nord le la province de Quebec, la Bale
d'Hudson, I'Ungava. Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Apr.) 105-118. [2516
Massicotte, E. Z. Les arpenteurs de Montreal ; addenda. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXV (July) 223-224. [2617
During the period 1648-1800.
I Massicotte, E. Z. La famille de Jean de Lisle de la Cailleterie. Bul. recherches
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1 Massicotte, E. Z. Jean de Lisle et Jean-Guillaume de Lisle. Bul. recherches hist.
XXV (May) 150-152. [2619
Corrects some errors which have arisen from the confusion of these two early citizens of Montreal,
father and son.
iMassicotte, E. Z. Le p^re Ance. Bul. recherches hist., XXV (Sept.) 287-288.
[2620
Appointed vicar of Saint-Eustache, in 1848.
JMassicotte, E. Z. Le premier notaire anglais de Montreal. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXV (July) 221-222. [2621
Eichard McCarthy, who received his commission July 19, 1765.
IMassicotte, E. Z. Le sherif Frangois-Roch de Saint-Ours. Bul. recherches hist.,
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f' She .If of Montreal during the rebelhon of 1837-38.
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A description of the territory acquired in 1912 by the province of Quebec, in the northern part of the
L<abrador peninsula.
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' The writer of this autobiography was a Polish surgeon who served in the American army during the
Revolutionary war and later settled at River Quelle.
^utnam, J. H. City government, Ottawa. Ottawa: James Hope and sons. 74 p.
[2525
Intended for use in the schools.
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On the origin of the name Ouelle.
lavard, Antonio. Au berceau de la confederation. Pays laurentien, III, 1918,
151-156. [2628
|cott, Henry Arthur. Grands anniversaires; souvenirs historiques et pensees utiles.
Quebec: Imp. de 1' Action sociale. xiv, 304 p. plates, ports. [2629
Contains historical essays on the parishes of Notre-Dame-de-Foy, Saint-Colomb-de-Sillery, and
Saint- F41ix-du-Cap-R ouge.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec. 1920) 395-396.
|ilvy, Pte. Le Saguenay. See. geog. Quebec bul., XIII (July) 236-237. [2530
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Account of the history of education in the province since 1846 when the public school boards were
' organized.
Province of Ontario.
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From the 18th century to the present time.
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Kent; a history. Kent hist. see. pap., IV, 5-12. [2532
eithaupt, W. H. Early roads and transportation. Upper Canada. Waterloo hist.
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eithaupt, W. H. Waterloo county history. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVII, 43-47.
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154 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
ddl!
263'!
Cameron, D. M. The fourth Middlesex militia regiment. London and Middl
SEX HIST. soc. trans., X, 16-24. [263
Carnochan, Janet. Williamstown, an historic village. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVI i
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Cox, G. M. Recollections of a London military school. London and Middlesi!
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Eames, Frank. Gananoque's first public school, 1816. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVI [
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Glass, S. Frank. Biographical sketch of the life and times of the Hon. David Glai
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Hamilton, A.M. A few notes on the early history of Chalmers' church, Winterboum
Waterloo hist. soc. rep., VII, 73-83. [25J!
a Presbyterian church in Waterloo county, founded in 1837. !
Herrington, Walter S., co7np. and ed. The newspapers of the county; a historicij
survey of the newspapers of Lennox and Addington presented in the form of extrac i
from the old files. Napanee, Ont. : Pub. by the Society. 62 p. (Lennox and A (
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Hicks, A. A. Growth of Methodism in Chatham and vicinity. Kent hist. soc. papi
IV, 34-39. [253
Hobson, W. B. Old stage coach days in Oxford county. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVI
83-36. [254!
Land, John H. The recollections of Lieut. John Land, a militia man, in the rebel
lion of 1837. Wentworth hist. soc. pap., VIII, 20-24. [2641
Landon, Fred. Fugitive slaves in London before 1860. London and Middlese'
hist. soc. trans., pt. X, 25-38. [254i
History of the negro community in London, Ont., before the outbreak of the American civil war. [
Lundy's Lane historical society, Welland, Ont. The centenary celebration of thj
battle of Lundy's Lane, July twenty-fifth, nineteen hundredand fourteen. Comf
by a committee of the Lundy's Lane historical society. Niagara Falls, Can
Lundy's Lane historical society. 150 p. plates. [264
MacDougall, James B. Building the North. Toronto: McClelland and Stewarr
268 p. illus., port., diagr. [264!
A study of the foundation and development of the educational system in that part of the province
Ontario known as "New Ontario."
MacKendrick, J. N. Local history in the street names of Gait. Waterloo msil
soc. rep., VII, 67-72. [264(
McKeough, George T. The early Indian occupation of Kent. Kent hist, soc
PAP., IV, 13-27. [264
McKeough, W. E. A short history of the Park street Methodist church, of Chathana
Ont. Kent hist. soc. pap., IV, 28-33. [264
MacLaren, D. H. British naval officers of a century ago; Barrie and its streets-
history of their names. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVII, 106-112. [264|
Barrie, Ont., was named in honor of Commodore Robert Barrie, R. N., who was Acting Commii
sioner of His Majesty's navy on the Great Lakes from July 1819 until its abandonment.
McMullen, W. T. History oi Presbyterianism in the county of Oxford. OntI
HIST. soc. PAP., XVII, 22-24. [264j
Moore, W. F. Dundas in the early days. Wentworth hist. soc. pap., VIIIj
47-58. [268i;
O'Hagan, Thomas. Right Reverend and Honorable Alexander Macdonell, firs,
bishop of Ontario [1760-1840] Am. Cath. quar. rev., XLIV (Jan.) 78-94. [256j
Pattullo, George R. Leaves from an unpublished volume. Ont. hist. soc. pap.
XVII, 5-10. [255!j
Historical account of the county of Oxford. !
Poldon, Amelia. Women in pioneer life. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVII, 25-29. [288J;
Bidden, William Renwick. Judges in the parliament of Upper Canada. MinN|
LAW EEV., Ill (Feb.-Mar.) 163-180, 244-256. [26S<j
?!■
1919. 155
Bidden, William Renwick. The judicial system of Ontario. Minn, law rev., Ill
(Jan.) 73-88. [2565
Bobertson, H. H. Lincoln militia — 1812-14. Wentworth hist. soc. pap., VI [I,
37-40. [2556
In 1812-14 the county of Lincoln included nearly all of the present county of Wentworth.
Sauer, Carl O. The role of Niagara Falls in history. Hist, outlook, X (Feb.)
57-65. [2657
Discussed under the following five headings: "Food supply" and "Portage," dealing with the
French and Indian regime, "[The FaUs as] Part of international boundary," "Scenic attraction," and
"Power development."
Scott, W. H. Upper Canada in 1827. Wentworth hist. soc. pap. , VIII, 25-28. [2668
From a letter written on Nov. 2, 1827, by W. H. Scott.
Sexsmith, W. N. Some notes on the Buxton settlement, Raleigh, Kent county.
Kent hist. soc. pap., IV, 40-44. [2659
Buxton settlement for colored refugees from the United States, founded in 1849.
Shields, John. Memoirs of experiences of the work in Ontario, Canada. Jour, hist.,
XII (Oct.) 448-455. [2660
The work of the Reorganized church of Jesus Christ of latter day saints (Mormon).
Sinclair, James. The former names of the Thames river. Ont. hist. soc. pap.,
XVII, 37-39. [2661
Smith, George. The Amishman. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVII, 40-42. [2662
A brief accotmt of the Amish immigration and settlement in Ontario, about 1824.
Soyne, James H. David Ramsay and Long Point in legend and history. Royal
soc. Canad. trans., 3d ser., XIII, sec. 2, 111-126. [2563
Transcript of crown grant, confirming previous Indian deed, for block one Grand
river Indian lands, Upper Canada, Peter Russell, president [1798] Waterloo
hist. soc. REP., VII, 85-87. [2664
Transcript of original deed for the German company tract, Waterloo township [1805]
Waterloo hist. soc. rep., VII, 87-90. [2666
Western Provinces and Territories.
Bowes, Leroy Thome. Rupert's House, the oldest British settlement in Canada.
Canad. mag., LIII (Aug.) 281-289. [2666
Story of the Hudson's Bay company settlement at Rupert's House on James Bay.
Burpee, L. J. A forgotten adventurer of the fur trade. Queen's quae., XXVI
(Apr.) 363-380. [2667
The story of Donald McKenzie, who served under three different corporations, the North West com-
pany, the Pacific fur company, and the Hudson's Bay company, during the early years of the 19th
century.
Duchaussois, Pierre. The Grey nuns in the far North (1867-1917). Toronto:
McClelland and Stewart. 287 p. [2668
History of the missionary activities of this religious community.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (June 1920) 218-219.
Elliott, T. C. The Northwest boundaries (Some Hudson's Bay company's corres-
pondence). Ore. hist. soc. quar., XX (Dec.) 331-344. [2669
Documents of the years 1825-1826.
Grenfell, Wilfred Thomason. A Labrador doctor; the autobiography of Wilfred
Thomason Grenfell. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. [10], 441 p. port.',
plates. [2670
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (June 1920) 225-226. ^
Morice, A.-G. Histoire abreg^e de I'Ouest canadien; Saskatchewan, Alberta, et
Grand-Nord. Saint-Boniface, Manitoba, 1914. vii, 163 p. [2671
Printed in Lille, France, in 1914, where it remained during the period of the German occupation,
and has just recently been brought to light.
Intended for use m the schools of the Canadian Northwest.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept. 1920) 306.
Morris, William John. Old Fort Garry in the seventies. Women's Canad. hist
soc. Toronto trans., XVIII, 14-31. [2672
Fort Garry, now Winnipeg.
09970°— 22 12
LATIN AMERICA.
General.
Altamira, Rafael. Las instituciones Americanas en la instmccion piiblica de Espaiia.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 349-362. [2573
Includes an English translation of the article.
Amunategui, Miguel Luis. Conquest, colonization, independence. Inter-America, i
II (June) 304-314. [2674 i
Translation of the introduction to his work " Descubrimiento i conquista de Chile," pub. in 1862.
Relates to the Spaniards as conquerors and colonizers.
Atlas America Latina; a geographic, economic and commercial atlas of Mexico, Cen- *
tral America, West Indies and South America presenting a series of new maps, !
commercial charts and descriptive data of the twenty Latin American republics
compiled from the most recent surveys, and the field notes of scientists and ex-
plorers, and the best Latin American authorities. N. Y. : General drafting co. 196
p. 21 commercial charts, 35 maps. [2575
Rev. in: Hisp. Am. hist, rev., Ill (Nov. 1920) 574-576. i
Badia Malagrida, Carlos. El factor geografico en la politica sudamericana. Madrid: i
Rates. 587 p. [2576 i
At head of title: Real Academia de jurisprudencia y legislacidn . !
Contents.— El criterio geografico en politica. La confederacion del Plata. La confederaci6n del I
Pacillco. Confederacion colombiana. La confederacion brasileiia. La confederacion centroameri- {
cana y la union antiUana. La confederacidn mejicana. Epilogo. ,
Bahuet, Andre. Les inter^ts frangais en Amerique latine. Nouv. rev., 4e ser.,
XXXIX (Jan. 15) 97-108. [2577 '
Bond, Beverley W. A course for the better understanding of Latin- America. Hist. I
OUTLOOK, X (Oct.) 374-376. , [2578
Calder6n, Ignacio. The Pan-American union and the Monroe doctrine. Jour,
intern AT. RELATIONS, X (Oct.) 133-137. [2579
Cejador y Frauca, Julio. Historia de la lengua y literatura castellana; comprendidoa
los autores hispano-americanos. (Epoca regional y modernista: 1888-1907). t.
X-XI. Madrid: Tip. de la Revista de archives. 2 v. ports. [2580
Conference on the foundation of a journal of Latin-American history. Minutes of a
conference on the foundation of a journal of Latin-American history, Cincinnati,
December 29, 1916. Am. hist, assoc. rep., 1916, I, 279-285. [2581
Cox, Isaac Joslin, and others. Syllabi of courses [in Hispanic American history]
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 419-446. [2582
Contents.— The history of Hispanic America, by Isaac Joslin Cox, South American relations (1810-
1910), by John F. O'Hara. A tentative syllabus of Hispanic-American history adapted to high school
use, by Livingston Rowe Schuyler.
Espinosa, Aurelio M. America espaiiola o Hispano- America. El termino "America
latina" es erroneo. Traduccion de Felipe M. de Setien. Madrid: V. Rico. 22
p. [2583
La fiesta de la raza de 1918 en America. Union ibero-am. (May) 21-39. [2584
Accoimt of the celebrations of the festival of the Spanish race, held in the different countries of Spanish
Ameiica,
Garcia Calderfin, Francisco. Ideas e impresiones, precede un estudio sobre Fran-
cisco Garcia Calderon por Gonzalo Paris. Madrid: Editorial- America. 256 p.
(Biblioteca de ciencias politicas y social es, XXXVII) [2585
Contents.— Prdlogo. Las corrientes filosoficas en la America latina. La origLnaUdad intelectual de
Am^ca El panamericanismo: su pasado y su porvenir. Los aspectos psicologicos de la guerra. La
teoria del germanismo. Los escritoresinglesesy la guerra. El fll61ogo Cuervo. La crisis del bergsonismo.
Bohvar.
Garcia CarrafTa, Alberto. Enciclopedla heraldica y genealogica hispano-americana.
Tomo primero. Ciencia heraldica o del blason. Madrid: Imp. de Antonio Marzo.
225 p. plates.
156
WBITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 157
Jones, C. K. Hispano- Americana in the Library of Congress. Hispanic Am. hist.
REV., II (Feb.) 96-104. [2587
Jones, C. K. La seccion bibliografica hispano-americana en la Biblioteca del Con-
greso. Inter- America, III (July) 119-124. [2688
A translation of the article noted above, no. 2587.
Klein, Julius. A new government office for Latin American research. Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 464-467. [2689
TheLatin American division of the Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce.
Latin Americana in the United States. Library jour., XLIV (Apr.) 223-228. [2690
Lockey, Joseph Byrne. Significacion del Panamericanismo. Reforma soc, XV
(Sept.) i-xxx. [2691
Los Rios de Lampgrez, Blanca de. Paginas para la historia de las misiones espaiiolas
en America. Raza espan., aiio I, June number. [2692
Lyra, Heitor. Pan Americanism in Brazil prior to the declaration of Monroe. Inter-
America, III (Dec.) 67-78. [2593
It is the writer's purpese to show that the so-called Pan American or inter- American doctrine did
not originate with Monroe, but that it was of Brazihan origin.
Means, Philip Ainsworth. Race and democracy in Latin America. Nation, CIX
(Nov. 1) 560-562. [2694
"The purpose of this article is to trace broadly the past and present status of the Indian in that part
of our continent which we call Latin America."
M6ndez Bejarano, Mario. Para la historia de los estudios americanistas. Cultura
hispano-americana, aiio VIII, ndm. 79 (June 15) 21-32. [2695
A report upon the aims and activities, and the work already accomplished by the Centro de estudios
americanistas, in the Archivo general de Indias, at Seville.
Opisso, Alfredo. Historia de Espana y de las republicas latino-americanas. Con
un prologo de D. Miguel S. Oliver, y otro prologo, referente a la parte de America,
de D. Federico Rahola. Barcelona: Casa editorial ''Gallach" [19 — ?] 25 v.
illus., plates, ports., maps. [2596
The volumes and sections relating primarily to Spanish America are— IX. Primera parte: El descu-
brimiento de America. XI. America precolombina. Descubridores y colonizadores: Venezuela,
Brasil, Honduras, Dari6n, La Florida, M6jico. XII. Conqmsta de Mejico, Honduras y del Peru. Las
ultimas conquistas: Colombia, Venezuela, Chile, El Plata y Paraguay. XV. El arte espanol en el
siglo XVI. Colonizaci6n de America. La decadencia. XVI. La guerra separatista. El ocaso espanol.
Espana y America en el siglo xvn. XVIII. La cultura espafiola durante el siglo xvm. Carlos IV. La
revoluci6n. Parte primera: America en el siglo xvm. XIX. La revoluci(3n espafiola. Guerra de
la independencia. Levantamiento de las colonias. Reaccidn absolutista. XX. La reaccion. La
cultura. La insurrecci<5n de America. XXI. Independencia de Am&ica. Segundar 6poca consti-
tucional. Los cien mil hijos de San Luis. XXII. La ominosa d^cada. La Argentina desde 1835 hasta
fines del siglo xix. XXIII. Paraguay. BoUvia. Chile, Peru. Ecuador. Colombia. Venezuela.
Republica Dominicana. Puerto Rico, Cuba. XXIV. Las reptlblicas de America Central y Mejico.
Espana durante la minoria de Isabel n.
jParnielee, Katherine Ward. Names of places in Latin America; an exhaustive com-
pendium of their derivation and meaning. So. American, VII (Mar.) 21-24,
(Apr.) 26-28. v. [2597
iQuelle, Otto. Zur Geschichte der rheinischen Handelsbeziehungen mit Latein-
amerika. DEUTSCH-siJDAM. u. iberisch. Inst. Mitteil., VII Jahrg., 72-75. [2698
iQiielle, Otto. Nachtrag zu dem *' Verzeichnis wissenschaftlicher Einrichtungen-
Zeitschriften und Bibliographien der ibero-amerikanischen Kulturwelt. '
Deutsch.-sijdam. u. iberisch. Inst. Mitteil, VII Jahrg., 47-71.
puelle, Otto. Verzeichnis wissenschaftlicher Einrichtungen, Zeitschriften und
■ Bibliographien der ibero-amerikanischen Kulturwelt. Bearbeitet von Otto Quelle.
Stuttgart und Berlin: Druck der deutschen Verlags-Anstalt, 1916. xvi, 67 p.
(Veroffentlichungen des Deutsch-Stidamerikanischen Instituts, Aachen) [2600
^a Real academia hispano-americana de ciencias y artes de Cadiz. Bol. centro
estud. am. Sevilla, aiio VI, num. 22 (Jan.) 8-16. [2601
[lodrlguez Codola, Manuel. Historia de Espana y de los pueblos hispano-americanos
hasta su independencia. Seguido cada periodo historico de un juicio de Miguel S.
^ Oliver. Tomo I. Barcelona [Miguel Segui] 544 p. illus. [2602
omera-Navarro, Miguel. America espafiola; ed. escolar abreviada, con aclaraciones
y notas gramaticales en ingles y vocabulario espanol-ingles. N . Y. : Holt, vii, 206 p.
158 AMEKICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
I
Rueda, Julio E. Pan Americanism: its political and economic aspects. Inteii
America, II (Feb.) 145-153. [260J
Schuyler, L. R. A tentative syllabus of Hispanic- American history adapted to higj
school use. In Association of history teachers of the middle states and Marylanc
Proceedings . . . No. 16. [Newark, N. J.: Daniel C. Knowlton, secretary
treasurer] p. 21-30. [260
Shepherd, William Robert. The Hispanic nations of the New world; a chronicle c
our southern neighbors. New Haven: Yale univ. press: [etc.] ix, 251 p. ports,
fold. maps. (The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. Lj
[2601
"Abraham Lincoln edition." 1
Shepherd, William Robert. The psychology of the Latin American. Jour. rac]|
DEVELOP., IX (Jan.) 268-282. [260*1
Sweet, William Warren. A history of Latin America. N. Y. and Cincinnati: Abing,
don press. 283 p. ports., maps, diagrs. [260}*
"Designed to meet the need for a suitable text in Latin American history."
Kev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXIV (July) 741-742; Hispanic Am. hist, rev.. Ill (Feb. 1920) 56-59.
A symposium on the teaching of the history of Hispanic America in educationa
institutions of the United States. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 397-418. ]
Contents.— The teaching of Hispanic American history from the practical standpoint, by Charles)
Lyon Chandler, Courses in Hispanic American history, by Isaac JosUn Cox. The teaching of Hispanic i
American history, by Percy Alvin Martin. What to teach and how to teach it in Hispanic American!
history, by John F. O'Hara. Hispanic American history from the student standpoint, by WUliam W.
Sweet. The college course in Hispanic American history, by Mary "VN ilhelmine WUliams. j
Umphrey, George W. Ruben Dario. Hispania, II (Mar.) 64-81. (Spanish- American 1
poets of to-day and yesterday, I) [2610[
Zarraga, Miguel de. Hispanos: no latinos. Mercurio, XVII (Sept.) 85-86. [261l'
Urges that the term Hispanic America be substituted for that of Latin America.
Discovery to 1600.
Agan, Joseph Eugene. The fabled silver mines of Bahia. Pan-American mag.,
XXIX (Oct.) 297-300. [2612
The story of the mines discovered by Roberio Dias in 1587, all trace of which has been lost to the
world. I
Bandelier, Fanny R., contributor. Two Spanish petitions concerning noted authors |
of the New world of the early seventeenth century. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II
(Aug.) 447-453. [2613 j
I. Petition by Gaspar de Villagra, 1613. II. Petition by Torquemada to return to New Spain, 1613. |
Booy, Theodoor de. Lope de Aguirre {ca. 1495-1561). Hispanic Am. hist, rev., !
II (Nov.) 638-642. [2614 '
Cortes, Hernando. Die Eroberung von Mexiko durch Ferdinand Cortes, mit den .
eigenhandigen Berichten des Feldherrn an Kaiser Karl v. von 1520 und 1522. '
Hrsg. von Arthur Schurig. Leipzig: Insel-Verlag, 1918. 409 p. port., map. '
[2614a ,
Contents.— Einleitung. Ferdinand Cortes an Kaiser Karl v.: Der Bericht vom 30. October 1520; I
der Bericht vom 15. Mai 1522. Das Reich Mexiko und seine Haupstadt Temixtitan, Aus den Denk- i
wiirdigkeiten des Feldhauptmanns Bernal Diaz del Castillo. Kleinere Erganzmigen zu den Berichten ;
des Cortes. Der Feldzug des Cortes nach Honduras. Anmerkimgen und Erlaiiterungen.
Cunningham, Charles Henry. The audiencia in the Spanish colonies as illustrated
by the audiencia of Manila (1583-1800). Berkeley: University of California press.
ix, 479 p. (University of California publications in history, v. IX) [2615
The writer has taken the audiencia of Manila as a typical legal and political institution— the audiencia
being the principal institution of the Spanish colonial system. This work is especially concerned with the
interrelation of the three chief factors of Spanish colonial government, the audiencia, the oflace of viceroy,
and the church.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 507-509.
Gonzales, Eloy G. Estandarte de Pizarro. Pan Am. union bol., XLIX (Oct.)
421^26. [8616
Reprinted from ActuaUdades (Caracas) for July 6, 1919.
i
WBIl^maS ON AMEBIC AH HlSTOHY, I9l9. 159
Gonzales, Eloy G. Standard of Pizarro. Pan Am. union bul., XLIX (Oct.) 395-399;
and So. American, VIII (Dec.) 11. [2617
The banner which Pizarro carried to the conquest of Peru.
English version of an article by Sefior Eloy G. Gonzales, published in Actualidades (Caracas) of
July 6, 1919. See no. 2616 above.
Haring, C. H. Ledgers of the royal treasurers in Spanish America in the sixteenth
century. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (May) 173-187. [2618
An analysis of the receipts and expenditures of the Spanish colonial treasurers in America, as given
in their ledgers, prior to 1560, which are found in the Archivo general de Indias, at Seville. A contri-
bution to the history of Spanish colonial administration.
Hodge, F. W. Bibliography of Fray Alonso de Benavides. N. Y.: Museum of the
American Indian, Heye foundation. 39 p. plates. (Indian notes and mono-
graphs, V. Ill, no. 1) [2619
Ispiztia, Segundo de. El gobierno de Espana en Indias; revision de la historia
de America. Cultura hispano-americana, aiio VIII, num. 77 (Apr. 15) 21-25; num.
78 (May 15) 16-19; num. 79 (June 15) 15-18; num. 80 (July 15) 16-20; num. 81
(Aug. 15) 11-15; mim. 82 (Sept. 15) 20-25; num. 83 (Oct. 15) 16-19; num. 84 (Nov.
15) 20-24. [2620
Latorre, German, ed. Relaciones geogrdficas de Indias (contenidaa en el Archivo general
de Indias de Sevilla). La Hispano-America del siglo xvi: Colombia — Venezuela —
Puerto Rico — Republica Argentina. Seville: Tip. Zarzuela. xi, 155 p. [2621
Contents.— Relacidn geografica de San Miguel de las Palmas de Tamalameque, gobernacidn de
Santa Marta, audiencia de Nueva Granada, virreinato del Peru. Descripci6n de la Isla de Puerto Rico,
Relaci(5n geografica y descripcidn de la provincia de Caracas y gobernacidn de Venezuela. Relacidn
de Nuestra Senora de CarabaUeda y Santiago de Le<5n de Caracas. Relacion geografica de la Ciudad de
La Palma, Nueva Granada. Dos relaciones geograficas del Tucuman.
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (Feb. 1920) 59-60.
Reprinted from the Boletin del centre de estudios Americanistas de Sevilla.
Levillier, Roberto, ed. Gobernaci6n del Tucumdn; correspond encia de los cabildos
en el siglo xvi. Documentos del Archivo de ^ndias. Madrid: Rivadeneyra, 1918.
xxiii, 501 p. [2622
Maricourt, Andre de, baron. Un colon frangais au Bresil; le sire de Villegagnon.
Rev. hebdomadaire, XXVIIIe ann. (Oct. 18) 351-364. [2623
Account of a colonizing enterprise in Brazil under the leadership of Nicolas Durand de Villegagnon,
1554-1559.
Nordenskiold, Erland. Sydamerika; kampen om guld och silver 1498-1600. Upp-
sala: J. A. Lindblad. 211 p. illus. (incl. ports., maps, facsims.) [2624
At head of title: De geografiska upptacktemas historia.
An historical and geographical r^sum^ of the discoveries and conquests of the Spanish, conquistadores.
Ocampo, Juan de. Los caciques heroicos: Paramaiboa. Guaicaipuro. Yaracuy.
Nicaroguan. Madrid: Editorial- America [19 19?] 246 p. (Biblioteca americana de
historia colonial) [2625
From manuscripts in Spanish libraries, cf. Advertencias.
Contents.— EI mar de las perlas (historia de la conquista de Nueva Andalucia) compuesta por el
maestre Juan de Ocampo, el aiio de 1598. Guaicaipuro . . . obra escrita en frances por el abate Jean
Moulin; version castellana del maestre Juan de Ocampo en 1601. El fiero Yaracuy (de los papeles de
Mencio Vargas) compuesta por Juan de Ocampo en 1605. Vida del guerrero b^rbaro Nicaroguan,
crdnica compuesta por Fray Nemesio de la Concepci<5n Zapata . . . 1684.
Rodrlguez-Navas, Manuel. Cartografia del literal de America, desde 1492 a 1543.
Cultura hispano-americana, aiio VIII, num. 82 (Sept. 15) 15-17. [2626
Rodrlguez-Navas, Manuel. Monedas hispano-americanas (1492-1800). Cultura
hispano-americana, aiio VIII, num. 78 (May 15) 39-42. [2627
Rodrlguez-Navas, Manuel. La pirateria contra Espaiia en los siglos xvi y xvii.
Cultura hispano-americana, ano VIII, num. 79 (June 15) 10-14. [2628
Rodrlguez-Navas, Manuel. La Universidad peruana en 1554. Cultura hispano-
americana, ano VIII, num. 81 (Aug. 15) 4-8. [2629
Schurz, William Lytle. The voyage of the Manila galleon from Acapulco to Manila.
Hispanic Am. hist rev., II (Nov.) 632-638. [2630
Torres Lanzas, Pedro. Catalogo de legajos del Archivo general de Indias. Secciones
1* y 2*. Patronato y contaduria del Consejo de Indias. Sevilla: Tip. Zarzuela.
203 p. (Biblioteca colonial americana, t. II) [2631
160 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. ji
Torres Lanzas, Pedro. Escudos de armas, titulos de ciudades y \dllas, fundaciones i
de pueblos, ereccion de obispados, etc. Bol. centro estud. Am. Sevilla, ano VI i
niim. 22 (Jan.) 17-26. [2632
Cont. from num. 18, Feb. 1916.
Documents from the Archivo general de Indias. 1
Contents.— Armas para la ciudad de los Reyes. Titulo de ciudad de los Reyes (Lima) [1537] Armas I
para Francisco Pizarro [1529] Armas para D. Francisco Pizarro [1537] Armas para el Marques D. Fran-
Cisco Pizarro [1537]. '
Virreinato del Peru (de 1530 a 1600) ; efemerides notables para reconstituir eu historia. I
CuLTURA HisPANO-AMERicANA, aiio VIII, nuHi. 81 (Aug. 15) 8-10; num. 82 (Sept.
15) 17-19. [2633
Signed: E. R.
Wright, I. A. El maestre de campo Don Juan de Texeda (1588-1593). Reporma
soc, XIII (Feb.-Mar.) 137-152, 239-253. [2634
1600-1830.
Arce, Agustin. Tabla capitular de la provincia de los xiiApostoles, del Peru (1755).
Archivo ibero-americano, ano 6, no. 31, 1919.
Hackett, Charles W. New light on Don Diego de Penalosa: proof that he never made
an expedition from Santa Fe to Quivira and the Mississippi river in 1662. Miss.
Valley hist, rev., VI (Dec.) 313-335. [2636
Disproves the autlienticity of the "Relacifin" claimed to have been written by Father Nicolas de
Freytas, and which purports to be an account of an expedition made by Pefialosa in 1662, while governor
of New Mexico, to Quivira and beyond the Mississippi. Quivira is the region to the east and northeast
of New Mexico in the present states of Kansas and Oklahoma.
Kino, Eusebio Francisco. Kino's historical memoir of Pimeria Alta; a contemporary
account of the beginnings of California, Sonora, and Arizona, by Father Eusebio
Francisco Kino, s. j., pioneer missionary explorer, cartographer, and ranchman,
1683-1711; pub. for the first time from the original manuscript in the archives of
Mexico; tr. into English, ed. and annotated, by Herbert Eugene Bolton.
Cleveland: Arthur H. Clark co. 2 v. maps, plan, facsim. (Spain in the West; a
series of original documents from foreign archives, v. III-IV) [2637
Pimeria Alta included what is now northern Sonora and southern Arizona.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Jan. 1921) 340-341; Hispanic Am. hist, rev., IV (Aug. 1921) 491-494.
Lang, William. An ill-starred imperialist: a footnote to history. Unit, emp., n. s. X
(Oct.) 455-460. [2638
William Paterson, the originator of the Indian and African trading company of Scotland, better
known as the Darien scheme, 1695.
Mendoza, Diego. El reconocimiento de las colonias espaiiolas por la madre patria (del
professor ^A'illiam Spence Robertson). Union ibero-am. (June) 23-27, (Julv) 28-37.
[2639
Priestley, Herbert Ingram. Spanish colonial municipalities. Cal. law rev., VII
(Sept.) 397-416. [2640
A study of Spanish colonial government in America.
E-obertson, James Alexander, ed. The English attack on Cartagena in 1741 ; and plans
for an attack on Panama. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Fsb.) 62-71. [2641
Copies of tv/o documents the originals of which are in the British museum. The first document refers
to the wellknown attack on Cartagena in the Spanish Indies made by the joint expedition under Admiral
Vernon in command of the sea forces and Brigadier General Wentworth in command of the land forces.
It purports to have been written by a Spanish official.
Schefer, Jakob. Thom.as Gage und sein Reisebericht aus Mttelamerika. [Bern:
Universitat Bern] 1915. 70 p. [2642
Dissert. Beni, 1915.
Thomas Gage was born in England in 1598, and in 1625 went to America, spending twelve years in
Mexico and Central America. A journal of his travels was pubUshed at London (Printed by R. Cotes)
in 1648.
Storer, Malcolm. Admiral Vernon medals, 1739-1742. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LII,
187-276. [2643
Medals struck to commemorate the operations in the West Indies dur.ing the years 1739-1741 of Vice-
Admiral Edward Vernon, namely, the capture of Porto Bello, the fiasco at Cartagena and the contem-
plated attack upon Havana.
Urrutia, F. J. Historia diplomdtica de 1810 a 1830. Cultura hispano-americana,
ano VIII, num. 76 (Mar. 15). [2644
1919. 161
Wright, I. A. La armada debarlovento(ha8ta el ano 1641). Reforma soc, XV (Sept.)
15-30. [2645
On Dec. 18, 1629, el Capitdn Francisco Diaz Pimienta was appointed "superintendente de fabrieas
de navies del puerto de San Crist6bal de la Habana y isla de Cuba y las deni4s de barlovento."
Wright, I. A. Las minas del Prado bajo la adini,in8traci6n de Juan de Eguiluz (1616-
1647). Reforma soc, XV (Dec.) 219-221. [2646
Mexico.
Bolton, Herbert E., ed. The Iturbide revolution in the Californias. Hispanic Am.
HIST. REV., II (May) 188-242. [2647
Copies of documents found in the Archivo general y publico, Mexico. They record the steps by
which the temporary Iturbide regime was installed in the two Californias in 1822, and are illustrative of
one phase of the "Guerra de independencia" as it affected two frontier Spanish provinces.
Cuevas, Mariano. La Virgen de Guadalupe en Mejico. Real acad. hist, bol.,
LXXV (Aug.) 185-199. [2648
Esquivel Obregfin, T. Factors in the historical evolution of Mexico. Hispanic Am.
HIST. REV., II (May) 135-172. [2648a
Esquivel ObregSn, T. Influencia de Espana y los Estados Unidos sobre Mexico.
Madrid: Casa editorial Calleja. 396 p. [2649
Gates, William. The four governments of Mexico. World's work, XXXVII (Feb.)
385-392. [2650
"Personal interviews with the leaders and first-hand studies of the operation of the four differently
organized nations that are Mexico to-day."
"An introductory analysis of the historical and social and ethnographic background of Mexican
affairs."
Huarte y Echenique, Amalio. Apuntamiento sobre el adelantamiento de Yucatdn.
Salamanca: Est. tip. de Calatrava, a cargo de Manuel P. Criado. 30 p. [2651
Concerned mainly with the first adelantado of Yucatan, Francisco de Montejo.
Jones, C. K. Bibliography of the Mexican revolution. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II
(May) 311-314. [2652
Le6n, Nicolas. Historia de antropologia fisica en Mexico. Am. jour, physical
ANTHROP., II (July) 229-264. [2653
Navarro y Rodrigo, Carlos. Vida de Agustin de Iturbide. Memorias de Agustin de
Iturbide. Madrid: Editorial- Americti. 362 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho . . .
[XXXVIII]) • [2654-6
" Este libro tiene dos partes: la una, Vida de Iturbide, escrita . . . 1869 en Madrid por D.Carlos Na-
varro y Rodrigo ... la otra, Memorias, editada . . . 1827 en Mexico por Ontiveros." The Memorias
originally published with title: Carrera militar y poUtica de Don Agustin de Iturbide.
Ogg, Frederic Austin. Mexico, from Cortez to Diaz. Munsey's, LXVIII (Dec.)
385-411. [2656
Priestley, Herbert Ingram. Mexican literature on the recent revolution. Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., II (May) 286-311. [2667
Priestley, Herbert Ingram. The old University of Mexico. Cal. univ. chron., XXI
(Oct.) 369-385. [2668
Rippy, J. Fred. Border troubles along the Rio Grande, 1848-1860. Southw. hist.
QUAR., XXIII (Oct.) 91-111. [2659
Disturbances along the frontiers of Texas and Mexico subsequent to the Mexican war.
Hippy, J. Fred. The Indians in the Southwest in the diplomacy of the United States
and Mexico, 1848-1853. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 363-396. [2660
Rojas, Luis Manuel. The National library of Mexico. Library jour., XLIV (Apr.)
216-217. [2661
Smith, Justin H. The war with Mexico. N. Y.: Macmillan. 2 v. illus. (maps),
plans. [2662
War between the United States and Mexico, 1845-1848.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 729-732; Am. jour, internat. law, XIV (Jan. 1920) 293-298;
Hisp. Am. hist, rev.. Ill (Aug. 1920) 375-381; Pol. sci. quar., XXXV (Dec. 1920) 646-651.
w
162 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Central America.
Panama Canal.
Lutz, O. Der Pana^makanal als politisches und wirtschaftliches Werkzeug der Verein-
igten Staaten von Amerika. Berlin: E. S. Mittler und Sohn. 39 p., (Meer-
skunde, Nr. 147) [i
MarvS, Jose. El canal de Panamd y los precursores espanoles de los siglos xv y xvi.
Raza espanola (Madrid) ano I, April number. [2663
West Indies.
General.
Booy, Theodoor de. The less known regions of the West Indies. Jour, geog.,
XVIII (Feb.) 57-62. [2664
Drascher, W. Das Vordringen der Vereinigten Staaten im westindischen Mittelmeer-
gebiet. Hamburg: L. Friederichsen und co., 1918. vi, 106 p. map. [2665
Rev. in: Mitteil. d. Deutsch-siidam. u. iberischen Instituts, VII. Jahrg., 1919, 85.
British West Indies.
Appeals to the Privy council. Caribbeana, VI (July-Oct.) 63-72, 117-120, 154-
158. [2666
Copies of printed statements of cases on appeal from the plantations to H. M. in Council, during the
first half of the 18 th century. From the mss. in the British museum.
Aspinall, Algernon E. West Indian federation: its historical aspect. Unit, emp.,
n. s. X (Feb.) 58-63. [2667
Cundall, Frank, and Joseph L. Pietersz. Jamaica under the Spaniards, abstracted
from the archives of Seville. Kingston, Jamaica: Institute of Jamaica. [8], 115 p.
maps. [2668
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 532-534; Hisp. Am. hist, rev., Ill (Aug. 1920) 387-388.
Ford, Henry Jones. The success of Barbados. Scribner's, LXVI (Nov.) 560-573.
[2669
Macdermot, T. H. Our West Indian colonies. Unit, empire, n. s. X (Nov.) 506-511.
[2670
Marston, R. B. Nelson in the West Indies. Spectator, CXXII (Jan. 25) 97-99.
[2671
References to his work in the West Indies, 1784-1787, in upholding the navigation laws.
[Oliver, Vere Langford] Views in Jamaica drawn by T. C. Hearn and others. Carib-
beana, VI (Jan.) 24-35. [2672
Describes a number of sketches of scenes in Jamaica made about 1766, now in the British museum.
Weiss, N. Un refugi^ de Montpellier a la Jamaique. Soc. hist. Protestantisme
FRANp. BUL., LXVIIIe ann. (Apr.) 138-139. [2673
Lewis (or Louis) Galdj^ who emigrated to Jamaica from France on account of his reUgion. He died
at Port Royal, December 22, 1739.
The white servants act. Caribbeana, VI (Oct.) 140-144. [2674
By certain laws of the colony of Antigua passed as early as 1716 proprietors of slaves were compelled
to have in their service one white man for every forty slaves.
Zook, George F. The Company of royal adventurers of England trading into Africa,
1660-1672. Jour, negro hist., IV (Jan.) 134-231. [2675
The last chapter, p . 206-231, is concerned with the slave trade with the British West Indies, Barbadoes,
and Jamaica, of which trade the Company of royal adventurers held a monopoly during the years under
consideration. Deals with the troubles between the company's agents and the West Indian planters
over the supply of slaves.
Cuba.
Parker, William Belmont, g<i. Cubans of to-day. N. Y. and London: Putnam, xvii,
684 p. ports. (Hispanic notes & monographs; essays, studies, and brief biographies
issued by the Hispanic society of America, I) [2676
Santovenia, Emeterio S. Enrique Herndndez Miyares, 20 octubre 1859-2 agosto 1914.
Estudiante latino-americano, I (Mar.) 190-192. [2677
WRITINGS ON- AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 163
Dutch West Indies.
Plante-Febure, J. M. West Indie in het Parlement 1897-1917: Bijdrage tot Nedei-
land's Kolonial-Politieke Geschiedenis. 's Gravenhage: Nijhoff. xii, 196p. [2678
A study of Dutch colonial politics in Surinam and the West Indies.
French West Indies.
Barrey, Philippe. Les origines de la colonisation frangaise aux Antilles; la Compagnie
des Indes occidentales. Recueil des publications de la Societe havraise
d'etudes diverses, LXXXIIIe ann. (1916) 213-264; LXXXIVe ann. (1917) 17-54,
107-145, 243-333. [2679
Partial contents.— Les frangais a Saint Christophe. Pierre Belain d'Esnambuc. Henry de
Chantail a Saint-Cliristophe et a la Guyane. Urbain de Roissey. Un associ6 de Belain d' Esnambuc:
Jean Gavelet, sieur du Hertelay, directeur de la Compagnie des Indes occidentales. La creation de la
Compagnie des Indes occidentales. La Compagnie des isles de I'Am^rique. Navires arm6s pour les
isles de 1635 k 1652.
Girault, Arthur. Thecolonialtariff policy of France. Ed. by Charles Gide. Oxford:
Clarendon press; London [etc.] Humphrey Milford, 1916. viii, [2], 305 p. (Car-
negie endowment for international peace. Division of economics and history) [2680
Chap. I (p. 11-41) ''The ancient regime: exclusion" deals with the commerce of the Antilles and New
France, and the East Indian trade.
Ij'histoire des colonies frangaises d'Am^rique dans la biblioth^que de Sir Thomas
Phillipps. Rev. hist, colonies FRANp., Vile ann., 4e trimestre, 310-318. [2681
Brief notice of those manuscripts of the late Sir Thomas Philhpps on sale at auction in June 1919, which
relate to the French Antilles, New France, Acadia, and Newfoundland, drawn from a catalogue of the
library pubhshed at London, by Sotheby, Wilkinson and Hodge.
La Ronciere, Charles de. L'attaque du Fort Royal de la Martinique par Ruyter (20
juillet 1674). Paris: Au siege de la Societe de I'histoire des colonies fran^aises, et
chez Edouard Champion. 16 p. [2682
Account of the defeat of the Dutch fleet under the command of Michel de Ruyter.
Reprinted from the Revue de I'histoire des colonies frangaises, VII^ arm., l^r trimestre, p. 35-46.
Sffalo, Henri. Les facheux errements du Capitaine Jacques Thomas (1684-1685).
Rev. hist, colonies fran^., Vile ann,, 2e trimestre, 289-302. [2683
Commander of a French privateer in West Indian waters.
Porto Rico.
Japfi-Rodrlguez, Pedro. The relations between the United States and Porto Rico;
past, present and future. Am. jour, internat. law, XIII (July) 483-525. [2684
Cont. from v. X, April 1916.
lapfi-Rodrlguez, Pedro. Some historical and political aspects of the government
of Porto Rico. Hispanic-Am. hist, rev., II (Nov.) 543-585. ' [2685
I. Under the rule of Spain. II. Under the Foraker act. III. The present Jones-Shafroth act: a
measure of relative self-government for Porto Rico.
Santo Domingo.
ondon, Peter. The church in the island of San Domingo. U. S. Cath. hist, rec,
XIII, 11-60. [2686
a fin de la domination frangaise a Saint-Domingue (1803-1809). Rev. hist, colonies
FRAN5., Vile ann., 4e trimestre, 321-326. [2687
f |im6nez Herrera, G. An historic day: February 27, 1844. Inter- America, II
i (Feb.) 162-164. [2688
Outlines the events that led to the division of the island of Santo Domingo, the separation of the
Spanish elements of the population and the establishment of an independent state as the Dominican
repubUc.
SOUTH AMERICA.
General.
Aguilar, Juan Maria. Aportaciones a la biografia del precursor de la independenci!
Budamericana don Francisco de Miranda. Sevilla: Tip. Zarzuela. 56 p. [26ij
Alvarez, Eduardo. Bolivar, caudillo? Bolivar, genio? La rabida, Mar. 1919. [26S',
Badia Malagrida, Carlos. El factor geografico en la politica sudameiicana. Madric,
Jaime Rates. 587 p. [269i
Barbagelata, Hugo D. Un procer de la independencia americana el general Eugeni'
Gar z on. Cahors: impr. Coueslant. 32 p. [269
Barcos, Julio B. Our professors of idealism in America; notes for a critical essa-
upon the positive and negative values of our Indo-Spanish culture. Inter-Amee
ICA, III (Dec.) 84-102. [269,
Analyses the thought of some of the leading South American writers: Rod<3, Rojas, Ingenieros, LV
gones, Garcia Calderon, and Alberdi. '
Bauer, Peter Paul. NW-Amazonien; ein Beitrag zur Geographic Aquatorialj
Amerikas. Brim: Rudolf M. Rohrer. xiv, 107 p. plates, map. [269'i
One chapter traces the history of voyages of discovery in this region from 1535, and the political ques
tions which have arisen from that period to the present.
Bollo, Luis Cincinato. South America, past and present. Tr. from Spanish bji
Nemesio Baros. New York, iv, 218 p. port., maps. [269i
Chapman, Charles Edward. South America as a field for an historical survey. Am
HIST. ASSOC. REP., 1916, I, 201-209. [2696
A summary accoimt of some of the principal bodies of archives in Buenos Aires, Santiago de Chile
and Lima. I
Fr5din, Otto, and Erland Nordenskiold. Uber Zwirnen und Spinnen bei den In-j
dianern Siidamerikas. Goteborg: Wettergren und Kerber [1918] 117 p. illus.,!
maps. (Goteborgs Kungl. Vetenskaps- och Vitterhets-samhalles Handlingar.l
Fjarde Foldjen. XIX: 3) [2697
Gudger, E. W. The myth of the monkey chain. Natural hist., XIX (Feb.)|
216-221. [2698!
Quotes from early accounts of South America, variations of the story of how, in northern South Amer-',
ica, monkeys by intertwining tails and legs made a living bridge across crocodile-infested streams. This
story had as its author the Jesuit priest. Padre Jose de Acosta, whose book was pubMshed in 1589. i
Ispizlia, Segundo de. Los vascos en America, v. VI. Venezuela, t. in. La ascen-
dencia vasca de Simon Bolivar, libertador de America. Madrid: Mateu. xvi,|
244 p. [26991
1 pte. Los Bolibar en America. 2 pte. Los Bollbar en Vizcaya. 3 pte. La puebla de Bolibar. I
Mitre, Bartoiome. La independencia sudamericana. Estudiante latino-ameri-
CANO, I (May) 250-251. [2700
Mitre, Bartoiome. San Martin. Estudiante latino-americano, II (.Julv) 26-27.
[2701 !
Moses, Bernard. Spain's declining power in South America, 1730-1806. Berkeley: '
University of California press, xx, 440 p. [2702 i
Contents. — The beginnings of a new society. State of the Spanish dependencies in South America, |
1730-17.50. The Spanish-Portuguese boundary treaty of 1750 and the war of the seven reductions. The I
6>:pulsion of the Jesuits. The creation of the vice-royalty of Rio de la Plata. The revolt of Tupac
Amaru. The rebellion of the comunerosin New Granada. The conspiracy of Gramuset and Bemey. !
The reorganization of the viceroyalty of Rio de la Plata. Awakening interest in science and politics: j
MutisandNarino. I^ima and Santiago at the end of the century. The state ofVenezuela and Miranda's ■
expedition. The British capture and loss of Buenos Aires. Peru and Chile at the beginning of the j
nineteenth century.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 309-311; Hisp. Am. hist, rev., Ill (Aug. 1920) 384-385
164
I
I
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 165
Muriel, Domingo. Historia del Paraguay desde 1747 hasta 1767. . . . Madrid:
Victoriano Sudrez. 659 p. (Coleccion de libros y documentos referentes a la his-
toria de America, v. XIX) [2703
Translated from Latin into Spanish by Pablo Hernandez, s. j.
NordenskiSld, Erland. Forskningar och aventyr i Sydamerika. Stockholm: Albert
Bonniers forlag [1915] [6], 597, [3] p. illus., plates, maps. [2704
Bland mumenfranforincaisktid: p. 91-117. Incallacta; enfastningbyggd av Inca Tupac Yupanqui:
p. 125-145.
O'leary, Daniel Florencio. Bolivar y las republicas del Sur, Argentina, Chile,
Brasil, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia; notas de R. Blanco-Fombona. Madrid:
Editorial- America. 230 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud hispano-americana [XVI] )
[2705
A reprint of chapters 44-49 (v. II, p. [426]-577) of " Bolivar y la emancipacidn de Sur- America; memo-
rias del general O'Leary ..." Madrid [pref. 1915]
O'Leary, Daniel Florencio. Gran Colombia y Espaiia (1819-1822). Notas de R.
Blanco-Fombona. Madrid: Editorial-America. 275 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud
hispano-americana [XVIII] ) [2706
A reprint of chapters 26-33 (v. II, p. [7]-181) of "Bolivar y la emancipacion de Sur- America; memo-
rias del general O'Leary ..." Madrid [pref. 1915]
O'Leary, Daniel Florencio. Historia de la independencia americana; la emancipa-
cion del Peru, segdn la correspondencia del general Heres con el libertador (1821-
1830). Madrid: Editorial-America. 495 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho. [XL])
[2707
" Hemos formado este volumen con el volumen I de la Correspondencia de hombres notables con el
libertador, coleccionado por el general D. F. O'Leary, y publieado ofi claim ente por Venezuela en
1880."— Introd. note.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 753-754.
O'Leary, Daniel Florencio. Junin y Ayacucho. Madrid: Imp. de Juan Pueyo.
[1919?] 295 p. [2708
Rivas, A. C. The centenary of the battle of Boyacd. Pan Am. union bul., XLIX
(Aug.) 125-133. [2709
I Rousseau, Frangois. Emancipation des colonies espagnoles; La Colombie du xvin
siecle a la mort de Bolivar. Rev. hist, colonies FRANg., Vile ann., ive trimestre,
237-276. [2710
Salzer, Eduardo P. La vida en Montevideo y Desterro (Brasil) a mediados del siglo
XVIII. CULTURA LATINO-AMERICANA, I, 1915-1918, 176-195. [2711
San Martin, Jose de. San Martin, su correspondencia (1823-1850). Madrid: Edi-
torial-America. 368 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho . . . [XXXIX]) [2712
"Esta nueva edieion de la correspondencia . . . se hace flelmente . . . de la edicidn que para el
j Museo hist6rico nacional arreglo . . . Senor Carranza en 1909" (i. e. 2d ed., [Madrid] 1910).
[Shepherd, William R. South American historical documents relating chiefly to the
period of revolution, from the collection of George M. Corbacho. N. Y. and London:
Putnam. 23 p. [2713
lilva, J. Francisco V. Alrededor de la nueva historia de America. Estudio, XXVII
(Sept.) 406-438. [2714
A review of three books relating to South American history, namely: "La Raza como ideal, por
Rodolfo Rivarola, " Buenos Aires, 1918. " El General Sucre, por Carlos Pereyra," Madrid, 1917. " V^lez
Sarsfield y el codigo civil argentino/' Cordoba, 1919.
lucre, Antonio Jose de. Cartas de Sucre al Libertador (1820-1830). Madrid: Edi-
torial-America. 2 V. port. (Biblioteca Ayacucho . . . [XXXVI-XXXVII])
[2716
' At head of title: . . . Daniel F. O'Leary.
"Este volumen . . . se forma con cartas de Sucre coleccionadas por el general O'Leary y pubhcadas
oficialmente por Venezuela en 1879." The letters in v. I-II were originally published in "Memorias
del general O'Leary ..." Caracas, 1879, v. I.
Contents.— [t. I ] Advertencia del general O'Leary. Resumen sucinto de la vida del general Sucre.
[Cartas al Libertador] 1820-1826. t. II. [Cartas al Libertador] 1826-1830. Correspondencia de Sucre
icon varios. Proclamas.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan. 1920) 327.
Tniversity of Notre Dame. The library of South Americana of the University of
Notre Dame. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., II (Aug.) 490-492. [2716
jl Taken from the Bulletin of the University of Notre Dame [Indiana] for July 1917, v. XIII, no. 1.
166 AMERICAIT HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Argentine Republic.
Armas, Jose de. Rosas and Doctor Francia. Inter- Am erica, III (Oct.) 21-25. |
[271|
Blanco-Fombona, Rufino. La revoluci6n de independencia argentina; las ides I
politicas. Reforma soc, XIII (Mar.) 211-238. [271 J
Blanco-Fombona, Rufino. The struggle for independence in Argentina. Intei
America, II (June) 315-323; III (Oct.) 47-64. [27ll
Laguardia, Garibaldi G. B . , and Cincinato G. B. Laguardia, eds. Argentina; legend an(|
history, readings. Chicago, N. Y. [etc.] B. H. Sanborn and co. Iviii, 411 p. illus.l
ports, maps. (The Hispanic series, under the editorship of J. D. Fitz-Gerald) j
[272'!
Murray, Thomas. The story of the Irish in Argentina. N.Y.: P. J. Kenedy and sons*
xlii, 512 p. plates, ports. [272 j
Neveu, Monsieur. Dans La Plata de 1863-1866. In the Precis des travaux d\
I'Academie des sciences, belles-lettres et arts de Rouen, pendant I'annee 1918
p. 275-322. [272S|
Pereyra, Carlos. El pensamiento politico de Alberdi. Madrid: Editorial- Am^ricsj
[1919?] 301 p. (Biblioteca Andres Bello. [XLVIII]) [272;|
Pereyra, Carlos. Rosas y Thiers; la diplomacia euroi)ea en el Rio de la Plata (1838-'
1850). Madrid: Editorial-America. 251 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud hispano'
americana [XV]) [272^|
Pidgeon, Marie Kiersted. Argentine library conditions. Library jour., XLI\j
(Apr.) 211-215. [272fl
A review of Argentine library history. |
Rojas, Ricardo. Reflections upon Argentine literature; progress and culture durin^i
a hundred years of national history. Inter- America, II (Apr.) 227-240. [272CJ
Saldf as, Adolf 0. La evoluci6n republicana durante la revolucion argentina. Madrid!
Editorial-America. 409 p. (Biblioteca Ayacucho [XLV]) [2727|
An edition was published in Buenos Aires, 1906. I
Schmidt-Klugkist, Wilhelm, and Christian Grotewald. Argentinien in geographis-i
cher, geschichtlicher und wirtschaftlicher Beziehung. 2. Aufl. Teil I. Hann-
over: Hahnsche Buchhandlung. xii, 178 p. [2728;
1st ed.— 1912. '
Brazil.
Baum, Loretta. German political designs with reference to Brazil. Hispanic Am.
HIST. REV., II (Nov.) 586-610. [2729!
Oakenfull, J. C. "Brazil," past, present, and future. London: J. Bale, sons and'
Danielsson. viii, 814 p. illus., plates, map. [2729a|
Renaut, F. P. L' organisation constitutionelle du Bresil; les debuts de la politique:
personnelle de dom Pedro. Rev. hist, dipl., XXXIII, 39-89. [27301
Siqueira Coutinho, J. de. Una grande mentalidade brasileira. Estudiante latino-,
AMERICANO, I (Mar.) 187-188. [2731 i
Briefsketchof Tobias Barretto, 1819-1889. ■
Sommer, Friedrich. Deutsche Charakterbilder aus der brasilianischen Geschichte;|
Hans Staden von Homberg, der Festingskommandant von Bertioga. Ger. Am.'
ANN., n. s. XVII (May) 69-91. [2732 '■
British Guiana.
Rodway, James. The press in British Guiana, Am. antiq. soc. proc, n. s. XXVIII, j
no. 2, 274-290. [2733 I
Includes a list of British Guiana newspapers before 1820. ;
Lee, Sir Sidney. Raleigh's discovery of Guiana. Unit, emp., n. s. X (Jan.) 23-36. |
[2734
!
1.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1919. 167
Chile.
Alzamora, Isaac. La cuestion pemano-chilena. Paris. 30 p. (Petite collection
americaine) [2735
Reprinted from Reforma social XIII (Feb.) 112-126.
Relates to the Tacna-Arica question, the controversy between Peru and Chile over the possession of
the provinces of Tacna and Arica.
Chandler, Charles Lyon. Admiral Charles Whiting Wooster in Chile. Am. hist.
ASSOC. REP., 1916, I, 445-456. [2736
Narrative of the services which an American captain and privateer, Charles Whiting Wooster
rendered m the Chilean navy, 1817-1819 and 1822-1847.
The controversy between Chile and Peru. So. American, VII (Jan.) 5-7. [2737
Written by the editor.
Friedrich, Ernst. Der Einfluss des Klimas auf die anthropogeographischen Verhalt-
nisse Chiles. Leipzig [Gesellschaft fur Erdkunde] 1917. 47 p. (Mitteilungen der
Gesellschaft f lir Erdkunde zu Leipzig, 1915-1916) [2738
Friedrich, Ernst. Religionsgeographie Chiles. Petermanns Mitteil. , LXIII, 1917,
183-186. [2739
Notes upon the geographical conditions of Chile and the religious ideas of its inhabitants.
Fuenzalida Grandon, Alejandro. Don Valentin Letelier and his intellectual work.
Inter- America, III (Dec.) 112-120. [2740
A Chilean educator and publicist, who died June 20, 1919.
L6pez, Jacinto. La mas grave cuestion internacional de America; la guerra del
Pacifico, sus causas, sus efectos, sus problemas actuales. Reforma soc, XIII
(Feb.-Apr.) 87-99, 176-200, 276-303; XIV (May-Aug.) 3-24, 103-131, 215-231;
XV (Sept.-Dec.) 38-59, 117-143, 239-267. [2741
Mendez Pereira, Octavio. Evolution of the civic and intellectual life of Chile.
Inter-America, III (Dec.) 108-111. [2742
Molina, Enrique. Chile, past and present; geographical features, history and present
state of culture. So. American, VII (May) 7-9. [2743
Montarroyos, E. La question du Pacifique devant le droit international. Con-
ference donn6e a la Sorbonne le 12 juin 1919. Paris [Cahors: Imp. Coueslant] 79
j p. (Petite collection americaine) [2744
Regarding the Tacna-Arica dispute between Chile and Peru.
Perez Resales, Vicente. Santiago, the capital of Chile, a century ago. Pan-Ameri-
can mag., XXIX (June) 71-77. [2745
A translation of the first chapter of Vicente Perez Rosales' Recuerdos del pasado, pubUshed in 1886.
^ey de Castro, Carlos. El articulo iii del Tratado de Anc6n, sinopsis cronologica.
Con prologo de Francisco Garcia Calderon. Paris [Cahors: Impr. Coueslant] 311 p.
(Petite collection americaine) [2745a
Concerned with the treaty of Ancon, 1884, and the Tacna-Arica dispute.
ley de Castro, Carlos. Le probl^me du Pacifique. Paris [Cahors: Imp. Coueslant]
30 p. (Petite collection americaine) [2746
Concerned with the Chile- Peru boundary dispute.
Colombia.
^entenario de Boyacd. Pan Am. union bol., XLIX (Aug.) 125-133. [2747
Centennial of the battle in which BoUvar imprisoned the Spanish army at Boyac^., August 7, 1819.
Colombia celebrates centennial of Boyaca. Pan Am. union bul., XLIX (Oct.)
373-383. [2748
English version of the accoimt contributed by the minister of foreign relations of Colombia. See
no. 2749 below.
ias fiestas patrias en Colombia. Pan Am. union bol., XLIX (Oct.) 426-437. [2749
"Articulo enviado por el Ministerio de relaciones exteriores de Colombia."
Umez Restrepo, Antonio. Reflections upon tlie bp^ttle of Boyaca. Inter- America,
III (Dec.) 103-107, [2760
168 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Dutch Guiana.
Dentz, F. Oudschans. Doopboek der Evangelisch Luthersche Gemeente op Suri
name, anno 1800. Navorscher, LXVIII, 364-366. [275]
Plante-Febure, J. M. West Indie in liet Parlement 1897-1917: Bijdrage tot Neder
land's Kolonial-Politieke Geschiedenis. 'sGravenhage: Nijhoff. xii, 196 p. [275ji
A study of Dutch colonial politics in Surinam and the West Indies. I
Ecuador. I
I
Goding, Frederic W. General Joseph Villamil. Pan Am. union bul., XL VII]
(Jan.) 24-27. [2763
The leading spirit of the revolution effected in Guayaquil in 1820 against the Spanish regime, and a
noteworthy character in public hfe in Ecuador after 1830.
Paraguay.
Armas, Jose de. Rosas and Doctor Francia. Inter- America, III (Oct.) 21-25. [2754
Pereyra, Carlos. Francisco Solano Lopez y la guerra del Paraguay. Madrid: Edi-
torial-America. 270 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud hispano-americana. [XIII])
[2765!
Peru. !
I
Alzamora, Isaac. La cuestion peruano-chilena. Paris. 30 p. (Petite collection!
americaine) [2766 1
Reprinted from Reforma social, XIII (Feb.) 112-126. |
Regarding the Tacna-Arica question.
Btilnes, Gonzalo. Bolivar en el Peru; ultimas campanas de la independencia del
Peru. Madrid: Editorial- America. 2 v. (Biblioteca Ayacucho. [XLI-XLII]) I
[2757 I
Earlier edition published with the title: Ultimas campaflas de la independencia del Peril (1822-1826)
Santiago de Chile, 1897. I
The controversy between Chile and Peru. So. American, VII (Jan.) 5-7. [2758 |
Written by the editor.
Regarding the Tacna Arica question. I
L6pez, Jacinto. La mas grave cuestion internacional de America; la guerra del
Pacifico, sus causas, sus efectos, sus problemas actuales. Reforma soc, XIII
(Feb.-Apr.) 87-99, 176-200, 276-303; XIV (May-Aug.) 3-24, 103-131, 215-231;
XV (Sept.-Dec.) 38-59, 117-143, 239-267. [2759 |
Means, Philip Ainsworth. The rebellion of Tupac-Amaru II, 1780-1781. His-
panic-Am. HIST. REV., II (Feb.) 1-25. [2760
Montarroyos, E. La question du Pacifique devant le droit international. Confer-
ence donnee a la Sorbonne le 12 juin 1919. Paris [Cahors: Imp. Coueslant] 79 p.
(Petite collection americaine) [2761
Regarding the Tacna-Arica dispute between Chile and Peru.
O'Leary, Daniel Florencio. Historia de la independencia americana; la emanci-
pacion del Peru, segun la correspondencia del general Heres con el libertador
(1821-1830). Madrid: Editorial- America. 495 p. (Biblioteca Ayachuco. . . .
[XL]) [2762
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July 1920) 753-754.
Paz Soldan, Mariano Felipe. Historia del Perd independiente (1822-1827).
Madrid: Editorial- America. 2 v. (Biblioteca Ayacucho. [XLIII-XLIV]) [2763
Originally appeared as the "2. periodo" of a more extended work with same title, pubUshed Lima,
1868-74. cf. BibUoteca peruana, v. I, p. 222.
Le Perou et les ''semaines de I'Am^rique latine." Paris. 44 p. port. (Petite
collection americaine) [2764
Describes the part taken by Peru in the "Semaines de I'Am^rique latine" of Paris and Bordeaux,
at the joint meetings of the Sorbonne and the Faculty de droit de la Gironde.
Contents.— Preface. La Semaine de Paris: Discours de M. F. Garcia Calderdn. Lettre addressee
h, "La Prensa" de Lima par M. C. Rey de Castro. La Semaine de Bordeaux: Discours de M. C. Rey
do Castro. Rapport sur la 3e Semaine de I'Am^rique latine par Eulogio del Solar, consul du P6rou
h, Bordeaux.
1919. 169
Iporras Troconis, Gabriel. San Martin en el Perii. Reforma soc, XIV (May)
32-41. [2765
iRey de Castro, Carlos. ^ El articulo iii del Tratado de Ancon, sinopsis cronologica.
Con prologode Francisco Garcia Calderon. Paris [Cahors: Impr. Coueslant] 311 p.
(Petite collection americaine) [2765a
Eegarding tlie treaty of Ancon, 1884, and the Tacna-Arica dispute.
iftey de Castro, Carlos. Le probleme du Pacifique. Paris [Cahors: Imp. Coueslant]
30 p. (Petite collection americaine) [2766
Concerned with the Tacna-Arica question.
Uruguay.
Sstrada, Dardo. Documentary sources for colonial history. Hispanic Am. hist.
REV., II (Nov.) 650-667. [2767
'Of importance, for the study of the growth of the national feeling in Uruguay, for the development
of institutions, and for local history." The larger part of the discourse is devoted to a sxumnary of the
documents in the Archivo de la Escribania de gobierno, at Montevideo.
[ontero Bustamente, Ratil. Bruno Mauricio de Zabala, the founder of Monte-
video. Inter-America, II (June) 272-279. [2768
Venezuela.
Iguado, Pedro de. Historia de Venezuela. Con prologo, notas y apendices por
1 Jeronimo Becker. Madrid: Est. tip. de J. Rates, 1918-19. 2 v. [2769
At head of title: Publicaciones de la Real academia de la historia.
Half-title: Segunda parte de la istoria que compuso fray Pedro de Aguado ... En el cual se trata
el descubrimiento y fundacion de la gouernacion y provincia de Uenencuela, con el descubrlmiento
de la isla Trenidad, y fundazion de la ciudad de Cartagena . . .
The first part of Aguado's historical work, the original ms. of which has title "Primera parte de la
recopilacion historial resolutoria de Sancta Marta y Nuebo Reyno de Granada de la Indias . . . was
pubushed at Bogota, 1906, with title " Recopilaci6n historial; escrita en el siglo xvi," and at Madrid,
1916-17, with title "Historia de Santa Marta y Nuevo Reino de Granada."
The second part ends with the death of Lope de Aguirre in 1561 .
jllvar, Sim6n. An address of Bolivar at the Congress of Angostura (February 15,
1819) Reprint ordered by the government of the United States of Venezuela, to
commemorate the centennial of the opening of the Congress (tr. from the original
Spanish by Francisco Javier Yanes) Washington, D. C.: Press of B. S. Adams.
39 p. port., pi., facsims. [2770
1 centenario del congreso de Angostura. Pan Am. union bol., XLVIII (Mar.)
1249-258. [2771
18 first centennial of the congress of Angostura. Pan Am. union bul., XLVIIl
(Mar.) 265-274. [2772
The second congress of the Provinces of Venezuela met in the city of Angostura, now Ciudad Bolivar,
EFeb. 15, 1919. It reastabhshed the independent government created by the first congress of 1811,
d laid the foimdations for a greater nation.
, js, A . Capitulos de la historia colonial d e Venez uela . Madrid : J . Pueyo . 23 7 p .
[2773
imprum, J. Painting in Venezuela. Pan Am. union bul., XLIX (Dec.) 621-640.
[2774
] English version of an article prepared in Spanish.
PACIFIC ISLANDS.
Hawaiian Islands. j
Freese, Ernest Irving. Hawaiian houses of other days. Art and archaeol., VI]'
(July) 215-224. [27^1
Scholefield, Guy H. The Pacific, its past and future; and The policy of the greji
powers from the eighteenth century. London: John Murray, xii, 346 p. map
[2771
A brief history of the policy of the great powers in the Pacific. i
Hawaii: p. 32-49.
Gowen, Herbert Henry. The Napoleon of the Pacific, Kamehameha the Greai
N. Y., Chicago [etc.] Revell. 326 p. plate, map. [277'
History of the Hawaiian king who at the close of the 18th century consohdated the Hawaiian grov'
of islands into a single monarchy. I
Gowen, Herbert Henry. The centenary of Kamehameha the Great. Wash, hisi!
QUAR., X (Apr.) 88-92. [277!
Philippine Islands.
Compania general de tabacos de Filipinas. Coleccion general de documentos relative!
a las islas Filipinas existentes en el Archivo de Indias de Sevilla; publicada per l!
Compania general de tabacos de Filipinas. Tomo II (1519). Barcelona: Impr. d'
la viuda de Luis Tasso. 359 p. [277,
1. 1, 1918. '
Rev. in: Hisp. Am. hist, rev., Ill (Nov. 1920) 581-584. I
Cunningham, Charles Henry. The audiencia in the Spanish colonies as illustrated
by the audiencia of Manila (1538-1800). Berkeley: University of California pressj
ix, 479 p. (Univ. of Cal. pub. in hist., v. IX) [2n\
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr. 1920) 507-509.
Fernandez, Leandro H. A brief history of the Philippines. Boston and N. Y.,
' Ginnandco. xiii, 337 p. illus., maps. [278'i
Kroeber, A. L. Peoples of the Philippines. N. Y. [American museum press] 224 pj
plates, maps. (American museum of natural history. Handbook series, no. 8) '
[278:
170
INDEX,
Abbatt, William, 1561.
Abbot, W. J., 1976.
Abbott, E. H., 1469.
F. M., 1300.
L. F., 1470-1472
. Lyman, 1473.
Abel, A. H., 210.
Abell, H. A., 1630.
L. P., 1630.
AbeU family, 1630.
Abenaki language, 222.
Abolition movement, 728; in Canada, 749, 750; in
the South, 748.
Abolitionists. See American colonization society.
Aboriginal America, antiquities, 161-209; a chron-
icle of, 455; Indians, 210-264; Mexico, Central
America, West Indies, and South America, 265-
374.
Aborigines, of Chile, 370; question of, in the law and
practice of nations, 1933. See also Indians, and
Man, prehistoric.
"EI Abra," rocks of, 291.
Acadia, 2419; history of, 2411; manuscripts relating
to, 2420. See also Forillon.
Acadiana, 2381, 2497.
Acoma, N. Mex., 1129.
Acosta, Jos4 de, 2698.
Adam, Leonhard, 211.
Adams, Abigail, 1293.
Brooks, 551.
Henry, 1305-1307
J. Q., 2057.
John, 1302.
Rev. John Qumcy, 2147.
R. M., 1308.
Samuel, 1302.
dams CO., O., 207.
jiAdams co.. Wis., 166.
Addison, John, 592.
Adelentado, Spanish colomal office of, 265L
Aeronautics, beginnings of, 700.
Aetna insurance company, 2020a.
Agan, J. E., 2612.
Agassiz, E. C, 1309.
A.ge societies of the Plains Indians, 211a.
A.gent, first Canadian, in London, 2466, 2477; pro-
vincial, of North Carolina, 606.
igents-general, Canadian, in London, 2401.
Agricultural company, Puget Sound, 1256.
Agricultural machinery, making of, 1979.
Agricultural papers of George Washmgton, 1587.
Agriculture, 1972, 1973, 1975; administration in Mis-
sissippi, 1961; collection of historical data relat-
ing to, 1973; economichistory of, 139; economic
history of, bibliography, 35a; Louisiana, 1720-
1766, 614; Montana, in its early period, 1975;
rice culture in South Carolina, 1213. See also
Farms, and Indigo culture.
59976°— 22 13
Aguado, Pedro de, 2769.
Aguilar, J. M., 2689.
Aguirre, Lope de, 2614, 2769.
Akeley, C. E., 1474, 1480.
Alabama, 866-872; admission to the Union, 100th
anniversary of, 868, 868-871.
Alabama, Centennial commission, 866.
"Alabama," Confederate cruiser, launching of, 814.
Alaska, and its problems, 1846; Catholic missions
in, 874; public documents relating to, 43; rein-
deer in, 873; Tlingit Indians of, 250.
Albany, N. Y., 1141, 1142; common council, min-
utes of, 1823, 1144; law to regulate theatrical
exhibitions in, 1823, 1144.
Albany co., N. Y., 1751.
"Albemarle," Confederate ram, 807.
Alberdi, J. B., 2693, 2723.
Alberta, Can., 2571.
Albig, W. E., 1988.
Albion, Mich., 1051.
Alcott, L. M., 1293, 2282.
Alden, H. M., 2283, 2301.
Alderman, E. A., 1445.
Alexander, D. S., 1578
H. B., 212.
J. W., 2248.
WilUam (Lord Stirling), 1309a.
Alexandria, Va., 1251.
Alexis, Riv. Phre, 2531.
— Joseph, 1081a.
Algeria, difficulties with, 1784-1810, 1872.
Algonquian Indians, 216, 248; fishing village, at
Cayuga, N. Y., 251; of central and western New
York, 252; pottery of, 258; wampum among, 254.
Alien and sedition laws of 1798, 712.
Allcott family, 1630a.
Allegheny co.. Pa., 1752.
AUeman, H. C, 2123.
J. G., 2152.
Allen, H. D., 758, 1353.
J. L., 1606, 2283.
Peter, 1197.
Almagro, Diego de, 379.
Almeida, Fernando de, 375.
"Alta California," newspaper, 891.
Altamira, Rafael, 75.
Alvarez, Eduardo, 2690.
Alvord, C. W., 914, 919.
Alzamora, Isaac, 2735.
Amazon river region, 2694.
America, discovery of, effect upon the nations of
Europe, 421; discovery of, evolution and
mystery in, 381; early accounts to 1600, 385, 386,
423; naming of, 377.
American academy of arts and letters, 2306.
American colonization society, 747.
American federation of labor, 2030,
American fur company, 1982.
171
172
INDEX.
American historical association, 92, 119; 32d annual
meeting, 76; Pacific coast branch, 77; Public
archives commission, 55.
American historical society, 1291.
American Uterary, scientific and military academy,
Norwich, Vt., 1308.
"American system," 1907.
Americana, in the John Carter Brown library, 4.
Americanism, the South and, 848; through Ameri-
can literature, 2273. See also National charac-
teristics and ideals.
Americanization, 499; bibliography of, 25; by class-
room practice, 90; program for schools, 104.
Americans buried in Paris, France, 516.
Amherst, Mass., 1001.
Amherstburg, British retreat from, ms, 714.
Amish Mennonites, 1150.
Amish settlement in Ontario, 2562.
Amsterdam, N. Y., 1786.
Amunategui, M. L., 2574.
Amyot, Jean, 2526.
Amyot Villeneuve, Mathieu, 2438.
Amyot Vincelotte, C. J., 2437.
Anabaptists, 551.
Anaheim, Cal., 884a.
Anahuac, ancient temples of, 298.
Anc6, le phe, 2520.
Ancon, treaty of, 1884, 2765a.
Anderson, C. F., 2250.
Kitty, 955.
Mrs. E., 1082.
Gen. Robert, 1310.
Anderson family, 1211.
Andes mountains, pre-Columbian civilization of,
328.
Andover, Mass., 1753.
Andover theology, 2070.
Andrews, C. L., 873.
C. M., 376, 520, 523a, 532, 1837, 1971.
F. D., 1105-1107, 1308.
M. P., 78, 501, 594, 760.
Andros regime in New England, 532.
Anglo-American colonies, beginnings of, 78. See
also English colonies.
Anglo-American diplomatic relations, during the
last half century, 1837; from 1861 to 1865, 814.
See also Great Britain, relations with the United
States.
Anglo-American entente, study of English history
in promoting, 103.
Anglo-American relations in commemoration of the
tercentenary of Sir Walter Raleigh, 1837.
Anglo-Saxon origin of American institutions, 1891.
See also EngUsh influence on American ideals
of justice, etc.
Anglo-Saxons. See English-speaking peoples.
Angostura, Congress of, 1819, 2770-2772.
Animals, in Indian mythology, 319; prehistoric, 340.
Ann Arbor, Mich., 1059.
Annapolis convention, 1604.
Annapolis, Md., 996, 999.
"Annual magazine subjeet index, 1918," 1.
Anthony, A. W., 2136.
S. B., 1302.
Anthropogeography, of Chile, 2738; of North Amer-
ica^ 455.
Anthropology, bibliography of, 34; Mexican, l\
tory of, 2653; of Florida, 204; of Guiana, 2j
of Peru and Bolivia, 204. See also Man, p
historic.
Anti-Catholic demonstration, 2083.
Antigua, white servants act of the colony of, 2674
Antilles, commerce between Quebec and, in 18il
2474; commerce with France, 2680; French c '
onization in, 2679; manuscripts relating to t
history of, 2420, 2681. See also West Indies.
Antillia, 380.
Antinomians, 551.
Antiquities, 161-209; public documents relating t
46; South American, 2704.
Anti-slavery movement, 752; in New England, 7Sl
See also Abolition movement, and Americii
colonization society.
Anti-slavery society of Canada, 749.
Apache Indians, 721; in the Southwest, I846-I8S
217; "medicine cords" of, 174.
Appleton, W. S., 838.
Aquidneck, R. I., 569.
Arawak Indians, 334, 352.
Arbitration, international, 1849; Venezuela, 1846. i
Arce, Agustin, 2635. \
E. J., 377, 378.
Archaeological maps of South America, 274.
Archaeology, Argentiue Republic, 345; biblioji
raphy of, 34; Colombia, 286; Curagao, 30J
Ecuador, 320; explorations in Arizona, 18i
"Manual of," 267; New England, 200; the Soutl
west, 190-192, 204; Utah, 181; Virgin Island:
275-277; Wisconsin, 166. See also Antiquitiejj
and Ruins, prehistoric. ',
Architects, Maryland and Virginia, 1792-1793, 2243;
Architectural competition, first important, 2243. '
Architecture, archaic, of New Mexico, 180; brick:
2232; colonial, 2234-2237, 2244-2246; Connectii
cut, 2236; in the United States, 2239; Long Is,
land, N. Y., 2244; mission-Pueblo, of New Mex|
ico, 1130; Nashville, Tenn., 1219; Old Chatham'
N. Y., 2235; old New England, 2246; prehistorici
357, 363; Salem, Mass., 2234.
Archives, federal, report on, 65; housing of, 60; Mary
land, 997; province of Quebec, 2367, 2436; rela
ing to the Philippine Islands, 2779; repairing
and binding of, 60; South American, 2695; Span
ish, relating to America, 2631, 2632; Uruguayan,
2767. See also Archivo general de Indias.
Archives and manuscript collections, 55-74.
Archivists, Conference of, December 27, 1916, 60.
Archivo general de Indias, Seville, 59, 71, 846, 2595,
2631, 2632, 2779. j
Arctic disaster of 1871, 832 j
Arctic explorers, 1301.
Arekun4 Indians, 314. j
Argentine Republic, 2717-2728; antiquities of, 321, j
345, 348; archives of, 2696; civil code of, 2714;
from 1835 until the end of the 19th century, 2596; J
geographical "relation" of, 16th century, 2621; |
Spanish conquest of, 407; Spanish government
in, 16th century, 2622; United States merchant
ships at, 1801-1808, 1977. See also Rio de la
Plata, vice-royalty of.
Arica, Chile, 370, 371.
I
INDEX.
173
Aristocracy in the politics of New York, decline of,
1911.
Arizona, archaeological explorations, in, 182, 204;
Cathohc church in, 3114; Catholic ecclesiastical
jurisdiction in, Spanish period, 2106; prehistoric
ruins in, 205; Spanish beginnings of, 617; story
of, 875.
Arkansas, Catholic mission in, 1831 to 1840, 2090;
history of, 876.
Aries, Henri d', 839,2419.
Armas, Jos6 de, 2717.
Armbruster, E. L., 1133.
Armenians in America, 2058.
Armor. See Breast-plates.
Arms. See Heraldry.
Armstrong, John, 623.
Robert, 1311.
S.C, 2211
T. H., 1002, 1003.
\rmy, Confederate, 769, 785, 798, 817-819; of north-
ern Virginia, 785.
Vrmy, Revolutionary, 665, 666, 681.
\.rmy, U. S., during the Civil war, nativity of sol-
diers in, 799; General staff, Historical branch,
148; heroes of, 1825. See also Military history.
Militia, and Regimental histories. Civil war.
Irnold, Benedict (1741-1801), 632a.
Benedict (1615-1678), 1312.
H. v., 1158a.
.mold's expedition to Quebec, 177§, 1561.
.roostook war, 1839, 991.
rsandaux, H., 286.
rt, aboriginal American, masterpieces of, 177;
Indian beadwork, 262; Indian quill work, 246;
of the ancient Chiriquians, 327; Porto Rican pre-
historic, 304; Mexican prehistoric, 268, 269, 299;
prehistoric, 170, 268, 269, 299, 304, 374. See also
Fine arts,
rthur, S. C, 962.
rtifacts, prehistoric, 189, 305. See also Implements,
I prehistoric.
j-tillery at the battle of Gettysburg, 1209.
tists, American, from 1755 to 1785, 2242. See also
Fine arts, biography, and Painters,
uba, archaeology of, 308.
|he, S. W., 761.
hley, R. L., 152, 822.
hley river, S . C ., 1215, 1216.
hluslay Indians, 333.
pinall, A. E., 2667.
sociation of history teachers, 106.
tor, J. J., 1302.
toria. Fort, restoration of, 1818, 715.
sronomy, 2360; knowledge of the Indians of Mex-
ico regarding, 316; of the Codex Nuttall, 315.
talante," French armed frigate, 531.
dnson, A. M., 462.
— G. W., 1262.
M. J., 1108.
jfdnson. Fort, Nebr., 1097.
tlantic monthly," 2268.
tlas America Latina," 2575.
^ aospheric phenomenon in Quebec, in 1785, 2500.
ocities. See War horror,
torney's test oath," 908.
.^I'ood, H. P., 1892.
)urn. Me., 1754.
Auclair, E. J., 2366, 2499.
Audet, F. J., 2367, 2500.
Audienciain the Spanish colonies, 2615.
Aulnay-Charnisay, Charles de Menou, sieur d', 2411.
Aulneau, J. P., 2435.
Aurner, C. R., 79.
Austin's colony, Texas, 1230.
Authors, New world, of the early 17th century, 2613;
Pittsburgh, 1201; Spanish American, 2580, 2693-
Virginia, 2277. See also Literary history, bi;
ography, and Poets.
Authors' association, Michigan, 1057.
Authorship, money returns of, 2260.
Autographs of leading citizens of New York, 1799,
1134.
Automobile industry, 1979.
Avery, S. P., 1622.
Avery family, 1622.
Avila, Pedro Arias de, 379.
Ayacucho, Peru, battle of, 18^4, 2708.
Aylett, William, 630.
Aztalan, Wis., prehistoric earth works at, 196.
Aztecs, rain god of, 367; ruins of, 187, 188; woman
among, 355.
Babcock, C. A., 1176.
W. H., 380.
Backes, W. J., 1458.
Bacot, T. W., 608.
Badia Malagrida, Carlos, 2576.
Bagby, Edward, 1313.
Bagley, C. B., 70.
W. C, 463.
Bagot, Sir Charles, 2469.
BagweU, Alexander, 762.
Bahamas, antiquities of, 309.
Bahia, fabled silver mines of, 2612.
Bahuet, Andr^, 2577.
Bailey, C. S., 442.
BaUy, J. L., 1177.
Bainbridge, L. S., 763.
Baird, H. S., 1265.
Baker, W. K., 1324.
Bakersfield, Vt., 1755.
Balboa, Vasco Nunez de, 412, 1301.
Balch, Benjamin, 2153.
E. S.,381.
G. W., 2153.
Baldensperger, Fernand, 2333.
Baldwin, Abraham, 1304.
S.E., 1314, 1947.
Simeon, 1314.
Balfour, Henry, 213.
Ball, D. H., 1315.
F. K., 465.
John, 430.
Wilham, 585.
BaU throwing, prehistoric, 321.
Ballou, Hosea, 2154.
Baltimore, Md., 998; passage of sixth Massachu-
setts regiment through, 1861, 760.
Bamford, E. M., 1817.
Bancroft, E. A., 915.
BandeUer, F. R., 2613.
Banham, Arthur, 2334.
Bank, Mechanics, of Trenton, N. J., 2022; of the
Manhattan company, 1134; of the United States,
second, 701, 736, 1907.
174
Il^DEX.
Banking system, national, 2023.
Bankruptcy law, 2025.
Bannon, John, 774.
Baptist church, Chester, Pa., 2079a.
Baptists, 2078, 2079; in Livingston cc, 111., 918:
missionary in Oregon, 1172.
Bar, Marion co.,Ind.., 949; New Mexico, in territorial
days, 1128; West Virginia, 1262.
Barbados, slave trade with, 2675; success of, 2669.
Barbagelata, H. D., 2692.
Barber, M. J., 2113.
Sister Mary Josephine, 2113.
Barbers Mountain, N. H., Indian fight on, 538.
Barbour, Francis, 1316.
Barce, Elmore, 214, 1989.
Barcos, J. R.,2693.
Bard, T.R. ,875a.
Bargy, Henry, 2076.
Barker, E.G., 1230.
Barlow, Joel, 1317.
Barnard, Henry, 2212.
Job, 898, 1705.
Barney, Joshua, 1318.
Barnstable co., Mass., 1756.
Barnum, Francis, 874.
Barratt, N. S.,2038.
Barret, Charles, 963.
S. A., 161, 215.
Barretto, Tobias, 2731.
Barrey, Philippe, 652, 2679.
Barrie, Robert, 2548.
Barrie, Ont., 2548.
Barth, Silas, 2080.
Bartlett, I. S., 1286.
M. G.,1178.
T.H.,1419.
Bartlett family, 1631, 1632.
Barton, A. O., 1266.
Clara, 1298, 1302.
J.E.,162.
Thomas, 1179.
W.M.,899.
W. P. C, 1319, 2361.
W.W.,2167.
Basketry of the Chitimacha Indians, 240.
Basques in America, 2699.
Bassett famUy, 1633.
Bastide, Charles, 443-447, 1292, 1608, 1937, 1938, 1966,
1967,2069,2169,2256.
Batault, Georges, 2257.
Batchellor, A. S.,537.
Batchelor, George, 2190.
Bates, G. W., 1315.
L. P., 1674.
W.N.,1326.
Bathrick, E. R., 1320.
Battle, K.D., 1399.
Battles, Civil war, 765, 766, 780, 782, 789, 790, 796,
804, 805; Revolutionary, 627, 674, 687, 690.
Bauer, P. P., 2694.
Bauer-Thoma, Wilhelm, 265.
Baum, Friedrich, 626.
Loretta, 2729.
Bayard family, 1624.
Bay State historical league, 97.
Beadwork, Indian, 262.
Beanes, William, 1321.
Beard, C. A., 463.
Beasley, D. L., 877.
Beatty, J. M., 1706.
Beaubien, F. G., 916.
Beaubien family, 916.
Beaud6, Henri, 839.
Beaudouin, Gustave, 2501.
Beauharnois, Francois de, 2440.
Beaulieu, J. A., 2502.
Beaumarchais, P. A. C. de, and the American revt
lution, 640, 652; papers of, 72. i
Beauregard, Gen. G. T., 764, 1322, 1323. |
Beck, H.H., 653. j
J. M., 1893.
Becker, Carl, 654, 1305. I
Becker, Jer<5nimo, 611, 2769.
Bedford, G. R., 1180.
J. R.,431.
Bedwell, E. E. A., 521.
Beers, H. A., 1475, 2280.
Bek, W. G., 1068, 1069.
Belain d'Esnambuc, Pierre, 2679.
Belden family, 1634.
Belding, Lyman, 1324.
Belfast, Me., 1756a.
Belknap, P. H., 2284.
Bellangerais, M. de la, 637.
Bellevue, Nebr., 1082.
BeUingham, Mass., 1027.
Beloit, Wis., 165.
Belting, P. E., 2178.
Benalcazar, Sebastian, 419.
Benavides, Alonso de, 17.
Benbury, Thomas, 1325.
Benden, Edwin, 918.
Benedetti, Anna, 2328.
Bennett, EsteUine, 2253.
H.E., 906.
WeUs, 2243.
Bennett family, 1635.
Benning, H. L., 910.
Bennington, Vt., expedition to, 1777, 626.
Benson, A. B., 1838.
E. L., 1635a.
Benson family, 1635a.
Bentley, William, 1004.
Bepler, D. W., 878.
Beranger, Jean, 259.
Berger, F. P., 2249.
Bering, Vitus, 1301.
Berkley, H. J., 1586.
Berkshire Hills, Mass., historical scenes in, 1028.
Bermuda, early map of, 416.
Berne, Switzerland, 1194.
Bemey , Antonio, 2702.
Bertrand, Camille, 2376.
Berwick, Me., 1757.
"Bethel," ship, 526.
Bethune, M. M., 1294.
Beuchat, Henri, 267.
Beuckman, Frederick, 612.
Beveridge, A. J., 1432.
Beverly, Mass., 561, 1031.
Beverwyck, N. J., 1112.
Beyer, Hermann, 267-270.
BibUography, 1-47; South American, 2716i
Biddle, Clement^ 1199.
INDEX.
175
Biddle, E. W., 1463.
Edward, 2191, 2228.
Nicholas, 701, 1326, 2191.
Bidwell,A.E.K., 1326a.
John, 892, 1326a.
M.C.,464.
Bleber, R. P., 522.
Bien, Morris, 1970.
Bienville, J . B. Le Moyne de, 872.
"Big business," age of, 1979. See also Capital, mas-
ters of.
Bigotry, social, 1144.
Billy, la famine de, 2474.
Bingham, Hiram, 293.
Biographic history, syllabus for, 130.
Biography, Canadian, 2375; comprehensive, 1291-
1304; Danvers, Mass., 1039; educational, 2210-
2227; fine arts, 2250-2254; individual, 1305-1619;
literary, 2280-2353; Louisiana, 977; Maine, 984;
North Carolina, 1157; of national leaders, for
children, 456; of the bishops of the Catholic
church, sources for, 15; of the founders of the
colonies, 523; Oregon, 1174; public documents
relating to, 44; religious, 2152-2168; "Venango
CO., Pa., 1176.
Blrket-Smith, Kaj . , 216 .
Bishop, J. B., 1476, 1530.
Bispham, C. W., 964, 965.
Bixby,G.S.,702.
Blackwater river, Va., operations on, 1862, 768.
Blaine, J. G., 1302; and Pan-Americanism, 1846.
Blaisdell, A. F., 465.
Blake,H.N., 692, 2192.
Blanco-Fombona, Rufino, 2705, 2706, 2718, 2719.
Blegen,T.C.,2050.
Blizzard i-n Dakota, in 1880, 842.
Blockade, in the Napoleonic wars, and the United
States, 1860; of Cuba, Spanish American war,
! 1846.
Blockade running in the Civil war, 775.
JBlomquist, M. C, 80.
Elount, Bertha, 217, 721.
ode, Klaudius,271.
odfish, A. W., 1005.
Boening, R. M., 1254.
Bogota, Colombia, 419.
Bohemians in Nebraska, 1089.
Bolas,321.
Bolinder,Gustaf,272.
Bolivar, Simon, 2585, 2690, 2699, 2705, 2706, 2770; in
Peru, 2757.
Bolivia, anthropological work in, 204; antiqmties,
334, 366; history of, 2596; Indians of, 333-335,
t354.
olio, L. C, 273, 2695.
olton, C. K., 523.
-H. E.,427,617,879.
- R. P., 655, 656. *
Jolton family, 1624.
ioman, Eric, 274, 345.
Jompard, Jacques, 2289.
Jonaire, archaeology of, 308.
ionclfere, Jean, 1336.
iond, B. W.,81, 523a, 657, 1971.
Jone, H. A., 82.
?one clattering, ancient Mexican cult, 358.
Jones, prehistoric human, 203.
Bonham, M. L., 966.
Boimey, A. F., 162a.
Boone, Daniel, 1301.
Booth, Edwin, 1327
J. W., 1328.
Booy, Theodoor de, 275-278, 382, 383, 2614, 2664.
Borah, W. E., 1840.
Border troubles with Mexico, 1848-1860, 740.
Borglum, Gutzon, 2251.
Bosc, R., 2258.
Boss, the political, 1916. ^
Boston, Eng., 539.
Boston, Mass., Brimmer school, 1032; Bums cente-
nary, 1869, 1012; Charlestown men In the service
during the Civil war, 1038; Church of the New
Jerusalem, 2116; early Sunday schools In, 2075;
evacuation by the British, medal struck in
honor of, 1598; first public mass In, 2089;
French church in, in 1690, 558; a gentlewoman
of, 17J,2-1805, 1043; inhabitants of, in 1664, 568;
letters from British officers in, 1774-1775, 646;
merchants and sea captains of old Boston, 1036;
Old South church, 1006, 1007; petitions of, 1664,
568; present of a memorial from Boston, Eng.,
539; prisoners in jail, in 1713, 565.
Boston public library, 539, 2033.
Botanists, two southern, 2364.
Botany, history of, 2360. See also Plants.
Boucher, C. S., 722.
J. N., 1992.
Boucher dela Bruere, Montarville, 2454.
Boudinot, Ellas, 624.
Bouffard, Jean, 2503, 2504.
Boundary, international, Niagara Falls as part of,
1146; northeast, proposal to resettle, 2388a;
northwest, 742.
Boundary dispute, between Chile and Peru, 2735,
2744, 2746; northeastern, 723; Oregon, 705, 706,
742.
Botmdary treaty. South America, Spanish-Portu-
guese, 2702.
Bourbonniere, Avila, 2505.
Bourchemin, sieur de, 2430.
Bourgeois, Marguerite, 2508.
Bourlamaque, F. C, chevalier ^q, 2406.
Bourne family, 1636.
Bouterone, Claude de, 2440.
Bow and arrow, Indian, 347.
Bowen, E. W., 2287, 2295, 2298, 2335.
Bowes, L. T., 2566.
Bowman, G. E., 1623, 1635, 1637, 1671, 1682, 1683,
1697, 1707, 1719, 1730, 1747.
Boxer rebellion. See China relief expedition.
B oyaca, battle of, 1819, 2709, 2747-2750.
Boyd, John, 2455,2480.
W. K., 1154, 1157, 2296.
Boynton, P. H., 2259, 2336.
Bracklin, James, 1267.
Bradbeer, W. W., 1155.
Bradford, Ephraim, 1637.
Gamaliel, 1293, 2282, 2294.
William, 540.
Bradford, Wis., 1277.
Bradford's "History of Plymouth plantation," loss
and return of, 550.
Bradlee,F. B.C., 1993,
Bradley, John, 1329.
176
INDEX.
Bradsher, E. L., 2260, 2300.
BradweU, I. G., 765-767.
Brainerd, Lawrence, 1337.
BramhaU, F. D., 505.
Branchburg, N. J., 1109.
Brand, W. F., 2155.
Brandow, J. H., 658.
Branford, Conn., 896.
Brathwaite, W. S., 2254.
Bratton, S. T., 107U.
Brawley, Benjamin, 1294,2051.
Bray, R. V., 2532.
Brazil, 2729-2732; colonizing enterprise in, 1554-
1559, 2623; discovery and colonization of, 2596;
French colony in, 1555, 2073; Indians of, 271;
life in, to the middle of the 18th century, 2711;
pan-Americanism in, prior to the declaration
of Monroe, 1885; politics and government, 2576.
Breastplates, prehistoric, 286.
Breithaupt, W. H., 2533,2534.
Brereton, John, 1638.
Brereton family, 1638.
Breton, A. C, 279-281.
Brevard, CM., 906.
Brewer, Me., 983.
Brick architecture, colonial, 2232.
Bridge, Saint John suspension, 2489.
Briggs, J. E.,1381,1953.
Brigham, C.S.,3.
Brimmer school, Boston, Mass., 1032.
Brinkley, W.C.,1231.
Brisay, Jacques-Ren6, 2447.
Brissenden, P. F., 2031.
Brissot de Warville, J. P., 432,
Bristol, T. H., 1814.
British, ambassador to the U. S., letter of, Mar. 29,
1846, 730; industry, and the American embargo
of 1807, 1985; military camps in New York,
Revolutionary war, 655, 656; naval officers in
Ontario, a century ago, 2548; officers in Boston,
letters of, 1774-1775, 646; readers, American his-
tory written for, 458. See also English, and
Great Britain.
British America, 1763 to 1867, 2454; 1867 to 1919,
2480-2486; discovery to 1763, 2406-2453; general,
2366-2405; Oregon boxmdary, 705, 706, 742; re-
gional history, 2487-2572; War of 1812, 2478, 2479.
British and American relations . See Great Britain,
relations with the United States.
British empire, Canada and, 2401, 2469, 2486; colo-
nial poUcy of, 2395; the colonies and, 668; effect
of the loss of the American colonies upon, 648;
growth of, study of, 130a; Raleigh's contribu-
tion to the founding of, 396. See also British
imperialism, British West Indies, and Great
Britain.
British Guiana, 2733, 2734.
British Honduras, Maya ruins in, 323.
British imperialism, in North America, 524. See
also British empire.
British North America act, 2391.
British West Indies, 2666-2675.
Britton, R.J. ,1071.
Broadalbin, N. Y., 1786.
Brockway family, 1639.
Bronson, W.C.,2261.
Bronx, New York city, 2288.
Brooke, W. E., 1587.
Brookline, Mass., 1758.
Brooklyn, N. Y., Ferry road, 1133.
Brooks, M. M., 83.
PhiUips, 2156.
Brough, John, 1330.
Broussard, R. F., 1331.
Brown, A. S., 1113.
C. E.,163,164.
Edward, 1429.
G. T., 1640.
Gen. Jacob, 1332.
John, raid of, 732.
Noah, 1642.
P. W., 1994, 2193.
Stuart, 613.
W.L.,218.
Brown family, 1641, 1642.
Brown university, John Carter Brown library,
second president of, 2217.
Browne, B.B., 591.
Charles Farrar, 2284, 2285.
John, 1641.
Bruce's Cross Roads, N. C, 1158.
Briickbauer, Frederick, 2119.
Brush, E. H., 1403, 1617.
Brut6, Bishop, 2087.
Buchanan, James, papers of, 72.
Buchwald, Otto von, 282.
Buck, Gertrude, 5.
Buckham, J. W., 2070.
Budd, Henry, 1181.
BueU,I.M.,165. j
Buenos Aires, Argentina, British capture andlosf
of, 2702; United States merchant ships at, 1801-1
1808, 1977. I
"Buffalo Bill," 1344.
Buffalo Cross Roads, Pa., 2140b.
Buffalo sweat lodge, Indian, 233.
Buffington, A. H., 524.
Joseph, 1894.
Buildings, historic,Philadelphia, 1184; Washing-j
ton, D. C, 903, 904. See also Houses, historic
Buley, R. C, 743.
Bull, J. H., 1642.
John, 1333, 1642.
Bull genealogy, 1642.
BuUer, A. H. R., 2368.
Bullitt, A. S., 957.
Biilnes, Gonzalo, 2757.
Bunnell, A. H., 1160.
Bimson, Alfred, 1278.
Burbank, A. S., 1008.
Bureau of American ethnology, U. S., 41.
Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, TJ. S., i
120, 2589. ;
Burgoyne, John, 625, 626; instructions for the ex- '
pedition to Bennington, Vt., in 1777, 626; sur- ,
render to Gates, 625. '
Bm-goyne campaign, 1777, 658. i
Burgundy, colonists from, in New France, 2450. j
Burial customs. /See Embalming. j
Burial grounds, Indian, 169, 186, 278; Pittsburgh's ;
first, 1187; pre-Columbian, in Chile, 332. See j
also Cemetery.
Burnes, David, 900.
Burnet, E., 2170.
«
INDEX.
177
Burnet, WMttier, 1588.
Burnett, E. C, 1895.
J. J., 2078.
Burns, Lee, 940.
Burns centenary in Boston, 1859, 1012.
Burpee, L. J., 1841, 2369, 2370, 2567.
Burr, Aaron, 632a, 1333a, 1334; trial of, 703.
Horace, 1815.
Burrage, H. S., 723.
Burrill, E. M., 1009.
Burroughs, John, 1478, 1480, 2286.
Burwash, Armon, 2371.
Buschan, Georg, 284.
Bushnell, D. I., jr., 219, 220.
Horace, 2070.
Business,ageof "big," 1979; American ideals in, 505;
in Philadelphia in 1739, 585. See also Capital,
masters of, Commerce, and Merchants.
Butler, David, 1083.
H. L., 1642a.
John, 627.
Butler family, 1642a.
Butte CO., Cal., 892.
Butts, A. B., 1066.
Buxton settlement, Ont., 2559.
Bye, G. T., 1453.
Byrd, William, 595.
Cabeza de Vaca. See Niinez Cabeza de Vaca.
Cabinet, Confederate, 815.
Cabinet-maker, a colonial, 2240.
Cable, G. W., 2287.
Cabot, John, 1296, 1301.
— Sebastian, 1301.
Caciques, 406.
Cadiz, Real academia hispano americana de cien-
cias y artes de, 2601.
CahoMa, HI., 612, 2092.
[Caillou, island of, 971.
Cairns,W.B., 2307, 2337.
Calder6n, Ignaeio, 1878.
Caldwell, G. F., 32.
Calendar, an Eskimo week, 213; Maya, 302, 324;
of the Indians north of Mexico, 167.
Oalhoun, A. W., 2044.
J. C, 1302.
California, 877-895; aboriginal pottery from, 172;
Catholic ecclesiastical jurisdiction in, Spanish
period, 2106; Cortes and, 384; county archives
of, 56, 57, 61; Drake's exploration along the
coast, 404; filibusters of, 729; first woman poet
I of, 2326; gold discoverer in, 1431; a great Fran-
ciscan in, 2082; history, literature of, 9; history
1 cm-riculum, 84; Indians of, 204; Mexican
war in, 744; missions in, in 1815, 249; Onate ex-
pedition to, 160^, 427; Spanish beginnings of,
617; Spanish press of, 11; Spanish regime in,
879; state rights editor in, 1862-1863, 793; voy-
age of Juan P6rez to, in 1774, 428.
alifornia, Dept. of public instruction, 84.
alifornia. Historical survey commission, 56, 57.
alifornia. Lower. See Lower California.
! California," name, origin of, 883.
alifornia. University of, 2194.
alliferes, chevalier de, 2441.
Cambridge history of American literature," 2255.
j|ambridge, Mass., 551; George Washington in, 1040.
Cameron, A. K., 2481.
D. M., 2534a.
Camp, D. N., 2212.
Campbell, David, 1329.
Duncan, 2134.
Jane, 1182.
Camps, British, in the Revolution, 655, 656.
Canaan, N. Y., 1759.
Canada, abolition movement in, 749, 750; adminis-
trative system of, 2388; agent of, in London,
1766-1768, 2466, 2477; and the British empire,
2469, 2486; and the Pacific, 2394; anti-slavery
society of, 749; as part of the British empire,
2395; attempt to reconquer, in the American
revolution, 670; bibliography of the history of,
14; Confederation of, 2471, 2528; constitution of
1791, 2461; disarmament agreement with the
United States, 1817, 1847; governor of, 1685-1689,
2447; governors general of, 1839 to 1854, 2469;
history, since the close of the French regime,
2374, 2396; history, study of, 159; history, writ-
ings on, 1917, 14; Indians of, 258; International
joint conomission between Canada and the
United States, 1841; Iroquois in, 258; legal profes-
sion in, 2392; military and naval forces of, 2456;
official agents of, in London, 2401; oldest British
settlement in, 2566; politics and government,
2388, 2391, 2401, 2457, 2459, 2461, 2466, 2467, 2469,
2471, 2475, 2479a, 2481, 2482, 2484r-2486, 2528, 2554,
2555; poUtics and government, French regime,
2427, 2429, 2440; provincial constitutions of,
2391; rebellion of, 1837-8, 2473, 2541; relations
with the United States since 1817, 1847, 1877;
self-government, 1839-1864, 2469; slavery in,
754, 755; under British rule, history of, 2458;
Washington and, 688. See also British Amer-
ica.
Canadian aboriginal canoes, 206.
Canadian- American friendship, 156.
Canadian Indians, sun dance of, 231.
Canadian nationality, 2373.
Canals, early, 1992; in the state of Washington,
1254; interoceanic, 2663; Pennsylvania, 1196.
Cancer, Luis, 1296.
Cannon, Miles, 843.
Mrs. J. S., 1467.
Cannon family, 929.
Csuion, sieur, 2443.
Canoes, aboriginal, 206.
Cap Rouge river. Que., 2474.
Capital, masters of, 2024.
Capitol building, U. S., 903; designer of the wings
of, 2250.
Cap6-Rodriguez, Pedro, 1842.
Capstick, J. H., 1335.
Captains of industry, 1979.
Caribbean, United States problems in the, 1846.
See also Spanish Main.
Carleton, Guy, 2457.
Carlyle, 111., 936.
Carman, T. D., 1479, 1486.
Carman family, 1629.
Carnegie, Andrew, 1302, 1336-1339.
Carnegie institution of Washington, Dept. of his-
torical research, 85.
Carney, Andrew, 1340.
Carnochan^ Janet, 2535.
178 INDEX.
Caroline CO., Va., 1243.
Caron, Ivanhoe, 426, 2409.
Max, 659.
Carr^, Ezekiel, 558.
Carroll, Charles, 1341.
D.H.,2229.
Carson, H. L., 583a, 660.
Cartagena, English attack on, 1741, 2641, 2643.
Carter, C. E., 87.
R. G., 1232.
Cartier, Sir G. E., 2455, 2465, 2475, 2499.
Jacques, 422, 1301, 2446, 2453.
James, 1296.
Cartographer, an early Spanish, 401.
Cartography, early American, 416; of America,
1492 to 1543, 2626. See also Maps.
Carton, A. C, 86.
Carver, Jonathan, 1301.
Caiy family, 1643.
Casas, Bartolome de las, 1296.
Cass, Lewis, 704, 1053.
Castles, prehistoric, in Colorado, 171.
Catawba Indians, 204.
Catholic church, 2080-2115; as a factor in early
Spanish colonial government, 2615; bishops of,
biographies of, 15; in Canada, 2486; in Green-
land in the Middle Ages, 184; in Louisiana
during the Spanish regime, 964; in Missouri,
archives of, I8I4-I868, 58; in Ontario, 2551; in
the island of San Domingo, 2686; in the Prov-
ince of Quebec, 2529; in the United States, out-
line for the history of, 476; missions in Alaska,
874; pioneer priest in the Illinois country, 864;
schools, history of the United States for, 482;
schools, text-book for, 1296. .
Catholic colony, first successful western, 708.
"Catholic encyclopedia," 6.
Cathohc historical society of St. Louis, 58.
Catholic history, bibliography of, 6.
Cathohc literary New York, 1 800-1 84O, 2276.
Catholics, first governor of New York, 1352; heroes of
Illinois, 921; in the Union army, 799; women of
Illinois, 931. See also Ursulines.
Catonsville, Md., 995, 2129.
CatsMll, N. Y., 1760.
Cattle raising in the West, 2004.
Caucus, destruction of, in 1824, 736.
Caudebec family, 1650.
Caullery, M., 2170.
Cavalry leaders. Confederate, 818.
Cavelet, Jean, sieur du Hertelay, 2679.
Caye, Roger, 2230,
Cayuga, N. Y., 251.
Cedar Creek, Va., battle of, I864, 765.
Cejador y Franca, J., 2580.
Celebrations, historical, of the founding of New
Orleans, 963; 125th anniversary of the incorpo-
ration of Pittsburgh as a borough, 1183. See
also Centennial celebrations, and Pilgrim ter-
centenary.
Celts used by the Indians, 164.
Cemetery inscriptions. See Regional genealogy,
vital records, etc.
Cemetery, pre-Columbian, in Chile, 332. See also
Burial grounds.
Censer, a prehistoric, 322.
I
Centennial, Missouri's, 1076; of the Ohio statj
library, 2035. 1
Centennial celebrations, Alabama, 866, 868-871
first meeting of the General assembly of Con I
necticut, 1947; Illinois, 923; Indiana, 945; 0
the Saginaw Indian treaty of 1819, 1053; West
field, Mass., 1011a, 1029.
Central America, ancient ruins of, 303; antiquities
302, 315, 322, 323, 325, 339, 351, 374; antiquities I
bibliography of, 35; atlas of, 2575; confederatioi 1
of, 2576; discovery and colonization, 407; Inj
dians of, relationsliip terms of, 279; Maya cul j
tureof,302; mythology of, 315; native language
of, 279; republics of, 2596; Spanish conquerors',
in, 412; travel in, 17th century, 2642. i
Central Pacific railroad, 2011. \
Centre de estudios americanistas, Seville, Spain, j
2595.
Ceramic art, prehistoric, 299. See also Pottery. 1
Ceramics, prehistoric Porto Rican, 304. See alsc\
Pottery. |
Ceremonials, Indian, 233; Diegueno ceremony olj
the death images, 221; the Wintun-Hesi cere-i
mony, 215. See also Magic. I
Cervera, Admiral, 837. j
Cervera Bariera, Julio, 833.
Cestre, Charles, 502, 503.
"Chac," Maya rain-god, 367.
Chamberlain, B. P., 2222.
E.M.,433.
Chambers, J. W., 648.
Champigny, Jean-Bochart de, 2440, 2474.
Champlain, Samuel de, 1301; assault on the Onei-i
das, 1615, 242a. i
Champlain Valley, pioneer of, 702.
Chandler, Albert, 1925. «
C. L., 151, 1619, 1977, 2736.
Channing, Edward, 467, 448.
Chantail, Henry de, 2679. ,
Chapais, Thomas, 2374.
Chapin, H. M., 7, 8, 1203.
Chaplain, C. T., 768.
Chaplin, W. E., 1287. |
Chapman, C. E., 9, 59, 384, 882, 883, 2082, 2696.
E. T., 88.
J. J., 1407.
Character, American, 506. See also National
characteristics and ideals.
Charities, American law of, 1935. See also Philan-
thropy.
Charleston, S. C. 753, 1217, 1761, 1762, 2064.
Charlestown, Mass., 1038, 2083.
Charlestown, N. Y., 1786.
Charlesworth, Hector, 2375.
Charlevoix, P. F. X. de, 2413.
Charlottesville, Va., 844.
Charnwood, Lord, 1408. ■
Charpentier, John, 1394. 1
Charter, of Pennsylvania, genesis of, 583a; of the col- I
ony of Massachusetts, 532.
Chase, Ebenezer, 2067. i
Jacob, 1204. I
S. P., 1342. i
Samuel, 632a. I
W. M., 2248. I
Chastellux, F. J., marquis de, 432. \
INDEX.
179
Chatham, Ont., 2532, 2539, 2547.
Chatham Center, N. Y., 2235.
Chelsea, N. Y., 1138.
Chemist, an early American, 1347.
Chemistry, history of, 2360; in old Philadelphia,
2363.
"Chenango country," N. Y,, 2147.
Cheney, A. L., 1481.
J. S., 1303.
Cherokee Indians, 1229.
Chesson, W. H., 814.
Chester, Pa., 2079a.
Chesterton, Cecil, 449.
. G. K., 449.
Chibcha Indians, 318.
Chicago, 111., 928; antiquities of, 183; Catholic
churchin, 2086, 2087.
Chicago road, the old, 214.
Chicago trail, the old, 1989.
Chickasaw Bluffs, De Soto at, 239.
Chickasaw Nation, 239.
Chickering family, 1644.
Chiefs, Indian, 261.
Child, L. M., 2352.
Robert, 559.
Cliildren's plays, Alabama history, 868-872.
Chile, 2735-2746; aborigines of, 370, 371; antiquities
of, 332, 370, 371; archives of, 2696; at the begin-
ning of the 19th century, 2702; controversy
with Peru over Tacna-Arica, 2735, 2737; history
of, 2596; navy of, American captain serving in,
1619; Santiago, at the end of the 18th century,
2702; Spanishconquestof, 2596; war with Peru,
j 1879-1882, 2741.
1 China relief expedition, 1904, 895a.
1 China. See Oriental policy of the United States.
IChinard, Gilbert, 504, 2262.
I Chinese world map of Father Ricci, 395.
Chippewa Indians, 204, 704.
Chiriqui, Panama, 325.
jiChiriquians, 327.
jchitimacha Indians, 240.
Choctaw Indians, 204.
Ilchoroti Indians, 333.
ilChrisman, L. H., 2308.
Christian, J. T., 1395.
S. L., 1232a.
Christianity in the Oregon coimtry, 850.
Christophers family, 1645.
'The Chronicles of America," 146, 412.
Chronology, Maya, 323; of the cultures of the South-
I west, 208; of the prehistoric civilizations of
Peru, 331. See also Calendar.
Ohrnig, Henry, 1843.
l^hurch, and state, in the Spanish American col-
onies, 2615; in Greenland in the Middle ages,
184.
'hurch music, in Montreal, 2513.
'hurch of England, bishop of Quebec, 1892 to 1914,
2512.
hurch of the New Jerusalem, 2116.
Jhurch plate, early Connecticut, 2249.
'hurch records. See Regional genealogy, vital
records, etc.
Jhurches, historic, 558, 1006, 1007, 1129, 1188, 2501;
in Quebec, 2501; in the United States, 2069;
Church of baptised bretherin, Royalton, Vt.;
1242a; Chm-ch of San Jos6 de Acoma, N. Mex.,
1129; first church in western Pennsylvania,
1188; French church in Boston, in 1690, 558; Old
South church, Boston, 1006, 1007; St. Thomas'
Protestant Episcopal church of Washington
CO., Pa., 1188. See also Religious history,
particular denominations.
Cibola, fabled cities of, 393.
Cincinnati, O., 726; pioneer life in, 1164.
Citizenship, Committee on education for, 92; teach-
ing of, 152; training for, in Iowa, 79.
Civic education, the newer, 99.
Civics, course of study in, 84, 152; instruction in
Iowa, 79; teaching of, 149, 492; teaching of,
effects of the World war on, 89; text-book of,
488. See also Citizenship, and Civil govern-
ment.
Civil government, high school texts in, 91; in Flor-
ida, 906; in the Old Northwest, organization of,
841; outline of, 468; study of, 129; teaching of,
106. See also Citizenship, Civics, and Politics
and government.
Civil Uberty in colonial Massachusetts, 551.
Civil service, American history for candidates for,
479; reform movement, 1939.
Civil war, Charlestown, Mass., men in service dur-
ing, 1038; effect on science and scientists of the
South, 2364; general, 757-818; Illinois during,
919; in Michigan, 1055; Indians as participants
in, 210; Ohio teachers in, 2179; regimental
histories, 819-821.
Civilization, American, 508. See also Americanism,
Institutions, American, and National character-
istics and ideals.
Civilization, Aztec, 355; of the Indians of Chile, 371;
pre-Columbian, in South America, 328; pre-
historic, 267, 331, 355. See also Culture, Indian.
Clan hats, Indian, 250.
Clan organization of the Winnebago, 236.
Clancy, F. W., 1128.
Claptn, Sylva, 2455.
Clapp, C. B., 10.
Clark, A. C, 900, 901.
C. H., 1947.
E. T., 1577.
J.B.,89.
Walter, 769.
WiUiam, 844, 1301.
Clark's expedition for the conquest of the North-
west, 1778, 689.
Clarksville, Tenn., 1439.
Clasons Point, N. Y. city, 202.
Classics, letters of Thomas Jefferson concerning,
2174.
Clay, Henry, 1302.
Clay heads, ancient Mexican, 280.
Cleary, J. J., 1110.
Cleaveland ancestry, 1628.
Clemens, Samuel Langhorne, 2258
W. M., 1686.
Clements, W. L., 628.
Clergy, Canadian, in 1791, 2461.
Cleveland, Grover, 1917.
Cleveland, O., 1161; Society for savings in the city
of, 2028.
Cleveland era, 826.
CUfl dwellings, in Colorado, 171; of Johnson Can-
yon, Col., 189.
180
INDEX.
Climate, influence upon the antliropogeograpliy of
Chile, 2738.
Clinton, De Witt, 1302; political followers of, 1911.
Clipper ships, 1983.
Clizbee, Azalea, 33.
Closse, Lambert, 2425.
Clowes family, 1646.
Clubs, Texas federation of women's, 1232a.
Clutz, J. A., 2124.
Coamo, Porto Rico, 834.
Coastwise sliipping, 1983; New England, 1993.
Cobden, Richard, 787.
Coburn, F. W., 1010.
Codex NuttaU, 315.
Codman, C. R., 1343.
Cody, L. F., 1344.
W. F., "Buffalo Bill," 1344.
Coe, G. A., 505.
Coffee, price and preparation of, 2046.
Coffin, L. A., 2232.
Coggeshall family, 1647.
Cohen, C. J., 1184.
H. L., 90.
Mrs. B. I., 998.
Cohiti, N. Mex., 224.
Coinage, obsolete, 2029; of the Confederacy, 773.
See also Money,
Coker, F. W., 91.
Colbert, J. B,, colonial policy of, 445.
Colby, Elbridge, 2263.
Colden, Cadwallader, 577.
David, 629.
Cole, A. C, 919, 1948.
G. M., 895a.
H. E., 166.
Coles, Mrs, S. E., 1136.
College, Dalhousie, Halifax, N, S., 2495.
College men, in the Revolutionary war, 692; in the
War of 1812, 2192.
Colleges. See Educational history, particular insti-
tutions, and under name of individual colleges.
Collins, A. H., 883a.
Caspar, 1096.
John, 2243.
V. L., 1111.
Coll y Toste, Cayetano, 833, 834.
Colombia, 2747-2750; antiquities, 286, 291; battle of
Boyac4, 1819, 2709; discovery and exploration,
419; geographical account of, 16th century, 2621;
history of, 2596; independence of, 2710; Indians
in, 272, 346; Spanish conquest of, 2596; War of
independence, 1810-1822, 2706, 2747-2750. See
also New Granada.
Colonial administration, of the British empire, 2395.
See aiso Colonial policy, Dutch colonial adminis-
tration, English colonial administration. Great
Britain, colonial administration, and Spanish
colonial administration.
Colonial agents. See Agents, provincial.
Colonial arcliitecture, 2234-2237, 2244, 2246.
Colonial companies. See Compagnie des cent
associ^s, Compagnie des Indes occidentales.
Dutch West India company, Indian and Afri-
can trading company of Scotland, and Virginia
company of London.
Colonial enterprise. See Colonization, and Darien
scheme.
Colonial governors, Connecticut, 1584; New Yorkj
577; of Carolina, 609; Plymouth colony, 5481
Rhode Island, 1312.
Colonial history to 1763, 454, 520-530; French am
Indian war, 531; Georgia, 1373; an historian of
142; individual colonies, 532-622; North Caro
lina, 1156, 1157; Plymouth colony, Indiar
friends of, 261; South Carolina, 1214; Spanish
America, 2612-2646; study of, 130a.
Colonial home rule, pre-Revolutionary problem oi
651.
Colonial land system, 657.
Colonial literature, bibliography of, 2261.
Colonial period, art in, 2230, 2238; bankruptcy in,:
2025; brick architecture of, 2232; compulsory!
education in, 2180; educational development oV
the South, 2181; furniture in, 2240; maritime]
commerce in, 1983; mathematics and mathe-'
matical instruction during, 2175; merchant ma-
rine in, 1983; Michigan fur trade during, 1982;
musicallifein, 2357; North Carolina miUtia, 1823;
records of the Commissioners of trade and plan-
tations, 72; sculpture in, 2238.
Colonial pohcy, British, 2395; of England, 524; of
France, 524. See also Colonial administration.
Colonial system, American, in the Old Northwest,
841;. English, 522, Spanish, 621. See also
Colonial administration, and Colonial policy.
Colonial tariff pohcy of France, 2414.
Colonial wars, early Massachusetts, 532; Indian,
532, 536, 538; Queen Anne's war, 525. See also
French and Indian war.
Colonists in New France, from Burgimdy, France,
2450.
Colonization, English, 454; English, Raleigh's plans
for, 396; French, 454; French, in Brazil, ^55-^-
1669, 2623; French, in Ontario, 2531; French,
in the Antilles, 2679; French attempt in the
Texas region, in 1720-1721, 259; negro, 2061;
of New France, 2416, 2417; Raleigh's place in,
376, 1837; Spanish America, 2574, 2596. See
also American colonization society, Colonial
companies, and Darien scheme.
Colonizers of Spanish America, 337.
Colorado, ancient ruins in, 198; antiquities of, 189;
archaeological field-work in, 204; prehistoric
villages, castles, and towers of, 171.
"The Colored American," periodical, 756.
Colrain, Mass., 1763.
Columbia river, exploration of, 1259.
Columbia river country, 706.
Columbia township, O., 1164.
Colmnbus, Christopher, 389, 1296, 1301; and new
lands, 412; commissions of, 394; discoveries of,
421; documents relating to, 414; first landfall
of, 383; letters of, 385, 386; nationality of, 403;
remains of, 390; tomb of, 391.
Columbus, Ga., 910.
Comedy, early American, 2263.
Command, J. A., 1045.
Commerce, 1976-1987; between France and the
Antilles, 2680; between Quebec and the An-
tilles in 1866, 2474; captme of Spanish merchant
ship by an American ship during the war with
England in 1748, 526; foreign, 1784--1810, 1872;
foreign, 1786-1790, 70Ca; foreign, 1801-1808,
1977; in Missouri, one hundred years ago, 1078;
INDEX.
181
of Lomsiana, mO-1766,6U; of old Boston, 1036;
of the Frencli colonies in America, 1700-1734,
529; with the Indies, 1786 to 1790, 700a; with the
Levant ports, 1784 to 1810, 1872. See also Busi-
ness, Capital, masters of, Merchant marme,
Prizes and Trade.
Commerce, U. S. Bureau of foreign and domestic,
120.
Commercial companies. See North West company
of Canada.
Commercialintercourse with the Confederacy in the
Mississippi valley, 771.
Commercial monopoly, French colonial, 2414. See
also Trusts,
Commercial readjustment following the War of
1812, 701.
Commercial relations, German, with Latin America,
2598.
Commercial system of Napoleon, and the United
States, 1860.
Commissary general of Virginia, Revolutionary
war, 630.
Commissary of prisoners, 1778, 624.
Commission on a national program for education, 92.
Commissioner of education, U. S., first, 2212.
Commissioners of trade and plantations, records of,
72.
Committee of vigilance, San Francisco, 1851, 894.
Committee on history and education for citizenship
in the schools, 92-95.
Committees of public information, 1863-1866, 816.
Committees of safety, Virginia Revolutionary, 631.
Common law, English, 521; of America, 1936.
\ Communication and transportation, 1988-2019; in
Ontario, 2540; Pennsylvania canals, 1196; postal
service, evolution of, 987; stage coach, 2540.
See also Indian trails. Portages, Roads, and
Trails.
Communistic republic, attempt to estabUsh, in
1743, 610.
iCompagnie de la Nouvelle, France, 2445.
jCompagnie des Cent Associes, 2504.
jiCompagnie des isles de P Amerique, 2679.
Compagnie des Indes occidentales, 259, 2504, 2679.
Compania general de tabacos de Filipinas, 2779.
Company of royal adventurers of England trading
into Africa, 2675.
pompany of the Hundred Associates, 2504.
jpomposer, early American musical, 2357.
Ipomprehensive histories, 442-461.
Compulsory education in the colonies, 533.
bomstock, D. W., 1345.
^omunerosin New Granada, rebellion of, 1781, 2702.
Conciliation proposals, 1774, 1775, 667.
Conciliatory proposition in the Massachusetts con-
vention of, 1788, 1898.
Concord, Mass., battle of, 1775, 661.
Concord school of philosophy, a "pilgrim" in, 2280.
ondict, Lewis, 434.
ondit, Mrs. B. S., 1112.
ondon, J. T., 1964.
- Peter, 2686.
lonfederate army, 785; campaign in Kentucky,
1862,804:; cavalry leaders, 818; diary of a soldier
of, 798; employment of negroes as soldiers in,
817; generals killed in war, 762; organization
and equipment of North Carolina troops, 769;
personal narrative of service in, 811; regimental
histories, 819.
Confederate navy, 807; launching of the Albemarle,
814.
Confederate soldier, morale of, 808.
Confederate states of America, alliance of the In-
dians with, 757; attorney-general of, 1350;
chronicle of, 809; coins of, 773; commercial in-
tercourse with, in the Mississippi Valley, 771;
diplomatic agents of, 774, 802; effort to obtain
recognition from the Pope, 774; executive offi-
cers and congressmen of, 770; fifty years after,
810; government of, 770; last meeting of the
cabinet of, 815; paper money of, 758; personal
narrative of service in, 811; secession of a Mis-
sissippi county from, in 1864, 759; secret mission
to Rome, 774; relations with Mexico, 802, 806;
treasurer of, 1353.
Confederate sympathizer, in California, 793.
Confederation, Canadian, 2471, 2528.
Confederation, the United States under, 464.
Conference of hereditary patriotic societies, 96.
Conference of historical societies, Dec. 28, 1916, 97.
Conference on the foimdation of a journal of Latin
American history, Dec. 29, 1916, 98.
Conger, J. L., 1909, 1977a.
Congregational church, 2116a, 2117; in Branford,
Conn., 896.
Congress, U. S., control of foreign relations, 1774-
1789, 691; delegates from Nebraska, contested
election of, 1860, 1095; first. North Carolina mem-
ber in, 1604; John Strohm's career in, 1200.
"Conimicut, tenement on," R. I., 1205.
Conkling, Roscoe, 1919.
Conley, P. H., 1268.
Coimecticut, architecture of historic houses in, 2245;
capitals and state houses of, 1947; colonial his-
tory, 573; Congregational church in Branford,
2117; domestic architecture in, 2236; early
church plate in, 2249; French in, 839; genealogi-
cal records, 1795, 1808; General assembly, first
meeting of, 1947; governor of, 1769 to 1784, 1584;
local history, 895a, 895b, 896; men in the Span-
ish-American war, Philippine insurrection, and
China relief expedition, 895a; origin of names of
towns of, 1947; political affairs in, early 19th cen-
tury, 1314; Revolutionary soldiers from, 696;
settlement of Massachusetts colonists in, in 1636,
552; towns of, in the order of their estabUsh-
ment, 1947.
Connecticut, Board of education, Dept. of Ameri-
canization, 468.
Connecticut river, 2015-2017.
Connor, R. D. W., 1157, 2213.
Connors, J. W., 1560.
Conquest of Spanish America, 2574, 2596, 2614a.
Conquistadores, Spanish, 405, 412, 419.
Conservatives, on the eve of secession, 722.
Conspiracy against the Spanish government in
Chile, 1780-1781, 2702.
Constitution, Idaho, 1945; Illinois, 1948, 1952; Iowa,
1954; Kentucky, 1957; Montana, 1945; North
Dakota, 1945; South Dakota, 1945; state of
Washington, 1945, 1964; Wyoming, 1945.
Constitution, U. S., Benjamin Franklin and, 1894;
birthday of, 1892, 1899; contest over, 1«95; how
182
INDEX.
it saved the Revolution, 1900; John Marshall
and, 1896; obligation of contracts clause of, 1901;
ratification of, by Massachusetts, 1898; relation
of the judiciary to, 1902; the South's effort to
destroy, 777; a study of, 1893; teaching of, 464.
See also Unconstitutionality.
"Constitution day," plea for the observance of, 1892.
Constitution of Canada, 2398, 2461; amendments to,
2391.
Constitutional convention, Illinois, 1869-1870, 50a;
Kentucky, 1891, 1957; Pennsylvania, 1838,1907;
Wisconsin, 1846, 1965; Wisconsin, 1848, 1265.
Constitutional convention of 1787, bankruptcy in,
2025; member of, from North Carolina, 1604.
Constitutional history and law, 1891-1906; in the
Federalist period, 713. See also Federalism,
Treaties, ratification of, and Unconstitution-
ality.
Constitutional system, American, 551.
Constitutionality of treaties, 1906.
Contested election of delegates to Congress from
Nebraska,in 1860, 1095.
"The Continent," periodical, 2146.
Continental army, 681,
Continental congress, control of foreign relations,
1876; jom-nal of a member of, 1778-1780, 636.
Controversies between states, judicial settlement
of, 1903.
Convent, at Charlestown, Mass, burning of, 2083;
first in Illinois, 2113.
ConweU, J. A., 1113.
Cooch, M. E. W., 1744.
Cooch family, 1744.
Cook, H. F., 1161.
Cooke, Jacob, 1648.
Cooke family, 1648.
Cooney, Robert, 2493.
Coons, W. S., 1729.
Cooper, C. R., 1344.
Peter, 1302.
Thomas, 712,
Copan, Hondm-as, 339.
Cope, Leona, 167.
Corbacho, G. M., 2713.
Corbin, John, 1910.
Corn, Indian, 1972.
Cornwell, J. J., 1482.
Coronado. See V4squez de Coronado.
Corpa, Peter de, 1296.
Corson, O. T., 1409, 1483.
Cortereal, Gaspar, 1301.
Miguel, 1301.
Cortes, Hernando, 1296, 1301, 2614a; and California,
384; conquest of Mexico, 387, 412, 417.
Corwin, E. S., 703, 1896.
Cosentini, Fr., 1609.
Cost of living, eighty years ago, 1140. . See also
Prices.
Cotterill, E. S., 956.
R. S., 724, 1996.
Cottman, G. S., 2233.
Cotton kingdom of the South, 847.
Cottrell, E, A., 99.
CouUlard-Despr^s, A., 2411.
Coulomb, C. A., 106, 469.
Coulter, E. M., 771.
Coulter, J. M., 505.
Coimty farm bureaus, 1973.
Course of study in history. See Curriculum, Syl-
labi, and Text-books, outlines, etc.
Court records, Massachusetts, 1668-1680, 554, 556.
Courthouse, District of Columbia, 904; Wisconsin's
oldest, 1266.
Courts, Supreme court, 1896; Supreme court of the
District of Columbia, 898. See also Judiciary.
Cousins, Frank, 2234.
Couvreu, Emile, 1610.
Covell, A. T., 2235.
Coventry, George, 2459.
Cowan, J. P., 1185.
-R. E,, 11,
Cowan family, 1649.
Cowing, Elizabeth, 694.
Janet, 1567.
Cox, G. M., 2535a.
I. J., 100, 101, 151.
Nathaniel, 845.
CoxsacMe, N. Y., 1150, 1763.
Coy, O. C, 56, 57, 61,
Crandall, L, A., 2165,
Crane, V, W., 525, 610.
Crawford, E.A., 441.
Crawford Notch, N. H., discoverer of, 1441.
Cree Indians, 231.
Creek war, I8IS-I8I4, 736.
Cr6qui-Montfort, G., 286.
Cretin, Joseph, 2157.
Crevecoeur, Fort, location of, 418.
Cribbs, G. A., 584, 1186.
Criddle, E. D., 102.
Crittenden, William, 725.
Crittenden compromise, 1860, 772.
Croghan, N. Y., 1149.
Crone, F. L., 1625.
Crone family, 1625.
Croquet, A. J., 2158.
Cross, A. L., 103.
Cross, use of, by primitive Indians, 349.
Crothers, S. M., 1306.
Crow Indians, 238.
Crump, N. M., 772.
Cruzat, H. H., 969, 978.
Heloise, 974.
Cuba, 2676, 2677; American filibusters in, 725;
blockade of, in the Spanish-American war,
1846; early map of, 416; history, 17th century,
2645, 2646; history of, 2596; Spanish fleet in,
17th century, 2645.
Cubagua, early map of, 416.
Cubberley, E, P., 2172.
Cuddeback, W. L., 1650.
Cuddeback family, 1650.
Cuevas, Mariana, 2648.
Culemans, J. B., 2152, 2162.
Culin, Stewart, 224.
Culleton, George, 1811.
Cullum, G. W., 1346.
Culpeper, Lord Thomas, 604.
Cult, ancient Mexican, 358.
Culture, Arawak, 334, 352; in Argentina, 2726;
Maya, 302; of the Chippewa Indians, 204; of the
Guiana Indians, 313; prehistoric, 171, 183, 191,
192, 208, 284, 287, 334, 348. See a?50 Lithie in-
dustries.
L
INDEX.
183
Cumberland co., Va., 631.
Cumberland county [N. J.] medical society, 1123.
Cumberland river, journey down, in 1807, 431.
Cummings, H. A., 1758.
"Cumulative book index," 12.
Cundall, Frank, 2668.
Ciineo-Vidal, Romulo, 388-391.
CunlifEe, J. W., 2173.
Cumungham, C H., 846, 2615.
E. E., 1083.
Curasao, archaeology of, 308.
Curran, W. R., 1972.
Currency, North Carolina state, 1155; United
States, 2029. See also Coinage and Money.
Current history, study of, 107, 121, 152.
Curriculum in history and civics, 84; for sixth
grades, 88; Spanish- American history, 101. See
also Course of study.
Currier, Moody, 2206.
Curtis, H. R., 1205.
M. A., 2364.
Natahe, 1484, 1485.
Curzon family , 1651.
Cusachs, Caspar, 970, 971.
Gushing, Caleb, 1652.
W.B.,807.
W. H., 106.
jl Cushing family, 1652.
Cushman, Josiah, 1653.
' Cushman family, 1653.
Custer, Milo, 929, 1699.
Custer CO., Nebr., 1084.
I Cutbush, James, 1347.
CzaplewsM, Eugen, 287.
Dahlinger, C. W., 1183, 1187, 1188, 2148.
Daily,S.G.,1095.
[ Dakota Indians, 231. See also Sioux Indians.
I Dakota territory, blizzard in, in 1880, 842; Indians
of, 253.
I Dalhousie college, Halifax, N. S., 2495.
: Dance, Indian, 231, 237,' 245; spirit, 245; s\m, 231, 237.
See also Wintun Hesi ceremony.
Danielson family, 1654.
Danish "West Indies. See Virgin Islands.
Daimer, A. C, 774.
Danvers, Mass., 563, 1004, 1024, 1025, 1030, 1039, 2153.
Danvers historical society, Danvers, Mass., 48.
Dapp,C. F.,2125.
Darien, discovery and colonization of, 2596; Scots'
colony, 2638.
Darien, Conn., 1804.
Darien scheme, 1695, 2638.
Dario, Rub^n, 2610.
Dark days in Quebec in 1785, 2500.
Dart, H. P., 62.
Dartmouth college, 2206, 2227,
Dartmouth college decision, 1901.
Daughters of 1812, National society of the United
States, 2040.
Davenport, Harbert, 392.
David, L. O., 2482.
Davidson,!. H., 1348.
Davidson CO., Tenn., 1220.
Davies, G, E., 1818a.
G. R., 104.
Davila, Pedrarias, 379.
Davin, N. F., 2385.
Davis, David, 1349.
E. H., 221.
George, 1350.
J. F., 57.
J. W., 661.
Jefferson, 788.
T. E., 1114.
V. M., 1221.
Davison, W. B., 105.
Dawson, Edgar, 106.
Deaf, Maryland state school for, 2048,
Dearborn, Fort, massacre at, 1818, 932.
Death Valley, Cal., 892a.
Deats, H. E., 67.
Debate, the Webster-Hayne, 737.
Debating societies in New Hampshire, 1102,
De Booy. See Booy.
Debt, West Virginia, 1263.
Declaration of independence, Mecklenburg, 679.
Decoration, early American, 2230.
Decorations, war, 1835.
Deeds, Barnstable co., Mass., 1756.
DeGrange, J, H., 973.
Dejan, Victorin, 974.
De Kay, Charles, 2288.
Delabarre, E, B,, 168,
Delafleld, J. R., 1620.
Delano family, 1655.
Delaplaine, E, S., 1398,
De La Vergne, H, J., 975.
Delaware, beginning of, 587; colonial history, 587;
genealogical records, 1779, 1815; local history,
897; Presbyterianchiu:ch at Lewes, 2139; Revo-
lutionary period in, 1468.
Delaware Indians, 260a. See also Lenape Indians,
De Lestry, E, L., 393, 1388, 1442.
Deming family, 1656.
Demoblization, in 1783, 666; in 1865, 779; since and
including the Revolution, 1831-.
Democracy, American, 510; English influence on,
507; English origin of, 501; in New York state,
early 19th century, 1922. See also Liberty.
Democratic movement of the century, Illinois in,
927,
Democratic party, 1922; return to power in 1884,
1921; triumph in 1828, 736.
De Mott, J, J,, 1115,
Denison, Bill, 884.
Denonville, J. R. de Brisay, marquis de, 2447.
Densmore, Benjamin, 1061.
Dent, Thomas, 1349.
Dentz, F. Oudschans, 2751.
Denver, Col., 895.
Depew, C. M,, 1351, 1487,
Deportation, negro, 946,
Derbigny, M, P., 968.
Description and travel, 430-441; California, in 1769,
885; Central America, 1625 to 1637, 2642; early
day travel to Cahfomia, 2002; Massachusetts,
1013; Oregon country, 852; Washington, D. C,
899. See also Geographical accounts, and
Life and manners.
Desertion in the Union army, 799.
Design, of Indian bead work, 262; on prehistoric
pottery, 170.
184
INDEX.
Des Moines, Fort, la,, 951.
De Soto, Hernando de, 1296, 1301; at the Chickasaw
Bluffs, 239; four narratives of, 239.
Desrosiers, Ad^lard, 2376.
Desterro, Brazil, 2711.
Detroit, Mich., Hull's surrender of, 720.
Devereux family, 1626.
Dewees, W. W., 2120.
Dewey, George, and Manila Bay, 1846.
John, 1488.
De Witt, J. H., 1228.
Dexter, F. B., 573.
Gregory, 7, 570.
DeyroUe, E., 288.
Diamond, James, 2243.
Dias, Roberio, 2612.
Diaz del Castillo, Bernal, 2614a.
Diaz Pimienta, Francisco, 2645.
Dickens, Charles, 1167, 2275.
Dickerson family, 1629.
Dickey, Marcus, 2323.
Dickinson, E., 505.
Emily, 1293.
John, 590.
W. L., 1120.
Dickson, F. S., 222.
L. E., 884a.
Dictators. See Francia, and Rosas.
Dictionary, a famous Indian, 222.
Diegueno ceremony of the death images, 221.
Diffenderffer, F. R., 663.
Dilnot, Frank, 1375.
Dimock, Davis, 1817.
Dionne, N. E., 2506.
Diplomacy, American, 1844, 1845. See also Diplo-
matic history.
Diplomatic agents of the Confederate states, 774,
802.
Diplomatic history, Spanish American, 1810 to 1830,
2644; relations between France and Argentina,
1838-1860, 2724.
Diplomatic history and foreign relations, U. S.,
1837-1890; Canadian-American friendship, his-
tory text-book poison in, 156; constitutionality
of treaties, 1906; Great Britain and the U. S.,
effect of history teaching on. 111, 140; Great
Britain and the U. S., school histories and, 132;
of the Federalist period, 713; public documents
relating to, 45; ratification of treaties, 1852, 1897;
relations with Mexico, Indians of the South-
west in, 1848-1863, 741; role of America in the
world, 447. See also Northeastern boundary
dispute, and Oregon question.
Diplomatic history of the acquisition of Louisiana,
710.
Disabled officers and soldiers. Revolutionary, 665.
Disarmament agreement of 1817, with Canada, 1847.
Disciples of Christ, 2118.
Discoverers and explorers of America, 337, 1296, 1301.
Discovery and exploration, 375-429; Amazon river
region, 2694; De Soto at the Chickasaw Bluffs,
239; French, 1851, 2449, 2451-2453; French, in
the 16th century, 445; Hudson Bay region, 258;
in the Southwest, 1820-1824, 849; in the Flat-
head section and the Spokane country, 1259;
Lake Superior region, in 1727, 2449; of Guiana,
2734; of La V6rendrye and his sons, 2452; Span-
ish, 2596; Spanish, in the Southwest, 615, 617
885. See also Lewis and Clark expedition.
Dishman, S. B., 1926. . i
Disloyalty, in the Civil war and the World war
776; in the North during the Civil war, 816.
District of Colvunbia, 898-905; marriage licenses of
1801 to 1820, 1765.
Dix, Dorothea, 1302.
Dixon, A. H., 129.
R. B., 1440. i
Dobie, Samuel, 2243. j
Documents, South American historical, 2713. Sei
also Archives and Public documents.
Dodd, W. E., 847, 1837.
Dodge, Henry, 737.
Dodson, R. B., 584
Dolila, J. C, 632.
Doggett, Carita, 907.
Dolfean, Jean, 2436a.
Dollier de Casson, Francois, 2422.
Dominican republic, estabUshment of, 2688. See
also Santo Domingo.
Dongan, Thomas, 1352. j
Doniphan, Kans., 244. :
Donnelly, T. F., 470. 1
Doorways, old New England, 2246. i
Douglas, George, 2385, 2483. |
W.B.,1461. j
Doughty, Elias, 1106. I
Dover, N. H., 1791. |
Dow, C. M., 1582. 1
G. F., 554, 555, 1011. • |
Dowd, F. J., 223. I
Dowley family, 1657. I
Downing, M. B,, 664, 904, 1129, 1459.
Dowse, W. B. H., 541. !
Doyle, A., 1419.
J. H., 1162. I
Dozier, H. D., 1978.
Draft riots in Wisconsin, 800.
Dragon-legend among primitive peoples, 367.
Drake, F. S., 223.
Sir Francis, 1296, 1301; and the fleet tradition,
415; exploration of the Pacific coast, 404.
J. R., 2288.
Drama, of United States history, 460. See also
Comedy.
Dramatist, a forgotten German- American, 2316.
Drascher, Wahrhold, 1843a.
Drinker, F. E., 1489.
Drouilly, Georges, 1491. ^
Drowne, H. R., 1137.
Drug store, Wisconsin pioneer, 1284,
Duanesburgh, N. Y., 1767.
Dubois CO., Ind., 947a.
Du Bourg, L. W., 2084.
Duchaussois, P., 2568. ;
Duchesnau, Jacques, 2440.
Duclos, P^re, 2071.
Duden, Gottfried, 1068, 1069.
Duel, the Potter-Pryor, 1860, 73 .
Duer, William, 632a.
Duer family, 1658.
Duffy, J. E., 1323. .^
Dulany, Daniel, 593. ^;
Duluth, Minn., 2095. >i
Dumarest, Noel, 224.
INDEX.
185
Pumas, sieur de, 2412.
Duncan, T. S., 2210.
Dundas, W. O., 775.
Dundas, Ont., 2550.
Dunlap, Boutwell, 2326.
Dunn, A. H., 2512.
J. P., 941.
. T. A., 1183.
Dunning, A. E., 1006.
W. A., 776.
Dupr6, F. J., 2378.
Durston, G. R., 1454.
George, 1454.
Dustin, Fred, 704.
Dutch, colonial administration in America, 581;
colonial politics in Surinam and the West Indies,
2678; fleet in the West Indies, defeat of, 1674,
2682; settlements in Wisconsin, 1272; settle-
ments on the Hudson, 575; trading post of Tren-
ton, N. J., 583.
Dutch Guiana, 2751, 2752.
Dutch Reformed church, 2119.
Dutch West India company, 581.
Dutch West Indies, 2678.
Dutcher, G. M., 106.
Salem, 777.
Dutchess CO., N. Y., 1146a.
Duval, Maurice, 1879.
Dwellings, Indian, 219, 220. See also CUfE dwellings ,
and Houses, historic.
Dyckman farm, Manhattan, 655.
Dyer, G. W., 1222.
Dykes, H. S. B., 1636.
Eagles as Indian symbols, 225.
Eames, Frank, 2536.
East Pikeland, Pa., 2125.
Eastman, C. A., 225,
Eaton, A. W.H., 1662, 2496.
, W. D., 1611.
Eberlehi, H. D., 2236, 2237.
Eccleston, Samuel, 2102.
kckenrode, H. J., 920.
Isconomic history, Montana, 1862 to 1870, 1080;
of American agriculture, bibliography, 35a; of
American agriculture as a field for study, 139;
of Canada, 2368; Virginia, 1814 to 1819, 1249.
See also Neutral trade, and Social and economic
history,
iconomic material in Pennsylvania state docue
ments, 1790-1904, 49.
Ilcuador, 2753; antiquities of, 305, 320, 328, 336;
I history of, 2596; Indians of, 292, 336; revolution
against Spain, 2753; war of independence, 2706.
dgar,W.C.,2062.
dison, T. A., 1302.
ducation, American ideals in, 505; Baptist, in
Pennsylvania, 2079; colonial, mathematical
instruction, 527; compulsory, in the colonies,
533; German conspiracy in, 518; in Illinois, to
1860, 917; in Mexico, 2658; in Mississippi, 1961;
in Ontario, 2535a, 2536, 2544; in patriotism, 129,
in South Carolina, 1212; in the provice of
Quebec, 2530a; in the Spanish colonies, 16th
century, 2629; military, in Ontario, 2535a; of
the Indians, 2088; patriotism through, 122;
religious, in lUinois, 934; what the World war
teaches about, 126. See aho History, study and
teaching, and Schools.
Education, U. S. Commissioner of, first, 2212.
Educational association of Virginia, 2185.
Educational history, biography, 2210-2227; develop-
ment of the southern colonies, 598; general,
2169-2177; of Canada, 2502; of Nova Scotia, 2495,
2497; of Virginia, 1814-1819, 1249; particular
institutions, 2190-2209; regional, 2178-2189.
Educational institutions, in Canada, 2495, 2502;
in Mexico, 2658; in the Spanish colonies, 16th
century, 2629; in the United States, 2190-2209.
Educational law. New York state, 2188.
Educator, a Chilean, 2740.
Edwards, J. N., 778.
Jonathan, 2269.
M. L,, 2072.
Edwards family, 1659.
Eekhof, A., 574.
Egan, M. F., 1492.
Eggert, E. M., 32.
Eggleston, Edward, 471.
Eitel, E, H., 2324.
El Dorado, Lope de Aguirre's search for, 400.
Eldredge, J. J., 1738.
Election, contested, in Nebraska, 1860, 1095; presi-
dential, of 1840, 701; of 1844, 701; of 1860, 722.
Elgin, J. B., Earl of, 2469.
EUas y EUas, Sefior, 331.
Ehot, C. W., 1425, 2309.
John, 542, 1302.
Elliott, L. E., 226.
T. C, 435, 705, 706.
Ellis, C. M., 1419.
Ellison, W. H., 107.
Ellsworth, W. W., 2264.
Ellwanger, E. H., 957, 958, 1997
Eknore, E. C, 1353.
Elton family, 1660.
Emancipation proclamation, 797; effect on English
public opinion, 814.
Embalming, of the Incas, 344.
Embargo of 1807, 1001, 1985.
Emblem, Louisiana state, 962.
Embroidery. See Samplers.
Emerson, C. S., 546.
R. W., 2269, 2280, 2289-2291.
Emigration, New England, to New York and the
middle west, 865; western, 1062. See also
Immigration, and Migration, negro.
Emmerson, L. L., 925.
Ende, AmeUa von, 2251.
Endecott, John, 1354.
Enemy, trading with, in the Civil war, 771.
Engelhardt, Zephyrin , 249, 2085.
England, America's links with Westminster Abbey,
517; and the birth of the American nation, 1837;
attack on Cartagena in 1741, 2641; attack upon
the sea power of Spain, in the 16th century, 396;
colonial empire in America, founding of, 396;
colonial policy in America, 524; Lords of trade
and plantations, 1675-1696, 522; mercantile ma-
rine, Drake and, 415; mercantile marine, Ra-
leighand,396; navy of, Drake and, 415; opinion
in, in regard to the American civil war, 814;
relations with her colonies in America, 606;
trade relations with Virginia, 1690-1691, 595;
186
INDEX.
Virginia genealogical gleanings in, 1811; war
with Spain, in 1748, participation of an American,
ship in, 526; West Indian expedition, Jf735-i74^,
530. See also Anglo-American entente, British,
English, and Great Britain.
English, discovery and exploration of America,
376, 396, 402, 404, 425, 2734; influence on Ameri-
can ideals of justice and liberty, 507; influence
on the American system of law, 521; origin of
American democracy, 501; origin of American
institutions, 1891; settlementinlndianainl817,
943; sympathizer with the American Revolu-
tionary cause, 661.
English colonial administration in America, 522,
532,596,651.
English colonial records, 72.
English colonies in America, association between
members of the Middle Temple and, 521; begin-
nings of, 78; Commissioners of trade and plan-
tations, records of, 72; founding of, 396; political
relations with the mother country, 606; trade
relations with England, 1690-1691, 595; study of
history of, 130a. See also English colonial ad-
ministration.
English colonization in America, 454; Raleigh's
place in, 1837,
English-French conflict for the control of the Missis-
sippi valley, 525.
English-speaking peoples, ideals of, 1837.
Englishman, correspondence of a, in regard to the
Civil war, 787.
Eno, J. N., 1808.
Ensignfamily, 1723.
Environment, physical, relation of Indians to, 230.
Epidemics, 2506.
Episcopal church. See Protestant Episcopal
church.
Equiluz, Juan de, 2646.
Equipment, military, of North Carolina troops
during the Civil war, 769. See also Breast
plates, and Helmets.
Equity, early administration of, 1932.
Ericsson, John, 1302.
Ermatinger, C. O., 714.
ErsMne, John, 506, 908, 2288, 2339.
Ervin,S. J., jr., 606.
Erwine,R.H.,108.
Escobar, Francisco de, 426.
Escott,T.H. S., 1338.
Eshleman, H. F., 586, 1200.
Eskimo week-calendar, 213.
Eskimos, 247.
Esnambuc, Pierre Belain d', 2679.
Espinosa, A. M., 2583.
Esquivel Obreg6n, T., 2648a, 2649.
Essex CO., Mass., court records, 1668-1680, 554, 556.
Estabrook, Experience, 1095.
Esterbrook family, 1657,
Esteves Pereira, F. M., 393a.
Estill,H. F., 472.
Estrada, Dardo, 2767.
Ethnology, bibliography of, 34; eastern Dakota,
253.
Ethnology, U. S. Bureau of, publications, 41.
" Eulalie," California's first woman poet, 2326.
Europe, effect of the American revolution upon
nations of, 644; effect of the discovery of Amer-
ica upon, 421; drifting of American aborigine i
inhabitants to, in the Middle ages, 197; prr
Columbian knowledge of the New world in, 37j '
European background to American history, 462, 47:
European diplomacy in the Rio de la Plata, 1838 1 '
1850, 2724. I
European missions to investigate American immi |
gration conditions, 2052, 2056. j
European wars, participation of American coloniei
in, 526, 530.
Evans, Allen, 1998. I
Conway, 557. '
G.R.,1726.
G. W., 902.
J. H., 1270.
Evarts, Sherman, 823.
W. M., 823.
Everitt,F.B. ,2140b. j
Ewing, M. E. W., 1661. i
P. K., 1661.
R. M., 1356.
— Robert, 1311.
Thomas, 1163.
Ewing family, 1661.
Executive. See President.
Executive department, Illinois, 1949.
Expansion. See Territorial expansion.
Exploration. See Discovery and exploration.
Explorer in the Southwest, an unknown, 849.
Fabled silver mines of Bahia, 2612.
Factory Hollow, N. Y., 193.
Factory system for trading with the Indians, 711,
Fages, Pedro, 436, 885.
Fain, J. T., 1224.
Fairchild, D. S., 950.
Fairchild family, 1622.
Fairweather, H. W., 1999.
Fales, De Coursey, 1662.
Fales family, 1662.
Families, heads of, in western Pennsylvania, 1790,
1198.
Family, the American, 2044.
Family history, Virginia, 600. See also Genealogy,
individual families.
Family relationship terms, Indian, 279.
Fannin, J. W.fjr., 1238.
Far East. See Oriental policy of the United States.
Farabee, W. C, 169, 292.
Faris, J. T., 1189.
Farley, John, Cardinal, 2159, 2160.
Farm bureau, the county, 1973.
Farmer, Hallie, 109.
Farms, of the Mayas, 285.
Farrand, Max, 450, 451. ' ^'
Farrar, V. J., 1255, 1256. i'
Faw, Abram, 2243.
Faxon, F. W., 1, 2297.
Federal relations of Oregon, 742.
Federalism, American, background of, 1858.
Federalist party, 1314; member of first two Con-
gresses, from North Carolina, 1568.
Federalist period, political and constitutional de-
velopment of, 713.
FederaUsts in New York, 1911; secret political soci-
ety formed by, in 1808, 1912.
Federation, West Indian, 2667.
INDEX.
187
Federmann, Nicholas, 419.
Feke, Robert, 2252.
Felch family, 1663.
Felton, R. L., 909.
Fenton, H. J., 110.
Fenwick, Cuthbert, 1355.
Femtodez, L. H., 2781.
Femandina, early map of, 416.
Ferrall, S. A., 432.
Ferrara, Orestes, 1880.
Ferron, Thertee, 2413.
Ferry road on Long Island, 1133.
Feudal restraints upon land, colonial, 657.
Fewkes, J. W., 170, 171, 227.
Fiction, historical, 5.
Field, C. W., 1302.
Eugene, 2292.
FiUbusters, in Cuba, 725; in Haiti, in 1871, 827; in
Mexico, 729.
Finance, 2020-2029; from 1814 to 1844, 701; liberty
loans of the Revolution, -676; Louisiana, 1766-
1788, 846; New Hampshire, 1100; North Carolina,
1155; panic of 1837, 701; Spanish American, 1492
to 1800, 2627; Spanish colonial, in America, 16th
century, 2618; struggle over the second Bank of
the United States, 1907. See also Mone5^
Financial system, of the Federalist period, 713.
Financing of the Clark project for the conquest of
the Northwest, 689.
Fmdley, Wilham., 1356.
Fine arts, 2228-2249; American Indian in painting,
234; biography, 2250-2254; history of, 2256; in
Lowell, Mass., 1010; Venezuela, 2774; portraiture
of the colonial period, 523; what Roosevelt did
for, 1528. See also Architecture, Designs, and
Portraits.
Fmlay, J. R., 1259.
Fire insurance, 2020a.
Firkins, O. W., 2321, 2840.
Fish, C. R., Ill, 452, .453, 779, 1844-1846, 2000.
I F.L., 1436.
?isher, C. E., 2001.
Ezra, 1172.
,| Hendrick, 1357.
j Isaac, 2219.
Peter, 2491.
: S. G.,587.
jji'ishing village, ancient AlgonMan, 251.
Piske, B. A., 1821.
j KimbaU, 2238.
Fite,E.D., 473, 1847.
PR. H., 1358.
lugh, Thomas, 2174.
igh, P. K., 824.
itrick, J. C, 73, 665, 666.
J. T., 1927.
lag, American, evolution of, 513; history of, 519;
origin of, 514.
Sag, Canadian, 2397.
agg,C.A.,695, 1630a.
ags, Louisiana, 966; Missouri state flag, 1074; of
the Province of Quebec, 2515; Virginia state
I flag, 1245.
j athead section, Wa'sh., 1259.
leming, G. T., 1377.
W. L., 825.
Fleming, New York, 1766.
Fling, F. M., 106.
Flint implements, aboriginal, 174.
Flippin, P. S.,596.
Florida, 906, 907; anthropological survey of, 204;
cession of, treaty regarding, 1821, 1874; discovery
and colonization of, 2596; first bishop of, 2085;
Jackson's conquest of, 1818, 736; Spanish dis-
covery and colonization, 407.
Florida, N. Y.. 1767, 1768, 1786.
Flour in Montana, 1862-1870, 1080.
Floyd, J. B., 780.
Folklore, negro, 2299.
Folk-songs, American, 2354.
Fonda, J. H., 849.
Fontenelle, Logan, 1086.
Food, use of plants as, by the Mayas, 339.
Food supply, Niagara Falls region, colonial period,
1146.
Forbes, Alexander, 886.
Mrs. A. S. C, 887.
Forbin, Victor, 293, 294.
Ford, H. J., 826, 2669.
H. P., 2139.
W. C, 558, 632a, 1333a.
Foreign affairs, public documents relating to,
1828-1861, 50. See also Diplomatic history and
foreign relations.
Foreign commerce, American, 700a; in the Rio dela
Plata, 1801-1808, 1977; with the Levant ports,
1784.-1810, 1872.
Foreign missionary, Princeton seminary's first,
2168.
Foreign navy, American captain serving in, 1619.
Foreign policy of the United States, 1853, 1854
1859; in the Orient, 1843; in the Pacific, 1869;
Monroe doctrine and, 1890; since the Spanish
American war, 1850; Washington's, 1839, 1840.
See also Monroe doctrine, and Open door poUcy.
Foreign relations, congi-essional control of, during
the American revolution, 1774-1789, 1876; con-
stitutionality of treaties, 1906; history teaching
as it affects. 111, 140; public documents relat-
ing to, 45; school histories and, 132, 156. See
also Diplomatic history and foreign relations.
Foreign soil, Americans buried in, 516.
Foreign territory, American invasion of. See Puni-
tive expedition against Mexico.
Foreign wars, Americans serving in, 2736. See
also European wars.
Forest reserve, Wisconsin state, 1285.
Forests, Michigan, 1056.
Forgues, le cure, 2510.
Forillon, Acadia, 2474.
Forrest, Bedford, 1359.
W. M., 844.
Forster, J. W. L., 1245.
Fort Astoria, restoration of, 1818, 715.
Fort Atkinson, Neb., 1097.
Fort Crevecoeur, location of, 418.
Fort Dearborn massacre, 1812, 932.
Fort Des Moines, la., 951.
Fort Donelson, Tenn., battle, 1862, 780.
Fort Garry, Man., 2572.
Fort Jackson, La., 764.
Fort McHenry, Md., bombardment of, I8I4, 1321.
59976°— 22-
-14
188
INDEX.
Fort Meigs, siege of, 181S, 719.
Fort Nisqually, Wash., 1256.
Fort Pitt, Pa., 635, 698.
Fort San Juan, La., 973.
Fort St. Charles, Lake-of-the Woods, Can., 2435.
Fort St. Philip, La., 764; bombardment of, 1816, 716.
Fort Sumter, S. C, defender of, 1310; firing on, 791.
Fort Vincennes, Ind., 2444,
Forts, Pennsylvania frontier, 1186.
" Forty-eighters," last of the, 1393.
" Forty-niner," letter of a, 884.
Foster, H. A., 152.
J. G., 1360.
FothergiU, John, 588, 667.
Foulke, W. D., 1939.
Founders, of the American republic, 677; of Vir-
ginia, Shakespeare and, 605. See also Patriots,
and Public officials.
Fowler, S. P., 1354.
Fox, D. R., 633,1911, 1912.
E. L., 747.
G. M., 1046.
John, 2293.
L. A., 597.
R. H., 588.
Fox Indians, 204,241.
France, Americans buried in Paris, 516; and the
American revolution, 640, 644, 659, 670; attempt
to reconquer Canada in the American revolu-
tion, attitude regarding, 670; attitude towards
American privateers, during the Revolutionary
war, 644; "citizen king" of, in America in 1797,
707; colonial policy in America, 524; colonial
tariff policy of, 2414; colonies in America,
526a, 529 (see also New France); Council
of commerce of, in relation to American
trade, 1700-173^, 529; diplomatic relations with
Argentina, 1838-1850, 2724; friendship with
the United States, 1773-1918, 1848, 1867; gov-
ernmental policy towards Canada in 1760,
2415; indebtedness of America to, since the
Revolutionary war, 1851; intervention in Mex-
ico {see Maximilian affair); Napoleon's com-
mercial system, and the United States, 1860;
naval participation in the American revolution,
669; negotiations with, in regard to the purchase
of Louisiana, 1865; official attitude in regard to
the American revolution, 644; official mourning
at the death of Washington, 1599; relations
with the United States during Napoleon's rule,
1860; traditional friendship between France
and the United States, 1867; treaty with, 1778,
684. See also French.
Francia, J. G. R., doctor, 2754.
Francis, A. T., 1822.
D. R., 1361.
Franciscans, in California, 2082; in Florida, 2085; in
Illinois, 2080, 2115.
Franklin, Benjamin, 667, 677, 700, 1302, 1362, 1894;
and slavery, 746.
"Franklin, state of," maker of, 861.
Franklin, Va., 768.
Fraunces' tavern, N. Y., 1187.
Frederick, Md., 1000, 1769.
Fredericksburg, Va., 1253.
Free negroes, Lincoln's plan for colonizing, 2061;
state legislation concerning, 2056.
Free trade, struggle for, in the 1790's, 1983.
"Free trade and sailors' rights," 1983.
Freedom of the press. See Zenger trial.
Freedom of the seas, 644. See also Blockade i
rung.
Freedom, religious. See Religious liberty.
Freemasonry, anti-Masonic movement, 1826
1840, 2038; George Washington and, 1590;
Pennsylvania, 2038, 2041a; Somerset co., N.
1114.
Freese, E. I., 2775. j
FreUnghuysen, Frederick, 693. I
Fremont, J. C, 1301.
French, colonies in America, 526a, 529 :
also New France); colonization in Amer|,
454; colonization in Brazil, 1654-1669, 2(i
2623; colonization in Ontario, 2531; (y\-
nization in the Antilles, 2679; colony in j
Ohio country, 708; correspondence regarding
American revolution, 637; discovery and i
ploration, 418, 422, 426, 429, 445, 620, 1851, 24 j
2451-2453, 2474; efforts in behalf of the Ameri(
colonies, 640, 652; expeditions from LouisiEl
into the Texas region in 1720-1721, 259; fort !
the lUinois country, 418; immigration to N
France, 2416, 2417; imperiahsm in North Am j
ica, 524; in America in the 16th century, 445; i
New England, 839; in the lUinois country, 6 ;
613, 620, 863, 864; influence on American lite !
ture, philosophy, science, and art, 1851; Latere |
in Latin America, 2577; language, teaching j
in colonial New York city, 579; missionaries I
New France, 2431, 2436a; participation ia t'
American revolution, 445, 644, 659, 662, 664, 6
673, 685, 1851 ; peril in the Old Southwest, 8(
privateer in West Indian waters, 1684-16>
2683; Protestant confession of faith in Ameri(
1667, 2073; Protestant refugee in Jamaica, 26'
Protestantism in Canada and the Unit
states, 2071; readers, American history for, 4^.
461; regime in Canada, doctiments bearing o
2427 {see also New France); regime in the Micl
gan region, 1931, 1982; regime in the Niaga
region, 1146; regime in Louisiana, 618, 619, 6i
rule in San Domingo, end of, 2687; settleme:
in what is now Missouri, in 1706, 616. See al
France, and Huguenots.
French-American friendship, 1773-1918, 1848, 186
French and Indian war, 587; oflacers and soldie
of, 961.
French Canada, historical literature relating t
2393.
French Canadians, 2416, 2417, 2486; poets an
poetry, 2390.
French Creek, W. Va., 2140a.
French-English conflict for control in America, 51
2441. {
French Guiana, Indians of, 288.
French West Indies, 2679-2683; Dutch attack upoi
in 1674, 2682.
Frewen, Moreton, 1307.
Frey, J. P., 505.
Freytas, Nicolas de, 615.
Friction between Great Britain and the Unite(i
States during the Civil war, 814. i
Fried, A. H., 1849.
Friederici, Georg, 295.
INDEX.
189
Friedrich, Ernst, 2738, 2739.
Friends, Society of, 2120-2122; at Berwick, Me., 1757;
in colonial Massachusetts, 551; in pubUc life in
provincial Pennsylvania, 590; rule in Pennsyl-
vania, 1741 to 1756, 588. See also Quakeriana.
Frietchie, Barbara, 1298, 1363.
Frobisher, Martin, 1301.
Frodin, Otto, 296.
Frontier, in poUtics, 736; Minnesota, expedition on,
in 1857, 1061; southern, in Queen Anne's war,
525; Texas, disturbances along, 1848 to 1860, 740,
Frontier and pioneer life, Iowa, 953; Minnesota,
1064; Texas, 1236.
Frontier communities, American mode of settling,
841.
Frontier forts hi Pennsylvania, 1186.
Frontier policy of Pennsylvania, 584.
Frontier military operations, 1832 to 1836, 737.
Frontier warfare, Revolutionary, 645.
Frontiersman, Jackson, the, 736.
Frothingham, T. G., 526.
Fry, A. F., 781, 848.
S. D., 903.
FuenzaUda Grandon, Alejandro, 2740.
Fiirstenwarther, Moritz von, 2052, 2057.
Fugitive slaves in Canada, 750, 750a, 2542, 2559.
Fuller, M. W., 1294.
Margaret. See Ossoli, M. F.
W. H., 1664.
Fuller genealogy, 1664.
Fullerton, H. S., 1968.
Fulton, Robert, 1302.
Fulton ferry, 1133.
Fur trade, an adventurer of, 2567; British, in the
Columbia river country, 706; in Michigan, 1049;
ha the Lake Superior region in 1727, 2449; in the
Northwest, 2449, 2451; in the Northwest, 1766-
1767, 628; in the Spokane country in 1812, 435;
in Wisconsin, 1274.
Furniture, colonial, 2240; prehistoric, 309.
Gage, Thomas, 2642.
Gagem, Baron von, 2057.
Gagnieur, W. F., 1047.
Galbraith, J. H., 2179.
Galdy, Lewis, 2673.
Galena, Wis., 1270.
Gall, H. R., 2020a.
iGallaher, R. A., 951.
Galleon, the Manila, 2630.
Gallinger, J. H., 1364.
Gallipolis colony, 708.
Gfalt, Ont., 2545.
j41vez expedition to California, 885.
james, Indian, 243.
Grananoque, Ont., 2536.
larber, J. P., 2179a.
parcia Calderdn, Francisco, 2585, 2693, 2764, 2765a.
Uarcia Carraflfa, Alberto, 2586.
larcia Cisneros, Francisco, 2265.
iarcia Pelayo, Dionisio, 394.
jxardiaer, W. H., 112.
ll'rardiner family, 1665, 1666.
[{Jardner, A. P., 1365.
C. L., 1365.
farland, Hamlm, 1494, 2295.
Gamier, C. M., 2290.
iarraghan, G. J., 2086-2088, 2195.
Garrison, W. L., 1302.
Garzdn, Eugenic, 2692.
Gaskill, N. B., 67.
Gaston, W. L., 1084.
Gates, Gen. Horatio, 625.
WilKam, 2650.
Gay, W. H., 1225.
Gayarr6, Charles, 614.
Geary, R. W., 2479.
Genealogical society of Utah, 13.
Genealogy, collected, 1622-1629; general, 1620, 1621;
in the Illinois state historical library, 18; in the
Library of Congress, 42; individual families,
1630-1750; Lancaster co.. Pa., 1193, 1194; re-
gional genealogy, vital records, etc., 1751-1817;
Spanish American, 2586; Venango co.. Pa., 1176.
Generals killed in war, Confederate, 762.
Genet, E. C. E., "Citizen," 1181.
Geographic factor in South American politics, 2576.
Geographic problems in American history, 82.
Geographic study of the history of the Algonquin
Indians, 216.
Geographical environment of American history, 455.
Geographical influences upon the hfe of the primi-
tive Indians, 455.
Geographical names. See Names, geographical.
Geographical "relations" of the Indes, 2621.
Geography, bibliography of, 34; effects upon Cali-
fornia history, 882; of Chile, 2738, 2739; pre-
Columbian knowledge of, 378; Wisconsin
physical and political, 1274.
George, D. E., 1328.
Georgia, 908-913; Civil war operations in, 783;
colonial history, 610; Presbyterian church in
Savannah, 2145; president of His Majesty's
cotmcil in the province of, 1373; two patriots
of, 1304.
Gerin-Lajoie, M. J., 2508.
German Americans, 1393; a forgotten dramatist,
2316; first priest m the West, 2105.
German company tract, Ont., 2565.
German conspiracy in American education, 518.
German influence, on American philosophical
thought, 2269; on the schools of Ohio, 2182.
German intrigues at Washington, 1914 to 1917, 1855.
Germans, emigration to Missouri, 1068, 1069; immi-
gration to the United States, 1817-1818, 2052,
2057; in Brazil, 2732; in the colonial South, 597.
Germany, commercial relations with Latin Amer-
ica, 2598; conflict with the United States over
Samoa, 1871; political designs with reference to
Brazil, 2729; political relations with the United
States, 1870 to 1910, 1852a.
Gerson, A. J., 106.
Gettysburg, battle of, 1863, gun used by the 1st
Rhode Island artillery at, 1209; Longstreet at,
782.
Gibault, Pierre, 864.
Gibbons, H. A., 1558, 1850.
Giddmgs, J. R., 1367.
Joshua, 1160.
Gide, Charles, 2414.
Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, 1301.
John, 1087.
Nathaniel, 1667.
GUbert family, 1667.
Gilchrist, Anne, 2351.
190
INDEX.
GUdas,N,, 2381, 2497.
GHder, J. B,, 1495.
Giles, Lionel, 395.
Gilkey, M. A., 42,
Gilkison, A. A. I., 228.
Gilman family, 1668.
Gilmore, M. R., 229, 230, IOCS, 1086.
Girard, Stephen, 1302, 1368, 1369; Masonic career
of, 2038.
Girard coUege, 2191,
Girault, Arthur, 2414.
Girl, the American, 2047.
Gist, Christopher, 1301,
Glacier national park, Montana, 1079,
Gladden, Washington, 2070.
Glass, C. B., 1138.
S.F., 2536a.
Gobbel, L. L., 1156, 1823.
Goddard, P. E., 231.
Godfrey, C. E., 232, 583, 2021, 2022.
E. H., 2383.
Goding, r. W., 2753.
Gods, ancient Mexican, 363, 367, 369; Indian, 306.
Godshaw, Esther, 152.
Goetchius, H. R., 910.
Goggio, Emilio, 2266.
Gold, in aboriginal art, 177; in prehistoric graves of
Panama, 325; search for, in South America,
U98-1600, 405; work of the Chibcha in, 318.
Gold camps, Montana, 1080.
Gold discoverer, a California, 1431.
Gold family, 1669.
Gold money, 2029.
Goldsmiths, aboriginal, 177.
G(5mez, Estevan, 416.
Gdmez Restrepo, Antonio, 2750.
Gonzales, E. G., 2616.
Good, J. I., 2073.
GoodeU, A.C.,jr,, 1370.
Goodman, J, T., 1371.
Goodpasture, A. V., 1439.
Goodmn, Cardinal, 849, 952, 1062, 1271,
Daniel, 1665.
M.W., 575.
Goodwin family, 1670.
Goodwyn, Mrs. W. S., 1246.
Goodyear, Charles, 1302.
Gordon, A. C, 844.
G. A., 1006, 1007, 2070.
J. H., 1288.
Nora, 1294.
W. S., 1693.
Gordy, W. F., 474.
Gorman, Henry, 2383a.
Gorsuch family, 1627.
Gosling, T. W., 1851.
Gosnold, Bartholomew, 1301.
Gosse, Edmund, 2320.
Gossehn, Auguste, 2461, 2509.
David, 2510.
Gottfredson, Peter, 1241.
Government, American system of, EngUsh origin,
1891; colonial, qualifications of officers of, 537;
elementary text-book of, 500; in the Old North-
west, organization of, 841; military, in Porto
Rico, 1898, 835; national, 1937-1944; of Texas
during the Spanish regime, 1230, 1233; of the
United States, outUne of, 468; state and loci i
1945-1965. See also CivU government, Civid
Colonial administration, and Politics and go
ernment. 1
Government, TJ. S., office for Latin American i|
search, 2589; system for trading wth the Ij
dians, 1986. (
Government buildings, competition for, 1792-17{,
2243. See also Capitol, U. S.
Government departments. See Patent office.
Government pubhcations. See PubMc document i
Governors, colonial, Connecticut, 1584; New Yor
577; of Carolina, 609; Plymouth colony, 54
Rhode Island, 1312. !
Governors of New York from 1777 to 1920, 1147. |
Gowen, H. H., 2777.
Graham, E. K., 2210, 2213, 2296. i
J. M., 921. !
Grain trade in Canada, 2369,
Gramuset, Antonio, 2702. i
Grand River, country. Mo., 1070.
Grand River Indian lands, Ont,, 2564.
Granger movement, 1920.
Grant, C.L., 1351.
Frank, 1011a. '
Madison, 1079.
U. S., 801; and early Galena, Wis., 1270.
Grasse, I'amiral de, in the American revolution, 65i
Gratz, H. H., 1012.
Simon, 1468.
Graves, O. D., 1107.
Gravestones, early New England, 535.
Gray, John, 1673.
Robert, 1301.
Thomas, 1671, 1672.
Gray family, 1671-1673.
Grays Harbor, Wash., 1258.
Great Britain, acts of Parliament in regard to th
American colonies, 1774-1777, 644; adtmni!
tration in Canada, 1766-1768, 2466; capture am
loss of Buenos Aires, 2702; and the birth of th
American nation, 649; and the Oregon bound |
ary dispute, 705, 706, 742, 730; colonial admiE
is tration in America, 596, 651; colonial adxaioif
tration in the West Indies, 2666; colonial polici
of, 2395; Commissioners of trade and planta
tions, records of, 72; conciliation proposals ti
the American colonies, 1774-1775, 667; contrc
versies with the U. S., 1846; effect of the los
of the American colonies upon, 648; expansioi
overseas, 130a; Indian agents in colonial Ajnerica
214; invasion and capture of Washington, 1814
899; invasion of Maryland, 181 4, 1321; King':
speeches to Parliament in regard of the Amerl
can colonies, 1775-1776, 644; Lords of trade anc
plantations, 1676-1696, 522; navy, on the Grea'
Lakes, 2548; Privy couucU, appeals from th(
West Indian colonies to, early 18th centuryi
2666; protection of American shipping ia th(
Mediterranean, 1784 to 1810, 1872; Public record
office, 72; regime in the Northwest, 1766-1767
628; relations with the Indians in colonial
America, 214; relations with the United StateS;
814, 1837, 1856, 1858; relations with the United,
States, history teaching as it affects. 111, 132,1
140; restoration of Fort Astoria by, 715; treatyi
with the United States, in 1846, 742. See ofao|
I
INDEX,
191
Anglo-American entente, British, England,
and English.
Great Lakes, 2474.
Great war. See World war.
Great Western turnpike, N. Y., 1139.
Gr^ber, Jacques, 2239.
Greeley, Horace, 801, 1302.
Green, B.W., 782.
Horace, 2359.
James, 1087.
S. S., 2297.
Greene, J. D., 1913.
John, 1674.
. Nathanael, 634.
William, papers of, 726.
Greene family, 1629, 1674.
Greene co., Tenn., 1227.
Greenland, church in, in the middle ages, 184;
Eskimos of, 247.
Greenlaw, Edwin, 396, 1837.
Greenough, C. P., 1580.
Greensville co., Va., 1246.
Greenwich, Conn., 1804.
Grenfell, W. T., 2570.
Grenier, E., 1419.
Gresham, Matilda, 1372.
W. Q., 1372.
Grey nuns in the far North, 2568.
Grierson, Francis, 1409a.
Griffin, A. P. C, 1852.
G. G., 14.
Griffith, William, 1496.
GrinneU, G. B., 233.
Groetzinger, Thomas, 1295,
Grosse He, Mich., 1045.
Grotewald, Christian, 2728.
Groulx, Adolphe, 2416, 2417.
Groveland, Mass., 1770.
'Gruber, M. A., 1769, 1771.
j Grymes family, 1675.
■ Guadalupe, Mexico, Virgin of, 2648.
Guaicaipuro, 406.
Guarani kinship terms, 341.
Guatemala, antiquities of, 322, 351; prehistoric
I monument in, 374.
Guayama, Porto Rico, 834.
Guayas, Ecuador, 305.
Gudger, E. W.,2698.
Guehenno, Jean, 2341.
Guernsey, S. J., 182.
Guiana, French colonization in, 2679; Indians of,
288; Raleigh's discovery of, 402. SeealsoTfntch
Guiana,
uilday, Peter, 15, 476.
iGuilford, H. M., 1676.
Gtuilford genealogy, 1676.
auillemin-Tarayre, E., 297, 298.
:JuilIemot-Magitot, G., 448.
Juitteau, W. B., 476.
bun used at Gettysburg, 1209.
jjushee family, 1677.
iwyer, W. A., 1088.
Habersham, James, 1373.
lackett, C. W., 615.
iaeberlin, H. K., 299.
ilaebler, Ruth, 300.
pgedorn, Hermann, 1497, 1538. '
Hagerstown, Md., 1771.
Haight, E.H., 2226.
Haiti, American filibusters in, 1871, 827.
Hal^vy, Daniel, 1612.
Half cents, U. S., 2029.
Haliburton family, 1662.
Halifax, N. S., 2495, 2496.
Hall, L. P., 793.
M. F., 1139.
Hallam, Mrs. W. T., 2384, 2418.
Halsey, R. T. H., 2240.
Hamilton, A. M., 2537.
Alexander, 677, 1302.
J. G. de R., 1157.
O.B., 922.
Hamlin, L. B., 726, 1164.
Hammond, O. G., 63.
Hampden-Sidney college, 2199.
Hand, Edward, 635.
Hansen, M. L., 113.
Hanson, W. T., 2149.
Hapgood, Norman, 1410.
Happel, F. L., 923.
Harbaugh, Henry, 1190.
Leonard, 2243.
Hard, William, 1498.
Harden, William, 783, 911.
Harding, M.S., 477.
S.B.,477.
Hardy, Elias, 2487, 2490, 2492.
Haring, C. H., 2618.
Harley, J. E., 1897.
L. R.,115.
Harper's Ferry raid, 732.
Harriman, E. H., 2024.
Harrington, E. C, 997.
Harris, Dean, 258.
E. D., 1374.
J, C, 2298, 2299.
John, 2206.
Rendel, 542.
Harrison, Fairfax, 1643.
W. H., siege of Fort Meigs, 181S, 719.
Hart, A. B., 478, 1940.
Philip, 2243.
W. W., 1441.
Harte, Bret, 2300.
Hartford, Conn., 2020a.
Harvard college, 551, 2190; class of 1869, 2196; class
of 1894, 2197; course in history in, in the seven-
ties, 150; first Jew to receive the degree of Master
of arts from, 1438; library, burning of, in 1764,
2036; men in the War of 1812, 2192; sojourn in
Concord, 1775-1776, 2193; soldiers and sailors in
the Revolution, 692.
Harvard university, Peabody museum of Ameri-
can archaeology and ethnology, 182.
Harvey, Mrs. J. E., 1099.
O. J., 707.
Harwich, Mass., 1772.
Hasenclever, Adolf, 1881.
Haskins, C. H., 1844.
Hassard, A. R., 2385, 2483.
Hasse, A. R., 24, 49, 50.
Hastings, G. E., 514, 700.
Hatch, Hannah, 1678.
J. P., 72.
192
INDEX.
Hatch, L. C, 984, 985.
Hatch papers, 1164.
Hatcher, M. A., 1233.
Hatchets, Indian, 104.
Hats, clan, of the Indians, 250,
Hattersley, A. F., 668.
Hatton, C, R., 784.
Havana, attack upon, contemplated by the Eng-
lish, 1740, 530.
Haverfield family, 1678a.
Haverford college, 38.
Haverhill, N. H., 1104a.
Havre, France, supphes for American revolution
sent from, 652.
Hawaiian Islands, 2775-2778.
Hawes, P. G., 785.
Hawk's prairie. Wash., 1257.
Hawkes, E. W., 161.
Hawldns, A. K., 479.
R. C.,1375.
Hawkins family, 1629.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 2280.
Hay, H. C, 2116.
Hayes-Conlding controversy, 1877-1879, 1919.
Hayne, M, P., 2419.
R. Y., debate ^vith Webster, 736.
Haynes, F. E., 1600.
G. H., 1898.
Lemuel, 1376.
Hays, Alexander, 1377.
G. A., 1377.
Haywood, E. R. B., 1325.
M. D., 1400.
Haywood co., N. C, 173.
Hazeltine, H. D., 507.
Health, Massachusetts State board of, 1023a.
Hearn, T. C, 2672.
Heath, WiUiam, 632a.
Heathcote, C. W., 786.
Heawood, Edward, 397.
Hebard, G. R., 1289.
Heck, W. H., 2214.
Hedges, J. E., 1499.
Heer, A. L., 116.
Heiligenstein, Paul, 2105.
Heilman, U. H.,1190.
Helgesen, H. T., 1378.
HeUman, G. S., 2303.
Helmets, Indian, 250.
Hemphill, J. C, 1427.
Henderson, Archibald, 1568, 2210.
D. M.,1500.
H. W., 1013.
Richard, 1229.
S. F.,1172.
Hendrick, B. J., 1563, 1979.
Hendricks, S. B., 727.
Henniker, N. H., 2116a.
Henry, H. T., 1368, 1369.
"Henry, O." See Porter, William Sydney.
Henry, Patrick, 677, 1302, 1379, 1380.
Henry famUy, 1746.
Hepburn, A, B., 2023.
W. P., 1381.
Heraldry, for Americans, 1620, 1621; Spanish Amer-
ican, 2586.
Herbermann, E. P., 2318.
I
Herbert, H. A,, 1382.
Heres, Tom4s de, 2707.
Hernandez, Pablo, 2703.
Heroes, Nebraska military, 1090; of national I
tory, 1295, 1296.
Heroines, Revolutionary, 669.
HeiTington, W. S., 2538.
Hersey, F. W. C, 398, 1837.
Hertelay, sieur du, 2679.
Hervier, P. L., 1501.
Hesi ceremony, 215.
Hessian, Revolutionary war journal of a, 632.
Hestermann, Ferdinand, 302.
Heye, G. G., 172, 173.
Hicks, A. A., 2539. :
J. D., 1945. '
Hicks family, 1679. i
Hidatsa Indians, 237. ]
Hieroglyphs, 291. |
Higginbotham family, 1680.
Higgins, James, 1296.
L. P., 1411, 1980.
Higginson, H. L., 1383.
High commissioners, Canadian, 2401.
High schools in IlUnois, to 1860, 917.
Highways, in Louisiana, 976. See also Roads, an
Trails.
Hildburgh, W. L., 174.
Hildebrand, J. R., 2127.
HUl, D. J., 1899.
E.G., 1297.
E. E., 152.
E. J., 1384.
H. P., 2511.
H. W., 1590.
J. J., 2024.
Hill family, 1681.
Hiller, A., 2128.
Hiller family, 1704.
Hills, L. E., 303.
HiUsboro, O., 1968.
Hillsborough, N. J., 1773.
Himes, G. H., 850, 1257.
Hines, Christian, 905.
E. D., 1014.
Hines family, 905.
Hitch famUy, 1655.
"Hispanic America," use of the term, 2583, 2611.
Hispanic America . See Spanish America .
Hispanic American history, teaching of, in educa
tional institutions of the United States, 151.
"Hispanic nations of the New world," 2606.
Hispano-Americana, 20, 22.
Historians, American, 136; of New Brunswick, Can.,
2491, 2493; of New France, 2413; of the thirteen
colonies, 142; vagaries of, 153.
Historical activities, in Canada, 1918-1919, 2369; in
the trans-Mississippi northwest, 1917-1919, 133.
Historical branch of the General staff, 148.
Historical commission, North Carolina, report of,
131.
Historical museum. See Museum, Historical.
Historical plays, Alabama, 868-870. See also Drama
of United States history.
Historical pubUcations, 1909 to 1919, 106.
Historical research, agricultural, ' 973; Department
of, in the Carnegie institution, 85; Latin Ameri-
can, 120.
INDEX.
193
Historical societies, Conference of, Dec. 28, 1916,
97; in Ontario, 97; in the state of Washington,
1255; reports of, 1916, 97; Historical society of
Western Pennsylvania, 2041; Indiana historical
society, 2039; Massachusetts historical society,
2042.
Historiography, methodology, study and teaching,
75-160; of South American history, 2696.
History, as an instrument of policy, 140; as litera-
ture, 146; course in, at Harvard college in the
seventies, 150; in high schools, current literature
relative to, 39; new treatment of, 78, 115, 128, 140;
pubUc documents relating to, 44; social utihty
of, 108; study and teaching of, 75-160, 469; teach-
ing of, current literature relative to, 39; effect on
relations with other countries. 111; guiding prin-
ciples in, 158; laboratory method in, 102; method
in, 124; problem method in, 123; reconstruction
of methods of, after the war, 143; the World war
and, 2400. See afco Text-books, outlines, etc.
History teacher, list of questions for, 469.
Hixon, A. H., 1591.
"Hobamock," Indian chief, 261.
Hobhouse, Stephen, 728.
Hobson, J. A., 787.
W. B., 2540.
Hockett, H. C, 480, 1882.
Hodge, F.W., 17,2619.
Hodges, L. F., 942.
HofEman, John, 1272.
Holand, H. R., 175.
Holbrook, F. L., 64.
Holden, A. C, 2232.
Holiday. See Thanksgiving day.
Holland, colonial politics in Surinam and the
West Indies, 2678.
Holley, E. J., 117.
iHoUiday, Benjamin, 1385.
Carl, 669, 1140, 1412, 2354.
Holman, F. v., 1173.
M. L., 1713.
Hohnes, W. H., 176, 177.
Hoist, C. A., 1273.
Holt, Hamilton, 1339.
JHolten, Samuel, 636.
JHolweck, F. G., 2090.
Homberg, Hans Staden von, 2732.
Home rule, colonial, from 1763 to 1774, 651.
Homer, Winslow, 2248.
Honduras, antiquities, 339; discovery and coloni-
zation of, 2596; Spanish conquest of, 2596.
Honeyman, A. V., 1116, 1357, 1733.
Hooker, G. E., 505.
Thomas, 552.
Hoover, Herbert, 1502.
Hopi pottery, 170.
Jopkins, J. C, 2372.
lopkinson, Francis, 700, 2357.
loppin, C. A., 1748.
Hornblow, Arthur, 2267.
lorner, J. B., 1174.
Hornet," American filibustering ship, 827.
loskins, J. A., 1158, 1430.
lospitals, Revolutionary, 634, 653. Sefi also Med-
ical institutions.
loss, E. E., 1465.
lostetter, A. K., 1191
Hostos, Adolfo de, 304.
Houdon statue of Washington, 1593.
Hough, F. L., 924.
Walter, 178.
House, E. M., 1292.
R. T., 1503.
Houses, Hawaiian, 2775; prehistoric, 178, 187-189
See also Cliff dwellings.
Houses, historic, Annapolis, Md., 996; Kentucky
955, 957; Litchfield, Conn., 2245; New England
preservation of, 838; Paxton township. Pa.
1197; Pennsylvania, 689a; Plymouth, Mass,
1008; Roxbury, Mass., 566; Sumter, S. C, 1211
Trenton, N. J., 1110; Virginia, 1379; Washing,
ton, D. C, 899, 904; White Plains, N. Y., 1136
Worcester, Mass., 1044. See also Colonial archi-
tecture, and Landmarks.
Houston, M. H., 788.
Sam, 1386.
Houston family, 1624.
Houston, Tex., 2187.
Hovelaque, H. L., 454.
Howard, McHenry 592.
WiUiam, 599.
Howard family, 1629.
Howe, EUas, 1302, 1387.
Joseph, 2385.
Julia Ward, 1298.
M. A. D., 1437, 1572, 2268.
Howells, W. D,, 912, 1160, 2301, 2302.
Howland, Harold, 1504.
Howland family, 1682, 1683 .
Hrbkova, S. B., 1089.
Huarte y Echenique, Amalio, 2651.
Huastec Indians, 356, 368.
Huave Indians, 342.
Hubbard, L. F., 1388.
Hudson, Henry, 425, 1301.
W. H., 2353.
Hudson Bay, historical notes regarding, 2516; men
who broke the trail to, 258.
Hudson river, Dutch and English on, 575.
Hudson's Bay company, 1301, 2567; connection
with the British cabinet, in 1825-1826, 706; corre-
spondence in regard to Oregon, 705, 706; settle-
ment at Rupert's House, James Bay, 2566;
a subsidiary company of, 1256.
Hughes, E. A., 2386.
William, 1389.
Huguenots, in Boston in 1690, 558; in South Caro-
lina, 608, 1214.
Huizinga, J., 508.
Hulbert, H. W., 2168.
Hulet, C. C, 789.
Hull, Isaac, 1390.
J. T., 986.
Gen. William, 720.
HuUu, J. de, 700a.
Hult, G. E., 2342.
Human bones, prehistoric, 203.
Humor, American, 2258.
Humorist, an American, 2284-2285. See also
Twain, Mark.
Humphrey, A. R., 1084.
Grace, 1298.
Hundred associates, Company of, 2504.
Hungarians. See Magyars.
194
INDEX.
Hungerpiller, J. G,, 2217.
Hunt, GaiUard, 509, 1900.
R. D., 2002.
Hunter, A. F., 97.
H. C, 234, 2241.
Hunting, W. B., 1901.
Huntington, A. M., 208.
Ellsworth, 455.
Huntington family, 1684.
Huntington, N. Y., 1774.
Hurd, H. M., 1566.
Hurons, mission of Pere Menard to, 2431.
Hurst, T. M., 790.
Hussey, R. B., 1015.
Husting, P. O., 1391.
Hutchinson, Anne, 1298.
Hutton family, 1626.
"Hyde, A. B., 748, 1981.
Hynes, Robert, 2092.
"I. W. W.," 2031.
Idaho, constitution of, 1945.
Ideahsm, American, 502, 503.
Ideals, American, English influence on, 507;
American, perpetuation of, 158; Committee
on training in American, report of, 118; of
EngUsh-speaking peoples, social and political,
1837; power of, in American history, 115. See
also National characteristics and ideals.
Idolatry among the Indians, 338, 373. See also
Gods.
Iglehart, F. C, 1505.
I.E., 943.
lUinois, 914^938; antiquities of, 183; Catholic church
in, 6, 2092, 2101, 2102, 2104, 2209, 2111-2113, 2115;
CathoUcs in, 2080, 2086, 2087; centennial history
of, 914, 919; centennial of, 1408; chief justice of
the Supreme court of, 1607; constitutional con-
vention of, 1869-1870, 50a; constitutions of, 1952;
early French fort in, 418; executive department,
1949; finances of, 689; first citizen of, 864; Francis-
cans in, 2080; French in, 863, 864; French in-
fluence upon, 620; high schools in, to 1860, 2178;
Indian mounds in, 165; judicial organization of,
1950; legislative development in, 1951; legisla-
tive reference bureau, 50a; pioneer priest in,
2152; pontics and government, 194&-1952;
Potawatomie Indians in, 214.
Illinois, University of, High school conference, 118.
Illinois Catholic historical society, 923.
Illinois country, Catholic church in, 2111; Catholic
missionary in early, 2162; Clark's conquest of,
in 1778, 689; French Canadians in, to the 18th
century, 2474; French customs in, 612, 613;
French fort in, 418; French in, 612, 613, 620. See
aiso Northwest, Old.
Illinois state historical Ubrary, 18.
'^Iflustrated news," periodical, 2062.
Illustrated topics for American history, 483.
Imes, W. L., 1928.
Immigrants to the northwestern states, 2050.
Immigration, conditions of, 1817-1818, 2052, 2057;
English, into Indiana in 1817, 943; German, to
Missouri, 1068, 1069; in 1818, 2052.
Impeachment, of Governor Butler of Nebraska, in
1871, 1083; of President Johnson, 825.
Imperial federation, British, 668. See also British
empire.
ImperiaUsm, American, 1843a; British and Frencl
in North America, 524.
Imperallst, an ill-starred, 2638.
Implements, Indian, 163, 164, 168, 347; prehistori
174, 286, 305, 321; trade, of the Indians, 163. Si
also Artifacts, prehistoric, Lithic Industrie;
Slings, and Weapons.
Inca Tupac Yupanqui, 2704.
Incas, 282; buried city of, 293, 294; embalming bj
344; institutions of, 330; Pizarro and, 412.
Incense burning. See Censer. I
Indentured servants, 540. |
Independence, Mecklenburg declaration of, 679.
Independence, Spanish American. See SpanisJ
American wars of independence. j
Indexes (cumulative) to serial publications, 48-54. i
Indian and African trading company of Scotland ■
2638. !
Indian chiefs. See Caciques, Hobamock, ant I
Samoset. \
Indian com, 1972. j
Indian massacre. Fort Dearborn, 1812, 932; in Uli |
nois, in 1819, 929; in Nebraska, in 1864, 1087; ii!
Texas, in 1871, 1232. See also Wyoming massa j
ere. '
Indian mounds, in North Carolina, 173; in Ohio
186, 207; in Texas, 195; in Wisconsin, 161, 165 1
196.
"Indian notes and monographs," 35, 172, 200, 251 j
252, 277, 278, 325.
Indian place-names, in Canada, 2371; in Nebraska
1085; in Wisconsin, 1282.
Indian policy, Pennsylvania's, 1682-1800, 584;
U. S. government, 1986.
Indian relics, in the Kentucky state historical
society, 162; in Wisconsin, 163, 164. See alsc\
Antiquities, and Indian implements. j
Indian Territory, Sam Houston in, 1386. |
Indian trails, 214, 552; along the Connecticut river,!
2017; in Indiana, 1989. {
Indian warriors, 1060. i
Indian wars, campaigns, etc., conflict between the
United States and the Apache Indians, 18^-
1886, 217; colonial, 532, 536, 538; Creek war,
1813-1814, 736; early New England, 532; in
Michigan, 1060; in Nebraska, early 19th century,
1097; in Nebraska, in 1864, 1087; Pontiac's con-
spiracy, 855; siege of Fort Meigs, 1813, 719;
uprising in Washington, in 1855, 1260. See also
French and Indian war. f
Indiana, 939-949; biography, 1602; founder of, .
2444; in the Mexican war, 743; Indian trail in, |
1989; interest held by, in historic Elinois, 936; !
journey to, in 1832-5, 433; pioneer experiences '
in, 857; pioneer life and manners, 433; Potawat-I
omi Indians in, 214; railroad in, 2010. i
Indiana, Dept. of conservation, 944.
Indiana, Historical commission, 945. ,
Indiana historical society, 2039. j
Indianapolis, Ind., 942. '
Indians, 210-264; aboriginal canoes of, 206; age so- |
cieties of, 211a; alliance with the Confederacy, i
757; art of, 2233 (see also Art, aborigi- ;
nal); burial place in Pennsylvania, 169; i
calendars of, 167; clash with white men in
Wisconsin lumber camp in 1864, 1267; customs !
in the southwest in the 18th century, 618; dep-
i
INDEX.
195
redations against the Kentucky pioneers, 686;
depredations in Utah, 1241; effort of the federal
government to win the loyalty of, 1986; field-
work of the Smithsonian institution among, 204;
fur trade with, 1274; government system for
trading with, 711; governmental relations with,
1986; implements of, 163, 164, 168; in CaUfornia,
886; in Latin America, past and present status
of, 2594; in Minnesota, 74, 2167; in modern law,
1933; inNebraska, 1086; in Ontario co., N.Y., 193.
in painting, 2241; in Pennsylvania, 1698 to 1716|
589; in Pennsylvania, policy in regard to, 168S-
1800, 1186; in Tennessee, purchase of land from,
in 1775,1229; in the Northwest, Catholic mission-
ary to, 2158; in the Old Northwest, 628, 855; in
the South, removal of, 736; in Wisconsin, 1274;
John Eliot's Christianizing of, 542; missions to,
74, 2158, 2167, 2431; myths and legends of, 312,
314,315,326; occupation of America by, 455; oc-
cupation of Kent CO., Ont., 2546; of Guiana, 288,
313; of Massachusetts, colonial period, 552; of
Mexico, 265, 266, 290, 316, 337, 368; of Mexico,
under Montezuma, 290; of South America, 288,
296, 300, 301, 306, 310-314, 333-335, 341, 346, 347,
349, 352, 354, 362, 370-373, 406; of Texas in 1820,
report on, 1233; of the Southwest in the diplo-
macy of the TJ. S. and Mexico, 741; origin of,
218; prehistoric villages, 171; religion, 308;
school for, first Catholic, 2088; Sioux Indians,
74; sites in New York city, aboriginal, 202;
slavery of, in the Spanish colonies during the
16th and 17th centuries, 409; trade with, 584,
628, 711, 1274, 1583, 1986; treaty with, 1819, 704;
villages, 171, 193, 219, 589. See also Aboriginal
America— Mexico, Central America, West In-
dies, and South America.
Indies, geographical accounts of, 2621; Spanish gov-
ernment in, 2620. See also Archive general de
Indias, and Spanish colonial administration in
America.
Indigo culture in the South, 1981.
Industrial democracy, 1848-1919, bibliography of,
i 23.
Industrial evolution of the South since Reconstruc-
I tion, 862.
Industry, aboriginal, 176; Canadian, 2368; Indian,
262, 300; Lancaster county silk, 1191; prehis-
toric, 343. See also Basketry, and Commerce
j and industry.
[ngenieros, Jos6, 2693.
jlngham, G. H., 2141.
j W. H., 953.
nnes, J. H., 399.
nness, George, 2248.
nnholders, Somerset co., N. J., 1778-1799, 1125.
nns. See Taverns.
nscriptions. See Hieroglyphs, and Kensington
rune stone.
Institutions, American, 75; perpetuation of, 158.
See also Americanism, and National charac-
teristics.
nstitutions, educational, 2190-2209. See also So-
cieties and institutions.
nsurance, fire, 2020a.
nteUigence, shifting of, during the past hundred
years, 2176.
ntendants of New France, 2474.
"The Interior," periodical, 2146.
International arbitration, 1849. See also Venezuela
arbitration.
International cooperation, 1904.
International joint commission between Can ada and
the United States, 1841.
International law, Jefferson and, 1870. See also
Neutrality, and Prizes.
International relations, a successful experiment in,
1841; history text-books and, 156. See also
Diplomatic history and foreign relations, and
World power, United States as a.
Interoceanic canals, 2663.
Invalid regiment. Revolutionary army, 665.
Inventor of the sewing machine, 1387.
Iowa, 950-954; civic instruction and training for
citizenship in, 79; constitution of, 1954; legisla-
tive history of, 1955, 1956; polities, from 1879 to
1912, 1600; politics and government, 1953-1956;
president of the Senate in, 1955; speaker of the
House of representatives in, 1956; writing of war
history in, 113.
"Iowa and war," 113, 951; index to, 51.
"Iowa biographical series," 1381, 1600.
Iowa Wesleyan college, 2198.
Ipswich, Mass., 1775, 1776.
Ipswich road, Mass., 1014.
Ireland, John, 2157.
Ireland's part in America's struggle for liberty, 680.
Irish, Catholics in the Union army, 799; in Argen-
tina, 2721; in early Illinois, 937; in the Amer-
ican revolution, 680.
Iron industry, 2024.
Iron vessel, America's first, 2007.
Iron Works Hill, battle of, 1776, 687.
Irons, H. M., 1183.
Iroquois Indians, 204; in Canada, 258; last grand
sachem of, 1449; reUgion and morals, 264. See
also Long Sault, siege of, and Six Nations
Indians.
Irrigation in the state of Washington, 1254.
Ii-ving, Washington, 1141, 2303.
Isanti Indians, 253.
Ispizua, Segundo de, 2620, 2699.
ItaUan culture in America, 2266.
Itonama Indians, 335.
Iturbide, Agustin de, 2654.
Iturbide revolution, 2654; in the Californias, 2647.
Ives, G. S., 1405.
Ivey, G. W., 2161.
P. D., 1048.
Jack, T. H., 867.
Jackson, A. B., 791.
Andrew, 701; the reign of, 736.
Hall, 1392.
James, 1304.
R. L., 1392.
Jacksonian period, 736; Pennsylvania poUtics
in, 1178.
Jacobi, Abraham, 1393.
Jaguar in Indian mythology, 319.
Jail, Boston, Mass., in 1713, 565.
Jamaica, early map of, 466; French Protestant ref-
ugees in, 2673; sketches of scenes in, 1766, 2672;
slave trade with, 2675; under the Spaniards, 2668.
James, G. W., 1130.
William, 2269, 2281.
196
INDEX.
Jameson, J. F., 14, 65, 85, 119, 574, 1001.
Jamestown colony, founders of, 594; 300th anniver-
sary of the settlement of, 1250.
Jamison, Isabel, 926.
Japan. See Oriental policy of the United States.
Jay, John, 654.
Jeancon, J. A., 179.
Jeffers, Le Roy, 2319.
Jefferson, Thomas, 677, 700, 1302, 1394-1397; and the
law of nations, 1870; letters of, concerning phi-
lology and the classics, 2174; political ideals of,
1910; war on the judiciary, 703.
Jefferson, Me., 1777.
Jefferson, O., 1160.
Jenkins family, 1685.
Jenks, J. W., 1843.
W. L., 1960.
Jennings, W. W., 2118. '
Jensen, J. C, 2135.
Jenson, Andrew, 1242.
Jernegan, M. W., 533, 598.
Jersey City, N. J., 1120.
Jersey co.. 111., 922.
Jesuits, expulsion from South America, 2702; mis-
sionaries, 617, 2431, 2433, 2434; reductions in
Paraguay, 2702,
Jew, first to receive the degree of M. A. from Har-
vard college, 1438.
Jijon y Caamano, Jacinto, 305, 306,320.
Jimenez Herrera, G., 2688.
Jivaro tribes, 292, 362,
Job seekers at Albany a century ago, 1141.
Jogues, Isaac, 2433.
John Carter Brown library, 4.
"John Randolph," America's first iron vessel, 2007.
Johnson, Alfred, 1756a.
Allen, 412, 520, 532, 575, 587, 703, 736, 752, 809,
825, 847, 855, 861, 862, 927, 1846, 1896, 1916, 1979,
1983, 2009, 2024, 2032, 2396, 2606.
Andrew, 1051; trial of, 825, 826.
CUfton, 437.
E. P., 792.
1. A., 1049.
Franklin, 2056.
J. A., 1929.
J. S., 1426.
Jemima, 1298.
T. S., 1444.
Thomas, 1398.
W. J., 1592.
W. T., 180.
Sir William, 575.
Johnson Canyon, Colo., 189.
Johnston, Jonas, 1399.
D. M., 1090.
Gen. J. E., 788.
Johnston, Rhode Island, 199.
Johnstown, N. Y., 1778.
JoUiffe, Percival, 2512.
Jones, C. K., 2587, 2588, 2652.
Calvin, 1400.
E. A., 629, 671.
H. B., 1401.
H. M., 851.
P. F., 2199.
R. M., 2200.
T.R., 888,889.
Jones, W. A., 1402.
Jones CO., Miss., 759.
Jordan, D. S., 1506.
W. G., 2020a.
Josselin de Jong, J. P, B. de, 307, 308. 1
Journal of Latin American history, conference o
the foundation of, 2581.
Journalists, CaUfomia pioneer, 894a.
Journals. See Periodicals.
Joyce, J. S., 1192.
T. A., 309.
Ju&rez, Juan, 2085.
Juda, Fanny, 729.
Judd, C. H., 2182.
N. M., 181.
Judges in the parliament of Upper Canada, 2554.
Judicial department, nimois government, 1950.
Judicial review of legislation, 1902, 1905.
Judiciary, Connecticut, 1314; estabUshment of, 703 :
Jefferson's war on, 703; of Ontario, 2555; of th(;
Territory of Michigan, 1960; relation to th(|
Constitution, 1902; Virginia, in 1818, 1247. Sei\
also Courts, Judges, and Justice, adnainistratiori
of. ;
Judson, K. B., 715. \
Katharine, 730. |
Juliana library company, Lancaster, Pa., 2034. i
Jtmin, Peru, battle of, 1824, 2708.
Jurisprudence, federal, 1929. '
Jusserand, J. J., 515, 1507. 1
Justice, administration of, in the Lake Michigan!
wilderness, 1931; American ideals of, 507. See\
also Equity, Judiciary, and Law.
Juvenile histories, biographies of national leaders,
456; Indian history for yoimg folks, 223; of New
France, 2421; stories of American history, 442.
See also Primary history.
Juvenile literature, biographies, 1296.
Kalamazoo, Mich., 1054.
Kamehameha the Great, 2777, 2778.
Kankakee river. 111., 183.
Kanon, sieur, 2443.
Kansa Indians, 244.
Kansas, colonization of, from 1854 to 1860, 733;
migration of negroes to, in 1879, 829; struggle,
Missouri in, 1072.
Kansas-Nebraska act, 722.
Karsten, Rafael, 310.
KaskasMa, 111., 612, 613, 2102.
Kaws, capital of the, 244.
Kayenta district, Ariz., 182.
Kearny, Philip, 1036.
S. W., 1096.
Keeling, J. M., 768. ',.';
Keen, G. B., 1626. ,,.':
Keen family, 1642a.
Keene, C. B., 987.
Keidel, G. C, 995, 2129. .,, ,
Keim, Jeannette, 1852a.
Kelby, WUliam, 2242.
KeUen, W. V., 1424.
Keller, George, 2250,
KeUett Ledge, Wash., 1258.
KeUey, H. J., 852.
M. A., 1431.
KeUogg, Chauncey, 1265.
I
INDEX.
197
Kellogg, L. P., 1274.
KeUy,H.B.,1290.
Kelsey, R. W., 2200.
Kemper, C. E., 2142.
G. W. H., 941.
Kendall famUy, 1686.
Kendrick, J. B.,2004.
Kennedy, Fronde, 2064.
Russell, 1786a.
Sinclair, 543.
Kennedy family, 1686a.
Kennison, David, 932.
Kenny, L. J., 708, 2093.
Lawrence, 616.
Kensington rune stone, 175.
Kent, C. W., 2215.
Kent, Duke of, at Quebec in 1791, 2509; departure
from Halifax in 1798, 2454.
Kent CO., Del., 1779.
Kent CO., Ont., 2532, 2546.
Kentucky, 955-961; Confederate campaign in, in
1862, 804; constitution and constitutional con-
vention of 1891, 1957; great lawyers of, 1926;
history, to the beginning of the 19th century,
861; Indian depredations in, during the Revo-
lution, 686; loyalists in, 686; pioneer experiences
in, 857; trip to, in 1795, 434.
Kentucky state historical society, 162.
Keresan Indians, 224.
Kerr, C. M., 978.
Key, F. S., 1321.
Rebecca> 996.
Keyser, H. Irvine, 997.
ICidd, Captom William, 1666.
Kidder, A. V., 182.
N. T.,97.
Ifllborn, R. D., 1050.
KHbourne, F. W., 2329.
KlmbaU, Everett, 1941.
Fiske, 2243.
Kimmel, Herbert, 527, 2175.
King, Grace, 963,
Rufus, 1403.
g Philip's war, 536.
g's Mountain, battle of, 1780, 861.
gsbury, F. B., 1099.
ad, E.S.,959.
0, E. F., 617.
o's historical memoir of Pimeria Alta, 617.
Sinsey, John, 590.
Ciasbip terms, Guarani, 341.
flowa Indians, 204, 1232.
kland, Caroline, 928.
J. H., 2220.
Winifred, 2343.
lissenberth, W., 311.
atchen-middens, Santo Domingo, 278.
vittredge, G. L., 559.
iQeefisch, J., 526a.
hein, Julius, 2589.
Ipem, M. J., 731, 1072.
line, M. J., 2130.
:napp,H. E., 1404.
J. H., 1404.
neass family, 1687.
-night, E. W., 1212.
iiight family, 1688.
ts Templar, in Pennsylvania, 2041a.
Knowlton, D. C, 94, 106, 121.
Knowlton, New Jersey, 1780.
Knoxville, Tenn., 1221.
Koch-Grunberg, Thecdor, 312-314.
Zohler, M. J., 2057.
Korn, A. L. B., 1385.
Kosciuszko, T. A. B., 682.
Kratz Creek mound group, 161.
Krause, Fritz, 235.
Kreichgauer, Damian, 315-317.
Kroeber, A. L., 2782.
Kuhns, Oscar, 1193, 1194.
Kunike, Hugo, 318, 319.
Kuykendall, G. B., 1689.
R. S., 793, 890, 891.
Kuykendall family, 1689.
Labor, 2030-2032; American ideals in, 505; biblio-
graphy, 23; in the colony of Antigua, 2674.
See also Indentured servants.
Labor unions, 2030-2032.
Labrador, 2570; early map of, 416; Eskimos of, 247.
Labrador peninsula, 2523.
Lacher, J. H. A., 1270.
La Farge, John, 2248.
La Fayette, marquis de, 445, 672, 67«, 685; a com-
' panion of, 673; in America, 683.
Lafayette, La., lost city of, 980.
Lafayette co.. Wis., 1268.
Lafitte, Jean, 970.
Lafontaine, A., 2330.
Laguardia, C. G. B., 2720.
G. G. B., 2720.
La Harpe, B6nard de, 259.
Laidlaw, G. E., 258.
Lake Michigan wilderness, 1931.
Lake Nipigon, Ont., 2449.
Lake Superior region, explorations in, in 1727, 2449.
Lamere, Oliver, 236.
Lamphier, R. G., 2243.
Lancaster, Pa., 2034.
Lancaster co., Pa., 1191, 1193, 1194.
Lancasterian system, 2177.
Land, J. H., 2541.
Land, 1970, 1971, 1974; grants in Upper Canada,
1798 and 1805, 2564, 2565; in New York city,
eighty years ago, price of, 1140; Kentucky, 961;
method of transfer, in Quebec, since 1760, 2504;
policy of the United States, 1970; public, 948,
961, 1171, 1285, 1970, 1974; pubUc, in Ontario,
2564, 2565; pm-chase from the Cherokee Indians,
1776, 1229; speculations of George Washington,
1591; system in the colonies, 1971; system of
Texas, 1974. See also Private property.
Land company, in Upper Canada, 1805, 2565.
Land tenure. See Quit-rent system.
Landis, C. I., 1179, 1583, 2034.
C. K., 1117.
D.H.,589.
J. H., 1363.
Landmarks, historical, in New York state, 1153;
Roxbury, Mass., 1033; Washington, D. C, 899;
Pennsylvania, 1197. See also Houses, historic,
and Milestones.
Landon, Fred, 732, 749-750a, 2464a, 2542.
Lane, E. E., 1016, 1017.
F. K., 2211.
J. E., 528.
198
INDEX.
Lang, William, 2638.
Langford, George, 183.
Languages, Indian, 222, 271, 342, 354, 360; Indian,
vocabularies of, 259; Maya, 302.
Lanier, Sidnejr, 2304.
Lansing, Robert, 1292.
LapaHce, O., 2513.
La Pahna, New Granada, 2621.
La Plata, Spanish conquest of, 407; travel in, 1863
to 1866, 2722. See also Rio de la Plata.
Laprade, W. T., 649, 1837,
LapradeUe, Albert de, 1853, 1904.
La Rochelle, France, relations with New France,
2474.
La Ronciere, Charles de, 2682,
Larrea, C. M., 320.
Larson, L. M., 184.
LaRue, W, E., 2136.
Larzelere, C. S., 2201,
La Salle, Robert de, 1301.
Las Casas, Bartholomew, See Casas, Bartolom6
de las.
LaseU, G. M., 468.
Lasso, 321.
Lasu6n, F. F. de, 2082.
Latan6, J. H., 1854.
Latham family, 1623.
Latin America, a coxirse for the better understand-
ing of, 2578; discovery to 1600, 2612-2634;
French interests in, 2577; from 1600 to 1830,
2635-2646; general, 2573-2611; history of, 2608;
history of, foundation of a journal of, 2581;
history of, study and teaching of, 2578; names
of places in, derivation and meaning of, 2597;
regional history, 2647-2774. See also Spanish
America.
"Latin America," use of the term, 2583, 2611.
Latin American division of the Bureau of foreign
and domestic commerce, 120.
Latin American research, U. S. government oflace
for, 2589.
Latin Americana, 20, 22.
Latorre, Germ4n, 401, 2621. ,
La Touche, sieur de, 2426.
Latour, A. L., 716.
La Tour, C. A. de, 2411.
Latourette, K. S., 1172.
N. E., 1172.
Lau, R. F., 2150.
Laurier, Sir Wilfrid, 2479a, 2481, 2482, 2484-2486.
La Valiniere, P. H. de, 2162.
LaveUe, M. J., 2159.
La Verendrye, P. G. de Varennes de, and sons,
1301, 2409, 2435, 2452.
Law, John, 618.
• William, 908.
Law, 1924-1936; an early Reconstruction law, 908;
American ideals in, 505; Argentine, 2714; con-
stitutional, 1891-1906; EngUsh influence on
American, 507, 521; first professors of, at Laval
university, Montreal, 2502; in Canada, 2392;
in New Mexico in territorial days, 1128; in
Ontario, 2554, 2555; practice of. Reconstruction
measure regarding, 908; West Virginia, 1262.
See also Constitutional history and law. Court
records. Courts, International law. Judiciary,
Legal publications, and Trials.
Law's Mississippi concession, 618.
Laws of New York, compilations of, 1927. See also
Legislation.
Lawton, A. R., 2007.
Lawton's VaUey, R. I., 1204.
Lawyers, early Marion co., Ind., 949; in Missouri
one hundred years ago, 1075; of colonial Massa-
chusetts, 551; of Kentucky, 1926; of Mont-
gomery CO., 111., 933; pioneer Michigan, 1315.
Lazarists, 2109.
Lea, H. J., 819.
Leach, E. W., 1275.
Leach family, 1690.
Lead miners in Wisconsin, 1274.
League of nations, contest over, 1895; proposed, in
1845, 739.
Le Breton Flats, Ottawa, Can., 2511.
Lechartier, Georges, 1855.
Le Due, W. G., 1405.
Ledyard, John, 1301.
Lee, A. S., 481.
Charles, 632a.
Sir Sidney, 402, 2734.
R. E., 1406.
"Lee," American cruiser, 675.
Leflerts, Walter, 456.
Legal profession in Canada, 2392.
Legal pubhcations, Virginia and West Virginia, 2.
Legislation, bankruptcy, in the colonies, 2025;
concerning the free negro, state, 2057; by gov-
ernor and judges, in the Northwest Territory,
1946; educational. New York state, 2188; in
lUinois, 1951; judicial re^4ew of, 1902, 1905. See
also Laws.
Leguizamdn, M. P., 321.
Lehmann, Walter, 322.
Leifthe Lucky, 1301.
Leighton, E. V., 122.
Leinheuser, Lawrence, 2355.
Leisler, Jacob, 575.
Le Jeune, Phe, 2434.
Lemieux, Rodolphe, 2387.
Le Moy, A., 637.
Lemoyne d'Iberville, Pierre, 1301.
Lenape Indians, 232, 260a.
Lenni-Lenape Indians, 260a.
Lennox and Addington co., Ont., 2538.
Lenotre, G., 673.
Leon, Nicolas, 2653.
Leonard, J. H., 794.
Leopoldine association, 2101.
Le Prestre de Chateaugeron, M., 637.
Leroux, Emmanuel, 2269.
Le Roy, J. R., 516.
Lescaut, Manon, 974.
"Les Chasseurs," secret political society, 2467.
Letelier, Valentin, 2740.
Le Vasseur, N., 403, 2514.
Levermore, C. H., 1837, 1856, 1883.
Levi, K. E., 1276.
Levilher, Roberto, 2622.
Levin, S. M., 123.
Lewes, Del., Presbyterian church, 2139.
Lewis, F. G., 2079, 2079a.
Gabriel, 845.
1. F., 2214.
Meriwether, 1301, 1396.
j;
INDEX.
199
Lewis, W. D., 1508.
W. S.,1565.
Lewis and Clark expedition, 844, 1396, 1461.
Lexington, Mass., battle of, 1775, 661.
Libbey, William, 67.
Liberal Kepublican movement, 1918.
Libertj^ American ideals of, 507; civil and religious,
in colonial Massachusetts, 551; political, English
origin of our, 1891. See also Democracy, and
Religious liberty.
Liberty loans of the Revolution, 676.
Liberty tree broadside, 1766, 638.
Librarian of Congress, report of, 72.
Librarians, biographical sketches of, 2297.
Libraries, 2033-2037; in Argentina, 2725; National
library of Mexico, 2661.
Library employes' union of Greater New York, 23.
Library of Congress, Division of manuscripts, 73;
genealogies in, 42; Hispano-Americana in, 20;
report of the librarian, 72.
Life and manners, 2043-2047; American, in the reign
of the Georges, 520; colonial, 520; colonial New
England, 532; early 19th century, attitude in
regard to the theatre, 1144; in Georgia, 909; in
Louisiana in the early 19th century, 845; in New
Orleans in the sixties, 981; in New York city in
1834, 1316; in pioneer Indiana, 433; in the Illi-
nois country, during the French period, 612, 613;
Indian, 227, 238, 243, 264, 330, 338; Indian, in-
fluence of geographical conditions upon, 455.
See also Clan organization, Culture, Dances,
Description and travel, Frontier and pioneer
life, and Games.
Liges, Georges, 2224.
Lima, Peru, 2633, 2702.
Lincoln, Abraham, 1302, 1407-1421; first election of,
722; news of the assassination of, 1225; personal
recollections of, 801; plan for a biographicalstudy
of, 496; plan for colonizing the emancipated ne-
groes, 2061; poUtical enemies of, 797.
Benjamin, 632a.
Nancy Hanks, 1411.
N. S., 1299.
Lincoln centennial association, 1413.
Lincoln co., Ont., 2556.
Lincoln genealogy, 1421.
Lindley, Harlow, 945.
Robert, 929.
Linguistics, bibliography of, 34.
Lippincott, H. M., 2202.
Lippincott family, 1668.
Lisle de la Cailleterie, Jean-Guillaume de, 2518, 2519.
Litchfield, Conn., 2245.
Literary history, 2255-2353; Canadian, 2480; Catholic,
2097; New York, 1800-1840, 2097; Pittsburgh, Pa. ,
1201; South America, 2693; Spanish America,
2580, 2610. See also Authors' association, and
Printing and pubUshing.
Literary societies in New Hampshire towns, 1102.
Literature, American ideals in, 505; Argentine, 2726;
biographical and critical, 2280-2353; French-
Canadian, 2390; general, 2255-2275; in Lowell,
Mass., 1010; Ohio, 1169; Oregon, 1174; Pennsyl-
vania-German, 1190; regional, 2276-2279. See
also Poetry.
Lithic industries , aboriginal , 176. See also Stone.
Lititz, Pa.,653.
Littell family, 1732.
Little, Luther, 1422.
Little Blue river, Nebr., Indian raid on, 1864, 1087.
"The Little brown church in the vale," song, 1277.
Livermore, M. A., 1298.
W. R., 1346, 1360, 2216.
Livingston, Henry, 1423.
Livingston co. , 111. , 918.
Llorens,E. L., 1884.
Lloyd, David, 590.
John, 72.
Thomas, 590.
W. A., 1973.
Loans, Liberty, 676.
Local government, 1945-1965.
Localhistory, California, sources of, 56, 57; pageants,
80; study of, 135. See also Regional (local)
history.
Locke, G. H., 2421.
Lockey, J. B., 1857, 2591.
Lockwood, Ina, 124.
Lockwood family, 1654.
Locofoco party, 1922.
Lodge, H. C, 1292, 1480, 1509.
Loeb, H. W., 1073.
Logan, J. D., 2498.
James, 590.
London, Ont., 2535a.
Long, B. R., 1367.
R. C. E., 323, 324.
S. H., 1301.
Long Island, N. Y., battle of, 1776, 994; domestic
architecture, 2244; Ferry road on, 1133; gen-
alogy of famines of, 1629, 1646; lost island of
Luisa identified as, 399.
Long Point, Ont., 2563.
Long-Sault, siege of, 1660, 2474.
Longfellow, H. W., 2305.
Longstreet, Gen. James, 782.
Lonn, Ella, 529.
Lopez, Francisco Solano, 2755.
Jacinto, 2741.
Narciso, 725.
Lord, Arthur, 1958.
C. P., 1105.
C. W., 1779.
Lords of trade and plantations, 522.
Loring, A. A., 1691.
Loring family, 1691.
Los Angeles, Cal., captured by American forces, in
1846, 894b.
Los Angeles, Cal., Public library, 25.
Los Reyes, ciudad de, Peru, 2633.
Los Rios de Lamp^rez, Blanca de, 2592.
Los XII Apostoles, province of, Peru, 2635.
Lost Cabin mines, Wy., 1286.
Lothrop, S. K; 325.
Lotteries, 2026.
Louisiana, 962-981; archives of, 62; Catholic church
in, 2108; Civil war preparations in, in 1861, 764;
emblematic bird of, 962; infantry in the Civil
war, 819; life and manners, from 1806 to 1809,
845; War of 1812 in, 716.
Louisiana (province). Catholic affairs in, 1816-1819,
2084; cession of, treaty concerning, 1803, 1873;
commerce and agricultiu-e of, 1720-1766, 614;
ecclesiastical history, 964, 969; financial reports
200
INDEX.
relating to, 1766-1788, 846; flags of, 966; French
expeditions from, to the Texas region in 1720-
1721, 259; Indian customs in, 618; John Law's
concession, 618; Spanish fort in, 973; Spanish
regime in, 964; Superior council of, records, 17^5,
619; Ursulines in, 969.
liOuisiana historical and biographical association,
977.
Louisiana purchase, 701; diplomatic negotiations
regarding, 1865.
Lounsberry, C. A., 1159.
Lovekin, L. A. M., 2465.
Lovelace family, 1627, 1692.
Lovering, H. M., 1424.
Lovett, R. M.,505.
Low, A, M., 1613.
Dirck, 1115.
Lowden, F, O., 1415, 1511.
Lowell, J. R., 2306-2314.
Lowell, Mass., 1010.
Lowen, G. E., 1822.
Lowenthal, John, 326.
Lower California, expedition of William Walker
to obtain the independence of, 185S, 729; his-
tory of, 886; Iturbide revolution in, 1822, 2647.
Lewie, R. H., 237, 238.
Loyal publication society of Nev\^ York, 816.
Loyalists, 593, 654, 663; in New I^runswick, 2487,
2490, 2492; in South Wales, 671; in the Ken-
tucky country, 686; letter of a, 1783, 629; Rhode
Island, 1206. See also Tory.
Loyalty as exemplified in Lincoln, 1409.
Lucayos, island of, early map of, 416.
Ludlow family, 1693.
Lugones,Leopoldo, 2693.
Lumbering in Wisconsin, 1267.
Luna,N.Mex., 178.
Lundy's Lane, battle of, I8I4, 717.
Luisa, lost island of, 399.
Luque, Hernando de, 379.
Lush family, 1629.
Lutheran church, 2123-2131; and the Civil war, 786;
in Surinam, 2751.
Lutheranism in Perry co., O., 1165.
Lutz,0., 2662a.
Lydon, P.J.,2095.
Lyford, J. O., 1100.
Lyman, A. T., 1425.
W. F., 1029.
Lynch, W. O., 733.
Lynn, Mass., 1009.
Lyon, Mary, 1293.
Lyons, A. A., 750.
E. H., 1379.
Lyra, Heitor, 1885.
Lytle, W. H., 1426.
Mac Adam, George, 1455.
McAdie,A.G.,404.
McAdoo, W. G., 1427.
McAfee, R. B., 718.
McArthur, Peter, 2484.
McCarthy, C. H., 482.
Richard, 2521.
Macartney, Earl, 72.
Mc Clary family, 1694.
McCormick,C.H., 1302.
S. B., 1183.
Mac Curdy, G. G., 327.
McCutcheon, O. E., 1051.
Macdermot, T. I-L, 2670.
McDermott, E. J., 1957.
Macdonell, Agnes, 1419.
Alexander, 2551.
Mac Dougall, J. B., 2544.
MacDowell, Edward, 2356.
Mace, W. H., 483.
McFadden, L. E., 1416.
Macfadyen, D., 544.
Macfarlane, James, 1196, 2008.
McGee, A, N., 1333, 1642.
D'Arcy, 2385.
G. R., 1226.
McGill university, Montreal, 242,
McGrane, R. C, 701.
McGregor, la., 1281.
McGrew, Kittie, 1091.
Machine, political, 1916.
Machinery, agricultural, 1979.
Machu Picchu mountain, Peru, 293, 294.
Mcllwaine, H. R., 602, 631.
Mcintosh, George, 911.
Maclntyre, Niel, 1500.
MacKendrick, J. N., 2545.
McKenzie, Donald, 2567.
Mackenzie river, 2514.
McKeough, G. T., 2546.
W, E., 2547.
McKeown, H. A., 2487.
Mackie, R. A., 125.
Mackinac, Mich. See Michillimackinac.
McKinley, A. E., 484.
William, assassination of, 1428.
McKiQney,W.W.,2143. j
McKitrick, Reuben, 1234.
MacLaren, D. H., 2548. [
McLaughlin, A. C, 485, 486, 1858.
Maclay, E. S,, 674, 675, 1824. I
McLean, John, 930. j
McLellan, Hugh, 639. |
McLennan, J. S., 2388.
McLeod, R. L., 913.
McManus, J. H., 1278.
McMaster, J. B., 487, 676.
MacMillan, K. D., 1440.
McMullen, W. T., 2549.
McNair, Alexander, 1429.
M'Neilly, J. H., 795, 796, 853, 1248, 1564.
MacPhail, Andrew, 2388a.
McQuaid, B. J., 2163.
McVickar, W. N., 2164.
Macy, Jesse, 752.
Madden, Margaret, 931.
Madison, Dolly, 1298, 1430.
James, notes upon the debates of the federal
convention of 1787, 1904.
Magazine, Russell's, 2064. .
"Magazine of history, with notes and queries," '
general index to, 53; index to the "extra num- 1
bers," 52. j
Magazines, American, 2270. See also Periodicals. ^
Magee, A. J., 1687.
Magellan, Ferdinand, 413, 1296, 1301; 4th centenary
of the discoveries of, 410.
Magic, Indian, 174, 194. See also Sorcery.
INDEX.
201
Magnan, Honnisdas, 2515, 2516.
Magruder, C. C.,1321.
Maguire, Don, 185.
Magyars, of Cleveland, 1161.
Maine, 982-992; Catholic bishops and priests serving
in, 2081; Catholic church in, 2096; coastwise
traffic of, 1993; genealogy, 1754, 1756a, 1757, 1777,
1781; in the Northeastern boundary contro-
versy, 723; Revolutionary pensioners living in,
695. * ,
Makepeace, William, 1695.
Makepeace family, 1695.
Malchelosse, Gerard, 2474, 2475.
Malcolm, G. M., 797.
James, 1142.
M. v., 2058.
Malo, Henri, 2683.
Malone, B. Y., 798.
• J. H., 239.
Man, prehistoric, archaeological value of bones of,
203; drifted from America to Europe in the
middle ages, 197; origin of, 218, 273. See also
Anthropology.
Manchester, N. H., 2107.
Mangum, W. P., 72.
Manhattan company, N. Y., 1134.
Manigault, Ann, 1213.
Manila, audiencia f, 1638-1800, 2780.
Manila Bay, naval battle, 1898, 1846.
Manila galleon, 2630,
Manitoba, history of, 2572.
Manly, James, 1595.
Mann, C. E., 1712.
M. W., 1018-1022.
Manners and customs. See Life and manners.
Manning, W. T., 1480.
Wentworth, 1235.
Manoir, Faucond du, 618.
Mansfleld, G. C, 892.
— Jared, 2216.
Manuscript collections, 55-74. See also Archives,
Hatch papers, and Nuttall codex.
Manuscripts of Cadwallader Golden, 17S0-1742, 577.
Maps, archaeological, of South America, 274; Chi-
nese world map of Father Ricci, 395; early, 416;
early, of New York, 397, 424; locating the islgind
of the Seven Cities, 380; of Rhode Island, check
list of, 8. See also Cartography.
Maraouanes, 288.
Marault, Olivier, 2422.
Marblehead, Mass., 553.
Mar bury v. Madison, 1905.
Marcy, W. L., 734, 735.
Margarita, island, early map of, 416.
Maricourt, Andr6 de, 2623.
Marietta, O., 1330.
Marine corps, 1819.
Marion co., Ind., 949.
Maritime history, merchants and sea captains of
old Boston, 1036; of New England, 1993. See
also Freedom of the seas, Merchant marine,
Ships and shipping, Steam-navigation in the
Pacific, and Shipwreck.
ilaritime law, 644.
Maritime supremacy, England's, in the time of
1 Raleigh, 396.
karket Street church, New York, 2119.
Marquette, James, 1301.
Marquette, Mich., 1315; ore docks at, 1052.
Marquette co., Mich., 1058.
Marriott, J. A. R., 1859.
Marsan, Jules, 640.
Marshall, J. W., 1431.
John, 703, 1302, 1432, 1896.
T. M., 734, 735.
Marsillac, Jean de, 2121.
Marston, R. B., 2671.
Martian, Nicholas, 1433.
Martin, Charles, 1434.
Homer, 2248.
P. A., 151.
Martinez, Pedro, 1296.
Martinez P16e, Manuel, 2344.
Martinique, Island of, Dutch attack on, in 1674,
2682.
Martzolff, C. L., 1163, 1165.
Marvin, W. T., 2176.
Maryland, 993-1000; architects of, 1792-1793, 2243;
archives of, 997; biography, 2155; brick arclii-
tecture of the colonial period in, 2232; colonial
history, 591-593; first governor of the state of
1398; genealogy, 1769, 1796, 1810; General assem-
bly, proceedings and acts of, 1733-1736, 592a;
Lutheran church in Catonsville, 2129; passage
of sixth Massachusetts regiment through, in
1861, 760; pioneer Catholic legislator of, 1355;
soldiers in the battle of Long Island, 1776, 994;
turnpikes of, 2019; War of 1812 in, 1321.
"Maryland four hundred'^ in the battle of Long
Island, 994.
Maryland historical society, 997.
Maryland state school for the deaf, 2048.
Marylanders, early colonial, 592, 593.
Maseres, Francis, 2466.
Mason, George, 1435.
Jeremiah, 1436.
R. C, 1435.
Masons. See Freemasons.
Massacre, Fort Dearborn, 1812, 932; Indian, at Oak
Grove ranch, Neb., in 1864, 1087; at Plum
Creek, Neb., in 1864, 1087; in Illinois, in 1819,
929; in Texas, in 1871, 1232; Wyoming, Pa.,
1778, 627.
Massachusetts, 1001-1044; coastwise traffic of, 1993;
colonial architecture of Salem, 2234; colonial
history, 261, 532-536, 539-568; convention of
1788, conciliatory proposition in, 1898; early
Sunday schools in, 2075; genealogy, 1753, 1756,
1758, 1763, 1770, 1772, 1775, 1776, 1793, 1794; gen-
eral court, resolves relating to Maine, 1818-1820,
988; historic trees of, 1035; historical societies
in, 97; House of representatives, journals of,
1715-1717, 560; infantry in the Civil war, 820;
legislative acts and resolves, 1777-1778, 641;
local history index, 48; Old Colony railroad,
2001; politics and government, 1958, 1959; rati-
fication of the Constitution by, 1898; regiment
in the Civil war, sixth, 760; shipbuilding in,
1980; town meeting in, 1958; vital records, pub-
lication of, 69. See also New England.
Massachusetts, State board of health, 1023a.
Massachusetts Bay colony, 532, 551-568; attempt at
union with the Plymouth colony, 532; relations
with the Plymouth colony in 1831, 540.
202
INDEX.
Massachusetts historical society, 2042.
"Massasoit," Indian chief, 261.
Massicotte, E. Z., 2423-2430, 2467, 2517-2522.
Massie family, 1696.
Masson, T. L., 2317.
Mathematics and mathematical instruction during
the colonial period, 2175.
Mathews, J. M., 1942.
Mathewson, Douglas, 2288.
Mathiez, Albert, 510.
Matthews, Albert, 2075.
Brander, 1327, 1512, 1513, 2270.
Maubilla, battle of, 869.
Maxcy, Jonathan, 2217.
MaxweU, E. E., 895.
Maximihan affair in Mexico, 1861.
Mayaguez, Porto Rico, 834.
Mayas, cultm-e of, 302; chronology, 323, 324; farms,
285; rain-god of, 367; ruins at Santa Rita, Brit-
ish Honduras, date of, 323; sculptured monu-
ment of, 374; system of numeration, 324; use of
plants by, 339.
Mayer, L. M., 1204.
Mayfield, N. Y., 1786.
"Mayflower," biU of lading of, 542.
Maynard, F. A., 1930.
Mayor des Planches, E., 1514.
Mazzei, Phihp, 72.
Mead, S. P., 1804.
Means, P. A., 2594, 2760.
Meany, E. S., 1258.
Mechanics bank, Trenton, N. J., 2022,
Mecklenburg declaration of independence, 679.
Medals, Admiral Vernon, 1739-1742, 530; ancient
Pawnee, 201; Indian peace, 263; the Manly
Washington, 1595; Pilgrim tercentenary, 541;
Washington, 1595, 1598.
Medford, Mass., 1018-1022.
Medical history, Cumberland co., N. J., 1123; Indi-
ana, 941; Iowa, 950; Missouri, one hundred
years of, 1073; New York state, 1152; Revolu.
tionary war, 2524.
Medical institutions of America, colonial and revo-
lutionary, 667. See also Hospitals.
Medical profession, Kent county, Ont., 2532.
Medical science, 2358-2361.
Medical society, Cumberland county, N. J., 1123.
Medicine, American naval, a pioneer in, 1319; doctor
of, first degree conferred in the colonies, 528;
practice of, in Montreal, to the 18th century,
2423.
Medicine cords, Apache, 174.
Medrano, H. J., 1515.
Meehan, T. F., 799, 2097, 2276.
Meigs, W. M., 1902.
MeiUer, R., 332.
MelviUe, Herman, 2315.
Melvin, F. E., 1860.
Memorizing in history, 127.
Menard, Ren6, 2431.
M6ndez Bejarano, Mario, 2595.
Mendez Pereira, Octavio, 2742.
Mendoza, Diego, 2639.
Men^ndez, Peter. See Men^ndez de Aviles.
Men^ndez de Avilfe, Pedro, 1296.
Mennonite settlement in northern New York, 1149.
Menomini Indian place names in Wisconsin, 125
Merchant marine, American, in the Rio de
Plata, 1801-1808, 1977; chronicle of, 1983; col!
nial, 526; story of, 1976. See also Ships atl
shipping. j
Merchants, Missouri, one hundred years ago, 107 j
Providence, R. I., early, 1984. j
Mercier, P. E., 2523. i
Mercierfamilj^, 1642a.
Merriam, H. G., 677. '
Merrill, Anne, 2389. '
W. S.,66.
Merritt, D. H., 1052. ■
Merwin, B. D., 240. i
Mescal society, 229.
Metallurgy, prehistoric Colombian, 286. '
Metals, prehistoric use of, 286. See also Gold, an !
Metallurgy. [
Metcalf, H. H., 1300. 1
J. H., 2223. 1
Metcalfe, C. T., Baron, 2469.
V. H., 1516.
Methodism in Kent Co., Ont., 2539. :
Methodist Episcopal church, 2133; Chatham, Ont.i
2547. 1
Meulles, Jacques de, 2440. i
Mexican projects of the Confederates, 802, 806. {
Mexican revolution, bibliography of, 2652; Mexicaii
literature on, 2657. 1
Mexican war, 743-745; capture of Los Angeles hv
American forces, 1846, 894b.
Mexico, 2647-2662; American invasion of, in 1865
proposed, 1861; and the Monroe doctrine, 1886
antiquities of, 204, 265-270, 280, 281, 285, 289
290, 297-299, 302, 303, 316, 317, 355-359, 363, 367|
369; atlas of, 2575; border troubles v/ith, 1848-\
1860, 740; confederation of, 2576; diplomatic
agent of the Confederacy in, 802; diplomatic
relations with the United States, 1848-1853, 741
discovery and colonization of, 2596; filibuster
ing expeditions into, 1852-1854, 729; great temple
of, 297; history of, 2596; Indians of, 265, 316, ;
368; influence of Spain and the United States
upon, 2649; intervention in, Shelby's expedition,
1865, 778; Maximilian affair, 1861; origin of the
people of, 265; politics and government, 2576;;
prehistoric civilization of, 355; punitive expedi-,
tion against, in 1842, 727; relations with thel
Confederacy, 802, 806; Spanish conquest of, 290,1
387, 407, 412, 417, 2614a; Texan military opera-)
tions against, 1843, 1231; travel in, 17th century,
2642; trouble with, in 1845, 739; war of independ-j
ence, 2747, 2754. ]
Mexico, National library of, 2661. |
Mexico, University of, 2658
Meyer, G. von L., 1437.
H.H.B., 26-28.
Meyers, J. A., 1259.
Mezy, Augustin de Saffray, sieur de, 2468.
Michel, Andre, 1593.
Michelson, Truman, 241.
Michigan, 1045-1060; administration of justice in
the early days, 1931; fur trade in, 1049; Indians
of, 704; judicial system of, 1805 to 1827, 1960;
Normal school at Mt. Pleasant, 2201; pioneer,
lawyer of, 1315; railroads ia, 1048.
INDEX.
203
Miehig?.n, National society of the United States
Daughters of 1812, 2040.
Michigan authors' association, 1057.
Michigan railroad commission, 1050.
Michillimackinac, Fort, journal of the commandant.
1766-1767, 628.
Middle Temple, London, Eng., 521.
Middle West, archive centralization in, 60; New
England element in the settlement of, 865;
short-story ^^Titer of, 2295. See also Illinois
country, Mississippi valley, Ohio valley, and
Old Northwest.
Middlecott, Richard, 1747.
Middlesex co., Ont., 2534a.
Middletown, O., 2143a.
Mignet, F. A., 1362.
Migration of negroes, from the South to the North
in 1879, 829; to Kansas, in 1879, 829.
Migrations of the Indians, 235.
Milestones, about Philadelphia, Pa., 1177.
Mihtary draft, in the Civil war, 800.
Military equipment, in the Civil war, 769; Indian,
see Helmets.
Military expedition, against the Mexicans, in 1842,
727; Shelby's expedition to Mexico, 1865, 778,
See also Filibusters.
Military forces of Canada, 1763 to the present, 2456.
Military government in Porto Rico, American, 835.
Military history, 1820, 1822, 1823, 1825, 1827, 1829-
1833, 1835; Canadian, 2383a; colonial, 525; de-
[ mobilization in 1783, 666; demobilization in
I 1865, 779; Iowa, 951, 954; Nebraska, early pe-
riod, 1096; North Carolina, colonial and revo-
lutionary, 1156; of the West, 951; Queen Anne's,
war, 525; Span. sh American war, 1846. Seealso
Army, Colonial wars. Confederate army, His-
torical branch of the General staff, Indian wars,
j and under name of separate wars.
iJMilitary hospitals, Revolutionary war, 634, 653.
ilitary organization and equipment of North
Carolina troops during the Civil war, 769.
ilitary organizations, of the American revolution,
681, 693; Richmond light infantry blues, 1252.
See also Militia, and Regimental histories,
ilitary parade at Washington, 1865, 801.
ilitary school, London, Ont., 2535a.
[ilitary strategy, Civil war, 795.
iUtary supplies. See Supplies, Revolutionary.
ij^IiUtary tradition, American, 512.
.ililitia, Gre8ns\411e co., Va., 1799-1815, officers of
1246; Iowa, 1838-1865, 954; lincolnco., Ontario,
2556; New York, 71st reg'ment, 1822; North
Carolina, colonial and revolutionary, 1156; of
the United States, prior to 1865, 1829, 1832;
Ontario, 2534a, 2556; Proiance of Quebec,
1763-1776, 2456.
mier, A. N., 1359.
Amos, 933.
George, 892a.
S. v., 439.
W. S., 1450, 2359.
ilUdge, J. W., 2488.
Us, A. H., 934.
T. B., 186.
ills family, 1629.
[ims, Ed\vin, 1446.
59976°— 22 15
Minaville, N. Y., 1767.
MindelefT, Carlos, 227.
Minding, Julius, 2316.
Miner, G. L., 535.
Mineralogy, 2360.
Miners, Wisconsin lead, 1274.
Mines, in Cuba, 17th century, 2646; in Michigan,
s:e Marquette ore docks; in Wyoming, 1280.
Minneapolis, Minn., 1063.
Minnesota, 1061-1065; Catholic church in, 2091,
2095; Catholic church in, 1850-1893, biblio-
graphy of, 6; ninth governor of, 1388; Sioux
Indians in, missions to, 74, 2167; twelfth
governor of, 1442.
Minnesota, University of, 2218.
Minor, J. B., 1263.
Miranda, Francisco de, 2689.
Miranda's expedition, 1806, 2702.
Mird, Estevan, 978.
Sliscellaneous, 513-519.
Liission architecture of New Mexico, 1130.
Missionaries, Catholic, among the Indians in the
Northwest, 2158; first Protestant, in Canada,
2418; in the Oregon country, 858; T'rinceton
seminary's first foreign missionary, 2168;
Recollet, in Nev/ France, 243Ca; Spanish, in
North America, 611, 858. See also Benavides,
Alonso de.
Missionary work among the Indians, John Eliot's,
542.
Missions, Baptist, 1172; Catholic, 874; in Alaska,
874; in Aita California, in 1815, 249; in Califor-
nia, 886; in California and the Southwest,
1683-1711, 617; in Oregon, 1172; Minnesota,
18S3-1850, 74; Indian, 74, 249, 2431; Jesuit,
2431; Spanish, 249, 617, 886, 2592; to the Indians
in Canada, 1660-1661, 2431.
Mississippi, early exploration of, 2474; negro mi-
gration convention in, in 1879, 829; public
administration in, 1961; public education in,
1961; ''Republic of Jones" in, 'in 1864, 759;
Texas annexation sentiment in, 18S5-18U, 1067.
Mississippi river, journey down, in 1807, 431; navi-
gation rights, 1783-1795, 1864; obstructions de-
signed for, in 1861, 764; steamboat traffic on,
1994.
Mississippi Territory, life and political events in,
1803 to 1811, 1468.
Mississippi valley, commercial intercourse with the
Confederacy in, 771; French and English con-
flict for the control of, 525; French in, 1700-1734,
529; historical activities in, 1917-1919, 133; his-
tory of, 100, 855; journey in, in 1807, 431; life and
manners in, early 19th century, 845; military
operations in, 1832 to 1836, 737; Spanish expedi-
tion in, in 1662, 615; trade ^vith France, 529.
See also Louisiana, province of. . _^
Mississij>pi Valley historical association, 100.
Missouri, 1068-1078; archaeology, 204; bibliography,
16; Catholic church in, 58, 2103, 2104; first gov-
ernor of, 1429; earliest settlement in, 610; in the
Kansas struggle, 731.
"Missouri intelligencer and Boone's Lick adver-
tiser," newspaper, 1385, 2068.
Misunderstandings, international, school histories
and, 132.
204
INDEX.
Mitchell, J. A., 2317.
Mitchell family, 1629, 1697.
Mitre, Bartolom^, 2700, 2701.
Mixe-Zoque tribes, 342.
Miyares, E. H., 2677.
Mobile, Ala., 869, 872.
Mohawk valley householders in 1800, 1786.
Moireau, A., 1517.
Mojena tribe, 354.
Mojos, Bolivia, 334.
Molina, Enrique, 2743.
Money, 2020-2029; aristocracy of, 1911; of the Con-
federate states, 758; Spanish American, 1492 to
1800, 2627. See also Wampum.
Monis, Judah, 1438.
Monkey chain, myth of, 2698.
Monolith, a prehistoric, 374.
Monongahela river, 1988.
Monopoly, commercial, French colonial, 2414; slave
trade, 2675. See also Trusts.
Monroe, B. D., 1607.
Monroe doctrine, 1846, 1858, 1878-1890; bibliography
of, 26; Germany and, 1852a.
Montana, 1079-1081; agriculture in, evolution of,
1975; Catholic church in, 2098; constitution of,
1945.
Montana, Dept. of public instruction, 488.
Montarroyos, E., 2744.
Montejo, Francisco de, 2651.
Montero Bustamente, Raill, 2768.
Montevideo, Uruguay, 2711, 2768; United States
merchant ships at, 1801-1808, 1977.
Montezuma, the Mexico of, 290.
Montgomery, John, 1439.
Montgomery co.. 111., 933.
Montoliu,C., 2345.
Montreal, Can., 2422-2425, 2427-2429; Congregation
de Notre Dame, 2508; monument to Cartier at,
2499; first English notary of, 2521; organists and
choir at Notre Dame de Montreal, 2513; land
surveyors of, 2517; Laval university, 2502;
sheriff of, during the rebellion of 1837, 2522.
Monument, a prehistoric Maya, 374. See also
Monohth.
Moniunentsin Westminster Abbey, American, 517.
Moody, John, 2009, 2024.
Moon, in Indian mjrthology, 319.
Mooney, J. A., 2318.
Moore, D. D., 977.
E. C, 126, 505.
G. F., 1438.
W. F., 2550.
Moores,C. W., 935.
Morale of the Confederate soldier, 808.
Morals, Iroquois, 264.
Moran, T. F., 500.
W. E., 2244.
Mor6, chevalier de, 673.
Moreau, C61estin, 2411.
Morehouse, H. L., 2165.
Morgan, Appleton, 1279, 1280.
George, 635, 678.
J. P., 2024.
James, 1518.
— — L. H., 1440.
Morgan's cavalry division, C S. A.
Moriarty, G. A., 1737.
811.
.m
I
Morice, A. G., 2571.
Morison, J. L., 2469.
Morley, S. G., 1371.
Mormons, 2134-2138; battalion in the Mexican wi
744; geographic names in the West, associat
with, 1242; in Ontario, 2560; outpost of San B(
nardino valley, 883a; war in Missouri, 1838, Iff.
Morohuasi, Argentina, prehistoric ruins of, 348.
Morris, Charles, 1301, 1302, 1825, 1826.
E. H., 187-189.
F. A., 127.
I. K., 821, 1334.
Margaret, 643.
Robert, 1302.
— W. A., 77.
W. J., 2572.
Morris family, 1642a.
Morrison, A. J., 679, 1249, 2185, 2186.
R. J., 2203.
Morse, C. R., 2204.
Charles, 545.
J. T., jr., 1343.
S. F. B., 1302.
W. H., 1376.
Morton, R. L., 1915.
Mortuary customs. See Burial customs.
Moses, Bernard, 2702.
Moses Brown school. Providence, R. I., 2200.
Motilon Indians, 272.
Mott, H. S., 1374.
Lucretia, 1298, 1302.
Mouchy, Nicolas de, 2428.
Moulin, Jean, 406. i
Mounds, Indian, in North Carolina, 173; in Ohi
186, 207; in Texas, 195; in Wisconsin, 161, 16
196; public documents relating to, 46.
Mount Desert, Me., 1781.
Mount Holly, N. J., battle at, 1776, 687.
Mt. Pleasant, Mich., 2201.
Mount Theodore Roosevelt, 1486.
Mt. Washington, N. H., 1104.
Mowbray, J. H., 1489.
Moyer, N. W., 589a, 1197.
Muir, John, 2319.
Muirhead, J. F., 517.
Mulieze, Frangois de, sieur de Bourchemin, 2430.
Mummified Jivaro heads, 292.
Munger, T. T., 2070.
Municipalities, Spanish colonial, 2640.
Munn, C. A., 1594.
Munro, D. C, 128.
W. B., 1943.
W. H., 709, 753.
Murdoch, William, 2489.
Muriel, Domingo, 2703.
Murphy, E. B., 1087.
Murray, G.H., 2498.
M. L., 1298.
Thomas, 2721.
\
Museimi, historical, at Three Oaks, Mich., 1046.
Music, 2354-2357; American ideals in, 505; at Notr
Dame church, Montreal, 2513.
Mussehnan, H. T., 2187.
Muster roll, Revolutionary, 693.
Mutis, J. C, 2702.
Mutual aid societies in Quebec, 2505.
Muzzey, D. S., 854.
IIS-DEX.
205
Myth regarding the island of the Seven Cities (An-
tillia), 380.
Mythology, Indian, 312, 314, 319, 326; of Central
America, 315.
Myths regarding America, early, 393. See also El
Dorado.
Naegely, H. E., 1053.
Name "California," origin of, 883.
Names, ancient Mexican picture-, 281.
Names, geographical, in Latin America, 2597; in the
West, associated with the Mormons, 1242; In-
dian, 1085, 1282, 2371; in Canada, 2371; Michi-
gan, 1047; Nebraska, 1085; of Connecticut towns;
origin of, 1947; state of Washington, 1258, 1251;
Wisconsin, 1282.
Nantucket, Mass., 1005, 1015.
Napoleon, and Washington, 1599; commercial sys-
tem of, and the United States, 1860; naviga-
tion system of, 1860.
Narino, Antonio, 2702.
Narragansett Indians, 536.
Narrow gauge railroad, 1175.
Nasca, Peru, pottery from, 361.
Nash, Timothy, 1441.
NashviUe, Tenn., 1219, 1225.
Nassau, N. Y., 1782.
Nation, American, birth of, 649.
National affairs, 1807-1844, 701. See also Political
affairs.
National board for historical service, 29, 92.
National characteristics and ideals, 446, 454, 458,
501-512. See also Americanism.
National education association, 92. ,
National government and administration, 1937-
1944.
National guard, 71st New York regiment, 1822. See
also Militia.
Nationallibrary of Mexico, 2661.
National park. Glacier, 1079; Yosemite, 890.
National road in Indiana, 940,
National spirit in American poetry, 2262,
Nationalism, tenets of, 703.
Nationalistic attitude of South Carolina, 1820 to
1827, 1909.
Nationality, American, development of, 452.
Native sons of the Golden West, Order of, 888.
Natural history, Jefferson's contributions to, 1396.
Naturalist, a great American, 1606.
Nature, in the art of the ancient Chiriquians, 327.
Naval academy, U. S,, memories of, in 1855, 1818.
Naval battles, in the West Indies, in 1674, 2882; of
the French and Indian war, 531; of the Pvevolu-
tion, a forgotten, 674. See also Naval history.
Naval forces of Canada, 1763 to the present, 2456.
Naval history, 1818-1819, 1821, 1824, 1828, 1828,
1830a, 1834, 1835; armed neutraUty of 1780, 644;
Civil war, 783, 803, 807; colonial period, 526;
French fleet in the American revolution, 659;
in the French West Indies, 1635-16o2, 2679;
operations on the Virginia rivers in the Civil
war, 803; Revolutionary war, 674, 675; Spanish-
American war, 837; study of, 110.
Naval medicine, a pioneer in, 2361.
Navarro y Rodrigo, Carlos, 2654.
Navigation, among the ancient Peruvians, 372; of
the Mississippi, rights of, 1783 to 1795, 1864; i
steam, in New England, 1993; steam, in the
Pacific, 886,
Navigation laws, British, 1784-1787, 2671.
Navy, TJ. S., 1821; discipline in, 1834; heroes of, 1826;
in the early 70's, 1830a; pioneer surgeon in, 1319;
religious side of life in, 1824; secretary of, 1801 to
1809, 1818a. See also Naval history.
Navy, British, on the Great Lakes, 2548.
Navy for the French West Indies, 1635 to 1652, 2879.
Neal, J. W., 1604.
Neander, John, 1773.
Nebraska, 1082-1098.
Nebraska, Dept. of pubhc instruction, 129.
Nebraska, University of, 2205.
Needlework. See Samplers.
Negley, G. G., 2144.
Negroes, as soldiers in the Confederate army, 817:
benefactor of, 2219; colonization of, 747, 2061
Congregational minister in New England, 1376
deportation of, Indiana state aid for, 946; folk-
lore, 2299; free, in Tennessee, 1928; free, state
legislation concerning, 2056; history of, 2051;
in London, Ont., before the American civil
war, 2542; in the wars of the United States, 1830,
1833; in the World war, 1830; in Virginia politics,
1865 to 1902, 1915; interpreter of, 2298; life and
history, teaching of, 160; Lincoln's plan for col-
onizing, 2061; migration from the South to
Kansas, in 1879, 829; migration from the South
to the North in 1879, 829; regiment in the Civil
war, 820; settlement in Ontario in 1849, 2559;
suffrage in the Wisconsin constitutional con-
. vention of 1846, 1965; trail blazers of CaUfornia,
877; women of achievement, 1294. See also
Slavery.
Nelson, A dmira I Horatio, 2671 .
Knute, 1442,
N. C, 190-192,
Nerinckx, Charles, 2103.
Neshanic, N. J., 1115.
Netherlands. See Dutch.
Neutral trade, Napoleonic wars, 1860.
Neutrality, armed, 1780, 644; of the United States
during the Napoleonic wars, 1860.
Neveu, Monsieur, 2722.
New Albany-Salem railroad, 2010.
New Bedford, Mass., 832.
New Brunswick, Can,, 2487-2494,
New Brunswick, N. J., 1108, 2141.
New Castle, Del., 897,
New Church. See Church of the New Jerusalem.
New England, ancestral heads of families of, 1783;
anti-slavery movement in, 756; archaeological
specimens from, 200; begmnings of, 840; colo-
nial history, 532-573; element in New York
and the north central states, 865; the "'fathers"
of, 532; French in, 839; Indians of, 261; influ-
ence of settlers from, upon New York and mid-
die western states, 865; old buildings in, preser-
vation of, 838; old doorways in, 2246; shipbuild-
ing in, 1980; steam navigation in, 1993; turn-
pikes of, 2019. See also North,
New England loyal publication society, 818.
New France, 2408-2453; an historian of, 2413; colo-
nists from La RocheUe, France, 2474; commerce
with France, 2414; French government and, in
1760, 2415; intendants of, 2436, 2474; juvenile
206
INDEX.
history of, 2421; loss of Canada by the French,
445; manuscripts relating to, 2420; military
forces of, 2408; origin of private property in,
2504. See also French regime in the Michigan
region, etc.
Nev,' Granada, history, to 1561, 2769; rebellion of
the comimeros in, 1781, 2702.
New Hampshire, 1099-1104; biographical sketches
of prominent men and women of, 1300; Catholic
cathedral in Manchester, 2107; celebration of
the Pilgrim tercentenary, 546; coast-^ise traffic
of, 1993; colonial government, qualifications o
officials, 537; colonial history, 537, 538; Con-
gregational church in Henniker, 2116a; Coinicil
and Conunittee of safety of, during the Kevolu-
tion,63; genealogical records, 1803, 1806; literary
and debating societies in, 2279; pioneers, 1623
to 1775, 1791; pioneers of religious liberty, 2154;
visitors to the White Mountains, 1823-1S36, 441.
New Haven, Conn., 573.
Nev/ Jersey, 1105-1127; beginning of, 587; colonial
history, 582, 583, 2141; commissions, civil and
military, 1709-1713, 582; genealogy, 1773, 1780,
1792, 1797, 1800-1802, 1809, 1810; Indians of, 232;
Mechanics bank, Trenton, 2022; mihtia in the
American revolution, 693; Presbyterian church
in New Brunsv.ick, 2141; public records of, 07;
Revolutionary battle in, 687; Trenton saving
fund society, 2021.
New Mexico, 1128-1132; antiquities, 178-180, 187,
188; archaeology, 208, 209; Cathohc church in,
1850-1875, 6; Cathohc ecclesiastical jurisdiction
. in, Spanish period, 2106; documents relating
to, 1847-1874, 40; Indians of, 224; Pueblo ruins
in, 187; Spanish beginnings of, 617; Spanish
colonization in, 621; statehood controversy,
1132a.
New Netherland, a chronicle of, 575; director gen-
eral and council of, 581; history of, in 1636, 581;
letters written from, in 1654, 580; report con-
cerning, 1628, 574.
"New Ontario," Can., 2544.
New Orleans, La., 964, 965, 967-969, 978-980; British
attack on, 1815, 716; Catholic church in, 1S27-
1828, 2108; victory of, 1815, 736.
New Scotland, N. Y., 1784.
New Smyrna colony, 907.
New Spain, 2636, 2637; colonization of New Mexico,
621; Kino's historical memoir of Pimeria Alta,
617. See also Spanish America, colonial period.
New world, pre-Columbian knowledge of, in
Europe, 378.
New York (city), aboriginal sites in, 202; baptisms
in, 1804-1809, 1785; British military camp in,
655; Catholic literary history, I8OO-I84O, 2276;
Common coimcil, minutes of, I784-I8SI, 1982;
dinner given to Dickens in, in 1868, 2275; Dutch
Reformed church in, 2119; Framices tavern,
1137; government of, 1784-1831, 1962; leading
citizens of, in 1799, 1134; life in, in 1834, 1316;
local history, 1775-1776, 2140; Lutheran chm'ch
in, 2128; Market street Dutch Reformed church,
2119; Presbyterian church history, 1775-1776,
2140; prices in, eighty years ago, 1140; teaching
of French in, in the colonial period, 579.
New York (state), 1133-1153; AlgonMan fishing \il-
lage in, 251; Algonkian Indians of, 251, 252; and
the national banking system, 2023; archaeolog: '
202; colonial history, 574-581; compilations 1
the laws of, 1927; Democratic party in, 1922; di ,
covery and exploration, 397, 399, 424; doraest: I
architecture, 2235, 2244; earliest maps of, 39' |
424; educational history, 2188, 2189; first Catholi
governor of, 1352; genealogy, 1751, 1759, 17e(
1764, 1766-1768, 1774, 1778, 1782, 1784-1787, 178!
1799, 1805, 1807, 1812-1814; governor of, 180^
1817, 1582; history of medicine in, 2365; India:
village in, 193, 251; infantry in the Civil wai
821; Lutheran church in, 2128; New Englan'
element in, middle 19th century, 865; person
of foreign birth in the colony, in 1715, 578; j
pioneer of the Champlain valley, 702; politic
and government, 1911, 1912; politics of, deciin
of aristocracy in, 1911; Presbyterian church ii!
the "Chenango country," 1798-1799, 2147J
Presbytery of, minutes, 1775-1776, 633; projecj
for the conquest of, from Canada, in 1689, 2441
Protestant Episcopal church in Schenectady
2149; Revolutionary battle in, 090; Revolution!
ary company of, 639; share in the Revolution
658; Speaker of the House of representative;
from, 1578; tory lieutenant governor of, 577.
''New York gazette," 1726-1729, 576.
New York genealogical and biographical society i
1620, 1621. I
"Nev/ York Globe," newspaper, 2065.
New York national guard, 71st regiment, 1822.
New York state archeologicai association, 1440.
New York Zouaves, in the Civil war, 1375.
Newark, N. J., 1118.
Newberry library, Chicago, HI., 66.
Newcombe, C. F., 242.
Nev/fcundland, manuscripts relating to, 2420.
Newhall, Charles. 1024.
Nev,-port, R. I., 509, 1208, 2027, 2063, 2252.
Newspapermen, old time, at the capitol in Albany
1142.
Newspapers, American, 1690-1820, bibliography of
3; British Guiana, before 1820, 2733; California,
793, 891; early French newspaper in New
Orleans, 968; first newspaper west of St. Louis,
2068; in Dakota territory, 842; first newspaper in
the Western Reserve, 1166; New Jersey, early,
1116; of Confederate sympathies, 793; of Lennox
and Addington co., Ont., 2538; oldest daily
newspaper in ximerica, 2065; Philadelphia, of
the Federalist period, 713; Wyoming, early,
287. See also Journahsts.
Newton, A. P., 130a, 1889.
Niagara Falls, N. Y., 1146.
Nicaraguan, 406.
Nicholas, R. C, 647.
Nichols, J. G., 1741.
L. N., 1698. !
Nichols family, 1698. ;
Nicholson, J. M., 998.
Nicola, Lewis, 665. \
Niles, Robert, 684. \
Nipigon, Lake, Ont., 2449.
Niskayuna, N. Y., 1151, 1787. '
Nisqually, Fort, V/ash., 1256. !
Nobility of the Compagnie de la Nouvelle France, 1
2445. i
Noble, L. S., 2040.
I
rNDEX.
207
Noel, F. R., 904, 2025.
Noguchi, Tone, 2346.
Nolan, Frances, 12.
Nordenskiold, Erland, 296, 333-336, 405, 2704.
Norris, Isaac, 590.
Norse discovery of America, 411, 420.
Norsemen, expedition into the American continent
in 1362, 175.
North, disaffection in, during the Civil war, 816;
religious defense of slavery in, 751a. See also
I New England.
I North Carolina, 1154^1158; bibliography of, 29a;
colonial history, 606, 607; colonial period, pa-
triotism of the Germans in, 607; federal politics
in, 1824 to 1836, 1908; Federalist member of Con-
gress from, 1568; Indian mounds in, :i73; news-
papers of, 1690-1820, bibliography of, 3; pro-
vincial agents of, 606; public servant in, 1604;
troops in the Civil war, 769.
\ North Carolina, State library, 29a.
North Carolina historical commission, 131.
North Dakota, constitution of, 1945; early history
of, 1158a, 1159. See also Dakota territory.
Northampton, N. Y., 1786.
Northeastern boundary, dispute, 723; proposal to
resettle, 2388a.
Northern Pacific railroad, 1999.
Northrop, Cyrus, 2218.
Northwest, competition for immigrants to, 2050;
constitutions of six states of, 1945; French ex-
ploration in, 2449, 2451; Indians in, Catholic
missionary to, 2158; Pacific, discovery and set-
tlement of, 858; Pacific, in 1854-1859, 859; Pacific,
material relating to the tiistory of, 70; Pacific, a
pioneer settler of, 1565; trans-Mississippi, his-
torical activities in, 1917-1919, 133. Ses also
Lewis and Clark expedition, and Oregon
country.
Northwest, Canadian, 2571. See also British Amer-
ica, Western provinces and territories.
Northwest, Old, American colonial system in, 841;
British occupation, 1766-1787, 628; a chronicle of,
855; Clark's project for the conquest of, 689; con-
quest of, during the Revolution, 1439; emigration
to, in 1811, 440; French colony in, 708; Indian
trade in, 1766-1767, 628; pioneer experiences in,
857; pioneer settlement, 1163; Revolution in,
689, 864, 1439; War of 1812 in, 718-720. See also
Illinois country, Northwest Territory, and
Ohio valley.
Northwest coast, voyage of Juan Perez to, in 1774,
428. See also Pacific coast.
iS^orthwest company of Canada, 2474, 2567; in the
Oregon country, 435.
N^orthwest Territory, government of, 1646. See
also Ordinance of 1787.
N orthv/estem boundary dispute, 705, 706. See also
Oregon question.
Jorway, Me., 989.
^otre-Dame-de-Foy, parish of, Que., 2529.
^ova Albion, identification of, 404.
^ova Scotia, 2495-2498; first Protestant missionary
m, 2418. See also Acadia.
Novels, historical, 5.
'Oville, H. de, 2378.
'oyes, Da^dd, 989.
Noyes, E. H. G., (Mrs. C. P. Noyes), 1868.
Nueva Andalucia, conquest of, 406.
Nullification, 736.
Numeration, Maya system of, 324.
Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, Alvar, 392, 1301.
Nunez de Balboa, Vasco, 1296.
Nuns, Catholic, 2110, 2113; first American, 2093;
in Northern Canada, 2568. See also Ursulines.
Nutt, Charles, 1026.
Nuttall, codex, 315.
Nye, E. W., ("Bill"), 2324.
Oak Grove ranch, Neb., 1087.
Oakenfull, J. C, 2729a.
Oath of allegiance to King George I., 578.
Obregon Esquivel, T., 2648a, 2649.
O'Brien, F. A., 1054.
M. J., 680.
Ocampo, Juan de, 406.
O 'Daniel, V. F., 1355.
O'FaUon, John, 719.
O'FerraU, S. A., 432.
Office seekers at Albany a century ago, 1141.
Officials. See Public officials.
Ogden, R. C, 2219-2221.
Ogg, F. A., 736, 855, 2656.
Oglethorpe, James, 1302.
O'Hagan, Thomas, 2390, 2551.
O'Hara, J. F., 101, 151.
J. P., 489.
Ohio, 1160-1170; Catholic church in, 1SS3-183S, 2100;
German influences in the schools of, 2182; histo-
riography, 87; Indian m.ounds in, 1S6, 207; in
the War of 1812, 720; literature m, 2278; Luther-
anism in, 2131; pioneer experiences in, 857;
political affairs in, 1833 to 1861, 726; Presby-
terian church in Middletov™, 2143a; Society of
Friends in, 2120; teachers in the Civil war,
2179; War of 1812 in, 719, 720. -
Ohio relief committee, in the Civil war, 763.
Ohio river, journey down, in 1807, 431.
Ohio state library, centennial of, 2035.
Ohio Valley, chronicle of, 855; journey in, 1807, 431.
Ohlmger, Gustavus, 518.
Ojibwa Indians, 231, 243; habitations of, 220.
Oklahoma, acquisition of state and school lands of,
1171.
Old Chatham, N. Y., 2235.
Old Colony railroad, 2001.
Old Gulph road, 1998.
Old Northwest. See Northwect, Old.
Old South church, Boston, 1006, 1007.
Old Southwest. See Southwest, Old.
Old world, pre-Columbian knov/ledge of the New
world in, 378. See also Europe.
O'Leary, D. F., 270.5-2708, 2715.
Oliver, Andrew, 638.
J. V/.,800.
M. S., 2596, 2602.
R. B., 1074.
V. L.,2672.
Olmsted, A. G., 1443.
Omaha Indians, 229, 260; in Nebraska, 1086.
Omond, G. W. T., 644.
Onate, Juan de, 427.
Onate expedition to California, 427.
208
INDEX.
Oneida Indians, 242a.
Ontario, Province of, 2531-2565; abolition move-
ment in, 749; educational system of, 2544; first
Catholic bishop of, 2551; first parliament of,
2474; historical societies in, 97; rebellion of 1837,
2459, 2473; slavery in, 754, 755; War of 1812 in,
2478, 2479.
Open door policy, 1846.
Opisso, Alfredo, 337, 407, 2596.
Orange CO., Va., 1788,
Orators, great Canadian, 2385, 2483.
Ordnance of 1787, 1952.
Ordway, Moses, 1444.
Oregon, 1172-1175; journey to, in 1852, 439; northern
boimdary of, 705, 706; territorial organization,
742.
Oregon City, Ore., 1172.
Oregon country, 843; Christianity in, 850; David
Thompson's journeys in, in 1812,435; geographi-
cal sketch of, 852; history of, 1172; journey to,
in 1832-1833, 430; northern boundary of, 705,
706; occupation and settlement of, 706; restora-
tion of Fort Astoria in 1818, 715; saving of, 1301;
Spanish friars in, 1810-1811, 858. See also
Lewis and Clark expedition, and Pacific North-
west.
Oregon question, 705, 70G, 730; negotiations of 1842-
1845, 742.
Orellana, Francisco de, 1301.
Orendorff genealogy, 1699.
Organization, Indian clan, 236.
Organized labor, 2032. See also Labor unions.
Oriental policy of the United States, 1843.
O'Riordan P., 2433.
d'Orlic family, 1182.
Ornament, prehistoric, 268, 286, 381. See also
Design.
Ornamentation of the Indians, 310.
Ornithology, work of Lyman Beldmg in, 1324.
Orozco, Enrique, 338.
Orr, R. B., 2399.
Orth, S. P., 1916, 2032.
Osage Indians, 204.
Osborn, C. S., 1057.
H. F., 1521, 1605, 1669, 1702, 1725, 1739.
Mrs. H. F., 132.
Osborne, G. L., 18.
Osgood, H. L., 142.
Ossoli, Margaret Fuller, 1293, 2294.
O'SuUivan, Vincent, 2271, 2272.
Oswego, N. Y., 1143.
Ottawa, Can., city government, 2525; legal and
political controversies respecting a portion of,
2511.
OueUe River, Que., 2524, 2527.
Outlines, for patriotic instruction, 129; of Colorado
history and civil government, 895; of Florida
civil government, 906. See also Text-book,
outlines, etc.
Overland journeys to the Pacific, 430, 439.
Overseas empire, England's, 396; Spain's, 412,
Overstreet, H. A., 505.
Owasco, N. Y., 1789.
Owen, M. B., 868-872.
Oxford CO., Me., 990.
Oxford CO., Ont., 2540, 2549, 2552.
Pacific coast, discovery and exploration, 427, 4281
Drake's exploration on, 404; in 1854-1859, 85S
journey to, in 1832-1833, 439; material in th
Archivo general de Indias for the history of, 59
voyage of discovery to, proposed, in 1815, 856
voyage of Juan P^rez to, in 1774, 428. See aU\
Oregon country, and Pacific northwest. ,
Pacific fur company, 2567.
Pacific Islands, 2775-2782. I
Pacific northwest, discovery and settlement oil
858; in 1854-1859, 859; material relating to th*
history of, 70.
Pacific ocean, discovery of, 412; steam navigatioi
in, 886.
Pacific raikoad, 2002, 2014; building of, 2Q11; earlj
agitation for, 724; Northern Pacific railroad
1999; reports, 1854 to 1859, 859.
Pacific region, policy of the great powers in, 1869
Canadian outlook in regard to, 2394; the Unitec
States and, 1846.
Packard, George, 1931.
Packet ships, 1983.
PadiHa, J. A., 1233.
Page, Rosewell, 1263, 2277.
T. N., 1250, 2293.
W. H., 1444-1446.
Pageants, local history, 80.
Paine, R. D., 1983.
Thomas, 1448.
Painter, E.E., 33.
Painters, American, 2248; early portrait, 2228, 2252.
See also Fine arts, biography, and Artists.
Painting, American, 2248; American Indian iii)
234; in Venezuela, 2774.
Pakenham, Richard,730.
Palenque, Mex., ruins at, 359.
Paltsits, V. H., 55, 1962, 2288, 2360.
Panama, antiquities of, 525; English attack on,
plans for, in 1741, 2641, 2843; gold in the pre-
historic graves of, 325.
Panama, Gulf of, islands of, 416.
Panama canal, 1846, 2662a, 2663; bibliography cf,
27; French enterprise, 1851.
Panama canal zone, bibliography of, 27.
Pan Americanism, 1857, 1868, 1878, 1884, 2585, 2591;
Blaine and, 1846.
Panic, financial, of 1837, 701; of 1907, 2C24.
Papal consul in America, first, 2099.
Paper money of the Confederate states, 758.
Papineau, L. J., 2385.
Paragonah, Utah, 181.
Paraguay, 2754, 2755; history of, 2596; history of,
from 1747 to 1767, 2703; Indians of, 333; Spanish
conquest of, 2596.
Paraguayan war, 1865-1870, 2755.
Paramaiboa, 406.
Paris, Gonzalo, 2585.
Paris, France, 516.
Paris, Custom of, 1931.
Parish, J. C, 133.
Park, Lawrence, 2252.
Park family, 1622.
.Park, Glacier national,
Run state, Indiana,
890.
Parker, A. B., 1522.
Montana, 1079; Turkey'
944; Yosemite national,;
INDEX.
209
Parker, A. C, 193, 242a, 1440, 1449.
^E.S., 1449.
. W. B.,2676.
Parks, Leighton, 2156.
Parliament of Upper Canada, first, 2474; British,
acts of, in regard to the American colonies,
177^-1777, 644.
Parmelee, K. W., 2597.
Parrislsland, S.C, 1214.
Parry, E. A., 1827.
Parsons, E. C, 194, 224, 505, 2299.
Eugene, 2292.
Parties, political. See Political parties.
Partridge, G. E., 1861.
G. F., 1027.
Patent office, U. S., 902.
Paterson, William, 2638.
Paterson, New Jersey, 1122.
Paton, L. E.,1309.
Patriotic instruction, outlines and suggestions for,
129.
Patriotic societies, conference of, Dec. 27, 1916, 96;
Daughters of 1812, 2040.
Patriotism, teaching of, 157; through education, 122.
Patriots, American, portraits of, 1796-1810, 1299;
early Kentucky, 960; Revolutionary, 654, 694,
1309a, 1317, 1398, 1403, 1434, 1435, 1459, 1468, 1561,
1577, 1604; two Georgia, 1304. See also Revo-
lutionary soldiers.
Pattee, F. L., 2273.
Patterson, B. S., 2041.
Pattison, G. S., 1450.
Patton, J. S., 1396, 2327.
PattuUo, G. R., 2552.
Pauv/elyn, Cyril, 2098.
Pawnee medal, ancient, 201.
Paxson, F. L., 828.
Paxton township. Pa., 1197.
Payne, F, O., 1523, 1524.
L. W., 2274.
Tobias, 1747.
Paz Soldan, M. F., 2763.
Peabody, George, 1302.
Peabody museum of American archaeology and
ethnology, 182.
Peace and reconstruction, of 1918, bibliography
of, 29.
Peace, in 1865, 779.
Peace medal, Indian, 263.
Peace negotiations in 1783, 666.
Peace treaties of the United States, 1862.
Peaked Mountain Presbyterian church, Rock-
ingham CO., Va., 2142.
Pearce, J. E., 195.
Pearson, H. C, 2208.
Jonathan, 1751.
Peary, R. E., 1301, 1525.
Pease, T. C, 60.
Peck, F. M., 2099.
Peck family, 1700.
Pedrazas, 346.
Pedro I, emperor of Brazil, 2730.
Peeke, H. L., 1167.
Peery genealogy, 1701.
Peirson, J. E., 1028.
Pelzer, Louis, 737.
Pemberton, James, 590.
Pemberton pedigree, 1702.
Penalosa, Diego de, 615.
Penfield, L. S., 1143.
Penn, William, 587, 590, 1302, 1450a, 1451.
Penney, Norman, 2121.
Pennsylvania, 1176-1202; ancient highway in, 1998;
anthracite regions of, 1462; Baptist church in
Chester, 2079a; Baptist education in, 2079;
canals of, 2008; Catholic affairs in Philadelphia,
1843-1849, 2094; charter of, 583a; colonial history,
583a-590, 2143; constitutional convention of 1838,
1907; economic material in documents of, 1790-
1904, 49; first church in the western part, 2148;
founder of, 1450a; freemasonry in, 2038, 2041aj
frontier of, defence of, 1682-1800, 584; genealogy,
1752, 1817; governor of, 1836-1839, 1463; in the
Revolutionary period, 635; Indian burial place
in, 169; Indian policy, 1682-1800, 584; Lutheran
church in, 2125; Lutheran church in Phila-
delphia, 2131a; military hospital at Lititz, 1777-
1778, 653; pioneer experiences in, 857; politics
in the Jacksonian period, 1178; Presbyterian
church at Bufialo Cross Roads, 2140b; Pres-
byterian church in Pittsburgh, 2144; Presby-
terianism in, 2143; Protestant Episcopal church
in western, the first, 2148; public opinion in
Philadelphia, 1789-1801, 713; public schools of
Philadelphia, 2179a; Revolution in, 660; settle-
ment of, 587; sojourn of Louis-Philippe in, 707-
transportation in, early development of, 1988;
Virginia regiment at Fort Pitt, during the
Revolution, 698.
Pennsylvania, University of, 2202.
Pennsylvania Dutch genealogies, 1625.
Pennsylvania-German idyl, 1190.
Penobscot shamanism, 255.
Pension system, 1827.
Pensioners, Revolutionary, 695, 696.
Pepperrgll, Sir William, 1452.
Pequannoc,N. J., 1121.
Pequehan, location of, 589.
Pere Marquette railroad company, 1048.
Pereyra, Carlos, 2714, 2723, 2724, 2755.
Perez, Juan, 428.
Perez Resales, Vicente, 2745.
Periodicals, American historical, 36; early Ameri-
can, 2062; Presbyterian religious, 2146; Atlantic
monthly, 2268; Russell's magazine, 2064. See
also Magazines.
Perkins, E. R., 1703.
H. E., 1717.
Perkins family, 1703.
Perley, Sidney, 561-564.
Perring, T. C, 2010.
Perry, Bliss, 2311a.
Perry CO., O., 1165.
Perryville, Ky., battle of, 1S62, 804.
Pershing, J. J., 1453-1456.
Persinger, C. E., 490.
Peru, 2756-2766; aboriginal inhabitants of, 372, 373;
anthropological work in, 204; antiquities of,
283-285, 293, 294, 307, 328-331, 336, 343, 344, 361-
366, 372, 373; archives of, 2696; art of navigation
among the ancient inhabitants of, 372; at the
beginning of the 19th century, 2702; history of,
2596; Incas of, 282, 284, 293, 294, 306, 380; Indians
of, 287, 301, 306, 336, 372, 373; Lima, at the cr.d
210
INDEX.
of the 18th century, 2702; prehistoric culture of,
287; provincia de los XII Apostoles, in 1755,
2635; Spanish conquest of, 379, 407, 412, 2596;
vice royalty of, 2633; history of, 1530 to 1600,
2633; war of independence, 2707, 2708, 2757, 2762.
2763: war with Chile, 1879-18S2, 2741.
Peru, University of, in 1554, 2829,
Peterboro, N. Y., 1145.
Peterson, A. E., 1962.
Petrie, George, 483.
Petroglyph, ancient Colombian, 291.
Pettingell, F. H., 1663.
Peyralbe, E., 1887.
Peyton, M. G., 2222.
Philadelphia, Pa., business affairs in, in 1739, 585;
Carpenters' hall, 1184; Catholic church affairs,
1843-1849, 2094; chemistry in, 2333; Citizen
Genet's visit to, 1181; freemasons in, 2038;
Friends in, 1790, 2121; old milestones about,
1177; public opinion in, 1789-1801, 713; public
schools of, 2179a; San Domingo refugees in, 1182;
St. Luke's Evangelical Lutheran church, 2131a;
story of, 1192.
Philadelphia and Lancaster turnpike, 1170.
Philanthropists, 1340.
Philanthropy, 2048. See also Charities, and Mutual
aid societies.
Philippine insurrection, Connecticut men in the
army and navy during, 895a,
Philippine Islands, 2779-2782; trade with Mexico,
early colonial period, 2630.
Philips, J. F., 1075,
Phillipps, Sir Thomas, 2420.
Phillips, H. A., 801.
Wendell, 1302,
Philosophers, American, 2281,
Philosophy, American, 2269; American ideals in,
505; development of, 2269.
Phips, Sir William, 1457,
Physical environment, effect upon the Indians, 230.
Physicians, American, letters of, 1758-lSSO, 23e0; of
New York state, 2365. See also Medical history.
Pickering, E. C, 2223.
Pickett, J. T., 802.
Picture-names, ancient Mexican, 281. See also
Petroglyphs.
Pictures, current events through, 121. See also
Paintings.
Pidgeon, M. K., 2725,
Pierce, B, L,, 134,
■ G, M., 681,
Pierson,W, W,,jr,,798,
Pietersz, J, L,, 2668,
Piggott, Sir Francis, 644.
Pike, Z. M., 1301, 1458.
Pilgrims, 539-550; coming of, 532.
Pilgrim tercentenary, 541, 543, 545, 546, 549.
Pillsbury, Hobart, 1101.
Pimeria Alta, Kino's historical m.emoir of, 615.
Pinchot, Gifford, 1526.
Pindray, Charles de, 729.
Pinz6n, J. L. H., 408.
M. A., 408.
Pioneer and historical societies in the state of
Washington; 1255.
Pioneer drug store, Wisconsin, 1284.
Pioneer life, in Illincis, 938; Indiana, 433; lowg
951-953; Louisiana, early 19th cent'iry, 84^,
Nebraska, 1082, 108-1, 1088, 1090, 1091, 1094, 109^1
1097, 1098; Ohio, 1163, 1164; Old Northwest'
855, 1163; Ontario, 2553; Pennsylvania, Ken
tucky, Ohio, and Indiana, 857; Wyoming, 12f!C
Pioneers, of America, 465; of Columbia, O., 1164
of the Old Southwest, 861; Oregon, 1173.
Pirates, 599; activities against Spain, 16th and 17tl
centuries, 2828; in the colony of New York
575; Lafitte, the Louisiana pirate, 970.
Piscataqua valley, N. H., 1791.
Piscataway, N. J., 1791.
Pitcher, Molly, 1298.
Pit house village, prehistoric, 178,
Pitt, Fort, in 1777, 635; regiment at, in 1783, 698.
Pitts, W, S., 1277.
Pittsbxirgh, Pa., 1183, 1185, 1187, 1198, 1201; East
Liberty Presbyterian church, 2144.
Huze, J. R., 2524.
Liveright, 2507, 2524.
Pizarro, Francisco, 379, 388, 412, 1296, 1301; arms
of, 2632; banner of, 2616, 2617. I
Place names. See Names, geographical. '
Plains Indians, 211a, 231.
Plante-Febure, J, M,, 2678.
Plants, Indian uses of, 230; of the ancient Mayas,
339,
El Plata, Spanish conquest of, 2596. See also Fuo
de la Plata.
Plate, early Connecticut church, 2249.
Plays, historical. See Historical plays, and Pag-
eants,
Pleadwell, F, L., 1319.
Pleasants, J. H., 1627, 1651, 1692.
Plischke, Hans, 197.
Plum Creek massacre, Nebraska, 1087.
Plumb, R. G., 794.
Plummer, E. H., 1029.
Plumsted family, 1626.
Plyler, M. T., 2161.
Plymouth, Mass., 1008, 1793.
Plymouth colony, 539-550; Indian friends of, 261;
Yit2ilrecoTds, 1675-1686, 1794.
Plymouth medallion, 1620-1920, 541.
Pocahontas, 1298.
Poe, E. E., 1862.
Edgar Allan, 2320.
Poetry, American, 2265; American, national spirit
in, 2262; of the American Indian, 212, 256.
Poets and poetry, French-Canadian, 2390; Spanish-
American, 2610.
Point Lookout, Md., Civil war prison camp at, 798.
Pointe-aux-Trembles, Que., naval battle, 1760, 531.
Poisson, Father, 618,
Poldon, AmeUa, 2553,
Polish physician in the Revolutionary army, 2524.
Political afiairs, from 1807 to 1844, 701; from 1833 to
1861, 726; from 1849 to 1857, 734, 735; in Con-
necticut, early 19th century, 1314. See also
PoUtics and government.
Political biography, 1314, 1432, 1437.
PoUtical circular in Tennessee, 1843, 1220,
Pohtical geography of Wisconsin, 1274,
PoUtical ideals of the Enghsh-speaking peoples,
1837, See also Democracy, and Liberty,
H;
INDEX.
211
Political leaders, of provincial Pennsylvania, 590.
See also Public officials.
Political liberty, English origin of our, 1891. See
also Democracy.
Political parties, in Alabama, 1819 to lSi2, 1914; of
the Federalist period, 713; organization of, 1916;
reorgardzation of, in the seventies, 1918; since
theCivil war, 1913; Democratic triumph, in 1828,
738; Liberal Republican party, 1918; PopuMst
party in Indiana, 947; Whig party, 701. See
also under name of individual party.
Political science. See Civics, and Civil government.
Political society, secret, 1912; in Canada in 1837,
2467.
Political imion. See Confederation, and Feder-
ation.
Politics, American ideals in, 505; frontier in, 736;
recent, historic ideals in, 511; United States,
1907-1923.
Politics, government and law, 1837-1965.
Politics and government, Alabama, 1819 to i8'i2,
867; Cleveland era, 826; Cleveland's administra-
tion, 1372; colonial Massachusetts, 551; dining
the reign of Andrew Jackson, 736; election of
1840,701; election of 1860, 722; Federalist period,
713; from 1807 to 1844, 701; Georgia, provincial
period, 1373; Iowa, from 1879 to 1912,1600; John
Marshall's participation in, 1432; Maryland,
1733-1736, 592; Massachusetts province, 1777-
i77S,641; Mississippi, 1086; Nebraska contested
election of delegate to Congress, 1860, 1095; New
York city, 1784-1831, 1962; North CaroKna,
colonial period, 606; North Carolina, 1824-1838,
1154; on the eve of secession, 1852 to 1860, 722;
Pennsylvania, in the Jacksonian period, 117S;
Pennsylvania colony, 583a; period from 1763 to
1774, 651; provincial Pennsylvania, leaders of,
590; radicals and conservatives, 1852 to 1860,
722; Roosevelt's contribution to, 1471, 1476,
1496, 1513, 1531; royal government in Virginia,
1624-1775, 596; rupture between Tyler and the
Whigs, 701; services of George von Lengerke
Meyer, 1437; Virginia, colonial period, 691, 602;
Wyoming, 1289. See also Colonial administra-
tion. Lords of trade and plantations, and
Political affairs.
Politics and government, British West Indies, 2666,
2667.
f'ohtics and government, Canada, 2388, 2391, 2401,
2457, 2459, 2461, 2466, 2467, 2469, 2471, 2475, 2479a,
2481, 2482, 2484-2486, 2528, 2554, 2555; French
regime, 2427, 2429, 2440; Nova Scotia, 2498.
'oMcs and government, Spanish America, 2576,
2650, 2678, 2685, 2702, 2718, 2723, 2724, 2727, 2730;
colonial period, 2576, 2615, 2620, 2622, 2640, 2685,
2702.
olk,J.K.,730,742.
oUard, A. F., 1888, 1889.
- H. R., 1313.
olloek, Oliver, 1459.
omfret. Conn., 1795.
ompton, N. J., 1121.
ompton Plains, N. J., 1121.
once de Leon, Juan, 1296, 1301.
ond, A. B., 505.
G. H., 74.
S. W., 74.
Pontalba, J. X. de, 978.
Pontiac's conspiracy, 855.
Poore, Alfred, 1753, 1770.
Pope, Sir Joseph, 2471.
Pope, of Rome, and the Confederacy, 774. See also
Papal consul.
Popenoe, Wilson, 339.
Popular sovereignty, 733.
Population and race elements, 2049-2061; Argen-
tina, 2721; Bohemians in Nebraska, 1089;
Dutch settlements in Wisconsin, 1272; English
settlement in Indiana in 1817, 943; Germans in
Missouri, 1068, 1069; Magyars of Cleveland, 1161;,
New England element in New York and the
north central states, 865; of Pittsburgh in 1790,
1198; Swedes in Nebraska, 1081a.
Populist party in Indiana, 1920.
Porcher, Manon, 974.
Porras Troconis, Gabriel, 2765.
Port Hudson, La., battle of, 1862, 796.
Port Royal, Martinique, 2682.
Port Royal, S. C, 1214.
Portage, Wis., 1283.
Portages, in the Niagara region, 1146.
Porter, David, 856.
E.S.,1119.
y/iUiam Sydney, 2321, 2322.
Portland, Me., 980.
Porto Bello, capture by the English, 1739, 530.
Porto Rico, 2884, 2685; geographical "relations " of,
18th centmry, 2621; history of, 2596; prehistoric
ceramics of, 304; relations -with the United
States, 1812; Spanish American war in, 833-836.
Portrait painters, early, 222.8, 2252.
Portraits, of American patriots, 1796-1810, 1209; of
the fonnders of the colonies, 523; of Washington,
1594, 1596.
Portraiture, colonial, 523; early, 2229.
PortsmoutJi, R. I., 569.
Portuguese, rivalry with the Spanish in South
America, 2702.
Po Shu Ouinge, New Mexico, prehistoric ruins at
179.
Posnansky, Arthm, 340.
Post family, 1704.
Post office, Danvers, Mass., 1024.
Postal service in Maine, evolution of, 987.
Potawatomi Indians, 214.
Potawatomie trail, 1989.
Potez, Henri, 1418.
Potter, A. C, 2036.
J. F., 738.
Pottery, aboriginal, from California, 172; ancient
Mexican, 299; Indian, 258: Peruvian, 343: Porto
Rican, 304; prehistoric, 170, 172, 299, 304, 397, 308,
340, 34:3, 351, 356, 361.
Power, Hiram, 967.
Power development of Niagara Falls, 1146.
Pranie du Chien, Wis., 1281.
Prairie du Rocher, 111., 612.
Pratt, J. W., 803, 1828.
Prayer book, American, of 1793, 2150.
Preachers, Tennessee's pioneer Baptist, 2078. See
also Religious biography.
Pre-Columbian America, 2596. See also Antiquities.
Pre-Columbian knowledge of a western continent,
197; myth regarding a vfestern continent, 380.
I..
212
INDEX.
I
Prentiss, S. S., 1460.
Presbyterian chiirch, 2139-2147; in Waterloo co.,
Ont., 2537; leaders of, and the Revolutionary
war, 633; New York Presbytery, minutes of,
1775-1776, 633.
"The Presbyterian journal," 2146.
Presbyterianism in Ontario, 2549.
Presbyterians in the Massachusetts Bay colony, 559.
Prescott,C. J., 1032,2207.
Presidential campaign of 1844, 701; election of 1840,
701; election of 1860, 722.
Presidents, U.S., papers of, 72; powers of, 1938.
Press, 2066; Andover press, Andover, N. H., 2067;
early Missouri, 2068; freedom of, see Zenger trial;
ir British Guiana, 2733; New York, dinner to
Dickens given by, 2275; Spanish, of California,
11 . See also Newspapers, and Printing and pub-
lishing.
Preston, H. W., 1206, 1207.
Samuel, 1030.
WilUam, 645, 1466.
Priber, Dr., 610.
Price, CM., 2245.
William, 619.
Prices, colonial and revolutionary periods, in New
Jersey, 1115; in New York city eighty years ago,
1140.
Priestley, H. I., 436, 885, 2640, 2657, 2658.
Primary history of the United States, 470, 472,487.
Prince, E. M., 1419.
Prince George's co., Md., 1796.
Prince of Wales royal Canadian regiment, 2383a.
Princeton, N. J., 1111.
Princeton theological seminary, 2168.
Princeton university, 1111.
Printing and publishing, 2062-2068. See also His-
torical publications, JournaUsts, Newspapers,
Periodicals, and Press.
Prison, Civil war, at Point Lookout, Md., 798.
Prisoners, in Boston jail, in 1713, 565; Revolution-
ary, commissary of, 624.
Private property, in the Province of Quebec, origin
of, 2504.
Privateers, French attitude towards American,
during the Revolutionary war, 644; French, in
West Indian waters, 2683; in the Chilean navy,
1817-1819, 1822-1847, 2736; of '76, 1983; of the
colony of New York, 575; privateer "Yankee,"
fifth cruise of, I8I4, 709.
Prizes, during the American revolution, 644; during
war between England and Spain, in 1748, 526.
Probate records, city and coimty of Albany, 1658-
1765, 1751; Stamford, Conn., 1729-1802, 1804.
See also Wills..
Proctor, Maj. Gen. H. A., 714.
J. C, 905.
Profits of the slave trade, 753.
Progressive party, 1920.
Prohibition, early movement for, 1968; in Maine,
beginnings of, 985. See also Temperance society.
Propaganda, alien, and history teaching, 115.
Property. See Private property.
Proprietors of the Delaware, 587.
Protective tariff. See Tariff.
Protestant confessions of faith, first in America, 2073.
Protestant Episcopal church, 2148-2150; Carlyle,
111., 936; in Pulaski co., 111., 924; of Washington
CO., Pa., 1188.
Protestant missionary in Canada, first, 2418.
Protestantism, French, in Canada and the United
States, 2071.
Providence, R. I., 1207; first settlers of, 571; Moses
Brown school, 2200; ships and shipmasters of
old, 1984.
Providence institution for savings, Providence,
R. I., 1984.
Prudhomme, Charley, 893.
Prud'homme, L. A., 2435.
Prudhomme, L. V., 893.
Prudon, L. V., 893.
Pruvost, Rene, 2066.
Pryor, Nathaniel, 1461.
R. A., 738, 1279.
Psychology of the Latin American, 2607.
Pubhc administration in Mississippi, 1066.
PubMc archives commission, 55.
Public debt. See West Virginia debt settlement.
Public documents, of Pennsylvania, index of eco-
nomic material in, 49; 61st to 64th Congresses,
24; relating to Alaska, 43; relating to American
history and biography, 44; relating to foreign
affairs, 1828-1861, 50; relating to foreign rela-
tions, 45; relating to Indians, 46; relating to
New Mexico, 18^7-1874, 40.
Public education, in Mississippi, 1961; in. the United
States, 2172. See also Public schools.
Public health, in Mississippi, administration, 1961;
Massachusetts state board of, 1023a.
Public information, committees of, 186S-1866, 816.
Pubhc land, Kentucky, 961; system of Texas, 182S-
1910, 1974; Wisconsin state forest reserve, 1285;
Indiana, early surveys of, 948; Oklahoma, 1171;
Ontario, 2564, 2565; policy of the United States,
1970 See also Land.
Pubhc officials, colonial, quahfications of, 537; New
Jersey, 1709-1713, 582; of Somerset co., N. J.,
1688-1799, 1124. See also Pohtical leaders.
Pubhc opinion in Philadelphia, 1789-1801, 713.
Pubhc record office, British, manuscripts in, 72,
Pubhc records. See Archives.
Public roads in Pennsylvania, 1179.
Public schools, Houston, Tex., 2187; in Illinois, to
1860, 2178; in Topsfield, Mass., in 1843, 1041;
of Philadelphia, centennial anniversary of,
2179a; Ontario, 2536, 2544; Quebec, 2530a;
Westchester co., N. Y., 2188.
Pubhc utilities, 1979.
PubMc works, 1988-2068; in the state of Washing-
ton, 1254.
Publishing, 2062-2068.
Pueblo, architecture of New Mexico, 1130; prehis-
toric culture, 192; ruins in New Mexico, 187,
188; villages in Colorado, 171.
Puget Sound agricultural company, 1256.
Pulaski CO., 111., 924.
"Pulaski," steamer, 913.
Pullman, 111., 930.
Punitive expedition against the Mexicans, 1842, 727.
Purcell, J. B.,2100.
Puritan commonwealth, a chronicle of, 532.
Puritanism, 2269.
Puritans, 551. ■ "^
Putnam, G. H., 1480, 1527.
Harrington, 1932.
Herbert, 72.
J. H., 2525.
INDEX.
213
I Putnam, N. A., 2356.
' Putnam ancestry, 1628, 1705.
Quaife, M. M., 430, 938.
Quaker colonies, 587, 588.
Quakeriana, 38.
Quakers, in Pennsylvania, attitude toward war,
1186. See also Friends, Society of.
Quarter, William, 2101.
Quebec (city), address of Benedict Arnold to the
inhabitants of. Mar. 4, 1776, 632a; dark days in
October 1785, 2500; Duke of Kent in, in 1791,
2509; fifth bishop of, 2512; in 1709, 2448; letter
written from, in 1765, 2468; seminary of, 2510.
Quebec, Province of, 2499-2530; archives of, 2367;
flags of, 2515; in 1769, 2457; mihtia of, 1763-1776,
2456; mutual aid societies in, 2505; northeastern
frontier of, 2503; northern part of, 2516; ordi-
nances of, 2436; origin of private property in,
2504. See also New France,
Quebec, siege of, 1759, 2443.
Quebec act, 177 J^, 2466.
Queen Anne's war, 525.
Quelle, Otto, 30, 31, 2598-2600.
Queredo, S. A. L., 341.
Quetzalcoatl, ancient Mexican god, 363, 369.
Quill work, Indian, 246.
Quirigua, Guatemala, 35; prehistoric monument
from, 374.
Quisenberry, A. C, 804.
Quit-rent system in the colonies, 1971.
Quivira, expedition of Diego de Peiialosa to, in 1662,
615.
j Race, distribution of. See Anthropogeography.
jj Race, festival of the Spanish, 2584.
j Race and democracy in Latin America, 2594.
Race elements, of the Philippines, 2782. See also
Population and race elements.
Race psychology, 2607.
Race question in Canada, 2486.
I Racine, Wis., 1279, 1280.
j "Racine Advocate," newspaper, 1276.
Radicalism in American politics, 1920.
Radicals, on the eve of secession, 722.
Radin, Paul, 342.
Rahola, Federico, 2596.
Raht, C. G., 1236.
Railroad building, a chronicle of, 2009.
Railroad commission, Michigan, 1050.
Railroading in Kentucky, early, 956.
Railroads, early, 1992; first raikoad from the east to
the west, 1998; in Michigan, 1048; in Missouri,
1070; in the Willamette valley, Ore., 1175; J. P.
Morgan and the, 2024; southern, restoration of,
2000; transcontinental, early agitation for, 1845-
1850, 724; New Aibany-Salem railroad, Ind.,
2010; Northern Pacific raikoad, 1999; Old Colony
railroad, 2001; Pacific railroad, 2002; Pere Mar-
quette railroad company, 1048; Union Pacific
railroad, 2014.
Rain-gods, 367.
Raleigh, Sir Walter, 1301, 1837; and British imper-
ialism, 396; as a man of letters, 398; discovery of
Guiana, 402; place in American colonization,
376.
Raleigh, Ont., 2560.
Ramirez, Juan, 1129.
Ramsay, David, 2563.
W.C, 1954.
Ramsey, J. G. M., 1224.
Ranck, E.G., 1528.
Randall, E. O ., 1168, 1169.
— Robert, 2511.
Randolph, C. F., 1264.
I. F., 1264.
Jolin, 647:
John, of Roanoke, 72.
Ransom, J. J., 2133.
Ransom co., N. Dak., 1158a.
Rantoul, R. S., 1031.
Raousset-Boulbon, G. R. de, 729.
Rasiere, Isaack de, 575.
Rfi-le, Sebastian, 222.
Ratification of treaties, refusal of, 1852, 1897.
Ravenel, H. W., 2364.
Rawson, M. N., 343.
Ray, C.B., 756.
Raymond, W. O., 2490-2493.
Raynor family, 1629.
Read, B.M., 409, 1131.
C. F., 1032,2207.
H. C., 1611.
Reade, John, 2480.
Readers, American history, 465.
"Readers' guide to periodical literature," 32, 33.
Readington, N. J., 1797.
Reagan, A. B., 198, 243.
Real academia hispano-americana de ciencias y
artes de Cadiz, 2601.
Real estate, method of transfer in Quebec, 2504.
Rebellion of 1837-8, in Canada, 2473; in Ontario,
2459, 2541.
RebelUons in South America, 1764-1806, 2702.
R6collet missionary in Canada, 2436a.
Reconstruction, 1865-1876, 825, 908; efi:ect on the
science and scientists of the South, 2364; in
South Carolina, 1212.
Reconstruction following the Great war, bibliog-
raphy of, 29.
Records, Spencer, 857.
Red Willow CO., Neb., 1094.
Redman family, 1706.
Reed, H. E., 491.
T. H., 1944.
Reeder, Daniel, 1164.
Reform, political, Grover Cleveland and, 1917.
Reformed church, of Coxsackie, N. Y., 1150; of
Niskayuna, N. Y., 1151; Dutch Reformed
church, 2119.
Regents questions in American history, 491, 492.
Regiment, Prince of Wales royal Canadian, 2383a.
Regimental histories, Civil war, 761, 794, 819-821;
Confederate, 811, 819, 1252; Mexican war, 744;
Revolutionary war, 639, 665.
Regional colonial history, 532-622.
Regional genealogy, vital records, etc., 1751-1817.
Regional (local) history, 838-1290.
Reid's yellow dent corn, 1972.
Reindeer in Alaska, 873.
Reizler, S., 410.
Relationships, Indian, 279.
Relief work in the Civil war, 763.
214
INDEX.
Eeligion, American ideals in, 505; ancient Mexican,
363; in Canada, 2486; Indian, 229, 264, 310, 314,
335, 349; of the Incas, 306. See also Dieguefio
ceremony of the death images, Gods, and Idol-
atry.
Religious defense of slavery, 751.
Religious forces in the United States, 1815-1830,
2072.
Religious history, 2069-2168; beginnings of Chris-
tianity in Oregon, 850; biography, 15, 2078,
2152-2168; Boston, Mass., 1006, 1007; Canada,
2418, 2568; Canada, in 1791, 2461; Civil war pe-
riod, 786; first church of Branford, Conn., 896;
French Protestant church in Boston, in 1690,
558; general, 2069-2077; Illinois, 918, 924, 934,
936; Massachusetts Bay colony, 559; New York
state, 1149-1151; of Chile, 2739; Ontario, 2537,
2539, 2547, 2549, 2551, 2560; particular denomi-
nations, 2078-2151; Pennsylvania, 1188; Quebec,
1892 to 1914, 2512; San Domingo, 2686; Ver-
mont, 1242a; Virginia, 1814-1819, 1249. See
also Churches, Theology, and Unitarianism.
Religious journal, a Presbyterian, 2146.
ReUgious liberty in colonial Massachusetts, 551;
in the American law, 1934; New Hampshire
pioneers of, 2154; prophet of, 572.
Religious orders. See Franciscans, and Jesuits.
Religious side of navy life, 1824.
Religious thought in America, 2070.
Remonstrants, 559.
Remsburg, G. J., 244.
Renaut, F. P., 710, 1864, 1865, 2730.
Renshaw, Henry, 979.
J. A., 980.
Rensselaerswyck, colony of, 1751.
Rent system in the colonies, 523a.
Reorganized church of Jesus Christ of latter day
saints, 2560.
Reporting, newspaper, 1142.
"Republic of Jones," in the Confederacy, 1864, 759.
RepubHcan movement. Liberal, 1918.
Research. See Historical research.
Reunion of the states, 825.
Rentier, L., 344.
Revolution, American, and the French revolution,
650; armed neutrality during, 644; British and
French documents relating to, 644; cause of the
discontent that brought it on, 1971; causes of,
657; French participation in, 445, 644, 659, 662,
664, 670, 673, 685, 1851; general, 648-651; griev.
ances of the colonies, 644; Harv?Td men in, 692;
hospitals, 634; in New Brunswick, N. J., 1108; in
the Old Northwest, 855, 864, 1439; Maryland
soldiers in the battle of Long Island, 994; Massa-
chusetts and, 551; new interpretation of, 140;
North Carolina during, 1157; North Carolina
militia in, 1823; officers of, 1318, 1325, 1333,
1399, 1422, 1439, 1577, 1617; pensioners, 695,
696; Polish surgeon serving in, 2524; privateers
of, 1983; soldiers of, 680, 692-699, 994; sources
and documents, 63, 623-647; Spain's attitude in
regard to, 644; special, 652-691; wives and
mothers of, 669.
Revolution, Spanish American. See Spanish
American wars of independence.
Revolutionary literature, bibliography of, 22S1.
Revolutionary times, Michigan fur trade in, 1982.
Revolutionary war medal, 1598.
RevUle, J. C, 2160.
Rey de Castro, Carlos, 2764, 2765a, 2766.
Reynier, Jean, 2076.
Reynolds, L. W., 1227.
Rheinisch-Westindische Kompagine, 2598.
Rhode Island, 1203-1209; aboriginal steatite quarry
in, 199; artillery at Gettysburg, 1209; Bristol
ship engaged in the slave trade in 1807, 753
colonial history, 569-572; documentary history i
of, 569; early printer of, 2063; first governor of, '
1312; Indian implement from, 168; maps of,
check list, 8; Newport history, 2027; schools in, ,
2200; ships and shipmasters of old Pro\idence,
1984.
Rhode Island historical society library, 8.
Rhodes, Harrison, 999. |
J. F., 136,a30.
Ribero, Diego, 401.
Ribot, Jean, 1301.
Ricei, Matteo, 395.
Rice, DeLong, 805.
Rice culture in South Carolina, 1213a.
Richard, Edouard, 2419.
M. F., 2381, 2497.
Richards, H. M. M., 411.
J. W., 2131a.
Richardson, W. H., 1120.
Richardson co.. Neb., 1098.
Richman, I. B., 412.
Richmond, Sbenezer, 1707.
Samuel, 1710.
Silvester, 1708, 1709.
W. H., 1462.
Richmond family, 1707-1710.
Richmond, Staten Island, N. Y., 656..
Richmond light infantry blues, 1252.
Riddeli, W. R., 754, 755, 2391, 2392, 2459, 2554, 2555.
Ridgefield, Conn., 1804.
Riley, James Whitcomb, 2323, 2324.
P. M., 2234.
Rio, Armand, 682.
Rio de la Plata, province of, British capture and
loss of Buenos Aires, 2702; European diplomacy
in, 1SS8-1850, 2724; United States merchant
ships In, 1801-1808, 1977; viceroyalty of, 2702.
See also La Plata.
Riordan, D. J., 2208.
Ripley, S. A., 1293.
Rippy, J. F., 740, 741, 806.
Risco, Alberto, 837.
Ritner, Joseph, 1463.
Rivarola, Rodolfo, 2714.
Rivas, A. C, 2709.
River Ouelle, Que., 2507, 2524, 2527.
Rivet, Paul, 34, 259, 286.
Roads, beginnings of artificial, in Pennsylvania,
1990; camino real, in California, 887; early
Indiana, 948; early Ontario, 2533; Ferry road
on Long Island, 1133; in Louisiana, 976; in
Pennsylvania, 1179, 1998; Ipswich road, Mass.,
1014; national road in Indiana, 940; New York
state, 1139; of New England, Virginia, and
Maryland, 2019; the old Chicago road, 214, 1989;
the Old Gulph road, 1998; turnpike, 1992, 2018
2019. See also Milestones, and IJrails.
Robbins, E. E., 1464.
Roberts, B. H., 744.
INDEX.
215
Boberts, G. E., 1585.
J. A., 1448.
. L. B., 1450a.
. Octavia, 683.
_ W. C, 2030.
Eobertson, George, 1275.
. H. H., 2556.
J. A., 2641.
J. M., 2312.
James, 1465.
Robinson, A. G., 2246.
. Caroline, 1665.
David, 1466.
Doane, 1218.
Leigh, 14^6.
M. H., 936.
0. W., 1055.
W. T>., 858.
W. H., 875.
Robinson family, 1711.
Rochambeau, comte de, 664, 685; departure for
America, 662.
Rocheraux, H., 346.
Rock writing, ancient, 291.
Rodgers, Jolxn, 72.
Rodman, Hugh, 1467.
Rodney, C. A., 72.
Caesar, 72.
R. S., 897.
Thomas, 72, 1468.
Rodd, J. E., 2693.
Rodrigue family, 1182.
Rodriguez Codola, Manuel, 2602.
Rodriguez-Navas, Manuel, 413, 2626-2629.
Rodway, James, 2733.
Rogers, E.M., 684.
H. O., 2026.
Robert, 628.
Rognoni, Rachele, 414.
Roissey, Urbaln de, 2679.
Rojas, A., 2773.
L. M., 2S61.
Ricardo, 2693, 2726.
Rollins, H. E., 2322.
Y/. E., 245.
Romera-Navarro, Miguel, 2603.
Romero, C. A., 373.
Romig, E. D., 2348.
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1292, 1302, 1470-1557; papers
of, 72.
Root, E. W., 1144.
Elihu, 1292, 1480, 1535, 1558.
Rosas, Juan de, 2723.
Manuel, 2717.
Rosati, Bishop, 2090, 2104.
Rosen, Eric von, 347, 348.
Rosenberg, L. J., 1057.
Rosenbloom, J., 1401.
Ross, Betsy, 1298.
C. S., 1303.
■ S. D., 1917, 1918.
Eothensteiner, John, 2102-2104.
Rotterdam, N. Y., 1798.
Roth, H. L., 246.
Roure, Lucien, 2291.
Rousseau, Francois, 2710.
Rowe, L. S., 1890.
Rowland, Dunbar, 1066.
Roxbury, Mass., 566, 1033.
Roy, P. G., 2393, 2436-2444, 2526.
R6gis, 2445-2447, 2527.
Royal government in Vii-ginia, 596.
Royalton, Vt., 1242a.
Royalty, members of, in America, 707.
Royaumont, Louis de, 685.
Royce, Josiah, 2224, 2225, 2269, 2281.
Roz, Firmin, 136, 1867.
Rueda, J. E., 1868.
Rugg, E. U., 137.
Ruggles, T. S., 566.
Ruins, prehistoric, at Santa Rita, British Hondu-
ras, 323; at Tiahuanacu, Bolivia, 366; Aztec
ruin, 187, 188; in Arizona, 205; in Colorado, 171,
189, 198; in Mexico, 289, 303; in New Mexico,
178, 179; in Peru, 283, 293, 294; in Yucatan, 363-
365; of Palenque, 359. See also Antiquities.
Euliere, II., 1397.
Runciman, Sir Walter, 415.
Rune stone, Kensington, 175.
Rupert's House, James Bay, Can., 2566.
Rush, Benjamin, 642.
Rushmore family, 1629.
Russell, A. J., 106,3.
CM. ,2253.
Pearl, 859.
Peter, 2564.
T. H.,1536.
•'Russell's magazine," 2064.
Russian- Japanese treaty, 1476.
Rutgers, Henry, 2119.
Ruud, M. B.,2313.
Ruyter, Michel de, 2682.
Ryan, A. J., 2325.
E. A., 2106.
D. J.,2^5.
W. S., 1145.
Sabin, E. L., 2011.
Sacajawea, 1298.
Sachse, J. F., 2038, 2041a.
Sackett, L. W., 138.
Saginaw Indian treaty of 1819, 704, 1053.
Saguenay co.. Que., 2530.
Sailiy, Petei', 702.
"Saint Bernard, bale," 259.
St. Charles, early French fort, 2435.
Saint Chiistophe, West Indies, French at, 2679.
Saint Colomb-de-Siliery, parish of. Que., 2529.
Saint-Eustache, Que., 2520.
St. Felix-du- Cap-Rouge, parish of. Que., 2529.
St. John, N. B., 2487-2489, 2492, 2494.
St. John's Berkley, S. C, 608.
St. Louis, Mo., 58, 2103, 2104.
St. Louis university, 2195.
Saint Memin, C. B. J. F. de, 1299.
Saint Memin collection of portraits, 1299.
Saint-Ours, F. R. de, 2522.
St. Paul, Minn., 2091; first Catholic bishop of, 2157.
Saint Paul's Bay, Que., 2506.
Saint Pierre, Paul de, 2105.
St. Regis seminary, 2088.
Ste Catherine, colony of, 618.
Saintyves, P., 349.
Salado Alvarez, V., 1237.
;, J. C, 350.
216
INDEX.
Saldias, Adolfo, 2727.
Sale, N.J. L., 1718.
Salem, Ind., 2010.
Salem, Mass., 557; colonial architecture of, 2234;
famous days of the port of, 1983; in 1700, 562-564.
Salem, W.Va., 1264.
Salisbury, N. Y., 1786.
Salley, A. S. jr., 1213a, 1214.
Salmon, David, 2177.
Salt Creek prairie massacre, 1871, 1232.
Salyards, Anna, 2166.
Salzer, E. P., 2711.
Samoa, conflict of Germany and the United States
over, 1871.
"Samoset," Indian chief, 261.
Samplers, early, 2247.
San Bernardino Valley, Cal., 883a.
San Domingo. See Santo Domingo.
San Felipe de Austin, ayuntamiento of, 1230.
San Fernando de Bexar, Texas, 1233.
San Francisco, Cal., 878; Committee of vigilance,
1851, 894.
San Juan, island, early map^of, 416.
San Martin, Jose de, 2701, 2712; in Peru, 2765.
San Miguel de las Palmas de Tamalameque, 2621.
San Salvador, identification of the island, 383.
Sanchez, N. V., d28.
Sanderson, E. L., 1034.
Sandusky county pioneer and historical association,
1170.
Santa Cruz, Alonso de, 416.
Santa Rita, British Honduras, 323.
Santangel, Luis de, 386.
Santayana, George, 2281.
Santiago de Chile, 2702, 2745.
Santiago de Cuba, campaign of, 1898, 1846; naval
battle, 1898, 837.
Santo Domingo, 2686-2688; division of the island,
2688; early map of, 416; kitchen middens of,
278; refugees of 1791, 1182; republic of, 2596.
Santovenia, E.S., 2677.
Sapper, Karl, 247.
Saratoga, N, Y., battle of, 1777, 690; Burgoyne's
surrender at, 625; campaign, 1777, 658.*
Sargent, G. H., 2067.
J. S., 2248.
Sargent family, 1712,
Sargent co., N. Dak., 1158a.
Sarsi Indians, 231.
Sartori, G. B., 2099.
Saskatchewan, Can., 2571.
Satterly family, 1629.
Sauer, C. O., 1146.
Sauk Indians, 204.
Savage, W. J., 493.
Savannah, Ga., 912; Independent Presbyterian
church, 2145; promotion of transportation,
2007.
"Savannah," first transatlantic steamship, 2007,
2013.
Savard, Antonio, 2528.
Savery, William, 2240.
Saville, F. H., 199.
M. H., 35, 200, 351.
Saving fund society, Trenton, N. J., 2021.
Savings, Society for, in Cleveland, O., 2028.
Savings banks of Newport, Newport, R. I., 2027.
Sawyer, A. L,, 1056.
R. D., 2154.
Scales, John* 1791.
Scammell, Alexander, 1559.
Schafer, Ernst, 417.
Schafer, Joseph, 94, 511.
Schalck de la Faverie, A., 650.
Schefer, Jakob, 2642.
Schenck, G. C, 1121.
Schenectady, N. Y., 1799, 2149.
Schilling, L. C, 1560.
Schlesinger, A. M., 480, 651, 1342.
Schmauk, T. E., 2125.
Schmidt, L. B., 35a, 39.
Max, 352, 353.
Schmidt-KIugkist, Wilhelm, 2728.
Scholefield, G. H., 1869.
School histories. See Text-books, outlines, etc. |
School lands of Oklahoma, 1171. |
Schools, Brimmer school, Boston, 2207; first CathI
oUc Indian school, 2088; Houston, Tex., 2187;
Illinois, 2178; in America, 2169; Lutheran '
school at Philadelphia, 2131a; Moses Browij
school. Providence, R. I., 2200; Mount Pleasan!
O., Friends, 2120; Ontario, 2536, 2544; Phila|
delphia, centennial anniversary of, 2179a!
Topsfield, Mass., in 1843, 1041; Waltham, Mass.i
1003, 1034; Westchester co., N. Y., 2188. -Sej
also High schools, and Public schools. (
Schrabisch, Max, 248. [
SchuUer, Rudolf, 354.
Schurz, W. L., 2630. ;
Schuyler, L. R., 101. ,
P. J., 632a. I
R. L., 140. '
Schweig, Arthur, 2614a. j
Science, 2358-2365; American ideals of, 505; firsi
degree of doctor of medicine conferred in thd
colonies, 528; in South America, during lat<
Spanish period, 2702. See also Astronomy!
Chemist, an early American, and Mathematics:
Scisco, L. D., 1786.
Scott, A. L., 1239.
A. P., 2395. :
H. A., 2529.
H. E., 69.
H. G.,1713. i
J. B., 1903, 1904.
L. M., 1175. 7
W. H., 2558.
W. W., 1788.
Scott genealogy, 1713.
Scotts Bluff country. Neb., 1093.
Scudder family, 1642a.
Sculptors, 2251, 2254.
Sculpture, ancient Mexican, 269, 280, 317; in coloma:
America, 2238; prehistoric, 374; Roosevelt inj
1523, 1524. i
Sculptured vase, prehistoric, 351. ,
Sea captains, early Providence, 1984; of old Boston i
1036. j
Sea power, England's, in the time of Raleigh, 396:
Sears, J. H., 1616. i
L. M., 1870, 1985. !
Seas, freedom of, 644.
Seaton, Mary, 141.
Secession, 792; eve of, 722.
I
INDEX.
217
Secession from the Confederacy, 759.
Secret political society, 1912; in Canada, 1837-1838,
2467.
Secretary of state, under Cleveland, 1372.
Secretary of the navy, 1801-1809, 1818a.
Sectionalism, 855; in Alabama, 1819-18^2, 867; in
South Carolina, 1909.
Sedella, Antonio de, 964.
Sedgwick, Ellery, 1447.
Sedition, in the North during the Civil war, 816;
trial in 1800, 712.
Seitz, D. C, 1451, 2284a.
Seler, Caecilie, 355, 356.
Edward, 357-365.
Self-determination, the South and, 813.
Sellers, J. E., 1649.
Semprum, J., 2774.
Senan, Jose, 249.
Senate, U. S., report on negro migration of 1879, 831;
treaties rejected by, 1852.
Seneca Indians, 193.
Senter, Isaac, 1561.
Serpent mound in Ohio, 207.
Servants, in the colony of Antigua, act regarding,
2674.
Setito, F. M. de, 2583.
Seton, Mother, 2110.
Settlement, western, 1062. See also Emigration,
western.
Seven Cities, the island of, 380.
Seven reductions, war of the, 1754, 2702.
Severin, Ernest, 1239.
Severn, battle of the, 1855, 591.
Sevier, John, 861, 1228.
Sewall, Samuel, 567.
W. W. ("Bill Sewall"), 1537, 1538.
Seward, W. H., 1302.
Sewing machine, inventor of, 1387.
Sexsmith, W. N., 2559.
Seybolt, R. F., 579, 2188, 2189.
Seymour family, 1714.
Shaker communities of Maine, 992.
Shakertown, Ky., 958.
Shakespeare, "William, and the makers of Virginia,
605.
Shamanism, 255.
Shambaugh, B. F., 1381, 1600.
Shannon, M. E. F., 2326.
Sharp, Alfred, 1420a.
John, 366.
Sharpe, H. D., 536.
Sharpless, Isaac, 590.
Shaw, A. H., 1562.
Albert, 1539.
F. J., 814.
Shawnee Indian village, 589.
Shearer, A. H., 36.
Sheboygan co.. Wis., 1272.
Sheen, D. R., 418.
Shelby's expedition to Mexico, 1865, 778.
Sheldon, A. E., 1092.
Shellheap, Indian, in New York city, 202.
Shenandoah valley campaign, 1864, 782.
Shenk, H. H., 1200.
Shepard, F. J., 2209.
• 1. S.,419.
Shepherd, H. E., 1000, 2304, 2331.
W. R., 142, 2606, 2607, 2713.
Sherman, A. R., 1281.
G. H., 1146a.
P. J., 1057.
Roger, 632a.
S. P., 1540.
Sherman's march to the sea, 795.
Sherwood, E. J., 32.
H.N. ,946.
Shields, John, 2560.
Shiloh, Tenn., battle of, 1862, 790, 805.
Shine, M. A., 201.
Shipbuilding, bibliography of, 28; in New England,
1980.
Shipmasters of old Providence, R. I., 1984. See also
Sea captains.
Shippee, L. B., 742.
Shipping, bibliography of, 28; of old Boston, 1036.
See also Commerce, Maritime affairs, and Mer-
chant marine.
Ships, early, 2007; of old Providence, R. I., 1984.
Ships and shipping, American, a chronicle of, 1983.
Shipwreck, in the Arctic, in 1871, 832; of the "Pul-
asld," June 14, 1838, 913.
Shirley, Ralph, 1420.
William, 566.
Shively, C. P., 143.
Shoemaker, F. C, 1076.
H. W., 1197.
Shores, V.L., 1919.
Shortridge, W. P., 1064.
Shoshoni Indians, 237.
Shotridge, Louis, 250.
Shriner, C. A., 1122.
Slirines. See Virgin of Guadalupe.
Shuey, D. B., 1715.
Shuey family, 1715.
Shumv/ay, G. L., 1093.
Shuttleworth, Ashton, 646.
Sibley, H. H., 1064.
Sickle's Excelsior brigade, 821.
Siebert, W. H., 686.
Sigondis, Lepine de, 729.
Silk industry of Lancaster co.. Pa., 1191.
Sille, Nicasius de, 5S0.
Silva, J. F.V., 2714.
Silver mines of Bahia, fabled, 2612.
Silversinithing, colonial, 2249.
Silvy, Phe, 2448, 2530.
Simitiere, P. E. du, 120S.
Simmons, F. J., 1716.
J. R., 1035.
Simmons family, 1716.
Simon, L. A., 60.
Simonds, J. R., 896, 2117.
Simpson, M. E., 144, 145.
Sims,W. S., 1563.
Sinclair, James, 2561.
Siouan Indians, anthropom.etry of, 257; early mis-
sionaries to, 74; in Minnesota, missionary to,
1860-1917, 2167. See also Dakota Indians.
Siqueira Coutinho, J. de, 2731.
Sisseton Dakota Indians, 231, 253.
"Sister Ohio," 703.
Siwanoy Indians, 202.
Six Nations Indians, 228.
Six-Mile Run, N . J., 1800.
Sixth Massachusetts regiment, 1861, 760.
218
INDEX.
Skeletons, prehistoric. See Human bones.
Skelton, O. D., 2396, 2485.
Skinner, A. B., 251-253.
Alanson, 202, 231, 1282.
C. L., 146, 861.
C. R., 1147, 1428.
E. M., 152.
R. P., 1541.
Slattery, C. L., 2225.
Slaughter, W. A., 687.
Slave trade, cfiorts to suppress, 748; in 18G7, 753;
with the British West Indies, 2675.
Slaveholding Indians, 210.
Slavery, 746-758; abolition of, 728; agitation again?t,
the Lutheran church and, 786; in Canada, 2364;
in the Spanish colonies during the 16th and 17i:i
centuries, 409; independence of Texas and, 1237.
See also Emancipation proclamation, Harpers
Ferry raid, Kansas-Nebraska act, and Kansas
struggle.
Slaves, in Tennessee, legal status of, 1928; fugitive,
in Ontario, 2542, 2559.
Slings, ancient Peruvian, 329; pre-Columbian use
of, 329.
Slosson, E. E., 1871.
Small, Jacob, 2243.
Smeaton, Oliphant, 2305.
Smith, Ashbel, 1564.
C. A., 2213.
C. W., 70.
E, P., 1347, 2363.
E. F.L., 1382.
G. E., 367.
George, 2562.
Gerrit, 1145.
H, A. M., 1215, 1216.
H. C, 2137, 2138.
H. F., 1565.
H.I., 203.
1. L., 2013.
J. H., 745.
John, 1301, 2166.
Joseph, 2138.
K. P., 2210.
Marjorie Aylefie, 162.
P. T., 147, 1829.
R.C., 1238.
Robert, 1818a.
T. J., 1123.
W. Merle-, 2221.
Smith family, 1717, 1718; of Long Island, 1629.
Smithsonian institution, 204.
Smyth, E.G., 2070.
Newman, 2070.
Smythe, H. A., 166.
"Snakapins," aboriginal site, 202.
Snake river, 843.
Snelling, ^Y. J., 852.
Snively, Jacob, 1231.
Snow, A. H., 1933.
Snyder CO., Pa., 1202,
Soapstone, aboriginal quarry, 199.
Social and economic history, 1966-2068; a lost Utopia
of the colonial period, 610; agriculture, forestry
and land, 1970-1975; commerce and industry,
1976-1987; communication, transportation, and
public works, 1988-2019; finance and money,
2020-2029; general, 1966-1969; labor, 2030-2032;
libraries, societies and institutions, 2033-204;
life and manners, 2043-2047; Massarhuseti
state board of health, founding of, i023a; of th
period from 1763 to 1774, 651; of the South sjir
Reconstruction, 862; philanthropy, 2048; popi
lation and race elements, 2049-2061; printin
and publishing, 2062-2068; rehef work in th
Civil war, 763.
Social ideals of the English-speaking peoples, 183/
Social life, Baltimore, Md., fancy dress bail, in 1837
998; in Georgia, 909. See also Life and manners
Social organization, of the Guarani, 341. See als
Clans.
Social sciences in the high school, 152.
Social utility of history, 108.
Socialization of the history recitation, 125.
Societies and institutions, 2038-2042; age, of th<,
Plains Indians, 211a; Indian, 238; New Hampl,
shire literary and debating, 1102; secret pohtica I
society, in Canada in 1837, 2467; secret political
society in New York, 1912; Cumberland countjl
[N. J.] medical society, 1123; Educationalasso-J
elation of Virginia, 2185; Native sons of th^i
Golden Yv^est, organization of, 888; Society foi
the propagation of the gospel in foreign parts, 72;
Washington benevolent society, 1912. S€e\
also Historical societies, Patriotic societies, and'
Pioneer and historical societies. {
"Society," American ideals in, 505. :
Soderini, Piero, 393a. \
Solar, Eulogio del, 2764.
Soldiers, Revolutionary, 680, 692-699, 994. !
Soldiers' Retreat, Ky., 955. i
Somerset CO., N. J., 693, 1124, 1125, 1357, 1801, 1802.
Somersworth, N. H., 1803.
Somervell, Gen. Alexander, 727.
Some^\^ile, N. J., 1119.
"Somerville [N. J.] messenger," newspaper, 1116.
Sommer, Friedrich, 2732.
Songs, folk, 2354; war, 2355.
Sonneck, O. G. T., 2357.
Sonera, Mex., 729; beginnings of, 617.
Soper family, 1719.
Sorcery. Indian, 310. See also Magic.
Sources and documents, 1763-1783, 623-647; vses J,
in history teaching, 106. See also Archives and
manuscripts.
South* and real Americanism, 848; and self-deter-
mination, 813; and the Constitution, 777; atti-
tude of its leaders on the Crittenden com.pro-
mise, 1S60, 772; chapters in the history of, 854;
characteristics of the old, 853; chronicle of the
old, 847; colonial period, education in, 2181;
coioiiial period, Germans in, 597; educational
development in the colonial period, 598; efforts-
to abolish slavery in, 748; famous steamboats-
on waters of, 1997; indigo culture in, 1581; mi-
gration of negroes from, in 1879, 829, 831; on the
eve of secession, 722; poets of, 2304, 2325, 2331;
railroads of, restoration of, 2000; science and
scientists of, 2364; secession of, 792; social
and industrial evolution, since Reconstruc-
tion, 862; the defensive. Civil war period,
781; trade and transportation in, before the
Civil war, 1978. See also Confederacy.
South America, anthropological work in, 204;
antiquities, 271, 273, 274, 282-284, 286, 288, 291,
292-296, 305-308, 318, 320, 321, 327-332, 334, 840^
INDEX.
219
343-345, 350, 353, 361, 362, 364-366, 370-373, 2704;
archaeology of, 274; archives of, 2696; as a field
for an historical survey, 2695; atlas of, 2575; bib-
liography, 2716; discovery and exploration, 382,
400, 402, 405-407, 412, 413, 419; general, 2689-2716;
Indians of, 288, 296, 300, 301, 310-314, 333-335, 341,
342, 346-348, 352, 354, 362, 368, 370-373; individ-
ual states, 2717-2774; past and present, 2695;
politics of, geographic factor in, 2576; prehistoric
man in, origin of, 273; Spain's declining power
in, 1730 to 1806, 2702; Spanish-Portuguese
rivalry in, 2702; struggle for gold in, 1498-1600,
405; wars of independence, 2705-2710, 2713,
2715, 2718, 2719, 2727, 2736, 2747-2750, 2753, 2757,
2763. See also Spanish America.
South American relations, 1810 to 1910; syllabi of
course in, 101.
South Americana, in the library of the University
of Notre Dame, Ind., 47.
South Carolina, 1210-1217; and the early tariffs,
1909, 1977a; colonial history, 608-610; education
in, 2183; Huguenot settlement in, 608; on the
eve of secession, 722; political history, early
19th century, 1909; reconstruction in, 2183.
South Carolina, University of, 2217.
South Dakota, brief history of, 1218; constitution
of, 1945. See also Dakota territory.
Southern Indians, removal of, 736,
Southwest, antiquities of, 185, 187-192, 205; Apache
Indians in, 1848-1886, 217; archaeology of, 204,
208, 209; border troubles in, 1848 to 1860, 740;
colonial period, 618; discovery and exploration,
1528-1536, 392; during the Spanish period, 615-
617; early history of, 427; explorations in, 1820-
1824, 849; Indian mounds in, 195; Indian tribes
of, 227; Indians of, in the diplomacy of the U.S.
and Mexico, 1848-1853, 741; materials in the
Archivo general de Indias relating to, 59; prehis-
toric ruins in, 205; Spanish colonization in, 621;
Spanish discovery and exploration in, 392, 393,
427; Spanish expedition in, in 1662, 615; in 1769,
436.
Southwest, Old, colonial period, 611, 614, 615, 617-
619, 621, 622; history of, 861.
Southworth family, 1720, 1721. •
Souvay, C. L., 2108-2110.
Soyne,J. H.,2563.
Spain, activities in the Mississippi valley, 1766-1788,
846; attitude in regard to the American revolu-
tion, 644; conflict with, in regard to navigation
on the Mississippi, 1783 to 1795, 1864; declining
power in South America, 1730 to 1806, 2702;
England's attack upon the sea power of, in the
16th century, 396; financial administration in
America, 16th century, 2618; influence upon
Mexico, 2649; loss of Spanish America, 2596;
Louisiana under the control of, 846; recognition
of the independence of Spanish American
colonies , ?639; royal treasurers of, in Spanish
America, 16th century, 2618; teaching of Ameri-
can history and institutions in, 75; treaty be-
tween the United States and, concerning the
cession of East and West Florida, 1821, 1874.
See also Spanish.
" Spain in the West," 617.
Spalding, Lyman, 1566.
59976°— 22 16
Spanish, administration in the Philippines, 2780;
archives relating to America, 59, 66, 2631, 2632
(see also Archivo general de Indias); colonial
administration, in America, 621, 2615, 2618,
2620, 2622, 2640, 2651, 2702; colonial municipali-
ties, 2640; colonies in America, ecclesiastical
jurisdiction in, 2106; colonies in America,
slavery in, 16th and 17th centuries, 409; coloni-
zation in America, 621, 2574, 2596; conquest of
America, 382, 387, 393, 400, 405-407, 412, 2574;
conquest of Mexico, 407, 2596, 2614a; conquest
of Peru, 2596; conquistadores, 405; defense of
Porto Rico during Spanish-American war, 833;
discoverers and colonizers, 337; discoyery and
exploration, 382, 384, 385-389, 392, 394, 400, 401,
405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 412, 413, 417, 419, 427, 428,
2596; discovery and exploration in the South-
west, 615, 617, 885; expedition to California, in
1769, 436; fleet in the Spanish- American war,
destruction of, 837; interoceanic waterways,
15th and 16th centuries, 2663; missions in
America, 2592; missions in California and the
Southwest, 249, 611, 617; possessions in the
West Indies, English expedition against, 1739-
1742) 530; press of California, 11; race, festival of
the, 2584; regime in California, 879; regime in
Louisiana, 973, 978; regime in Texas, 1230, 1233;
rule in Jamaica, 2668.
Spanish America, antiquities, 265-374; biblio-
graphy, 20, 22, 30, 31, 2587, 2599, 2600; diplo-
matic history, 1810 to 1830, 2644; discovery and
exploration, 382, 400, 402, 405-407, 410, 412,
417, 419; history, study of, 2595; history, syllabi
of courses in, 101; history of, 2606; independence
of, recognition by the mother country, 2639;
money of, 1492 to 1800, 2627; slavery in, during
the 16th and 17th centuries, 409; Spanish period,
2760, 2769, 2773; wars of independence, 2596,
2647, 2654, 2689, 2692, 2700, 2705-2710, 2713, 2715,
2718, 2719, 2727, 2736, 2747-2750, 2753, 2757, 2763.
See also Latin America, and Pan Ameri-
canism.
"Spanish America," the term, use of, 2583.
Spanish American, the psychology of the, 2607.
Spanish American academy of sciences and arts,
Cadiz, Spain, 2601.
Spanish American heraldry and genealogy, 2586.
Spanish American war, 833-837, 1846; Connecticut
men in, 895a; Roosevelt's part in, 1476.
Spanish Americana. See South Americana, and
Spanish America, bibliography.
Spanish Fort, La., 973.
Spanish Main, French privateer in, 1684-1686, 2683;
piracy in, 2628.
Spanish- Portuguese South American boundary
treaty of 1750, 2702.
Spaulding, O. L., 148.
Speaker of the House of representatives, 1825 to 1827,
1578.
Speck, F. G., 254, 255.
Spencer, C. R.,jr., 808.
H. R., 149.
P. L., 2396.
R. H., 593.
Spier, Leslie, 205.
Spinden, H. J., 256.
220
INDEX.
Spinning, among the Indians, 296.
Spirit dance, Indian, 245.
Spiritual interpretation of liistory, 115.
Spoilsmen, fighting the, 1939.
Spokane comitry, 1259; David Thompson's journeys
in, in 1812, 435.
Sprague, J. F., 991, 1452, 1457.
Spring Hill, Tenn., battle of, 1864, 789.
Spnmt, James, 1350, 1837.
"Squanto," Wampanoag Indian, 261.
Squires, V. P., 1317.
Stage, American, distinguished tragedian of, 1327.
Stage coach days, 2540.
Stamford district, Conn., 1804.
Stamp act, a loyalist antagonist of, 593.
Stamp officer in Boston, hanging in effigy of, 638.
Standard oil company, 2024.
Standardization of history teaching, 469; of tests in
history, 137.
Standish, Myles, 1747.
Standish family, 1722.
Stanley, William, 1164.
Stanton, E. C, 1302, 1567.
Starbird, C. M., 1679.
Stark family, 929.
"Stars and Stripes," evolution of, 513; origin of,
514.
"Star-spangled banner," authorship of, 1321,
State, U. S. Department of, 1942.
State and local government, 1943, 1945-1965; Illinois
constitutional convention, 1869-1870, 50a.
State flag of Missouri, 1074.
State legislation concerning the free negro, 2056.
State publications, Pennsylvania, economic mate-
rial in, 49.
State rights, editor in California, 1862-1863, 793;
menace of, 703; the South and, 777.
Statehood controversy, Arizona-New Mexico, 875a.
Staten Island, N. Y., 656.
States, controversies between, judicial settlement
of, 1903.
Statistics, army, of the Civil war, 799.
Staton, F. M., 2473.
Statuary, ancient Mexican, 269, 317.
Staub, Walter, 368.
Steam navigation, in New England, 1993; in the
Pacific, 886; traffic on the Mississippi, 1994.
Steamboats, on western and southern waters, fa-
mous, 1997.
Steamship, first transatlantic, 2007, 2013.
Steatite quarry, aboriginal, 199.
Stebbins, C. B., 2166.
Steel family, 1625.
Steel industry, 1979.
Steel trust merger, 2024.
Steele, E. B., 494.
J. D., 494.
John, 1568.
Steensby, H. P., 420.
Stefansson, Vilhjalmur, 1512.
Steiner, B. C, 592a, 997, 1576, 2048, 2212.
Stephens, E. W., 2068.
Stephenson, N. W., 495, 809, 810.
Stephentown, N. Y., 1805.
Sterling, J. A., 1569.
Stems, F. H., 256a.
Stevens, I. L., 457.
Stevens, J. L., 709.
N. E.,2364.
W. B., 1361, 1373.
Stewart, C. W., 1390. i
E. D., 947.
F. H., 1126.
Stiles, C. D., 1037.
Stillwater, N. Y., 1803, I
Stirling, Lord, 1309a. {
Stokes, Hugh, 1612. '
Stone, H. L., 811.
J. S., 1543.
J. W., 1058.
R. B., 1443.
W. J., 1570.
Stone, aboriginal quarry in Rhode Island, 199;
celts, Indian, 164; prehistoric monument, 374.
See also Lithic industries.
Stone age in America, 162a.
Storer, Malcolm, 530, 1595,
Stovall, Mathilda, 369.
Story, W. W., 2254.
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 1293, 1298.
Straight, C. T., 1209.
Stratton family, 1723.
Strategy, Civil war, 795.
Stratham, N, H., 1807.
Strickland, A, B., 572,
Strohm, John, 1200.
Strother, Henry, 1659.
Stroud, A. B., 1724.
Stroud family, 1724.
Strube, A., 1884.
Stryker family, 1642a.
Stuart, J. E, B., 1571.
Stuart's portraits of Washington, 1596.
Sturge, Joseph, 728.
Sturges pedigree, 1725.
Sub-Treasury of the United States, 701.
Sucre, Oen. A. J. de, 2714, 2715.
Suffrage, negro, in Wisconsin, 1965; woman's, see
Woman's suffrage.
Sullivan, L.R., 257.
T. R., 1572.
Siilloway, C. A., 1573.
Suite, Benjamin, 688, 2449-2451, 2474.
Sumichrast, F. C. de, 458.
Summerfield, N. C, 1158.
Sumner, Charles, 787, 1302.
Sumter, Fort, S. C, defender of, 1310; firing on, 791.
Sun dance, Indian, 231, 236.
Sunday schools, early Boston, 2075; in Illinois, 934.
Supplies, Revolutionary, brought from France, 652.
Supreme court, U. S., 1896; cases regarding contro-
versies between states, decided in, 1903; five
to four decisions of, 1930.
Surgeons, American, letters of, 1756-1880, 2360;
celebrated NewHampsliire surgeon, 1392; Revo-
lutionary war, 1561, 2524.
Surgeon, U. S. navy, 1319, 2361.
Surgical practice, 2360.
Surinam, Dutch Guiana, 2751, 2752.
Surry, N. H., 1099.
Surveys, of Indiana public lands, 948; of Kentucky
public lands, 961.
Swadner family, 1726.
Swanson, A. E., 505.
INDEX.
221
Sweatlodge, Indian, 233.
Sweden, treaty v/ith the U. S., 1783, 1838.
Swedenborgian church. See Church of the New
Jerusalem.
Swedes, in Nebraska, 1081a; in Texas, 1239.
Sweeney, W. A., 1830.
- W. M., 1680.
Sweet, W. W., 151, 2608, 2609.
Sweetser, K. D., 2047, 2275.
Swem, E. G., 37, 647.
Swift, Lindsay, 150.
Swiss families in Pennsylvania, 1193, 1194.
Switzer family, 1625.
Sydenham, C. E. P. Thomson, Lord, 2469.
Syllabi, of American history for 7th and 8th grades,
491; of courses in Hispanic American history,
101; history, for elementary schools, 130; of
United States history, 480. See also Text-
books, outlines, etc.
Symbols, Indian, 225; on prehistoric pottery, 170.
Syndicalism, American, 2031.
Tacna, Chile, 371.
Tacna-Arica dispute, 2735, 2737, 2744, 2745a, 2746.
Taft, W. H., 1292; papers of, 72.
Tainan Indians, 309.
Talbott, J. F. C, 1574.
Tahnage, D. T., 1575.
R. S., 1575, 1727.
Tahnage family, 1727.
Talon, Jean, 2440.
Tampu Tocco, Inca city of, 293, 294.
Taney, R. B., 1576.
Tantonin, Louis, Sieur de la Touche, 2426.
Tapirap6 Indians, 311.
Tapley, H. S., 1039.
Tappan, E. M., 459.
Tariff policy of France vnth her colonies, 2414.
Tariffs, early. South Carolina and, 1909; in the
Jacksonian period, 1907; of 1828, 736.
Tate, Joseph, 1803.
Taverns, historic, of New York city, 1137; of Wor-
cester, Mass. ,1044. See also Innholders.
Taxationin Mississippi, 1961.
Taxation without representation, 668.
Taylor, George, 1577.
J. M., 2226.
J. w., 1578.
r P. F., 961.
Rowse, 440.
W. H., 1947.
W. R., 1579.
Wallace, 1678a.
Zachary, 734.
Taylo family, 1728.
Teachers, in the Civil war, Ohio, 2179; of history,
469; associations of, 106; training of, 106.
j Teaching, history. See History, study and teach-
ing.
Tecumseh, retreat from Amherstburg, 1813, 714.
Teich, E. L., 12.
I Teigmnouth, Lord, 1830a, 1872.
^'Telegraphe," newspaper, 968.
Telephone, invention and development of, 1979.
Temiscouata, portage of, 2434.
Temperance movement, beginning of, 1968.
Temperance society, early Nashville, 1223.
Temples, prehistoric, of Mexico, 297, 298.
701; annexation
18S5-1844, 1240;
Tennessee, 1219-1229; battle afc Fort Donaldson,
1862, 780; "father" of, 1465; free negroes and
slaves in, legal status of, 1928; history of, to the
beginning of the 19th century, 861; pioneer
Baptist preachers of, 2078; 'pioneer settler of,
1439.
Tennessee, University of, 2204.
Tenuxtitlan, Mex., 416.
Terracotta figure, ancient Mexican, 269.
Terrell, M. C, 1294.
Territorial expansion, 444. See also Louisiana
purchase, and World power, United States as.
Territorial government, 1946, 1960.
Tests, history, 137.
Tewa Indians, 204.
Texas, 1230-1240; annexation of,
sentiment in Mississippi,
Catholic ecclesiastical jurisdiction in, Spanish
period, 2106; first Europeans in, 1528-1536, 392,
French expedition from Louisiana to, in 1720-
1721, 259; independence of, 1237; Indians of,
259; publicschoolsin, 2187; republic of , military
operations against Mexico, 1231 ; struggle for
independence, 1231. See also Southwest.
Texas federation of women's clubs, 1232a.
Texas revolution, 1238.
Texas trail, 2004.
Texeda, Juan de, 2634.
Text-books, outlines, etc., 462-500; American
educational history, 2172; American govern-
ment, 1940, 1944; American history, 117; for
Catholic schools, 1296; history of American
literature, 2259, 2274; history of Canada, 2380;
history of Tennessee, 1222, 1226; Latin Ameri-
can history, 2608; Spanish American history,
2603. See also Outlines for patriotic instruc-
tion, and Sjdlabi.
Textiles of ancient Peru, 343.
Thanksgiving day in Illinois, first, 926.
Thames river, Ont.,2561.
Thayer, H. R., 1201.
J. B., 1580.
M. R., 894a.
W. R., 153, 1040, 1544, 1545, 2348, 2349.
Theatre, in America, history of, 2267; law to rega-
late, 1823, lUi. See also Stage.
Theology, American, 2070, 2269.
Thomas, A. C, 38, 2122.
Charles, 2474.
H. C, 1921.
J. L., 14.33.
Jacques, 2683.
R. H., 2122.
S. E., 154, 155.
W. S., 1423.
Thompson, A. E., 496.
B. F., 1629.
Bram, 2398.
David, 435.
Holland, 862.
J. J., 620, 689, 863, 864, 937.
J. R., 2327.
W. B.,1550.
Waddy, 497, 498.
Thoreau, H. D., 2328-2330.
Thorncraft, Thomas, 1205.
Three dollar gold pieces, 2029.
Three Oaks, Mich., 1046.
222
INDEX.
Three Rivers, Que., 2474.
Throgs Neck, N. Y. city, 202.
Thwing, Eugene, 1551.
Tiahuanacu, Bolivia, mystery of, 366; prehistoric
culture of, 331.
Tibbitts family, 1729.
Till, I.E., 646.
Tillman, B. R., 1581.
Tillson, C. H.,938.
Tilton, A. C, 1102.
Timbalier, island of, 971.
Time-reckoning systems, Indian, 167. See also
Calendar and chronology.
Timrod, Henry, 2331.
Tinldiam, Ebenezer, 1678.
Tippecanoe campaign, 214.
Tisdall family, 1730.
Titus, W. A., 1283.
"Tlaloc," Aztec rain-god, 367.
Tlingit Indians, 250.
Tobacco society, Indian, 238.
Toledo, O., 1162.
Tolland, Conn., 1808.
Toll-gates, historic, 2018.
Tomlinson, E. T., 1456.
Tompkins, Avery, 1831.
D. D,, 1582.
F. C, 981.
H. B., 1312.
Tooke, Home, 661.
Topsfield, Mass., 554, 555, 1011, 1041.
Torquemada, Juan de, 2613.
Torres, L. M.,274.
Torres Lanzas, Pedro, 71, 2631, 2632.
Torrey, F. C.,1644.
Tory, lieutenant-governor of New York, 577; pro-
prietors of Kentucky lands, 686. See also
Loyalists.
Totem pole, 242.
Totemism, 335; Peruvian, 287.
Totten,J.R., 1645, 1666.
Towers, prehistoric, in Colorado, 171.
"Town burning machines," 675.
Town meeting, Massachusetts, 1958.
Trabue, Alice, 1731.
Trabue family, 1731.
Trade, along the south Atlantic seaboard, before the
Civil war, 1978; British, in the Columbia river
coimtry, 706; colonial period, 529; early Spanish
American colonial, 2630; embargo of 1807, 1001;
French, with colonial America, 529; fur, 309,
435, 628, 706, 1049, 1274, 2240, 2449, 2451, 2567;
grain, in Canada, 2368; in Michigan, 1049; in
Wisconsin, 1274 ; in the Spokane country, i n
1812, 435; Indian, in Pennsylvania, 1680-1770,
1186; neutral, 1860; relations between Virginia
and the mother country, 1690-1691, 595; routes
of, following the Revolution, 1983; slave, 748,
753, 2675; with the Indians, 1986; with the In-
dians, 1796 to 1822, 711; with the Indians in
Pennsylvania, 1680-1770, 584; with the Indians
in the Northwest, 1766-1767, 628. See also Busi-
ness, and Commerce.
Trade and plantations, Commissioners of, records
of, 72; Lords of, 1675-1696, 522.
Trade implements, Indian, 163.
Trader in the Southwest, 1820 to 1821, an unknown,
849.
Trading companies. Company of royal adven-
turers of England trading into Africa, 2675;
Indian and African trading company of Scot-
land, 2638. See also American fur company,
Hudson's Bay company. Northwest company
of Canada, and Pacific fm* company.
Trading expedition to Oregon, in 1832-1833, 430.
Trading post, Dutch, 583.
Trading with the enemy, 771.
Trails, early Indiana, 948; from the Massachusetts
settlements to Connecticut, 552; historic, across
New York state, 1139; in California, historic,
887; in early Wisconsin, 1278; Indian, along the
Connecticut river, 2017; old Chicago trail, 1989;
Potawatomi Indian, 214; Texas trail, 2004.
Train, G. F., 1303.
Transatlantic steamship, first, 2007, 2013.
TranscendentaUsm, 2269.
Transcontinental journey, 1832-1833, 430. See also
Overland journeys to the Pacific.
Transcontinental railroad, early agitation for, 724.
See also Pacific railroad.
Transportation, along the south Atlantic seaboard,
before the Civil War, 1996; early Ontario, 2533;
on the Monongahela river, early, 1988; water, in
Missouri, 1070. See also Communication and
transportation.
Travel. See Description and travel.
Treacy, G. C, 1340.
Treason. See Disloyalty.
Treasury, Spanish royal, in America, 2618.
Treasury, U. S., comptroller of, 1796 to 1802, 1568.
Treaties, constitutionality of, 1906; Indian, 704,
1053; peace, 1862; ratification of, 1852; refusal to
ratify, 1852, 1837.
Treaty, between France and the United States re-
garding the purchase of Louisana, 1873; between
Sweden and the United States, 1783, 1838;
between the United States and Spain concern-
ing the cession of East and West Florida, 1821,
1874; of alliance, 1778, 684; of Ancon, 1884, 2765a;
of 1846 v/ith Great Britain, 742; our first unso-
licited, 1838; Saginaw treaty of 1819, 704, 1053;
Spanish-Portuguese South American boundary
treaty of 1750, 2702; Webster-Ashburton treaty,
701.
Treaty making power, 1852.
Trees, historic, of Massachusetts, 1035, 1040.
Tremaudan, A. H. de, 2435, 2452.
Trenholme, N. M., 106.
Trent, W. P., 2303.
WilUam, 1583.
Trent affair, 814.
Trenton, N. J., 583, 1110.
Trenton saving fund society, Trenton, N. J., 2021.
Trexler, H. A., 1080.
Trial, impeachment, of Gov. Butler of Nebraska,
in 1871, 1083; of Aaron Burr, 703; of Henry
Wirz, 761 ; of President Johnson, 825; imder alien
and sedition laws of 1798, 712; Zenger, 1735, 575.
Tribal organization. See Clan organization.
Trickett, William, 1905.
Trimble, WilMam, 1922.
Trinidad, early map of, 416. ;
INDEX.
223
Troesch, Helen, 2113.
Trophies, of the Jivaro tribes, 292.
Trumbull, Jonathan, 1584.
"Trump of fame, " newspaper, 1166.
Trust, first great American, 1979.
Tryon, R.M.,39.
Tubman, Harriet, 1294.
Tucker, H. S., 1380.
St. George, 1380.
W. J., 2070, 2227.
Tuckerman, Frederick, 441, 1596.
Tucuman, Argentina, 2621.
Tunebos, 346.
Tupac-Amaru II, rebelUon of, 1780-1781, 2702, 2760.
Tupac Yupanqui, Inca, 2704.
Tupi Indians, 271.
Tupper, Frederick, 1552.
Ichabod, 1678.
Turkey, difficulties with, 1784 to 1810, 1872.
Turkey Run state park, Ind., 944.
Turnbtdl, Andrew, 907.
Turner, Daniel, 528.
F. J., 865.
J. M., 152.
Japhet, 1678.
Turner, Me., 1754.
Turnpikes, 1992; Great Western turnpike, N. Y.,
1139; historic, 2018; of New England, Virginia,
and Maryland, 2019.
Turpin, Mary, 2093.
Tuttle, J. H., 568, 2042.
Twain, Mark. See Clemens, S. L.
T wilier, Wouter van, 581.
|'TwitcheU,R.E., 40,621.
Two-cent pieces, 2029.
Tyler, John, papers of, 72; rupture with the Whigs,
701.
— L. G., 599, 600, 812, 813, 1253, 1614, 2037.
TyrreU's prairie. Wash., 1257.
Uhle, Max, 370, 371.
Uhich, Joseph, 186.
Umphrey, G. W., 2610.
Unconstitutionality of the "attorney's test oath"
act, 908.
Underground railroad, 750, 756.
Underwood, J. C, 72.
Ungava Bay, Can., 2516.
Ungrich family, 1732.
Union league of America, 825.
Union Pacific raUroad, 2011, 2014.
Unitarianism, 2269.
United daughters of the confederacy, 876.
United Lutheran chturch in America, 2124.
United States, 1768-1783, 623-699; 1783-1789, 700,
700a; 1789-1829, 701-720; 1829-1861, 721-756;
1881-1866, 757-821; 1865-1919, 822-837; biography^
1291-1619; colonial history, 520-622; compre-
hensive histories, 442-461; description and
travel, 430-441; educational history, 2169-2227;
fine arts, 2228-2254; genealogy, 1620-1817; litera-
ture, 2255-2353; military and naval history,
1818-1836; miscellaneous, 513-519; national
characteristics and ideals, 501-512; politics, gov-
ernment and law, 1837-1965; regional (local)
history, 838-1290; reUgious history, 2069-2168;
social and economic history, 1966-2068; text-
books, outlines, etc., 462-500.
U. S. Bureau of American ethnology, 41.
United States geographic board, 1261.
Universities, American, 2169, 2170, 2173. See also
Educational history, particular institutions.
Universities, state. See under name of state.
University center for higher studies in Washington,
2171.
University of Notre Dame, 47.
University of Peru in 1554, 2629.
University of St. Mary of the Lake, Chicago, 2208.
Upham, C. B., 954, 1832, 1953, 1955, 1956.
G. B., 538, 1103, 2015-2017.
Upper Canada, crown land grant in, 1798, 2564; early
roads and transportation, 2533; first parliament
of, 2474; in 1827, 2558; judges in the parUament
of, 2554; rebellion in, in 1837, 2459; the slave in,
754, 755; slavery in, 2472. See also Ontario,
Province of.
Urrutia, F. J., 2644.
Ursulines, convent at Charlestown, Mass., burning
of, 2083; nun, 2093; of Louisiana, 969.
Urteaga, H. H., 372, 373.
Uruguay, 2767, 2768; life in Montevideo, to the
middle of the 18th century, 2711; United States
merchant ships in, 1801-1808, 1977.
Usher, E.B., 1618.
— Roland, 544, 547.
Utah, archaeological investigations in, 181, 204;
genealogy, 13; geographic names in, associated
with Mormons, 1242; Indian depredations in,
1241.
Utah, Genealogical society of, 13.
Ute Indians, 237.
Utensils, prehistoric, 353. See also Implements.
Utley, W. L., 1275.
Utopia, of the colonial period, 610.
Uxmal, Yucatan, prehistoric ruins at, 364, 365.
Vallette, M. F., 421, 422, 2114, 2453.
Valley campaign of 1864, 784.
VaUey Forge, Pa., New Hampshire's memorial at,
1101; Washington at, 660.
Van Arsdale family, 1733.
Van Buren, Martin, 701.
Vance, H. W., 2140a.
Vancouver, George, 2389.
Vanderlip, F. A., 1585.
Van Der Werker, N. I. S., 1059.
Van Deusen, A. H., 1734.
Van Dusen family, 1734.
Van Dyke, J. C, 2248.
Van Every, J. F., 2400.
Van Laer, A. J. F., 580, 581, 1751.
Van Liew, Ehzabeth, 1735.
Van Liew family, 1735.
Van Ness, J. P., 900.
Mareia, 900.
Van Schaak, Peter, 654.
Van Tyne, C. H., 486.
VanVUet,G.S., 1146a.
Van Wagenen, Mary, 24.
Van Zandt cc, Tex., 1235.
Varennes, J. P. de, 2435.
Vargas, Mencio, 406.
Varney,H. C.,1065.
Vasquez de Coronado, Francisco, 393, 1301.
Vassar college, 2226.
V^lez Sarsfield, Dalmacio, 2714.
224
INDEX.
Venango co., Pa., 1176.
Venezuela, 2769-2774; antiquities, 350; Basques in,
2699; conquest of, 406; discovery and coloniza-
tion of, 2596; discovery and exploration, 400,
407; geographical '^relations" of, 16th century,
2621; history of, 2596; Indians of, 346; movement
for independence, 2702; pre-Columbian geo-
graphical denominations of, 350; Spanish con-
quest of, 2596; war of independence, 2706.
Venezuela arbitration, 1846.
Venn, T. J., 2029.
Verendrye. See La V^rendrye.
Vergennes, C. G., comte de, and the American
revolution, 670; state papers of, in regard to the
American revolution, 644.
VerHe, E. J., 1952.
Vermont, genealogy, 1755; local history, 1242a.
Vernon, Vice-Admiral Edward, 530; attack on
Cartagena, 1741, 2641, 2643.
Verrazzano, Giovanni da, 399,1296, 1301, 2474.
Vespucci, Amerigo, 377, 393a, 423, 1296, 1301.
Viallate, Achille, 1969.
Viceroy, office of, 2615.
Vicksburg, Miss., 829.
Viles, Jonas, 1077.
VUlages, Indian, east of the Mississippi, 219; pre-
historic, in Colorado, 171; prehistoric, in New
Mexico, 178.
ViUagomez, Pedro de, 373.
Villagra, Gaspar de, 2613.
Villamil, Joseph, 2753.
ViUard, O. G., 1393.
ViUegagnon, Nicolas Durand de, colonizing enter
prisein Brazil, 2623.
ViUeneuve, M. A., 2438.
ViUiers, Brougham, 814.
ViUiers du Terrage, baron M. de, 259.
Vincennes, sieur de, 2444.
Vincennes, Ind., 2444; reconquest of, in 1779, 864.
Vincent, I. O ., 2530a.
Vineland, N. J., 1105-1107,1113, 1117, 1127, 1809, 1810.
Vinton, S. F., 726.
Virgin Islands, archaeology of, 275-277; early map
of, 416.
Virgin of Guadalupe, Mexico, 2648.
Virginia, 1243-1253; and the Revolution, 647; archi-
tects in, 1792-1793, 2243; authors of, 2277; bibli-
ography of, 37; brick architecture of the colo-
nial period in, 2232; Civil war in, 765, 768; colo-
nial history, 594-605; commissary general of.
Revolutionary war, 630; Coimcil of, legislative
journals, 1680-1773, 602; Council of, minutes,
1622-1629, 601; educational history, 2185, 2186;
flag of, 1245; fotmders of, 594, 605; genealogical
recordsin England, 1811; genealogy, 1788; Gen-
eral assembly, acts and journals of, 1619-1776,
37; General assembly, minutes of, 1622-1629,
601; General assembly, 300th anniversary of,
603; in the making of Illinois, 920; legal publi-
cations, bibliography of, 2; naval operations on
the rivers of, in the Civil war, 803; poet of,
2327; polities, negro in, 1865 to 1902, 1915; Pres-
byterian church in, 2142; regiments in the Rev-
olution, 698, 699; Revolutionary committees of
safety, proceediags of, 631 ; Revolutionary war
in, 645; turnpikes of, 2019.
Virginia, Educational association of, 2185.
Virginia, University of, 2222.
Virgiaia company of London, 594.
Virginia state library, 2037.
Virtue, E. B.,74.
Vischer Ferry, N. Y., 1812.
Visitandiues' foimdation at Kaskaskia, 111., 2102.
Vital records, of Massachusetts towns, publication
of, 69. See also Regional genealogy, vital rec-
ords, etc.
Vital statistics of Revolutionary patriots, 694.
Vocabulary, Indian, 354.
Vogt, Berard, 1149.
Vore, Jacob, 260.
Vosburgh, R. W., 1150, 1151, 1759, 1760, 1764, 1766-
1768, 1778, 1782, 1787, 1789, 1808, 1812, 1813.
Wade, B. F., 1160.
F. C, 2401.
Wadsworth family, 1736.
Wagenseller, G. W., 1202.
Wahpeton Indians, 253.
Wakash Indians, 211.
Walcott, H. P., 1358.
Waldo, Samuel, 2252.
Walker, C.L, 1217.
E. R., 260a.
Fowler, 2466, 2477.
— ; — N. W., 2213.
Walker family, 1738.
Wall street, a chronicle of, 2024.
Wallace, W. S., 156, 2466, 2477.
Wallis, W. D., 231.
Walmsley, J. E., 815.
Walsh, J. J., 1152, 2365.
Waltham, Mass., 1002, 1003, 1016, 1017, 1034, 1042.
Wampanoags, 261, 536.
Wampum, 254.
Wanderings. See Migrations.
Wanton, Joseph, 1206.
War decorations, 1835.
War helmets, Indian, 250.
War horror of the American revolution, 675.
War of 1812, 701, 714-720, 855; British invasion and
capture of Washington, I8I4, 899; British iava-
sion of Maryland, I8I4., 1321; events of, 702; fur
trade in Michigan dmiag, 1982; Harv^ard men
in, 2192; Ohio in, 1166; privateers in, 1983; vic-
tory of New Orleans, 736.
War songs, 2355.
War trophies of the Jivaro Indians, 292.
Ward, Sir A. W., 605.
Artemus. See Browne, Charles Farrar.
Ward family, 1739, 1740.
Warden, D. B., 72.
Ware, E. E., 816.
Warfield, C. A., 1231.
Warner, L. C, 1741.
Warner family, 1741.
Warren, E. K., 1046.
Nathan, 1042.
Richard, 1622.
Whitney, 1553.
Wiaslow, 548.
Warren family, 1742, 1743.
Warren, Rhode Island, 168.
Warrensburg, N. Y., 1148.
INDEX.
225
Wars. See Civil war, Colonial wars, French and
Indian war, Indian wars, Military and naval
history, Spanish-American war. Revolution,
War of 1812, and World war.
Warwick, R. I., 1203, 1205.
Washburn, C. G., 1554.
G. C, 1628.
Washburn family, 1623.
Washington, B. T., 1302.
George, 677, 1301, 1586-1599; at Valley Forge,
660; in Cambridge, Mass., 1040; manuscripts of,
73; foreign policy, 1839, 1840; political ideals
and principles of government, 1893; statue of,
967.
— Martha, 1298.
— W. L., 1597.
Washington, D. C, 898-905; Church of the Refor-
mation, 2127; diplomatic intrigues and affairs
at, 1914-1917, 1855; federal buildings at, 2243;
marriage licenses, 1801 to 1820, 1765; military
parade at, 1865, 801; panic at, after firing on
Fort Sumter, 791; political affairs at, in 1857,
735; visit to, in 1850, 734.
Washington (state), 1254-1261; first constitution of,
1964; pioneer settler in, 1565. See also Oregon
country.
Washington, University of, 70.
Washington benevolent society, 1912.
Washington co.. Pa., 2148.
Washington elm, Cambridge, Mass., 1040.
"Washington historical quarterly," 54.
Washington's headquarters at White Plains, N. Y.,
1136.
Water rights in the West, 1925.
Water transportation, in Missouri, 1070. See also
Navigation, and Waterways.
'Water Witch," U. S. steamer, 783.
Waterbury, D. H., 2494.
Waterhouse, Benjamin, 1040.
Waterloo co., Ont., 2534, 2537.
Waterloo township, Ont., 2564, 2565.
Waterman, C. E., 992, 2285.
Waters, T. F., 1370.
Waterways, Connecticut river, navigation on,
2015, 2016. See also Canals.
Watkins, Albert, 1094-1097.
Watson, Blanche, 2314.
Watterson, Henry, 2332.
Wauchope, G. A., 1837.
Waugh, F. W., 206, 243.
Wawarsing, N. Y., 1813.
Way, R. B., 711, 1986.
Wayne, Anthony, 855.
Weapons, Indian, 295, 347. See also Implements,
and SUngs.
Weardale, Lord, 549.
Weare, Meschech, 63.
Weather conditions. See Atmospheric phenom-
enon, Blizzard, and Climate.
Weaver, J. B., 1600.
— R. M., 2315.
Weaver family, 1625.
Webb family, 1744.
Webber, M. L., 1213, 1685, 1761, 1762.
Webster, Daniel, 10, 1302. ^
H. H., 499.
H. J., 1183.
Webster-Ashburton treaty, 701.
Webster-Hayne debate, 736.
Weeden, J., 2063.
Weeks, A. G., 261.
J. W., 1104.
Wegelin, Oscar, 884.
Weightman, R. C, 901.
Weill, Georges, 136, 461.
Weiss, N., 2673.
Weld, W. S., 1028.
Wells, Horace, 1302.
J. K., 392.
Wells college, Aurora, N. Y., 1440.
Welschinger, Henri, 1555, 1599.
Wendell, Barrett, 1043.
Catherine, 1043.
J. A., 1153.
Wendell family, 1043.
Went, G. S. v., 1556.
Wentworth co., Ont., 2556.
Werner, C. J., 1629, 1646.
Wesley, C. H., 817, 2061.
West, G. M., 1601.
H. L., 157, 2286.
Joseph, 609.
William, 1601.
West family, 1745.
West, during the colonial period, 611-622; explora-
tion and fur trade in, in 1727, 2449; famous
steamboats on the waters of, 1997; first Ameri-
can newspaper in, 2068; fixst German-American
priest of, 2105; French discovery and explora-
tion in, 2449, 2451; fur trade in, 1049, 1982; geo-
graphic names in, 1242; Indians and fur trade
in, 1274; military history of, 1097; military oper-
ations in, 1832 to 1836, 737; painter of the, 2253;
Revolution in, 687, 689; state builders of, 1388;
the historical, 851 ; trade with the Indians in,
711; travel in, 1800-1820, 438; water rights in,
1925. See also Illinois country, Ohio Valley,
Northwest, and Northwest territory.
West, Canadian, 2566-2572.
West, Far, efforts to add to the United States, in
the '40s, 1560; in 1854-1859, 859; trading expedi-
tion to, in 1832-1833, 430. See also Lewis and
Clark expedition, Northwest, far, Oregon coun-
try. Pacific coast, and Pacific railroad.
West Florida, War of 1812 in, 716.
West India company, French. See Compagnie des
Indes occidentales.
West Indian federation, 2576, 2667.
West Indies, 2664-2688; American problems in, 1846;
antiquities, 275-278, 304, 309; archaeology of,
275-278; atlas of, 2575; British naval operations
in, 1739-1741, 530; commerce between Quebec
and, in 1866, 2474; confederation of, 2576, 2687;
Enghsh expedition against the Spanish in. 1739-
1742, 530; influence of the United States in,
1843a; less known regions of, 2664; slavery in,
1660-1672, 2675.
West Point, Wis., 1269.
West Vhginia, 1262-1264; French Creek Presbyte-
rian chm-ch, 2140a; legal pubUcations, bibli-
ography of, 2.
West Virginia debt settlement, 1263.
West Virginia imiversity, College of law, 2.
Westchester co., N. Y., 1814, 2188.
226
INDEX.
Westerberg, T. J., 1239.
Westergaard, Waldemar, 875a.
Western Pennsylvania, Historical society of, 2041.
Western Reserve, celebrities of, 1160; first news-
paper in, 1166.
Westfieid, Mass., 1011a, 1029, 1037.
"The Westminster," periodical, 2146.
Westminster Abbey, America's links with, 517.
Weulersse, G., 512.
Whalers, New Bedford, loss of, 1871, 832.
Wheat, in Montana, 1862-1870, 1080; industry, 2368.
Wheatland colony, Wy., 1288.
Whigs, in New York, 1911; in Tennessee in 1843,
1220; rupture between Tyler and, 701.
Whistler, J. M., 2248.
Whitman, Marcus, 1301.
Walt, 72, 2280, 2333-2351.
W^hitcher, W. F., 1104a.
White, G. F., 1602.
Isaac, 1602.
J. B., 1078.
Kate, 2325.
W. P., 2146.
White House, reception at, in 1862, 1414.
White Mountains, Ariz., 205.
White Mountains, N. H., 1104, 1441; early visitors
to, 1823-1836, 441; first hotel in, 441; Thoreau
and, 2329.
White Plains, N. Y., 1136.
White servants act, colony of Antigua, 2674.
Whitney, Asa, 724.
Eli, 1302.
Whittier, J. G., 2352, 2353.
Wickham family, 1629.
Wieder, F. C, 397, 424.
Wilder, B. G., 820.
Wilderness, battle of the, 1864, 766.
Wilhite;S. E.G., 1098.
Wilkes, L. E., 1833.
Wilkins family, 1744.
Wilkinson, William, 592.
Willamette valley. Ore., 1175.
Willard, F. E., 1293, 1302, 1603.
Willett, Col. Marinus, regiment of levies, 639.
William and Mary college, 2199, 2203.
WilUams, C. R., 1834.
Dion, 1835.
Emanuel, 1695.
H. H., 2213.
M. F., 894.
M. W., 151, 802.
Roger, 572, 1302.
S. C, 1229.
Talcott, 1480.
W. F., 832.
Williamson, Hugh, 1604.
J. P., 2167.
Williamstown, Ont., 2535.
Willison, Sir John, 2486.
Williston, S. W., 1605.
Seth, 2147.
Willoughby, C.C., 207.
Wills, E. v., 712.
Wills, Allegheny co.. Pa., 1803-1809, 1752; city and
county of Albany, 1681-1766, 1751; Maryland,
1667-1742, 1816; Somerset co., N. J., 1801.
political theoriei
Wilmington, Del., 1815.
Wilson, Alexander, 1606.
G. R., 947a, 948.
H. B., 158.
M. L., 1081, 1975.
William, 1607.
Woodrow, 136, 1608-1613;
of, 1910.
Wilson family, 1746.
Wind-god. See Quetzalcoatl.
Winn, A. M., 888.
Winnipeg, Can., 2572.
Winslow, Edward, 548.
J. B., 505.
Sarah, 1747.
Winston, J. E., 1067.
Winterbourne, Ont., 2537.
Wintersmith, Charles, 2243.
Winthrop, John, 540.
Wait, 536.
Y/intun Hesi ceremony, 215.
Wirz, Henry, 761, 812, 1614.
Wisconsin, 1265-1285; antiquities of, 196; archae-
ology, 165, 166; Catholic chm-ch in, 1843-1875, !
6; constitutional convention of 1846, negro suf- 1
frage and woman's rights in, 1965; draft riots in, i
during the Civil war.
Indian mounds in, I
161, 165; Indian relics in, 163, 164; infantry in
the Civil war, 794; pioneer Presbyterian mis-
sionary in, 1444; twelfth governor of, 1579.
Wisconsin teachers' association, 105.
Wissler, Clark, 208, 209, 262, 263.
Witchcraft, 551; in Salem, Mass., 557.
Witherspoon, J. G., 818.
Wittke, Carl, 159.
Wolf, Morris, 264.
Woman's rights in Wisconsin, 1965.
Woman's suffrage movement, 1567. [
Women, in American history, 1298; in pioneer j
Ontario, 2553; in the Aztec kingdom, 355; in i
the United States, social history of, 2044; noted, i
biographical sketches of, 1293; of territorial I
Nebraska, 1091; of the Mormon church, dis- !
tinguished, 2137; of the Revolutionary period;
669; of the sixties in Louisiana, 981.
Women's clubs, Texas federation of, 1232a. '
Wood, F. J., 2018, 2019.
G. C, 691.
Leonard, 1486, 1536, 1615, 1616.
M. E., 1752.
N.B., 1060.
R. E., 1171.
Thomas, 2418.
Wood carving, 2230.
Woodburn, J. A., 500. .
Woodbury, Margaret, 713.
Woodbury, N. J., 1126.
Wooden stool, Indian, 309.
Wooden utensils, prehistoric, 353
Woodhull, Nathaniel, 1617.
Woodman, Cyrus, 1618.
T. G., 519.
Woodson, C. G., 160.
Woodward, Henry, 2168.
Woollen, W. W., 949.
Wooster, C. W., 1619.
INDEX.
227
Worcester, Mass., 1026, 1044.
Worcester cc, Md., 1816.
Work, M. N., 756.
World power, developmeiit of the United States
from colonies to, 451, 458; United States as, 447,
451, 1846, 1853, 1854.
World war, America during, 822; America's entry
into, 1858; America's part in, 479; American
negro in, 1830; and the teaching of history, 2400;
Canada and, 2387; collection of state war service
records, 64; diplomatic affairs at Washington,
1914 to 1917, 1855; effects on the teaching of his-
tory and civics, 89; events of, 485; German
intrigues at Waslungton during, 1855; historical
work after, 86; history of, 500; Pennsylvania
soldiers in, 1202; reconstruction of the methods
of teachiag history after, 143; Wall street and,
2024; what it teaches about education, 126;
writing of the history of, in Iowa, 113.
Worthington, Thomas, 2035.
Wrench, Wirufride, 425, 550.
Wright, H. M., 374.
1. A., 2634, 2645, 2646.
Capt. Job, company of, 1782, 639.
Quincy, 1906.
Wright-Davis, Mary, 1421.
Wright family, 1748, 1749.
Wrightsville, Pa., bui-ning of, 1863, 767.
Writing, Maya, 302; of the Chibchas, 291; picture,
281.
Writers, South American, 2693. See also Authors,
aud Literary biography.
Wrong, G. M., 1877.
Wyant, A. H., 2248.
Wyatt, E. P., 2350a, 2350b.
E. v., 1352.
Wyckofi, Jacob, 1750.
Wyckoff family, 1750.
Wyeth, Nathaniel, 430.
Wyoming, 1286-1290; constitution of, 1945.
Wyoming, Pa., massacre, 1778, 627.
Wyoming region. Pa., 1180.
Wyoming Valley, Pa., 707, 1817.
Ximenes de Quesada, Gonzalo, 419.
Yale college, class of 1873, 2209; first degree of doctor
of mediciue conferred by, 528.
Yanes, F. J., 2770.
"Yankee," privateer, 709.
Yankee ^dkings, 1983.
Yaracuy, 406.
Yorktown, siege of, 1781, 664.
Yosemite Valley, Calif., 890.
Yucatan, adelentados of, 2651; ancient architecture
of, 357; early map of, 416; Spanish colonial
government of, 2651.
Zabala, Bruno Mauricio de, 2768.
Zahm, J. A., 1557.
Zapata, Nemesio de la Concepcidn, 406.
Zapotecs, 265.
Z&rraga, Miguel de, 2611.
Zenger, J. P., trial of, 1735, 575.
Zimmermann, R. P., 2316.
Zion's evangeUcal Lutheran church. East Pikeland,
Pa., 2125.
Zolknan, Carl, 1934, 1935.
Zook, G. F., 2675.
Zuckerman, L. E., 1936.
Zuni district, N. M., prehistoric ruins in, 208
Zuni Indians, 194.
Zm-bonsen, A., 2115.
Zurich, Switzerland, 1193.
Zwierlein, F. J., 2163.
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wmimas on American history, 1920.
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OP BOOKS AND ARTICLES ON UNITED STATES AND
CANADIAN HISTORY PUBLISHED DURING THE YEAR 1920, WITH
SOME MEMORANDA ON OTHER PORTIONS OF AMERICA.
COMPILED BY
GRACE GARDNER GRIFFIN,
m
PREFACE.
The annual bibliography which follows is the fifteenth number
of a continuous series opening with 1906. A volume entitled Writ-
ings on American History, 1902, prepared by Professor Ernest C.
Richardson, librarian of Princeton University, and Mr. Anson Ely
Morse, was published at Princeton in 1904. A volume upon a plan
more like the present. Writings on American History, 1903, prepared
by Professor Andrew C. McLaughlin, Mr. William A. Slade, and
Mr. Ernest D. Lewis, under the auspices of the Carnegie Institution
of Washington, was published by that institution at Washington in
1905. After an interval followed the series. Writings on American
History, 1906, 1907, and 1908, prepared by Miss Grace Gardner
Griffin, and originally published by the Macmillan Company (New
York, 1908, 1909, 1910).
Independent publication ceased for a time with the volume for
1908. Begiiming with the volume for 1909, though the preparation
of the material continued to be provided for by subscription, the
printing and publication of the annual bibliography was assumed
by the American Historical Association. In its Annual Re'ports for
1909, 1910, 1911, bibliographies of the material published m those
years were included. The Yale University Press, with much public
spirit, took up at this point the publication of the series, and issued
as independent volumes the bibliographies for 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915,
1916, and 1917. Publication by that concern having ended, the plan
of incorporating this annual survey in the Annual Reports was
resumed, and the bibliographies for 1918 and 1919 were incorporated,
as supplementary volumes, in the Annual Reports for those years.
A similar procedure is followed with this bibliography for 1920.
To those who desire to have complete sets of the volumes hitherto
published, it may be useful to know that the volume for 1902 can
still be obtained from the library of Princeton University, that for
1903 from the Carnegie Institution of Washington, while those for
1906, 1907, 1908 (independent volumes), and bound ''separates" of
those for 1909, 1910, and 1911, and the volumes for 1918 and 1919
can be obtaiaed from the secretary of the American Historical
Association.
The ensuing pages have been prepared upon the same system as
in the preceding volumes. The intention of the compiler has been
to include all books and articles, however brief, which contain any-
thing of value to the history of the United States and of British
North America. With respect to the regions lying south of the con-
tinental United States, however, and to the Pacific islands, the
intention has been to include all writings on the history of these
regions published in the United States or Europe; but the product
(not relating to the United States) of South America and other
southward regions has been left to their own bibliographers. New
I
VI PREFACE.
editions of books, if they contain no new material, have not bee:
noticed. When no other date of publication is given, the date i:
1920. The annotations have been confined to explanations of title!
which seem to need explanation; or analyses of contents (in manj
cases taken from the catalogue cards of the Library of Cojigress;!
when analyses seemed requisite; or mention of critical appraisals i]
a few journals whose criticisms have value.
A topical arrangement has been followed. As a rule, the booki
and articles in any division are arranged alphabetically by thi
authors' names. In a few cases another arrangement appeared to b !
more helpful; in the case of biography and genealogy the subject o'
the book or article determines the alphabetical arrangement.
In the compilation of the material, performed at the Library o
Congress, Miss Griffin has had most obliging assistance from Mi!
Appleton P. C. Griffin, Chief Assistant Librarian, and the Librarian!
Dr. Herbert Putnam, has kindly afforded her every facility for hej
work.
Meanwhile the preparation of the manuscript, as distinguisheci
from the printing and publication, has from 1906 to the present timJ
been sustained by a group of subscribers consisting of various his|
torical societies and individuals, the present list being the following
The American Catholic Historical Association, the American Histon
cal Association, the American Jewish Historical Society, the Chicagt
Historical Society, the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, the Floridf
Historical Society, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the lUinoif
State Historical Library, the Iowa State Historical Society, th(
McCormick A^icultural Library, the Massachusetts Historica
Society, the Michigan Historical Commission, the Minnesota Statt
Historical Society, the New York Historical Society, the Ohio State
History Teachers' Association, the Oregon Historical Society, thei
State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Mr. Charles Altschul, Mr. Jamsfil
Phinney Baxter, 3d, Mrs. Washington E. Connor, Miss Amelia D.
Campbell, Professor Henry W. Farnam, Mr. Edwin F. Greene, Pro-i
fessor John B. McMaster, Mr. Stewart L. Mims, Mr. Henry C. Morrisj
Mr. Irving B. Richman, Mr. Walter Scott, Professor W. H. Siebert,;
and Mr. John B. Stetson, jr. ;
J. Feanklin Jameson.
CONTENTS.
Gbneralities: Page.
Bibliography 1
Indexes (cumulative) to serial publications 4
Archives and manuscript collections 6
Historiography, methodology, study, and teaching 6
America in General:
Aboriginal America —
Antiquities 11
Indians 14
Mexico, Central America, West Indies, and South America 18
Discovery and exploration 22
United States:
Description and travel 28
Comprehensive 29
Text-books, outlines, etc 30
National characteristics and ideals 32
Miscellaneous 33
Colonial history to 1763 —
General 34
French and Indian War 35
Regional colonial [arranged geographically] 36
1763-1783—
Sources and documents 51
General 53
Special. 53
Revolutionary soldiers: Names 57
Revolutionary societies 57
1783-1789 57
1789-1829—
Sources and dociunents 58
Miscellaneous 58
War of 1812 59
1829-1861—
Miscellaneous 60
Mexican War 60
Slavery 61
1861-1865—
Miscellaneous 61
Regimental histories 64
1865-1920—
Miscellaneous 64
Spanish-American War 65
European War 65
Regional (local) history —
General 76
Alabama 78
Alaska 78
Arkansas 78
California 78
Colorado 79
Connecticut 79
Delaware 80
District of Columbia 80
Georgia 80
Idaho 80
Illinois 81
Indiana 82
Iowa 83
Kansaa 84
vn
Vni CONTENTS.
N
United States — Continued.
Regional (local) history — Continued. Pag<
Kentucky 8
Louisiana 8
Maine 8
Maryland 8
Massachusetts 8
Michigan 8
Minnesota 9
Mississippi 9
Missouri 9 j
Nebraska 9
Nevada 9
New Hampshire 9
New Jersey 9:
New Mexico 91
New York 9
North Carolina 9j
North Dakota 9i
Ohio 9i
Oregon 9(
Pennsylvania 9'
Rhode Island 9!
South Carolina 91
South Dakota 9!
Tennessee 10(
Texas 10(
Utah 10(
Vermont 10]
Virginia 10]
Washington. 10]
West Virginia lOij
- Wisconsin lOij
Wyoming lOci
Biography —
Comprehensive 10^1
Individual [arranged alphabetically by subject] lOd
Genealogy — i
General lljj
Collected genealogy llSj
Individual families lid
Regional genealogy, vital records, etc 127i
Military and naval history 1321
Politics, government, and law — '
Diplomatic history and foreign relations 133!
Monroe doctrine. 1351
Constitutional history and law 136)
Politics 138
Law 139
National government and administration 140
State and local government and administration 141
Social and economic history —
General 142j
Agriculture; forestry; land 142
Commerce and industry 142^
Communication ; transportation ; public works 144j
Finance; money 145:
Labor 145'
Libraries; societies; institutions 145'
Life and manners 147:
Philanthropy and social welfare 147!
Population and race elements 147i
Printing and publishing 148|
Religious history —
General 150'
Particular denominations 150
Biography 155 :
i
CONTENTS. IX
United States — Continued.
Educational history — Page.
General 158
Regional 158
Particular institutions 159
Biography 161
Fine arts —
General 162
Biography 163
Literature —
General 163
Regional 164
Biographical and critical 164
Music - 167
Science 167
British America:
General 169
Discovery to 1763 172
1763-1867 176
1867-1920 178
Regional history —
Labrador 179
New Brunswick 179
Newfoundland 179
Nova Scotia 179
Province of Quebec 180
Province of Ontario 181
Western Provinces and Territories 184
Latin America:
General 186
Discovery and conquest (1492-1550) 187
Colonial period (1550-1810) 188
Revolutionary period (1810-1830) 189
1830 to 1920 190
Mexico 190
Central America 192
West Indies —
General 192
British West Indies 193
Cuba 193
French West Indies 194
Haiti 194
Porto Rico 194
Virgin Islands 195
South America —
General , 195
Argentine Republic 195
Boli\ria 196
Brazil 196
Chile 1 97
Colombia 197
Ecuador 197
Guiana 197
Peru 198
Uruguay 199
Venezuela 199
Pacific Islands:
Hawaiian Islands ^ 200
Philippine Islands 200
Index 201
«
PUBLISHERS REPRESENTED, WITH ABBREVIA-
TIONS USED.
Abingdon press. Abingdon press (Methodist book concern), 150 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Alcan. Librairie F^lix Alcan, 108 boulevard Saint Germain, Paris.
Allen and Unwin. George Allen and Unwin, ltd., RusJdn House, 40 Museum St.,
W. C, London.
Am. bk. CO. Anjerican book company, 100 Washington square, N. Y.; 330 E. 22d
St., Chicago.
Am. hist. soc. American historical society, 799 Broadway, N. Y.
Appleton. D. Appleton and co., 29-35 W. 32d St., N. Y.; 25 Bedford st., W. C,
London.
Atlantic monthly press, 8 Arlington St., Boston.
Authors' pub. assoc. Authors' publishing association, 440 Fourth ave., N. Y.
Badger. K. G. Badger (Gorham press), 194-200 Boylston st., Boston.
Baker and Taylor. Baker and Taylor co., 354 Fourth ave-, N. Y.
Ball pub. CO. Ball publishing co., 376 Boylston st., Boston.
Barnes. A. S. Barnes co., 130 E. 25th st., N. Y.
Batsford. B. T. Batsford, 94 High Holborn, W. C, London.
Benziger. Benziger brothers, 36-38 Barclay st., N. Y.; 205 W. Washington St.,
Chicago.
Berger-Levrault. Librairie Berger-Levrault, 136 boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris.
Biblioteca nueva, Lista, 66, Madrid.
Black. A. and G. Black, 3-6 Soho Square, W., London.
Blackwell. Basil Blackwell, 50 and 51 Broad st., Oxford, Eng.
Blakiston. , P. Blakiston's son and co., 1012 Walnut st., Phila.
Bossard. Editions Bossard, 43 rue Madame, Paris.
Brentano. Brentano's, Fifth ave. and 27th st., N. Y.
Brill. E. J. Brill, Leyden, Holland.
Buck. B. F. Buck and co., publishers, 156 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Cadmus book shop, 312 W. 34th st., N. Y.
Century. Century co., 353 Fourth ave., N. Y.
Cervantes. Tipograffa artistica Cervantes, Cervantes, 28, Madrid.
Champion. Edouard Champion, 5 quai Malaquais, Paris.
Chapman. Chapman and Hall, 11 Henrietta st., Covent Garden, W. C, London.
Chappie pub. co. Chappie publishing co., 952 Dorchester ave., Boston.
Clarendon press. See Milford, Humphrey.
Collier. P. F. Collier and son, 416-430 W. 13th st., N. Y.
Congregational union of England and Wales, Publication department, 1 and 2
Congregational Memorial Hall, 15 Farrington st., E. C, London.
Cornhill co. Cornhill publishing co., 2a Park St., Boston.
Coronas. Higinio Coronas, Plaza del Castilla, 12, Pamplona, Spain.
Cosmopolitan book corporation, 119 W. 40th st., N. Y.
Dent. J. M. Dent and sons, 10-13 Bedford st., W. C, London.
DeVinne press, 395 Lafayette st., N. Y.
Dodd. Dodd, Mead and co., Fourth ave. and 30th st., N. Y.
Donnelley. R. R. Donnelley and sons co., Plymouth court, cor. Polk st., Chicago.
Doran. George H. Doran co., 244 Madison ave., N. Y.
Doubleday. Doubleday, Page and co., Garden City, N. Y.
Dutton. E. P. Dutton and co., 681 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Editions de La Sir^ne, 29 boulevard Malesherbes, Paris.
Editions franjaises de la Nouvelle Revue Nationale, 11 his, impasse de la Visitation,
Paris.
Editorial America. Editorial America; Concesiondria exclusiva para la venta:
Sociedad espanola de librerla, Ferraz, 25, Madrid.
Editorial catolica toledana, calle de los B^cquer, 15, Toledo, Spain.
Ellis. George H. Ellis co., 272 Congress st., Boston.
Faxon. F. W. Faxon co., 83 Francis st., Boston.
Flammarion. Ernest Flammarion, editeur, 26 rue Racine, Paris.
Xn PUBLISHEBS REPRESENTED.
Four seas co., 168 Dartmouth st., Boston.
Franklin pub. co. Franklin publishing co., 1931 Cherry st., Phila.
Friederichsen. L. Friederichsen and co., Bergstr. 23, Hamburg, Germany.
Geographical pub. co. Geographical publishing co., 621 S. Plymouth court, Chicago
Gibson. Gibson brothers, 1312 I st., N. W., Washington.
Ginn. Ginn and co., 15 Ashburton place, Boston; 70 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Gov. print, off. Government printing office, Washington.
Green-Lucas co., 103 South st., Baltimore.
Hachette. Librairie Hachette, 79 boulevard Saint-Germain, Paris.
Hanson- Roach-Fowler co., 104 S. Michigan ave., Chicago.
Harcourt. Harcourt, Brace and Howe, 1 W. 47th st., N. Y. |
Harper. Harper and brothers, 333 Pearl st., N. Y., and 45 Albemarle st., W., Londoil
Heath. D. C Heath and co., 50 Beacon st., Boston; 231 W. 39th st., N. Y.
Heinemann. William Heinemann, 20 and 21 Bedford st., Strang, W. C, LondoEf
Hernando. Sucesores de Hernando, Arenal, 11, Madrid. j
Hinds. Hinds, Hay den and Eldredge, 11-15 Union square, W., N. Y. ',
Hodder. Hodder and Stoughton, St. Paul's House, Warwick square, E. C, London!
Hoeber. Paul B. Hoeber, 69 E. 59th et., N. Y.
Holt. Henry Holt and co., 19 W. 44th st., N. Y. \
Houghton MifHin. Houghton Mifflin co., 4 Park st., Boston; 16 E. 40th st., N. Y. i
Ijdo. Eduard Ijdo, Leyden, Holland.
Imprenta de hu^rfanos de intendencia 6 intervenci6n mihtares, calle de Caracas, 7
Madrid.
Innes. Innes and sons, 129 N. 12th st., Phila. 1
Jacobs. George W. Jacobs and co., 1628 Chestnut st., Phila. !
Jones. Marshall Jones co., 212 Summer st., Boston.
Keller. Heinrich Keller, Griineburgweg, 98, Frankfurt a. M., Germany. ,
Knickerbocker press, 2 W. 45th st., N. Y.
Knopf. Alfred A. Knopf, 220 W. 42d st., N. Y.
Le^ds. Lewis historical publishing co., 799 Broadway, N. Y.
Lippincott. J. B. Lippincott co., 227 S. 6th st., Phila. |
Longmans. Longmans, Green and co., 55 Fifth ave., N. Y.; and 38-41 Paternoster
Row, E. C, London.
McBride. Robert M. McBride and co., 31 E. 17th st., N. Y.
McClurg. A. C. McClurg and co., 330-352 E. Ohio st., Chicago.
McKay. David McKay co., 604-608 S. V/ashington square, Phila.
Macmillan. The Macmillan co., 66 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Maestro. Imprenta de Estanislao Maestre, Pozas, 12, Madrid.
Marshall. Horace Marshall and son, 123-125 Fleet st., E. C, London.
Marzo. Imprenta de A. Marzo, San Hermenegildo, 32, Madrid.
Merrymount press, 232 Simimer st., Boston.
Methodist book concern, 150 Fifth ave., N. Y.
Methuen. Methuen and co., 36 Essex st., W. C, London.
Meulenhoff. Meulenhoff and co., Damrak 88, and Zoutsteeg 13, Amsterdam.
Milford. Humphrey Milford, Oxford university press, Amen Corner, E. C., London.
Moffat. Moffat, Yard and co., 30 Union square, N. Y.
Murray press, publishers, 359 Boylston st., Boston.
Neale. Neale publishing co., 440 Fourth ave., N. Y.
Neufeld. Neufeld and Henius, Grossbeerenstr. , 94, Berlin.
Nijhoff. Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague.
Norman. Norman, Remington co., 308 N. Charles st., Baltimore.
Nouvelle librairie nationale, Place du Pantheon, 3, Paris.
Oxford university press, American branch, 35 W. 32d st., N. Y.
Penn pub. co. Penn publishing co., 925 Filbert st., Phila.
Philip. George Philip and son, 32 Fleet st., E. C, London.
Pilgrim press, 14 Beacon st., Boston; 19 W. Jackson boulevard, Chicago.
Plon-Nourrit. Plon-Nourrit et cie. , 8-10 rue Garanciere, Paris.
Pueyo. Imprenta de Juan Pueyo, Luna, 29, Madrid.
Putnam. G. P. Putnam's sons, Putnam building, 2-6 W. 45th St., N.Y.; 24 Bedford
St., Strand, W. C, London.
Rand, McNally. Rand, McNally and co., Rand, McNally building, Chicago; 40 E.
22dst.,N. Y.
"Razon y fe." Imprenta "Razon y fe, " Plaza de Santo Domingo, 14 bajo, Madrid.
Reimer. Dietrich Reimer, Aktiengesellschaft, Wilhemstr. 29, Berlin.
Renaissance du livre. La Renaissance du livre, 18 boulevard Saint-]\iichel, Paris.
Revista de archives. Tipografla de Revista de archives, 016zaga, 1, Madrid.
Rider. William Rider and son, 8-11 Paternoster Row, E. C, London.
PUBLISHEKS REPRESElsTTED. XIII
Rivadeneyra. Sucesores de Rivadeneyra, Paseo de San Vicente, 20, Madrid.
Sagot. Ernest Sagot et cie., 19 rue Cujas, Paris.
Sanborn. B. H. Sanborn and co., 50 Beacon st., Boston; 15 W. SSthst., N. Y.
, Scribner. Charles Scribner's sons, 597 Fifth ave., N. Y.; 608 S. Dearborn st., Chicago.
Shrewesbury pub. co. Shrewesbury publishing co., 5525 South Boulevard, Chicago.
Silver, Burdett. Silver, Burdett and co., 218-223 Columbus ave., Boston; 126 Fifth
ave., N. Y.
I Small, Maynard. Small, Maynard and co., 41 Mt. Vernon st., Boston.
Soci^t^ de 1 'histoire des colonies frangaises, 21 rue des Pyramides, Paris.
Sopena. Ramon Sopena, editor, Provenza, 93 a 97, Barcelona, Spain.
Stanford. Edward Stanford, 12-14 Long Acre, W. C, London.
Stechert. G. E. Stechert and co., 151-155 W. 25th st., N. Y.
Stokes. Frederick A. Stokes and co., 443^49 Fourth ave., N. Y.
Stratford co., 32 Oliver st., Boston.
Sudrez. Libreria general de Victoriano Suarez, calle de Preciados, 48, Madrid.
Tasso. Imprenta de la viuda de Luis Tasso, Arco del Teatro, 21 y 23, Barcelona.
Tolmer. A. Tolmer et cie., 13 quai d'Anjou, Paris.
Torrent y c». Establecimiento tipografia de Torrent y c*., Vdlgame Dios, 6, Madrid.
Ullstein. Ullstein Aktiengesellschaft, Kochstr., 22-26, Berlin.
Union press, 1816 Chestnut st., Phila.
Unwin. T. Fisher Unwin, 1 Adelphi Terrace, Strand, W. 0., London.
Verlag der Vereini^ng wissenschaftlicher Verleger, Walter de Gruyter und co.,
Genthinerstr. 38, Berlin.
Westminster press, 251 N. 52d st., Phila.
pilliame and Norgate, 14 Henrietta st., Covent Garden, W. C, London.
iVilson. H. W. Wilson and co., 958-964 University (Lind) ave., N. Y.
pinston. John C. Winston co., 1006-1016 Arch st., Phila.
l^Vorld bk- co. World book co., Park Btill, Yonkers-on-Hudson, N. Y.
right. Tobias A. Wright, printer and publisher, 150 Bleecker st., N. Y.
i\^right and Potter. Wright and Potter print, co., state printers, 32 Derne st., Boston.
5ajzuela. Tipografia Zarzueia, Alvarez Quintero, 27, Seville, Spain.
Id
r
\
\
LIST OF PERIODICALS, WITH ABBREVIATIONS
USED.
Aarde. De Aarde en haar volken Amsterdam, Holland.
Acad, insciip. comptes rendus. Acad^mie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, comptes
rendus, Paris.
Acad. nac. hist. bol. Academia nacional de historia, boletln, Quito, Ecuador.
Acad. pol. sci. proc. Academy of political science in the city of New York, pro-
ceedings.
Action fran?. L'action frangaise, Montreal, Can.
Am. anthrop. American anthropologist, Washington, J). C.
Am. antiq. soc. proc. American antiquarian society, proceedings, Worcester, Mass.
Am. bar assoc. jour. American bar association journal, Baltimore, Md.
Am. Oath. hist. soc. rec. American Catholic historical society of Philadelphia,
records.
Am. Cath. quar. rev. American Catholic quarterly review, Phila.
Am. econ. rev. American economic review, Princeton, N. J.
Am. educ. American education, Albany, N. Y.
Am. hist, assoc. rep. American historical association, annual report, Washington,
D. C.
Am. hist. rev. American historical review, N. Y.
Am. Indian mag. American Indian magazine, Washington, D. C.
Ana. inst. arch. jour. American institute of architects, journal, Washington, D. C.
Am. inst. criminal law jour. Journal of the American institute of criminal law and
criminology, Chicago.
Am. Jew. hist. soc. pub. American Jewish historical society, publications, N. Y.
Am. jour, archaeol. American journal of archaeology, N. Y.
Am. jour, internat. law. American journal of international law, N. Y.
Am. jour, nursing. American journal of nursing, Rochester, N. Y.
Am. jour, physical anthrop. American journal of physical anthropology, Washington,
D. C.
Am. jour, physiol. optics. American journal of physiological optics, Southbridge,
Mass.
Am. jour. sci. American journal of science. New Haven, Conn,
Am. jour, sociol. American journal of sociology, Chicago.
Am. law rev. American law review, St. Louis, Mo.
Am. lib. assoc. bul. American library association, bulletin, Chicago.
Am. mag. art. American magazine of art, New York city and Washington, D. C.
Am, mus. nat. hist, anthrop. pap. American museum of natural history, anthropo-
logical papers, N. Y.
Am. phil. soc. proc. American philosophical society'-, proceedings, Phila.
Am. pol. sci. rev. American political science re\iew, Baltimore, Md.
Am. Scandinavian rev, American Scandinavian review, N. Y.
Am. scenic and hist, preservation soc. rep. American scenic and historic preserva-
tion society, annual report, Albany, N. Y.
Am. schoolmaster. American schoolmaster, Ypsilanti, Mich.
Am. statistical assoc. pub. American statistical association, quarterly publications,
Boston.
Am. soc. church hist. pap. America,n society of church history, papers, N. Y.
Americana, jimericana, SomervUle, N. J., and New York city.
1 Anglica.n theol. rev. Anglican theolo^cal review, N. Y.
Anglo-i' rench rev. Anglo-French review, London.
Ann. Am. acad. pol. sci. Annals of the American academy of political and social
science, Phila.
Ann. g6og. Annales de geographic, Paris.
Ann. Iowa. Annals of Iowa, Des Moines, la.
Ann. medical hist. Annals of medical history, N. Y.
Annales revol. Annales r^volutionnaires, Besan^on, France.
Anthrop. Gesells. Wien Mitteil. Anthropologische Gesellschaft in Wien, Mittei-
lungen, Vienna, Austria.
XYI UST OF PERIODICALS. ,
t
Anthropologie. L'anthropologie, Paris.
Anthropos. Anthropos, Modling, bei Wien, Austria. j
Appalachia. Appalachia, Boston.
Arch. rec. Architectural record, N. Y. I
Arch. rev. Architectural review, N. Y.
Archiv f. Religionswissens. Archiv f iir Religionswissenschaft, Leipzig, Germany..
Archiv f. Anthrop. Archiv fiir Anthropologie, Brunswick, Germany. I
Art and archaeol. Art and archaeology, Washington, D. C.
Art in America. Art in America, N. i.
Arte tipograf. Arte tipografico, N. Y.
Arts and decoration. Arts and decoration, N. Y.
Atlantic. Atlantic monthly, Boston.
Baptist hist. soc. trans. Baptist historical society, transactions, London.
Bergen co. hist. soc. rep. Bergen county historical society, annual report, Hacken-
sack, N. J.
Bib. rev. Biblical re\iew, Albany, N. Y.
Bib. sacra. Bibiiotheca sacra, Oberlin, 0.
Bibliog. soc. Am. pap. Bibliographical society'- of America, papers, Chicago.
Bibliotheque de I'Ecole des chartes. Bibliotheque de PEcole des chartes; revue
d 'erudition, Paris.
Blackwood's. Blackwood's magazine, Edinburgh.
Bookman. Bookman, N. Y.
Boston pub. lib. bul. Public library of the city of Boston, bulletin.
Bostonian soc. proc. Bostonian society, proceedings, Boston.
Bostonian soc. pub. Bostonian society, publications, Boston.
Brookline hist. soc. proc. Brookline historical society, proceedings, Brookline, Mass.
Buffalo hist. soc. pub. Buffalo historical society, publications, Buffalo, N. Y. i
Bul. of bibliog. Bulletin of bibliography, Boston.
Bul. recherches hist. Bulletin .des recherches historiques, L^vis, Que. i
Burlington mag. Burlington magazine, London.
Cal. law rev. California law re\dew, Berkeley, Cal; 1
Cal. univ. chron. University of California chronicle, Berkeley, Cal. i
Cambridge hist. soc. pub. Cambridge historical society, publications, Cambridge, \
Canad. bankers' assoc. jour. Canadian bankers' association, journal, Toronto, Can. |
Canad. bookman. Canadian bookman, Montreal, Can. i
Canad. hist. rev. Canadian historical review, Toronto, Can. ^ j
Canad. law times. Canadian law times, Toronto, Can. ' |
Canad. mag. Canadian magazine, Toronto, Can.
Canada fran?. Le Canada frangais, Quebec, Can.
Canada law jour. Canada law journal, Toronto, Can.^ ;
Cath. educ. rev. Catholic educational review, Washington, D. 0. |
Cath. hist. rev. Catholic historical review, Washington, D. C. !
Cath. world. Catholic world, N. Y. _ ;
Cavalry jour. Cavalry journal, Washington, D. C. ;
Central law jour. Central law journal, St. Louis, Mo.
Centre estud. Am. Sevilla bol. Centre de estudios Americanistas de Sevilla, boletfn,
Seville, Spain.
Century. Century magazine, N. Y.
Chamb. jour. Chambers's journal, London and Edinburgh. !
Champlain soc. pub. Champlain society, publications, Toronto, Can.
Ciudad de Dies. La Ciudad de Dios, Madrid. ;
Col. soc. Mass. pub. Colonial society of Massachusetts, publications, Boston. |
Columbia hist. soc. rec. Columbia historical society, records, Washington, D. 0.
Columbia law rev. Columbia law review, N. Y. I
Columbia univ. stud. Columbia university studies in history, economics, and
public law, N. Y. ' ^
Confed. vet. Confederate veteran, Nashville, Tenn. _ ^ . ' ?
Congregational hist. soc. trans. Congregational historical society, transactions, y
London.
Conn. acad. arts and sci. trans. Connecticut academy of arts and sciences, transac-
tions. New Haven, Conn.
Conn. hist. soc. coll. Connecticut historical society, collections, Hartford, Conn.
Conn, state lib. bul. Connecticut state library, bulletin, Hartford, Conn.
Const, rev. Constitutional review, Washington, D. C.
Constructive quar. Constructive quarterly, N. Y. and London.
Contemp. rev. Contemporary review, London.
UST OF PERIODICALS, XVH
Cornell law quar. Cornell law quarterly, Ithaca, N. Y.
Comhill mag. Cornhill magazine, London.
Corresp. Correspondant, Paris.
Country life. Country life, Garden City, N. Y., and New York city.
Cultura hisp.-am. Cultura hispano-americana; organ del Centre de cultura hispano-
americana, Madrid.
Current opinion. Current opinion, N. Y.
D. A. R. mag. Daughters of the American revolution magazine, Washington, D.C.
Dan vers hist. soc. coll. Dan vers historical society, historical collections, Dan vers,
Mass.
Delaware co. hist. soc. bul. Delaware county historical society, bulletin, Chester, Pa.
Deutsch-Am. Geschichtsblatter. Deutsch-Amerikanische Gescnichtsblatter, Chicago.
Deutsche Gesells. Anthrop. Korresp. Deutsche Geeellschaft fiir Anthropologie,
Korrespondenzblatt, Brunswick, Germany.
Dial. TheDial, N. Y.
Discovery. Discovery, London.
Eccles. rev. Ecclesiastical review, Phila.
Econ. jour. Economic journal, London.
Edinburgh rev. Edinburgh review, Edinburgh.
Educ. foundations. Educational foundations, N. Y.
Educ. rev. Educational review, N. Y.
Education. Education, Boston.
Eig. Haard. Eigen Haard, Amsterdam, Holland.
Element, school jour. Elementary school journal, Chicago.
Emp. rev. Empire review, London.
Eng. hist. rev. English historical review, London.
Espana y Am^r. Espana y America, Madrid.
Essex inst. hist. coll. Essex institute historical collections, Salem, Mass.
Estados Unidos. Los Estados Unidos, Barcelona, Spain.
Estudiante latino-am. Estudiante latino-americano, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Estudio. Estudio, Barcelona, Spain,
l&tudes. Etudes, Paris.
Everybody's. Everybody's magazine, N. Y.
Field artillery jour. Field artillery journal, Washington, D. 0.
Filson club pub. Filson club publications, Louisville, Ky.
Fortn. rev. Fortnightly review, London and N. Y.
Forum. Forum, N. Y.
France- Am^riqu'e. France-Am^rique, Paris.
Friends' hist. soc. bul. Friends' historical society of Philadelphia, bulletin.
Friends' Jiist. soc. jour. Friends' historical society, journal, London.
Ga. hist. quar. Georgia historical quarterly, Sav&anah, Ga.
Gazette des beaux-arts. Gazette des beaux-arts, Paris.
Geneal. Genealogist, London.
Geog. jour. Geographical journal, London.
Geog. rev. Geographical review, N. Y.
iGeog. Zeits. Geographische Zeitschrift, Leipzig, Germany.
JGeografia. La Geografia, Novara, Italy.
jiG^ographie. La Geographic, Paris.
George Washington univ. bul. George Washington university bulletin, Washington,
D.C.
Grande rev. Grande revue, Paris.
Grranite mo. Granite monthly. Concord, N. H.
Grizzly Bear. The Grizzly Bear; a monthly magazine devoted to all California,
Los Angeles, Cal.
jrosvenor lib. bul. Grosvenor library bulletin, Buffalo, N. Y.
"arper's. Harper's monthly magazine, N. Y.
arv. grad. mag. Harvard graduates' magazine, Cambridge, Mass.
law rev. Harvard law review, Cambridge, Mass.
rv. theol. rev. Harvard theological review, Cambridge, Mass.
waiian hist. soc. rep. Hawaiian historical society, annual report, Honolulu.
apania. Hispania; a quarterly devoted to the interests of teachers of Spanish,
Stanford university, Cal., and N. Y.
Bspanic Am. hist. rev. Hispanic American historical review, Baltimore, Md., and
Washington, D. C.
iist. outlook. Historical outlook, Phila.
3istory. History, London.
111124"— 23 2
XVin UST OF PERIODICALS. |
Home and schoolguest. Home and school guest, Stroudsburg, Pa.
Homiletic rev. Homiletic review, N. Y.
Hug. Boc. S. C. trans. Huguenot society of South Carolina, transactions, Charlet
ton, S. C.
la. jour. hist. Iowa journal of history and politics, Iowa City, la.
la. law bul. Iowa law bulletin, Iowa City, la.
Ibero-am. Gesellsch. Mitteil. Ibero-amerikanische Gesellschaft, Mitteilungen, Ham
burg, Germany.
111. Cath. hist. rev. Illinois Catholic historical review, Chicago.
111. hist. lib. coll. Illinois state historical library, collections, Springfield, 111.
111. hist. soc. jour. Illinois state historical society, journal, Springfield, lU.
Ill hist. soc. trans. Illinois state historical society, transactions, Springfield, 111.
111. law bul. Illinois law bulletin, Urbana, 111.
111. law rev. Illinois law review, Chicago.
Ind. hist. com. bul. Indiana historical commission, bulletin, Indianaixjlis, Ind.
Ind. hist. soc. pub. Indiana historical society, publications, Indianapolis, Ind.
Ind. mag. hist. Indiana magazine of history, Bloomington, Ind. i
Indep. Independent, N. Y. ^ ^ [
Index to legal periodicals and Law lib. jour. Index to legal periodicals and La^j
library journal, N. Y. ;
Infantry jour. Infantry journal, Washington, D. C. \
Inter-America. Inter-America, N. Y. i
Inter-America. Inter-America, N. Y. |
Internat. Archiv f. Ethnog. Internationales Archiv fur Ethnographie, Leyden,(
Holland. !
Jahrbiich. Nationalokonomie. Jahrbucher fiir Nationalokonomie und Statistik, Jenai
Germany. {
James Sprunt hist. pub. James Sprunt historical publications. Chapel Hill, N. 0(
John Rylands lib. bm. Bulletin of the John Ry lands library, Manchester, Eng. 1
Johns Hopkins alumni mag. Johns Hopkins alumni magazine, Baltimore, Md.
Johns Hopkins imiy. stud. Johns Hopkins university studies in historical and politi
cal science, Baltimore, Md. j
Jour. Am. folk-lore. Journal of American folk-lore, N. Y. j
Jour. Am. hist. Journal of American history, N. Y.
Jour. educ. Journal of education, Boston. |
Jour. educ. research. Journal of educational research, Menasha, Wis. i
Jour. Eng. and Germanic philol. Journal of English and Germanic philology,
Urbana, 111.
Jour. geog. Journal of geography, N. Y,
Jour, mtemat. relations. Journal of international relations, Worcester, Mass.
Jour, negro hist. Journal of negro history, Washington D. C.
Jour. pol. econ. Journal of political economy, Chicago.
Jour, savants. Journal des savants, Paris.
Jour. soc. comp. legis. Journal of the Society of comparative legislation and inter-
national law, London.
Jour, U. S. artillery. Journal of the United States artillery. Fort Monroe. Va.
K. Ned. Aardrijkskundig Tijdschrift. Koninklijk Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig
Genootschap, Tijdschrift, Ainsterdam, Holland.
Kansas state hist. soc. pub. Kansas state historical society, publications, Topeka,
Kans.
Kings CO. hist soc. contrib. Kings county historical society, contributions to Ameri-
can history, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ky. hist. soc. reg. Kentucky state historical society, register, Frankfort, Ky.
Ky. law jour. Kentucky law journal, Lexington, Ky.
La. hist. quar. Louisana historical quarterly. New Orleans, La. |
Lancaster co, hist. soc. pap. Lancaster county historical society, papers, Lancaster,!
Pa. . i
Landmark. The Landmark; the monthly magazine of the English-speaking union,.
London.
Law lib. jour. See Index to legal periodicals.
Lawyer and banker. Lawyer and banker. New Orleans, La.
Lectura. La lectura, Madrid.
Lib. jour. Library journal, N. Y.
London quar. rev. London quarterly review, London.
Luth. ch. rev. Lutheran church review, Phila.
Luth. quar. Lutheran quarterly, Gettysburg, Pa.
Iklaine law rev. Maine law review, Bangor, Me.
Maiden hist. soc. reg. Maiden historical society, register. Maiden, Mass.
UST OF PERIODICALS. XIX
Man, Man; a monthly record of anthropological science, London.
Manchester quar. Manchester quarterly, Manchester, Eng.
Marine corps gazette. Marine corps gazette, N. Y.
Mass. hist. soc. proc. Massachusetts historical society, proceedings, Boston.
Mass. law quar. Massachusetts law quarterly, Boston.
Mayfl. desc. Mayflower descendant, Boston.
Mazama. Mazama; a record of mountaineering in the Pacific Northwest, Portland,
Ore.
Md. hist. mag. Maryland historical magazine, Baltimore, Md.
Medford hist. reg. Medford historical register, Medford, Mass.
Mentor. Mentor, N. Y.
Mercure de France. Mercure de France, Paris.
Meth. quar. rev. Methodist quarterly review, Nashville, Tenn.
Meth. rev. Methodist review, N. Y., and Cincinnati, O.
Mich. hist. mag. Michigan history magazine, Lansing, Mich.
Mich, law rev, Michigan law review, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Minn. hist. bul. Minnesota history bulletin, Saint Paul, Minn,
Minn. hist. soc. coll. Minnesota historical society, collections, St. Paul, Minn.
Minn, law rev. Minnesota law review, Minneapolis, Minn.
Miss. Valley hist, assoc. proc. Mississippi Valley historical association, proceedings,
Cedar Rapids, la.
Miss. Valley hist. rev. Mississippi Valley historical review, Cedar Rapids, la.
Mo. hist. rev. Missouri historical review', Columbia, Mo,
Munsey's. Munsey's magazine, N. Y.
N. C. booklet. North Carolina booklet, Raleigh, N. C.
In. C. hist. com. pub. North Carolina historical commission, publications, Raleigh,
N. C.
N. J. hist. soc. proc. New Jersey historical society, proceedings, Newark, N. J.
N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec. New York genealogical and biographical record, N. Y.
IN, Y. hist. soc. bul. New York historical society, quarterly bulletin, N. Y.
N. Y. med. jour. New York medical journal, N. Y.
N. Y. pub. lib. bul. New York public library bulletin, N. Y.
jN. Y. state hist, assoc. jour. The Quarterly journal of the New York state historical
association, Albany, N. Y.
;N. Y. state hist, assoc. proc. New York state historical association, proceedings,
j Albany, N. Y.
N. Y. state mus. bul. New York state museum. Museum bulletin, Albany, N, Y,
Nantucket hist, assoc. proc. Nantucket historical association, proceedings, Nan-
tucket, Mass.
Nation. Nation, N. Y.
Nation, acad. sci. proc. National academy of sciences, proceedings, Washington,
B.C.
Nation, geneal. soc. quar. National genealogical society, quarterly, Washington,
D. C,
S[ation. geog. mag. National geographic magazine, Washington, D. 0.
Sfation. municipal rev. National municipal review, Phila.
Nation, rev. National review, London.
Natural hist. Natural history; journal of the American museum of natural history,
N. Y.
l^ature. Nature, London.
J^aval hist. soc. pub. Naval history society, publications, N. Y.
Siavorscher. De Navorscher, Amsterdam, Holland.
Sfederiandsch arch. v. kerkgeschiedenis. Nederlandsch archief voor kerkgeschie-
denis. The Hague, Holland.
Slev. hist. soc. pap. Nevada historical society, papers, Reno, Nev.
New Church life. New Church life, Bryn Athryn^Ta.
New-Church rev. New-Church review, Boston.
"Jew Eng. hist, and geneal, reg. New England historical and genealogical register,
Boston.
sfew Eng. soc. anniv. celeb. New England society in the city of New York, anni-
versary celebration.
jj^ew world. New world ; monthly international review, London,
'ewport hist. soc. bul. Newport historical society, bulletin, Newport, R. I.
iagara hist. soc. pub. Niagara historical society, publications, Niagara, Ont.
9th cent. Nineteenth century and after, London and N. Y.
"o. Am. rev. North American review, N. Y.
0. Dak. hist. soc. coll. State historical society of North Dakota, collections, Bis-
marck, N. D.
XX LJST OF PERIODICAI^.
Nonnal instructor. Normal instructor and Primary plans, Dansville, N. T.
Nouv. rev. Nouvelle revue, Paris.
Nuestro tiempo. Nuestro tiempo, Madrid.
Nuova antologia. Nuova antologia di lettere, scienze ed arti, Rome.
Ohio archaeol. and hist. quar. Ohio archaeological and historical quarterly, Col
umbus, O. !
Ohio educ. mo. Ohio educational monthly, Columbus, O.
Ohio hist, and phil. soc. pub. Historical and philosophical society of Ohio, quar
terly publication, Cincinnati, O.
Ohio hist, teach, jour. Ohio history teachers' journal, Columbus, O.
Ohio state univ. bul. Ohio state university bulletin, Columbus, O. j
Old-time New England. Old-time New England, Boston. '
Ont. hist. soc. pap. Ontario historical society, papers and records, Toronto, Can. I
Ore. hist. soc. quar. Oregon historical society, quarterly, Portland, Ore.
Outlook. Outlook, N. Y.
Overland. Overland monthly, San Francisco, Cal.
Pa. geneal. soc. pub. Genealogical society of Pennsylvania, publications, Phila.
Pa. mag. hist. Pennsylvania magazine of history and biography, Phila. i
Pa, school jour. Pennsylvania school journal, Lancaster, Pa. \
Pa. soc. yr. bk. Pennsy^lvania society, yearbook, N. Y. |
Pacific rev. Pacific review, Seattle, Wash. t
Palacio. El Palacio, Santa Fe, N. Mex. j
Palimpsest. Palimpsest, Iowa City, la. !
Pan Ain. uni6n bol. Union panamericana, bol-etin, Washington, D. C. |
Pan Am. union bul. Pan American union, bulletin, Washington, D. C. '
Pan-American mag. Pan-American magazine, N.Y.
Peabody mus. Am. archaeol. pap. Peabody museum of American archaeology and!
ethnology, papers, Cambridge, Mass. {
Pedagog. sem. Pedagogical seminary, Worcester, Mass. i
Personalist. Personalist; a quarterly journal of philosophy, theology and literature,!
Los Angeles, Cal. !
Petermanns Mitteil. Petermanns Mitteilungen, Gotha, Germany. j
Phila. acad. nat. sci. proc. Academy of natural sciences of Philadelphia, proceedings.!
Phila. city hist. soc. pub. City history society of Philadelphia [publications].
Phila. g;eog. soc. bul. Geographical society of Philadelphia, bulletin.
Pol. sci. quar. Political science quarterly, N. Y.
Popular educ. Popular educator, Boston.
Presbyterian hist. soc. jour. Presbyterian historical society, journal, Phila.
Prince soc. pub. Prince society, publications, Boston.
Princeton theol. rev. Princeton theological review, Princeton, N. J.
Quar. jour. econ. Quarterly journal of economics, Cambridge, Mass. j
Quar. rev. Quarterly review, London. j
Queen's quar. Queen's quarterly, Kingston, Can.
R. 1. hist. soc. coll. Rhode Island historical society collections, Providence, R. I.
Raz6n y fe. Raz6n y fe, Madrid.
Real acad. hisp.-am. ciencia bol. Real academia hispano-americana de ciencia y
arte, boletln, Cadiz, Spain.
Real acad. hist. bol. Real academia de la historia, boletfn, Madrid.
Real soc. geog. bol. Real sociedad geografica, boletfn, Madrid.
Reformed ch. rev. Reformed church review, Lancaster, Pa., and Phila.
Rev. and expositor. Review and expositor; a Baptist theological quarterly, Louis-
ville, Ky.
Rev. Anjou. Revue de I'Anjou, Angers, France.
Rev. anthrop. Revue authropologique, Paris.
Rev. archeol. Revue archeologique, Paris.
Rev. archives. Revista de archives, bibliotecas y museos, Madrid.
Rev. bleue. Revue bleue (Revue politique et litt^raire), Paris.
Rev. canad. Revue canadienne, Montreal, Can.
Rev. chretienne. Revue chr^tienne, Paris.
Rev. ciencias jur. y soc.^ Revista de ciencias jurldicas y sociales, Madrid.^
Rev. critiques idees et livres. Revue critique des idees et des livres, Paris.
Rev. deux mondes. Revue des deux mondes, Paris.
Rev. droit internat. Revue de droit international et de legislation compar^e, Brussels,
Belgium.
Rev. econ. statistics. Review of economic statistics, Cambridge, Mass.
Rev. ethnog. Revue d'ethnographie et des traditions populaires, Paris.
Rev. 6tudes hist. Revue des etudes historiques, Paris.
Rev. g6n. droit internat. Revue g^n^rale de droit international public, Paris.
I
UST OF PERIODICALrS. XXI
Rev. g^n. sci. puree et appliqu^es. Revue g^n^rale des sciences pures et appliqu^ea,
Paris.
Rev. geog. col. y mere. Revista de geografia colonial y mercantil, Madrid.
Rev. hebdomadaire. Revue hebdomadaire, Paris.
Rev. hist. Revue historique, Paris.
Rev. hist, colonies frang. Revue de I'histoire des colonies frangaises, Paris.
Rev. hist. dipl. Revue d'histoire diplomatique, Paris.
Rev. maritime. Revue maritime, Paris.
Rev. mex. derecho internac. Revista mexicana de derecho internacional, Mexico
City.
Rev. mondiale. Revue mondiale, Paris.
Rev. of rev. Review of reviews, N. Y.
Rev. Paris. Revue de Paris, Paris.
Rev. pel. et pari. Revue politique et parlementaire, Paris.
Rev. sci. pel. Revue des sciences politiques, Paris. ,
Rev. synthese hist. Revue de synthese historique, Paris.
Rev. th^ol. Revue de th^logie et de philosphie, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Rev. trimestrielle canad. Revue trimestrielle canadienne, Montreal, Can.
Riv. geog. ital. Rivista geografica italiana e BoUettino della societa di studi geografici
e coloniali in Firenze, Florence, Italy.
Riv. Italia. Rivista d' Italia, Rome.
Roxbury hist. soc. yr.-bk. Roxbury historical society, year-book, Roxburjr, Mass.
Royal anthrop. inst. jour. Royal anthropological institute of Great Britain and
Ireland, journal, London.
Royal artillery jour. Journal of the Royal artillery, Woolwich, Eng.
Royal hist. soc. trans. Royal historical society, transactions, London.
Royal soc. Canad. proc. Royal society of Canada, proceedings, Ottawa, Can.
Royal statistical soc. jour. Royal statistical society, journal, London.
Royal unit. ser. inst. jour. Royal united service institution, journal, London.
S. A. R. yr. bk. National society of the Sons of the American revolution, year book,
Washington, D. C.
S. C. hist. mag. South Carolina historical and genealogical magazine, Charleston, S. C.
Sabretache. Carnet de la Sabretache, Paris.
Sat. rev. Saturday review, London.
School and home educ. School and home education, Bloomington, 111.
School and soc. School and society, N. Y.
School news. School news and practical educator, Taylorville, 111
School rev. School review, Chicago.
Science. Science, N. Y.
Scientific mo. Scientific monthly, N. Y.
Scottish geog. mag. Scottish geographical magazine, Edinburgh.
Scottish hist. rev. Scottish historical review, Glasgow.
Scribner's. Scribner's magazine, N. Y.
Sewanee rev. Sewanee review, Sewanee, Tenn.
Sierra club bul. Sierra club bulletin, San Francisco, Cal.
Smith coll. stud, in hist. Smith college studies in history, Northampton, Mass.
Smithsonian inst. rep. Smithsonian institution, annual report, Washington, D. C. ^
Smithsonian misc. coll. Smithsonian miscellaneous collections, Smithsonian insti-
tution, Washington, D. C.
So. American. South American, N. Y,
So. Atlan. quar. South Atlantic quarterly, Durham, N. G.
hist. soc. pap. Southern historical society papers, Richmond, Va.
So. workm. Southern workman, Hampton, Va.
Soc. Am^r. Paris jour. Soci^t6 des Am^ricanistes de Paris, journal , Paris.
~oc. anthrop. Paris bul. et mem. Societe d' anthropologie de Paris, bulletins et
m^moires, Paris.
'Soc. geog, Lisboa bol. Sociedade de geographia de Lisboa, boletim, Lisbon.
Soc. geog. Quebec bul. Society de geographie de Quebec, bulletin, Quebec.
Soc. hist, protestantisme frang. Society de I'Mstoire du protestantisme fran^ais,
bulletin, Paris.
Soc. ing^nieurs civils France m^m. Soci6t^ des ing^nieurs civils de France, m^moires
et compte rendu des travaux, Paris.
Soc. "Le vieux papier" bul. Societe arch^logique et artistique "Le vieux papier, "
bulletin, Paris.
Soc. prehist. frang. bul. Soci^t6 pr^historique fran^aise, bulletin, Ps
3oc. roy. beige g^g. bul. Soci^t^ royale beige de geographic, bulletii
3outhw. hist. quar. Southwestern historical quarterly, Austin, Tex.
3outhw. pol. sci. quar. Southwestern political science quarteriy, Ausi
XXn LIST OF PERIODICALS,
I
Spectator. Spectator, London.
Sprague's jour. Maine hist. Spra^ue's journal of Maine history, Dover, Maine.
St. Louis Cath. hist. rev. St. Louis Catholic historical review, St. Louis, Mo.
St. Louis law rev. St. Louis law review, St. Louis, Mo.
State service. State service ; the New York state magazine, Albany, N. Y.
Stenun. d. Tijds. Stem men des Tijds.
Stone and Webster jour. Stone and Webster journal, Boston.
Teach, jour. Teacher's journal, Marion, Ind.
Teachers coll. rec. Teachers college record, N. Y.
Teaching. Teaching, Emporia, Kans.
Tech. rev. Technology review, Boston.
Tenn. hist. mag. Tennessee historical magazine, Nashville, Tenn.
Texas hist, teach, bul. Texas history teachers' bulletin, Austin, Tex.
Texas rev. Texas review, Austin, Tex.
Thunder Bay hist. soc. rep. Thunder Bay historical society, annual report. Fort Wil-
liam, Ont,
Tijdschrift v. gesch. Tijdschrift voor geschiedenis, Groningen, Holland.
Topsfield hist. soc. coll. Toi)sfield historical society, collections, Topsfield, Mass,
Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag. Tyler's quarterly historical and genealogical
magazine, Holdcroft, Charles City county, Va.
U. S. Cath. hist. rec. U. S. Catholic historical society, records and studies, N. Y.
U. S. N. inst. proc. U. S. Naval institute proceedings, Annapolis, Md.
U. S. Nation, mus. proc. United States National museum, proceedings, Washington,
D. C.
Unit, empire. United empire; the Royal colonial institute journal, London.
Unit. ser. mag. United service magazine, London.
Univ. mag. University magazine, Montreal, Can.
Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. University of California publications, American
archaeology and ethnology, Berkeley, Cal.
Univ. of Cal. pub. in hist. University of California publications in history, Berkeley,
Cal.
Univ. of Col. hist. coll. University of Colorado historical collections, Boulder, Col.
Univ. of No. Dak. quar. jour. Quarterly journal of the University of North Dakota,
University, No. Dak.
Univ. of Penn. law rev. University of Pennsylvania law review and American law
register, Phila.
Univ. of Penn. mus. jour. University of Pennsylvania, The Museum journal, Phila.
Univ. of Tenn. mag. University of Tennessee magazine, Knoxville, Tenn.
Univ. of Va, alumni bul. Alumni bulletin of the University of Virginia, Charlottes-
ville, Va.
Univ. of Wash. pub. pol. and soc. sci. University of Washington publications in
political and social science, Seattle, Wash.
Unpartizan rev. Unpartizan review, N. Y.
Utah geneal. and hist. mag. Utah genealogical and historical magazine, Salt Lake
City, Utah.
Va. jour. educ. Virginia journal of education, Richmond, Va.
Va. law reg. Virginia law register, Charlottesville, Va.
Va. law rev. Virginia law review. University, Va.
Va. mag. hist. Virginia magazine of history and biography, Richmond, Va.
Va. state lib. bul. Virginia state state library, bulletin, Richmond, Va.
Vie des peuples. La Vie des peuples, Paris.
Vineland hist. mag. Vineland historical magazine, Vineland, N. J.
Vt. hist. soc. proc. Vermont historical society, proceedings, Montpelier, Vt.
Wash. acad. sci. jour. Washington academy of sciences, journal, Washington, D.C.
Wash. univ. stud. Washington university studies, St. Louis, Mo.
Wash. hist. quar. Washington historical quarterly, Seattle, Wash.
Waterloo hist. soc. rep. Waterloo historical society, annual report. Kitchener, Ont.
Weekly rev. Weekly review, N. Y.
Wentworth hist. soc. pap. Wentworth historical society, papers and records,
Hamilton, Ont.
West-Indische Gids. West-Indische Gids, The Hague.
West Va. law quar. West Virginia law quarterly, Morgantown, W. Va.
Western mag. Western magazine, St. Paul, Minn.
Western Pa. hist. mag. Western Pennsylvania historical magazine, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Western Reserve hist. soc. pub. Western Reserve historical society, publication,
Cleveland, 0.
Wis. archeol. Wisconsin archeologist, Milwaukee, Wia.
UST OF PERIODICALS. XXni
WiB. hist. soc. coll. State historical society of Wisconsin, collections, Madison, Wis.
Wis. hist. soc. proc. State historical society of Wisconsin, proceedings, Madison, Wis.
Wis. mag. hist. Wisconsin magazine of history, Madison, Wis.
Wm. and Mary quar. William and Mary college quarterly historical magazine,
Williamsburg, Va.
Women's Canad. hist. soc. Toronto trans. Women's Canadian historical society of
Toronto, transactions, Toronto, Can.
World's work. World's work, N. Y.
Wy. hist, and geol. soc. proc. Wyoming historical and geological society, proceedings
and collections, Wilkes-Barre, ra.
Yale law jour. Yale law journal, New Haven, Conn.
Yale rev. Yale review. New Haven, Conn.
Ymer. Ymer; tidskrift utgifven af iSvenska sallskapet for antropologi och geografi,
Stockholm, Sweden.
York pioneer and hist. soc. rep. York pioneer and historical society, annual report,
Toronto, Can.
Zeits. vergleich. Rechtswissens. Zeitschrift fur vergleichende Rechtswissenschaft,
Stuttgart, Germany.
i
1
4'K
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920.
GENERALITIES.
Bibliography.
I Annual magazine subject-index, 1919. A subject-index to a selected list of American
and English periodicals and society publications- Edited by Frederick Winthrop
Faxon. Boston: F. W. Faxon co. 241 p. [1
History, fine arts, architectxire, mountaineering, travel and exploration, and outdoor life are covered
more fully than other subjects.
The aim has been to index periodicals not available in the "Readers' guide to periodical literature."
Books relating to New York state; list of interesting books covering biography, his-
tory and government available in the State library. State service, IV (Mar.)
241-246. [2
From the Bulletin of the New York state library.
Boston. Public library. New England; a selected list of works in the Public
librarv of the city of Boston. Boston: The Trustees. [4], 38 p. (Brief reading
lists, no. 16) [3
Boston. Publiclibrary. The Pilgrims; aselected list of works in the Public library
of the city of Boston. A contribution to the tercentenary celebration, comp.
by Mary Alice Tenney, Catalogue department. Boston: Pub. by the Trustees.
43 p. (Brief reading lists, no. 15) [4
Brigham, Clarence S. Bibliography of American newspapers, 1690-1820. Am.
ANTiQ. soc. PROC, n. s. XXIX, pt. 1, 129-180; XXX, pt. 1, 81-150. [6
Contents.— Pt. XI: Ohio. Pt. XII: Peimsylvania (A-N).
Cambridge, Mass. Public library. List of books in the Cambridge public library
relating to the Pilgrim fathers and the settlement of Plymouth, Mass., in 1620,
comp. and issued on the occasion of the Pilgrim tercentenary celebration, by the
Cambridge public library, Cambridge, Mass., 1920. [Cambridge, Mass.: Tribune
composition co.] 16 p. [6
Carnegie library, Pittsburgh. The Pilgrims; selected material for use in connection
with the Pilgrim tercentenary celebration. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Carnegie library.
13 p. [7
IJhase, Franklin H. Where to find it; bibliography of Syracuse history. Pub. by
the Onondaga historical association . . . Syracuse, N. Y.: The Dehler press.
219 p. [8
3havez, Alberto N. Bibliograffa antropol6gica californiana. Ethnos (Mexico) I,
100-106. [9
bonnecticut state library, Hartford. Select list of manuscripts in the Connecticut
state library. Hartford, Conn.: Pub. by the library. 32, [3] p. {Its Bulletin,
no. 9) [10
George S. Godard, state librarian.
|j[lie Cumulative book index. Twenty-second annual cumulation. Author, title
and subject catalog in one alphabet of books published June 1919-June 1920. Com-
piled by Emma L. Teich and others. N. Y.: H. W. Wilson co. [6], 677 p. [11
laughters of the American revolution. Library. Historical and genealogical works.
National society Daughters of the American revolution. Library. Memorial con-
tinental hall. [Washington, D. C] 104 p. [12
)ellenbaugh, Frederick S. Books by American travellers and explorers from 1846
to 1900. Being chapter xiv of the third volume of the Cambridge history of Ameri-
can literature. With a bibUography. N. Y.: Putnam, p. 131-170, 681-728. [13
Bibliographies: p. 681-728.
1
2 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Fish, Carl Russell, and Wallace Notestein. Short bibliography of American histor}
London: The Historical association. 9 p. [1
Compiled for the use of English students and readers.
Goodwin, Helen Dunle. Shipbuilding in the Pacific Northwest. Wash, hist
QUAR., XI (July) 183-201. [1
Consists mainly of a Chronological table of the chief coast-built vessels, 1788-1795, and a Bibliography
Guilday, Peter. Guide to the biographical sources of the American hierarchy
Oath. hist, rev., VI (Apr .-July) 128-132, 267-271. [K
Contents.— D-K.
Cont.fromv. V, July 1919.
Huguenot society of America. Catalogue or bibliography of the library of the Hugue
not society of America. Comp. by Julia P. M. Morand. N. Y.: Priv. print, bj-
Mrs. James M. Lawton. [11
"This collection has been classified with particular reference to the emigrations and various settle
ments of the Huguenots." c/. Introd.
Jones, C. K. Hispanic American bibliographies. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., ID
(Aug.-Nov.) 414-442, 603-633. [15
In this list are included bibliographies, collected biographies, histories of literature, and some general
and miscellaneous works found of frequent use for reference purposes.
Eeniston, Hayward. List of works for the study of Hispanic- American history.
N. Y.: The Hispanic society of Ainerica. xyiii, 451 p. (Hispanic notes andi
monographs; essays, studies, and brief biographies issued by the Hispanic society ■
of America, V) [19!
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., IV (May 1921) 281-283. i
Leechman, J. D. Bibliography of the anthropology of the Puget Sound Indians.!
Wash. hist, quar., XI (Oct.) 266-273. [20|
Lincoln, E. E. List of references in economics 2. Economic history of Europe since {
1800, and of the United States. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard university. 145 p.l
[2l|
A revision and extension of the references originalljr prepared by Professor Day for use in connection I
with the courses in European and American economic histoiy at Harvard college. j
A list of some early American publications. Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXXI
(Sept.) 248-256. [221
a list of books and pamphlets printed in America, 1733-1809, bearing on Cathohc history in the New ,
world, contained in the library of the American Catholic historical society of Philadelphia.
McCutcheon, Roger P. Americana in English newspapers, 1648-1660. Col. soc.
Mass. pub., XX, 84-96. [28
Meyer, Herman H. B. List of references on the treaty-making power, comp. under
the direction of Herman H. B. Meyer, chief bibliographer. Washington: Gov.
print, off. 219 p. (U. S. Library of Congress) [24
"The object in view in the arrangement of the material is to afford a historical view of the treaty-
making power as exercised in typical instances."— Pref. note.
Contents. — Treaty-making power: GeneraL In foreign states, particularly Great Britain. In the
United States.— Considerations in respect to special treaties.
Phelps, Edith M. Selected articles on the American merchant marine. 2d and enl.
ed. N. Y.: H. W. Wilson co. xxxvii, 344 p. (Debaters' handbook series) [26
Bibliography p. [xix]-xxxvii.
Phillips, Philip Lee. Author list of the geographical atlases in the Library of Con-
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U. S. Superintendent of documents. Tariff and taxation; list of publications
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University of Arizona. Library. Mexican writers; a catalogue of books in the
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University of Arizona record, v. XITI, no. 5.
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A second edition, revised and enlarged by the addition of notes in reference to the 19 portraits which 1
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Wagner, Henry R. The Plains and the Rockies; a contribution to the bibliography |
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WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 5
Archives and Manuscript Collections.
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iniciales que significan "Confederate states of America ", y abandonados por el
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At the close of the Civil war the Confederate diplomatic representative at Madrid, Mr. Pierre A. Rost,
left a portfoUo of documents relative to his mission— they have been given to the Academia de la historia,
Madrid, and are now listed here.
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Brief rfeum^ of the material relating to the French colonies in America contained in the collection of
manuscripts and autographs which belonged to the late Sir Thomas Phillipps, and which are listed in
a catalogue of the sale of this library, published by Sotheby, Wilkinson and Hodge, of London, in 1919.
Gonzdlez Palencia, Angel. Extracto del catdlogo de los documentos del Consejo de
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Montero, Juan. Guia histdrica y descriptiva del Archivo general de Simancas,
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Cont. from ano VI, ntim. 31, 1919.
Contents.— Seccidn segimda: Contadurla general del Consejo de Indias.
6 AMEBICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. I
v. S. Library of Congress. Report of the Librarian of Congress ... for the fiscal
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Herbert Putnam, Librarian of Congress.
Contains a summary of important acquisitions of manuscripts relating to American history, among
them being facsimiles of manuscripts essential to the study of the Indian languages of Mexico and CentraS
America, Mexican imprints, papers of the presidents (Roosevelt, Taft, and Cleveland). Washiogton
and Franklin papers, letters of American clerg3rmen, dating from 1719 to 1873, papers relating to Ameri-
can commerce during the Revolution, quartermasters' accounts in the Revolution, I'Enfant papers '
papers of W, W. Corcoran of Washington, 1815 to 1888, and World war papers. ' i
List of transcripts from manuscripts In the Public record office and the library of the Society tor the |
propagation of the gospel in foreign parts: p. 168-174. 1
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Reports covering the research work in Louisiana history that she has carried on for the Society in the 1
Archivo general de Indias. i
Historiography, Methodology, Study and Teaching.
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Also pub. in the Hispanic American historical review, v. II, Aug. 1919. j
American historical association. Report of the proceedings of the thirty-third !
annual meeting of the American historical association, Philadelphia, Pa,, December i
27-29, 1917. Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year 1917, 31-92. [78
This account is adapted from that printed in the American historical review for April 1918. i
Includes brief r6sum6s of the papers read at the meeting. 1
American historical association. Conference of historical societies. Proceedings 1
of the fourteenth annual Conference of historical societies, Philadelphia, Pa.,
December 29, 1917. Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year 1917, 173-216. [79
American historical association. Conference of historical societies. Reports of
historical societies, 1917. Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year 1917, 185-216. [80 ^
American historical association. Conference of teachers of history. Proceedings |
of the Conference of teachers of history, Philadelphia, December 29, 1917. Am. |
hist. ASSOC. REP., for the year 1917, 217-247. [81 j
American historical association. Conference on the report of the Committee on j
history and education for citizenship in the schools. Report of the secretary and [
papers read at the Conference on the report of the Committee on history and educa- '.
tion for citizenship in the schools. Reported by Daniel C. Knowlton. Hist, out-
look, XI (Feb.) 73-83. [82
Application to conditions in the South, by MiUedge L. Bonham, jr.: p. 75-76. The new course of
study and the teachers' training schools, by F. S. Bogardus: p. 76-79. The standpoint of the National
education association's committee, by Daniel C. Knowlton: p. 79-80. The proposed course of study
for elementary schools, by Charles A. Coulomb: p. 81-83. j
American historical association. Conference on the report of the Committee on
history and education for citizenship in the schools. Supplementary papers. Hist. |
outlook, XI (Mar.) 111-115. [83
Application to conditions in New England, by Herbert D. Foster: p. 112-115. I
American historical association. Pacific coast branch. Report of the proceedings !
of the fourteenth annual meeting of the Pacific coast branch of the American Ms- ;
torical association, Berkeley, Cal., November 30-December 1, 1917. By William
A. Morris, secretary of the branch. Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year 1917, 93-103. !
[84
Includes brief r6sum6s of the papers read at the meeting.
Andrews, Charles M. How American colonial history should be written. Col. soc.
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Andrews, Matthew Page. A new perspective of America's beginnings. Educ. i
foundations, XXXII (Sept.) 1-12. [86
Calls attention to the need of a new interpretation of the origin of English colonial beginnings in
America.
* , WKITINGS ON AMEBICAN HISTORY, 1920. 7
Beatty, WlUard W. An experiment in the use of pageantry and ritual as motivating
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iBranom, Mendel E. The project problem method in history. Hist, outlook, XI
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[Brown, Arthur H. The patriotic duty of an historical association. Bergen co. hist.
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iBrown, Gertrude. History in the intermediate grades. Teaching, V, no. 4 (Oct.)
18-22. [93
[Buck, Solon J. The Minnesota historical society. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Oct.)
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luckingham, B. R. Indices of efficiency in the teaching of United States history.
In the Proceedings of the High school conference of the University of Illinois,
November 20-22, 1919. Urbana: University of Illinois. (University of Illinois
bulletin, v. XVII, no. 13) p. 304-313. [95
[Buckingham, B. R. A proposed index of efficiency in teaching United States history.
Jour. educ. research, I (Apr.) 249-257. [96
Byington, Edwin H. Student-authorship in history. Jour, educ, XGII (Nov. 4)
429^31. [97
California. State normal school, San Jose. A history outline for seventh and eighth
grades. Clara H. Smith, supervisor of history, State normal school, San Jose,
California. Sacramento: California state print, off. 40 p. [98
arnegie institution of Washington. Department of historical research. Annual
report of the director of the Department of historical research. [Washington,
D. C] p. 179-184. [99
J. Franklin Jameson, director.
Extracted from the Year book no. 19 for the year 1920.
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piark, Edith M. The history curriculum since 1850. Hist, outlook, XI (Feb.)
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3orbin, Mabel L. Biography as a help in teaching history and geography. Normal
INSTRUCTOR, XXIX (Oct.) 45, 76. [103
Contents .—Columbus .
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XXIX (Nov.) 38; (Dec.) 36. (Suggestions for grammar grades) [104
:. Two leaders— Brewster and Bradford. U. Captain Miles Standlsh and Edward Winslow.
'1 lordier, Henri. Les origines de la Soci^te des Am^ricanistes de Paris. Soc. Amer.
Paris jour., n. s. XII, 204-206. [106
Address at the celebration of the 25th anniversary of the society,
ioulomb, Charles A. Cleveland meeting of the American historical association,
December 1919. Hist, outlook, XI (Feb.) 69-72. [106
>odd, W. E. Nationalism in American history. Texas hist, teach, bul., VIII
(Feb.) 55-66. [10?
)owell, Edward S. The method of history instruction used in the Bucyrus high
school [Bucyrus, 0.] Hist, outlook, XI (Dec.) 356-359. [108
8 AMERICAN- HISTORICAL ASSOCIATTOIT. I
I
Dimning, William A. A generation of American historiography. Am. hist, assoo. '
REP., for the year 1917, 347-354. [109 1
A review of American historiography since 1884, the year in which the American historical associa- 1
tion was organized.
Elson, Henry W. The teaching of American history. In Klapper, Paul, ed. College t
teaching; studies in methods of teaching in the college. Yonkers-on-Hudson* |
World bk. CO. p. 256-262. [HO i
Finney, Boss L. Course in general history from the sociologists' standpoint. Hist i
OUTLOOK, XI (June) 221-227. [HI ,
Fling, Fred Morrow. The writing of history; an introduction to historical method.
New Haven: Yale university press. 195 p. [112
Intended as a guide to the student through his first steps in research. Concerned with the writing '
of history in general, not specifically American history. ',
Ford, Worthington C. The editorial function in United States history. Am. hist. .
ASSOC. REP., for the year 1917, 249-263. [113
Reprinted from the American historical review, v. XXIII, January 1918. !
Gates, Arthur I. The psychological vs. the chronological order in the teaching of ,
history. Hist, outlook, XI (June) 227-230. [114 I
Goldenweiser, A. A. A new approach to history. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (Jan.) \
26^7. [116 1
A review and analysis of the work entitled "The processes of history. By Frederick J. Teggart" '
(New Haven: Yale univ. press, 1918). I
Goldsmith, Margaret O. Material for the Pilgrim tercentenary. Normal instruc-
tor, XXIX (Nov.) 20, 66-67. [116
Griffith, G. L. Harlan's American history test in the New Trier township schools.
School rev., XXVIII (Nov.) 697-708. % [117
Guilday, Peter. The American Catholic historical association. Cath. hist, rev.,
VI (Apr.) 3-14. [118
Hackett, Charles W. The twelfth annual meeting of the Mississippi Valley historical
association [May 8-10, 1919] Miss. Valley hist, assoc. proc, X, pt. 1, 15-36.
[118a
Gives a r^sum^ of the papers read at the meetmg.
Hall, Edward Kagaman. The preservation of historic landmarks. N. Y. state
hist. ASSOC PROC, XVII, 56-64. [119
Hatch, R. W. The project-problem as a method for teaching history. Hist, out-
look, XI (June) 237-240. [120
Hatch, R. W. Teaching modern history by the project method; an experiment.
Teachers coll. rec, XXI (Nov.) 452-169. [121
Herrick, Cyril A. The family trail through American history. Minn. hist, bul.,
Ill (Nov.) 489-505. [122
Points out the possibilities of family history as a method of approach to the study of local and general
history.
Hinchman, F. K. The laboratory method in high school history. Teaching, V,
no. 4 (Oct.) 10-13. [123
Hockett, H. C. The method and aims of modem historians. Ohio hist, teach.
JOUR., no. 16 (Jan.) 131-140. [124
Hulbert, Archer Butler. The increasing debt of history to science. Am. antiq. i
soc PROC, n. 8. XXIX, pt. 1, 29-42. [126 ;
Jameson, J. Franklin. The American council of learned societies. Am. hist, rev.,
XXV (Apr.) 440-446. [126 \
An account of the recently organized federation of learned societies called the American council of |
learned societies devoted to humanistic studies, the first meeting of which was held on February 14, ;
1920, in New York. !
Jameson, J. Franklin. The American historical review, 1895-1920. Am. hist, rev., I
XXVI (Oct.) 1-17. [127 I
Jameson, J. Franklin. The meeting of the American historical association at Cleve- !
land. Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr.) 369-390. [128
An account of the meeting held at Cleveland, December 29-31, 1919.
1920. 9
Johnson, Allen. History should be made interesting. State service, IV (Apr.)
318-320. [129
Advocates a change in the method of presenting history in our schools.
Jones, Opal Rogers. Some aims in the teaching of history. School news, XXXIII
(June) 587-588. [130
Kilpatrlck, W. H. Effect of the war upon the teaching of history and civics. Pa.
SCHOOL JOUR., LXVIII (Jan.) 314-315. [131
Kohl, C. C. A suggested program for teaching America's part in the Great war for
the high school. Ohio hist, teach, jour., XVI (Jan.) 125-130. [132
Laprade, William T. Concerning the teaching of history. Educ. rev., LIX (Mar.)
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Latourette, K. S. A history teacher's confession of faith. Ohio hist, teach, jour.,
no. 19 (Nov.) 177-182. [134
Mclntire, Kuth E. Presenting history to beginners. Popular educ, XXX VIII
(Sept.-Nov.) 8-9, 85, 154-155. [135
Title varies.
Moore, J. R. H. After- the-war reorganization of history in the elementary school.
Miss. Valley hist, assoc. proc, X, pt. 1, 144-161. ' [133
North Carolina historical commission. Eighth biennial report ... December 1,
1918, to November 30, 1920. Raleigh: Edwards and Broughton print, co., state
printers. 40 p. (N. C. hist. com. pub. Bui. no. 27) [137
Norton, F. E. The socialization of history in the seventh grade. Texas hist,
teach, bul., VIII, no. 3 (May 15) 109-137. [138
Orbison, Inez. The use of magazines in the teaching of history. Ohio hist, teach.
jour., XVI (Jan.) 119-124. [139
Page, Edward Carlton. More about the working museum of history. Hist, out-
look, XI (Feb.) 55-57. [140
Not-es regarding the work of the museum of history at the Northern Illinois state normal school,
De Kalb, 111.
parish, John C. Historical activities in the trans-Mississippi northwest, 1919-1920.
Miss. Valley hist, rev., VII (Dec.) 242-260. [141
Pennsylvania. Department of public instruction. Proceedings of educational con-
gress, November 17-22, 1919. Harrisburg, Pa.: J. L. L. Kuhn, printer to the com-
monwealth. 673 p. ' [142
Section IX. Histcwy and social science: p. 387-417.
Pierce, Bessie L. The socialized recitation. Hist, outlook, XI (May) 189-193.
[143
Price, Q. V. Socialization of high school history. Education, XL (Jan.) 307-316.
[144
Robinson, M. P. Virginia's historical laboratory. Hist, outlook, XI (Feb.) 53-54.
[145
Describes the work of a number of "archival appremtices " in the Virginia state library.
Earle Underwood. Character and value of standardized tests in history.
Hist, outlook, XI (June) 231-236. [146
Reprinted from the School review, XXVII, December 1919.
Eugg, Earle Underwood. Supervised study in history. Hist, outlook, XI (Apr.)
142-149. [147
Schlesinger, Arthur Meier. The history situation in colleges and universities, 1919-
20. Hist, outlook, XI (Mar.) 103-106. [143
Schlesinger, Arthur Meier. The problem of teaching recent American history.
Hist, outlook, XI (Dec.) 352-355. [149
Ishambaugh, Bertha M. H. Newspaper history. Palimpsest, I (Aug.) 33-46. [150
jSiebert, Wilbur H. The future of the Ohio Valley historical association. Ohio
msT. teach, jour., no. 19 (Nov.) 183-189. [150a
Suggests plans for the future of th« association and lines of research that may be taken up.
111124°— 23 ^3
1
10 AMEEICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Staples, Laurence C. Education for citizenship. Hist, outlook, XI (Feb.) 85-86 j
[15l|
Stockton, J. Lewis. Teaching current events. Hist, outlook, XI (Jan.) 13-15;!
and Texas hist, teach, bul., VIII (Feb.) 76-81. [162 j
Sullivan, James. Federating and affiliating local historical societies. N. Y. state!
HIST. ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 1919, 100-107. [163 i
Super, Charles William. Rewriting American history. Americana, XIV (Oct ) I
309-338. [1541
Taylor, Raymond G. Some sources for Mississippi Valley agricultural history. Miss, i
Valley hist, rev., VII (Sept.) 142-145. [165
Texas. Dept. of education. Texas high schools; history and the social sciences.!
Annie Webb Blanton, state superintendent of public instruction. Mrs. R. L.'
Ragsdale, supervisor of public high schools. Issued by the Department of education, i
state of Texas. [Austin] 48 p. plates. (Bulletin 124. October 15, 1920) [156]
Thayer, William Roscoe. Fallacies in history. Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan.) 179-^
190. [167
Thomas, C. C. The study of history. Teach, jour., XIX (Jan.) 233-235. [158 i
Thompson, Lillian W. The effects of the 1917 course of study on the status of history] _is
in the high school of Chicago. Hist, outlook, XI (Mar.) 122-123. [169(
Tighe, Benjamin Charles B. The bias of history. Hist, outlook, XI (Apr.) 139-
140. [160
Tramond, Joannds. Les conceptions historiques du President Wilson. Rev. mari-
time, n. 8., no. 12 (Dec.) 721-740. [161
A review of Woodrow Wilson's History of the American people, which has recently been translated
into French by M. Desire Roustan, and published in Paris, 1918-1920.
Tyler, Lyon Gardiner. Propaganda in history. Richmond: Richmond press. 19 p.
[162
Mainly a protest against the estimation of the influence of the Pilgrims, and the treatment of Lin-
coln's greatness in many historical writings.
Veineau, Ilen6. L'evolution des etudes americanistes depuis 1895. Soc. Amer.
Paris jour., n. s. XII, 206-211. [163
Brief review of the activities of the Societe des Americanistes of Paris, in research in American his-
tory and ethnalogy of the prehistoric and early historic periods, since the foandation of the society in
1895.
Violette, E. M. After-the-war reorganization of history in the normal school. Miss.
Valley hist, assoc. proc, X, pt. 1, 162-170. [164
Wagner, C. A. Principles of method in teaching history. Pa. school jour., LXVIII
(Jan.) 356-358. [165
Wanger, Ruth. Teaching social economics. Hist, outlook, XI (Mar.) 118-119.
[166
Way, R. B. Reconstructed courses in history in the colleges. Miss. Valley hist.
ASSOC. PROC, X, pt. 1, 171-179. [167
Weatherly, Josephine. The correlation of history and literature. Teaching, V,
no. 4 (Oct.) 12-16. [168
Williams, Pelagine. The history teacher's opportunity. Teaching, V, no. 4 (Oct.)
8-9. [169
AMERICA IN GENERAL.
Aboriginal America — Antiquities.
Alabama anthropological society. Handbook of the Alabama anthropological society,
1920. ^ Comp. by the president. Montgomery, Ala.: The Brown print, co. 60 p.
(Publications of the Alabama state department of archives and history. Historical
and patriotic series) [170
Aboriginal towns in Alabama: p, [42]-54. Bibliography of material available in Montgomery: p.
[55h58.
Allen, Glover M. Dogs of the American aborigines. Cambridge, Mass.: Printed for
the Museum. [3], 432-517 p. (Bulletin of the Museum of compai*ative zoology at
Harvard college, v. LXIII, no. 9) [170a
1 "An attempt is made here to gather what information the earlier travellers recorded as to the appear-
Iance of the dogs of the American aborigines, and so far as may be, to characterize the various breeds
that can be distinguished."
Anderson, Rasmus B. Another view of the Kensington rune stone. Wis. mag.
HIST., Ill (Apr.) 413-419. [171
Presents evidence against the genuineness of the runic inscription.
Baudoin, Marcel. Discussion sur Fan tiquite de Fhomme de V^ro (Etats-Unis). Soc.
PREHIST. FRAN^. BUL., XV, 1918, 478. [172
Birket-Smith, Kaj. Some ancient artefacts from the eastern United States. Soc.
Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 141-169. [173
Describes an Indian tomahawk, globe-headed clubs, pipes, and pipe-bowls, preserved in the Ethno-
graphical collection of the National museimi in Copenhagen.
Bloom, Lansing B. Archaeological explorations in northeastern Arizona. Palacio,
VIII (Jan.) 20-24. [174
JBloom, Lansing B. Pre-historic villages. Palacio, VIII (Jan.) 30-34. [176
I Notes regarding prehistoric pueblos of the Southwest.
JBrown, Charles E. Algonkian artifacts. Wis. archeol., XIX (Jan.) 25-27. [176
jBushnell, David Ives, jr. Native cemeteries and forms of burial east of the Missis-
■ sippi. Washington: Gov. print, off. 160 p. illus., plates. (Smithsonian insti-
tution. Bureau of American ethnology. Bulletin 71) [177
I Bibhography: p. 149-155.
bolton, liarold Sellers. Did the so-called cliff dwellers of central Arizona also build
"hogans"? Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (July) 298-301. [178
ibummings, Byron, The national monuments of Arizona. Art and archeol., X
(Aug.) 27-36. [179
National monuments which conserve archaeological ruins.
belabarre, Edmund Burke. The inscribed rocks of Narragansett Bay. R. I. hist.
soc. COLL., XIII (Jan., July) 1-28, 73-93. [180
I I. The Mount Hope rock. II. The Portsmouth rocks.
pelabarre, Edmund Burke. Recent history of Dighton rock. Col. soc. Mass. pub.,
XX, 286-462. [181
I A comprehensive summary of all the investigations and discussions of the inscription on this rock
■ from the time of Rafn's inquiries in 1829 to the present. Takes up first the Norse theory of the inscrip-
tion; second, the opinion that the inscription was wrought by aboriginal inhabitants, to which theory
the writer gives his support. There are in all thirty-three different theories, which are here enumerated
Bibhography of Dighton rock: p. 438-462.
elabarre, Edmund Burke, and Harris H. Wilder. Indian corn-hills in Massachu-
sette. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (July) 203-225. [182
a study of remains of small mounds or hiUs in which the Indians planted their maize and other
crops.
)orrance, Ethel, and James Dorrance. The Mesa Verde Park and its prehistoric ruins.
MuNSEY's, LXXI (Oct.) 90-98. [183
11
f
12 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Farabee, William Curtis. A newly acquired wampum belt. Univ. op Penn. mus.
JOUR., XI (Mar.) 77-80. [184
Fewkes, J. Walter. New Fire house, a ruin lately excavated in the Mesa Verde.
Art and archaeol., X (Aug.) 44-46. [186
Fletcher, Alice C. Prayers voiced in ancient America. Art and archaeol., IX I
(Feb.) 73-75. [186 I
Fox, George R. A minor mystery of Michigan archeology. Mich. hist, mag., IV
(Apr.) 583^87. [187
Regarding a prehistoric man-made pit near Galien township, and the question as to the purpose for
which it was made. I
Gerend, Alphonse. Sheboygan county. Wis. archeol., XIX (Aug.) 121-192. [188 j
Sketch of the archaeology of Sheboygan county, Wisconsin. 1
Harrington, M. R. An archaic Iowa tomahawk. [N. Y.: Museum of the American i
Indian, Heye foundation] [4], 55-58 p. plate. (Indian notes and monographs, v '
X, no. 6) ' [189 I
Harrington, M. R. A bird-quill belt of the Sauk and Fox Indians. [N . Y. : Museum I
of the American Indian, Heye foundation] [4], 47-50 p. plates. (Indian notes and 1
monographs, v. X, no. 5) [190 j
Represents the period of Indian art before the introduction of glass beads by the white people. It I
was considered a powerful amulet and to confer warlike powers on its wearer. I
Harrington, M. R. Certain Caddo sites in Arkansas. N. Y.: Museum of the Ameri- '
can Indian, Heye foundation. 349 p. illus., plates, maps. (Indian notes and '
monographs) [191 j
Harrington, M. R. Old Sauk and Fox beaded garters. N. Y.: Museum of the |
American Indian, Heye foundation. [4], 39-41 p. plate. (Indian notes and '
monographs, v. X, no, 4) [192 [
Harrington, M. R. A sacred warclub of the Oto. N. Y.: Museum of the American j
Indian, Heye foundation, p. 25-27. plate. (Indian notes and monographs, v. i
X, no. 2) [193 j
A type of weapon once widespread among the tribes bordering the plains area to the east.
Hewett, Edgar L. Antiquities of Colorado. Art and archaeol., X (Aug.) 39-43. [194
Hodge, Frederick Webb. The age of the Zuni pueblo of Kechipauan. N. Y.: Mu- i
seum of the American Indian, Heye foundation, p. 45-60. plates. (Indian notes I
and monographs, v. Ill, no. 2) [196 i
Kechipauan was one of the "Seven cities of Cibola," made famous by the first Spanish explorers of i
New Mexico. I
Hodge, Frederick Webb. Hawikuh bonework. N. Y.: Museum of the American i
Indian, Heye foundation, p. 65-151. illus., plates. (Indian notes and mono- |
graphs, V. Ill, no. 3) [196 '
Represents the result of observations on a class of artifacts found at the ruins of Hawikuh, |
New Mexico. ;
Holand, H. R. Further discoveries concerning the Kensington rune stone. Wis. I
MAG. msT., Ill (Jan.) 332-338. [197 j
Hooton, Earnest Albert. Indian village site and cemetery near Madisonville, Ohio,
by Earnest A. Hooton; with notes on the artifacts by Charles C. Willoughby,
Cambridge, Mass.: The Museum, vii, 137 p. illus., plates. (Papers of the Pea- j
body museum of American archaeology and ethnology, Harvard umversity, v. VIII, \
no. 1) [198
Hough, Walter. Exploration of a pit house village at Luna, New Mexico. U. S.
Nation, mus. proc, LV, 409-431. [199 ;
Hue, Edmond. L'homme fossile de V^ro, Floride, Etats-Unis. Soc. prehist. i
FRANf. BUL., XV, 1918, 319-336. [200 !
Keyes, Charles R. Some materials for the study of Iowa archaeology. Ia. jour.
msT., XVIII (July) 357-370. [201 |
Kidder, A. V. Ruins of the historic period in the upper San Juan valley, New '
Mexico. Am. AxNthrop., n. s. XXII (Oct.) 322-329. [202 \
1920. 13
Lawson, Publius V., and S. A. Barrett. The ancient city of Aztalan. Wis. archeol.,
XIX (Jan.) 7-15. [203
Circular in the interest of the preservation of Aztalan, an ancient Indian city in Wisconsin, issued
by Publius V. Lawson, chairman of the Statelandmarks committee of the Wisconsin historicalsociety
and Dr. S. A. Barrett, president of the Wisconsin archeological society , January 1920.
McElwee, W. E. Aboriginal remains in Tennessee. Tenk. hist, mag., VI (Oct.)
200-205. [204
Means, Philip Ainsworth. Distribution and use of slings in pre-Columbian America,
with descriptive catalogue of ancient Peruvian slings in the United States National
museum. U. S. Nation, mus. proc, LV, 317-349. [205
Moore, Clarence B. Shell implements from Florida. Acad. nao. hist. bol. (Quito)
I (July) 1-3. [206
Nelson, N. C. The archaeology of the Southwest; a preliminary report. Palacio,
VIII (July) 175-179. [207
From the proceedings of the National academy of sciences.
A summary account based upon the Archer M. Huntington survey of southwestern United States
conducted by the American museum of natural history. The full report will be pubUshed by the
Museum.
Nilsson, Martin P. Primitive time reckoning; a study in the origins and first de-
velopment of the art of counting time among the primitive and early culture peoples.
Lund: C. W. K. G-leerup. xiii, 384 p. (Skrifter utgivna av humanistiska Vetens-
kapssam fundet i Lund, I) [208
Oetteking, Bruno. Morphological and metrical variation in skulls from San Mi^el
Island, California, i. The sutura nasofrontalis. N. Y.: Museum of the American
Indian, Heye foundation. [4], 51-85 p. illus., plates. (Indian notes and mono-
graphs, V. VII, no. 2) [209
Orchard, William C. Sandals and other fabrics from Kentucky caves. N. Y.:
Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation. 20 p. illus., plates. (Indian
notes and monographs . . .) [210
[Orr, Rowland B.] New accessions to Museum. In Toronto. Ontario Provincial
museum. Thirty-second annual archaeological report, 1920. Toronto: Printed
and published by Clarkaon W. James, p. 86-102. [211
Parker, Arthur C. The mound builder culture in New York. -In The University of
1 the state of New York. New York state museum. Fifteenth report of the director
of the State museum and Science department . . . Albany: The University of
the state of New York. p. 283-292. (N. Y. state mus. bul., nos. 219, 220) [212
feabody, Charles. Quelques connexites entre la pr^histoire am^ricaine et euro-
p^ene. Soc. prehist. pran^. bul., XVI (Feb. 1919) 134-139. [213
epper, George Hubbard. Pueblo Bonito. N. Y.: Pub. by the trustees [of the
American museum of natural history] [4], 398 p. illus., plates, maps. (Am. mus.
1 nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XXVII) [213a
Report upon certain arGhaeologicai excavations at the ruined Pueblo Bonito in Chaco Cafion, north-
western New Mexico.
Notes on Pueblo Bonito, by N. C. Nelson: p. 381-390.
?epper, George Hubbard. A stone effigy pipe from Kentucky. [N. Y.: Museum of
the American Indian, Heye foundation] 20 p. illus., plates. (Indian notes and
monographs, v. X, no. 1) [214
'rovlne, W. A. Some early archeological finds in Tennessee. Tenn. hist, mag.,
I V (Jan.) 216-228. [216
leagan, Albert B. Who made the Kayenta National monument ruins? Am. an-
throp., n. s. XXII (Oct.) 387-388. [216
Ruinsin the Kayenta region of Arizona,
javille, Foster H. A Montauk cemetery at Basthampton, Long Island. [N. Y.:
Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] p. 63-102. illus., plates,
(incl. maps). (Indian notes and monographs ... v. II, no. 3) [217
Describes the skeletons found there, also aboriginal artifacts and articles received through trade with
the English.
Ichaefer, Francis J. The Kensington rune stone. Cath. hist, rev., VI (Oct.)
330-334. [218
Ihetrone, H. C. The culture problem in Ohio archaeology. Am. anthrop., n. s.
XXII (Apr.) 144-172. [219
14 AMERICAN HISTOKICAL ASSOCIATION.
Skinner, Alanson. An antique tobacco-pouch of the Iroqonis. [N. Y.: Museum of
the American Indian, Heye foundation] 107-108 p. plates. (Indian notes and
monographs, v. II, no. 4) [220
Skinner, Alanson. Archeological investigations on Manhattan Island, New York
city. N. Y.: Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation. [4], 125-218 p.
plates (incl. maps). (Indian notes and monographs, v. II, no. 6) [221
Skinner, Alanson. An Illinois quilled necklace. N. Y.: Museum of the American
Indian, Heye foundation. [4], 33-34 p. plate. (Indian notes and monographs,
V. X, no. 3) [222 _
Skinner, Alanson. An Iroquois antler figurine. N. Y.: Museum of the American |
Indian, Heye foundation. [2], 113-114 p. plate. (Indian notes and monographs, i
V. II, no. 5) [223
Skinner, Alanson. A native copper celt from Ontario. N. Y. : Museum of the Amer- \
ican Indian, Heye foundation. 6 p. plate. (Indian notes and monographs . . .) [
[224 I
Describes a copper celt found in an Attiwandaron or Neutral Indian cemetery at Saint Davids, I
Ontario. I
Skinner, Alanson. Two antler spoons from Ontario. N. Y. : Museum of the American '
Indian, Heye foundation. 6 p. plate. (Indian notes and monographs . . .) [225 j
Describes two carved antler spoons obtained from graves in Attiwandaron or Neutral cemeteries in
Ontario.
Skinner, Alanson. Two Lenape stone masks from Pennsylvania and New Jersey, i
N. Y.: Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation. 7 p. plates. (Indian j
notes and monographs . . .) [226 I
Somers, A. N. Prehistoric cannibalism in America. Wis. archeol., XIX (Jan.) '
20-24. [227 j
Reprinted from the Popular science monthly, v. XLII, December 1892.
Sterling, William T. A visit to Aztalan in 1838. Wis. archeol., XIX (Jan.) 18-19,
Aztalan, an ancient Indian city in Wisconsin.
Walter, Paul A. F. National monuments of New Mexico. Art and archeol., X
(Aug.) 7-26. [229
National monuments which conserve archaeological remains. i
Wardle, H. Newell. The Indian knoll. Am. Ind. mag., VII (Aug.) 30-38. [230 ;
Describes the relics unearthed from the site of an ancient Indian village in Kentucky, long known as :
"The Indian Knoll".
Wardle, H. Newell. Iron ore artifacts from Alabama. Phila. acad. nat. sci. proc, ,
LXXII, pt. 2, 209-213. [231
Describes a collection of artifacts of peculiar form and unusualmaterial,from Bloimt county, Alabama,
owned and discovered by Mr. E. S. Ginnane, a local private collector.
Waterman, Thomas Talbot, and Geraldine Coffin. Types of canoes on Puget Sound.
N. Y.: Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation. 43 p. illus., plates.
(Indian notes and monographs . . .) [232 I
Describes the types of canoes used by the aborigines of the North Pacific coast. i
Wheaton, Harriet, and Charles E. Brown. The dedication of the Fort Atkinson I
intaglio. Wis. archeol., XIX (Nov.) 197-208. [233
An account of the dedication of the IndianintagUo effigy, a "monument to therehgion of the Indians",
near Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, June 5, 1920.
Wilson, Olive. The survival of an ancient art. Art and archaeol., IX (Jan.) 24-29. ;
[234 I
The pottery industry of the Indians of New Mexico and Arizona. '
Wissler, Clark. Prehistoric man. Mentor, VIII, no. 2 (Mar. 1) 1-11. [235 |
Aboriginal America — Indians. See also Antiquities, j
Barce, Elmore. The savage allies of the Northwest. Ind. mag. hist., XVI (June) ,
152-171. [236 i
A sketch of the allied Indian tribes in the Old Northwest during the 18th century. |
Boas, Franz. The classification of American languages. Am. antheop., n. a. XXII ]
(Oct.) 367-376. [237
If
WRITIiq^GS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 15
Boas, Franz. The social organization of the Kwakiiitl. Am. anthrop., n. s.XXII
(Apr.) 111-126. [238
Bolton, Reginald Pelham. New York city in Indian possession. N. Y.: Museum of
the American Indian, Heye foundation. [4], 223-395 p. facsims., map. (Indian
notes and monographs, v. II, no. 7) [239
Cadzow, Donald A. Native copper objects of the copper Eskimo. N. Y.: Museum
of the American Indian, Heye foundation. 22 p. plates. (Indian notes and
monographs) [240
The culture of the American Indian: its regional distribution and origin. Geoq.
REV., X (Oct.) 262-266. [241
Gushing, Frank Hamilton. Zuhi breadstuff. N. Y.: Museum of the American
Indian, Heye foundation. 673 p. illus., plates. (Indian notes and monographs,
V. VIII) [242
Davis, Edward H. The Papago ceremony of vikita. N. Y. : Museum of the American
Indian, Heye foundation. [4], 157-177 p. plates. (Indian notes and mono-
graphs, V. Ill, no. 4) [243
Densmore, Frances. The sun dance of the Teton Sioux. Nature, CIV (Jan. 1)
437-440. [244
Farabee, William Curtis. Indian cradles. Univ. op Penn. mus. jour., XI (Dec.)
183-211. [245
Fehlinger, H. Die Indianer Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika. Naturwissen-
scHAFTEN (Berlin) II, 1914, 1068-1071. [246
Fewkes, Jesse Walter. Sun worship of the Hopi Indians. In Smithsonian institu-
tion. Annual report . . . 1918. Washington: Gov. print, off. p. 493-526. [247
Fewkes, Jesse Walter, and Charles Mindeleff. Indian tribes of the Southwest;
antiquities, arts and habits of modern and extinct races. Western mag., XV
(Jan.-Feb.) 4-7, 61-64. [248
Frachtenberg, Leo J. Eschatology of the Quileute Indians. Am. anthrop., n. s.
XXII (Oct.) 330-340. [249
"It is the study of eschatology, the investigations conducted into the beliefs, held by primitive races,
concerning after-life and the composition of the human being, which reveal to us the deepest and
minutest philosophical thoughts of primitive man."
Goddard, P. E. The cultural and somatic correlations of Uto-Aztecan. Am. an-
throp., n. 8. XXII (July) 244-247. . [250
A study of a linguistic group in North America, united under the name of Uto-Aztecan. It con-
sists of three linguistic subdivisions, the Shoshonean, the Piman, and the Nahuatl.
Godsell, P. H. The Ojibway Indian. Thunder Bay hist. soc. rep., X, 21-29.
[251
Grinnell, George Bird. Who were the Padouca? Am. anthrop., n. a. XXII (July)
248-260. [252
The writer is convinced that the Padouca Indians mentioned in accounts of early exploration in
the West, were not Comanche and is disposed to regard them as Aj)ache.
Guernsey, S. J. Notes on a Navajo war dance. Am. anthrop.. n. s. XXII (July)
304-307. [253
Gummere, Amelia M. Papunahung, the Indian chief. Friends' hist. soc.
BUL., IX, no. 3, (May) 114-118. [254
Hammond, J. Hugh. Contareia or Kontarea or Contarea and St. Jean Baptiste
mission. In Toronto. Ontario provincial museum. Thirty-second annual
archgeological report, 1920. Toronto: Printed and published by Clarkson W.
James, p. 48-53. [266
Establishes the location of the Huron village Contareia, visited by Champlain in 1615, and of the
Jesuit Mission de Saint Jean Baptiste in the Huron country.
Hartley, Marsden. Red man ceremonials; an American plea for American esthetics.
Art and archaeol., IX (Jan.) 7-14. [256
Hawkes, Ernest W. The mound builders. So. workm., XLIX (Dec.) 563-566.
[257
Hewitt, J. N. B. A constitutional league of peace in the stone age of America. The
league of the Iroquois and its constitution. In Smithsonian institution. Annual
report . . . 1918. Washington: Gov. print, off. p. 527-545. [258
16 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOlir.
Holmes, W. H. On the race history and facial characteristics of the aboriginal Ameri-
cans. Art and archaeol., IX (Feb.) 77-89. [269
Hooper, Lucile. The Cahuilla Indians. Berkeley: Univ. of California press, p
[315]-380. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol., XVI, no. 6) [260
Hough, Walter. The cliff dweller housekeeper. Am. Ind. mag., VII (Aug.) 7-10.
[261
Houghton, Frederick. Are there evidences of an Iroquoian migration west of Lake
Erie? Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (July) 293-297. [262
Houghton, Frederick. The history of the Buffalo Creek reservation. Buffalo
HIST. soc. PUB., XXIV, 4-181. [263
The Seneca Indian reservation in the valley of Buffalo Creek.
Kate, Herman F. C. ten. De Indiaan in de letterkunde. De Gids (Amsterdam)
LXXXIII Jaarg., 1919 (July) 63-128. [263a
A study of the American Indian in literature, discussing among many others, the storiesof James
Fenimore Cooper, Longfellow's "Hiawatha," and the writings of Chateaubriand which treat of the
Indians.
Eroeber, Alfred Louis. California culture provinces. Berkeley: Univ. of California
press, p. [151]-169. map. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. and ethnol., v. XVII,
no. 2) [264
Kroeber, Alfred Louis. Games of the California Indians. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII
(July) 272-277. [266
Kroeber, Alfred Louis. Yuman tribes of the lower Colorado. Berkeley: Univ. of
California press, p. [475]-485. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. and ethnol.,
V. XVI, no. 8) [266
Kroeber, Alfred Louis, and Thomas Talbot Waterman, eds. Source book in anthro-
pology. Berkeley: University of California press. 565 p. illus. (University of
California. Syllabus series, no. 118) [267
"Intended as the basis for study in courses of instruction in general anthropology."
The extracts relating to American anthropology are the following.— The type of tne half-breed Indian,
by Franz Boas. Habitat and food plants of the Coahuilla Indians, by David Presoott Barrows. The
origin and distribution of agi-iculture in America, by H. J. Spinden. The influence of the horse in the
development of Plains culture, by Clark Wissler. Architecture of the ancient Maya, by W. H. Holmes.
American Indian basket weaves, by Otis T. Mason. Costumes of the Plains Indians, by Clark Wissler.
Eskimo society, by Franz Boas. Marriage and society among the Crow Indians, by Robert H. Lewie.
The Iroquois gens, by Lewis H. Morgan. The gentile system of the Omaha, by J. Owen Dorsey. Miwok
moieties, by Edward Winslow Gifford. The potlach of the Kwakiutl Indians of Vancouver Island, by
Franz Boas. Warfare of the Plains Indians, by George Bird Grinnell. The decorative art of the Indians
of the north Pacific coast, by Franz Boiji The book of the life of the ancient Mexicans [Codex Magll-
abecchl] translated by T. T. Waterman. The Dakota elk ceremony, by Alice C. Fletcher. Magic formu-
las of the Hupa Indians, by P. E. Goddard. The creation according to the Maidu Indians of California,
by R. B. Dixon. ThecreationaccordingtotheTUngit Indians of southern Alaska, by John R. Swanton.
La Flesche, Francis. The svmbolic man of the Osage tribe. Art and archaeol.,
IX (Feb.) 68-72. ' [268
A study of Osage tribal rites and ceremonials.
Lawson, Publius V. The Potawatomi. Wis. archeol., XIX (Apr.) 41-116. [269
LeVasseur, N. Une tribu sauvage pen connue. Soc. g^og. Quebec bul., XIV
(Mar.) 100-102. [270
Notes on the Hopi Indians.
Loewenthal, John. Ein Bestallungsbrauch der Potawatomie und Ottawa. Arch.
Religionswissenschaft, XVII, 1914, 671-672. [271
Loev/enthal, John. Ein Zauberglaube der Pawnee. Arch. Religionswissen-
schaft, XVII, 1914, 672-673. [272
Mason, J. Alden. The Papago harvest festival. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (Jan.)
13-25. [273
Describes one of these ceremonies of the Papago Indians of the Santa Rosa valley.
Moss, Claude Russell. Kankanay ceremonies. Berkeley: Univ. of California
press, p. [343]-384. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. and ethnol., v. XV, no. 4)
Pach, Walter. The art of the American Indian. Dial, LXVIII (Jan.) 57-65. [276
Pach, Walter. Notes on the Indian water-colours. Dial, LXVIII (Mar.) 543-345.
[278
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 17
Parsons, Elsie Clews. Notes on ceremonialism at Laguna. N. Y.: The Trustees
[of the American museum of natural history] [2], 85-131 p. illus. (Am. mus.
nat. hist, anthrop. pap., v. XIX, pt. 4) [277-8
Potler, Pierre. Manuscripts. In Ontario. Bureau of archives. Fifteenth report
of the Bureau of archives for the Province of Ontario . . . 1918-1919. Toronto:
Printed and published by Clarkson W. James, xiii-xix, 1-782 p. [279
The valuable manuscripts here given in facsimile, date from 1743 to 1744 and were written at Lorette
by the Rev. Pierre Potier, whose name is inseparably associated with the mission to the Huron Indians
in the Sandwich and Detroit district.
Ms. no. 1. Elementa grammaticae Huronicae. Ms. no. 2. Radices Huronicae. Ms. no. 3. Extraits
de L'evan^eld. Ms. no. 4. Account book of the Huron mission at Detroit and Sandwich (1740-1751)
by Frs. Riehardie and Pierre Potier. Translation and notes by Richard R. Elliott.
Preusse-Sperber, O. Die Zivilisierung undNutzbarmachung der Indianer Amerikas.
Ibero-am. Gesellsch. Mitteil., II, 1919, 33-45. [280
Primitive beliefs and superstitions of the Hurons and Algonquins. In Toronto.
Ontario Provincial museum. Thirty-second annual archaeological report, 1920.
Toronto: Printed and published by Clarkson W. James, p. 9-18. [281
Eadin, Paul. The autobiography of a Winnebago Indian. Berkeley: Univ. of
Cal. press. 381-473 p. (Univ. of Cal. pub. Am. archaeol. and ethnol., v. XVI,
no. 7) [282
Autobiography of a Winnebago Indian obtained by the writer of the present article.
The red man as the supreme artist of America. Current opinion, LXVIII (Mar.)
388-390. [283
Eichards, Clarice E. (Jarvis). Indian legends of Colorado. Am. lib. assoc. bul.,
XIV (July) 203-210. [284
Schmidt, P. W. Die Kulturhistorische Methode und die nordamerikanische Eth-
nologie. Anthropos, XIV-XV, 546-563. [285
Skinner, Alanson. Medicine ceremony of the Menomini, Iowa, and Wahpeton Da-
kota, with notes on the ceremony among the Ponca, Bungi Ojibwa, and Potawatomi.
N. Y.] Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation. 357 p. illus., plates.
(Indian notes and monographs, v. IV) [286
Snov/shoes, 7n Toronto. Ontario Provincial museum. Thirty-second annual archae-
ological report, 1920. Toronto: Printed and published by Clarkson W. James,
p. 19-36. [287
Speck, Frank G. Decorative art and basketry of the Cherokee. Milwaukee, Wis.:
Pub. by order of the Trustees. [2], 55-86 p. plates. (Bulletin of. the Public
museum of the city of Milwaukee, v. II, no. 2. July 27, 1920) [288
Stevens, O. A. Uses of plants by the Indians. Science, n. s. LII (July 30) 99-101.
[289
Stock, Harry Thomas. A resume of Christian missions among the American Indians.
Am. jour, theol., XXIV (July) 368-385. [290
Sullivan, Louis K. Anthropometry of the Siouan tribes. Nation, acad. sci. proc,
VI (Mar.) 131-134. [291
Thompson, Lucy. To the American Indian. Eureka, California [The author] 1916.
[291a
"This volume of over two hundred pages on the Yurok of northwestern, California is written and
published by a full-blooded Yurok woman. It is a valuable contribution to the world's knowledge of
a specialized culture of which available descriptions are few." c/. Ana. anthrop., n. s. XXIII (Apr. 1921)
220-221.
Valletti, Marc F. Is the American Indian of Asiatic origin? Am. Cath. quab.
rev., XLV (Apr.) 294-320. [292
The writer supports the Asiatic theory of the origin of the American Indian.
Falter, Paul A. F. The fiesta of Santa Fe. Art and archaeol., IX (Jan.) 15-23.
[293
A three days' festival at Santa Fe, devoted to the presentation of Pueblo Indian scenes, ceremonials
and religious drama.
aterman, Thomas Talbot. The whaling equipment of the Makah Indians. Seat-
tle, Wash. : The University. 67 p. illus., plates. (University of Washington pub-
lications in political and social science, v. I, no. 1. June 1920) [294
18 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOI^. j
Wissler, Clark. Arctic geography and Eskimo culture; a review of Steensby's work.
Geog. rev., IX (Feb.) 125-138. [295 ,
The work referred to is "An anthropogeograpliical study of the origin of the Eskimo culture, by I
- H. P. Steensby," published in Meddelelser cm Gronland (Copenhagen) v. LIU, 1917. !
Wissler, Clark. The Indian and the horse. Am. Ind. mag., VII (Aug.) 20-26.
[296
CJoncerning the origin of the horse in America and the manner in which horses were utilized by the '
Indians. j
Wissler, Clark. North American Indians of the plains. N. Y. [American museum of 1
natural history] 164 p. illus., plates, maps, plan. (American museum of natural j
history. Handbook series no. 1 (2d ed.)) [2S6a |
1st ed. pub. in 1912. In this 2nd edition a chapter on "The chronology of plains culture" has been j
added. [
Aboriginal America — Mexico, Central America, West
Indies, and South America.
Alexander, Hartley Burr. Latin -American [mythology] Boston: Marshall Jones co.
xvi, 424 p. illus., plates (part col., incl. front., map, facsims.) (The mythology
of all races . . . L. H. Gray . . . editor ... v. XI) [297
"Native Indian myths of Mexico and of Central and South America." — Introd.
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (Nov.) 576-579.
Barker, Ruth Laughlin. An ancient city in the new world. Pan-American mag., ■
XXX (Apr.) 281-285. [298 I
The preliistoric Maya city of Quirigua in Guatemala. I
Benners, Ethel Ellis. Ancient Peruvian textiles. Univ. of Penn. mus. jour., XI 1
(Sept.) 140-147. [299 j
Beyer, Hermann. Una pequena colecci6n de antigiiedades mexicanas. Mexico \
ANTiGUO, I (Apr.) 159-197. [300 i
A description, with illustrations, of 65 archaeological specimens from Mexico.
Breton, A. C. An ancient Mexican picture-map. Man, XX (Feb.) 17-20. [301
Describes a relic of ancient Mexican art, a picture-map on a piece of woven material, now contained 1
in the British museum. |
Breton, A. C. The ancient picture-map in the British museum. Man, XX (Sept.) '
143-144. [302 I
Additional note regarding the map described in the February number of "Man." See no. 301 above. :
Bunt, Cyril G. E. Studies in Peruvian textiles. Burlington mag., XXXVI (Mar.- I
Aug.) 127-128, 189-190. [303 |
A study of brocades and embroideries of ancient Peru.
Capitan, Louis. Les sacrifices humaines et I'anthropophagie rituelle chez les anciens '
Mexicains. Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 211-217. [304 i
Cr6qui-Montfort, Georges, comte de, and Paul Rivet. La langue Uru ou Pukina. \
Internat. Arch. Ethnog., XXV, 87-113. [306 |
Cuervo M^rquez, Carlos. Prehistoria y^ viajes; estudios arqueol6gicos y etnogrdficos i
americanos. Madrid: Editorial -America. 2 v. [306
2d ed., rev. and enl. * ;
Czaplewski, Eugen. Amerikanische Ausgrabungen in Mittelamerika [Yucatan] |
Deutsche Gesells. Anthrop. Korresp., LI. Jahrg., 45-46. [307
Delachaux, Theodore. Poteries anciennes de la Colombie. In Fuhrmann, Otto, I
and Eugene Mayor. Voyage d 'exploration scientifique en Colombie. Neuchatel: ;
Attinger fr^res, 1914. (Soci^t^ neuchateloise des sciences naturelles. Memoires,
t. V) p. 1071-1037. [308 ;
De Ward, Sable. An American Babylon. Pan-American mag., XXXI (July)
109-117. [309 I
A description of the prehistoric ruins of Tiahuanacu, Bolivia.
Donoho, Mary Brown. Uxmal, "times past." Pan-American mag., XXXI (June) i
55-60. [310
Sketch of the prehistoric Maya ruins at Uxmal, Yucatan.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 19
Farabee, William Curtis. Ancient American gold. Univ. of Penn. mus. jour.,
XI (Sept.) 93-129. [311
Describes numerous objects comprising the main part of two collections recently acquired by the
Museum. The first represents all of the ancient American gold-working civiUzations from Mexico to
Peru, and the second collection consists of a group of objects recently excavated in the mountains near
Ayapel, Antiquoia, Colombia.
Froidevaux, Henri. La station des Trois-Rivieres (Guadeloupe) et sea p^troglyphes.
Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. a. XII, 127-140. [312
Gaither, S.. B. Government and jurisprudence of the Mexicans before the Spanish
conquest. Va. law rev., VI (Mar.) 422-^40. [313
An analysis of the ancient laws of the Aztecs.
Gamio, Manuel. Las excavaciones del Pedregal de San Angel y la cultura arcaica
del Valle de Mexico. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (Apr.) 127-143. [314
Data on the archaic culture of the Valley of Mexico, remains of which have lately been discovered.
The writer concludes that they represent an Otomi cultm-e.
Gamio, Manuel. Recent archeological discoveries in Teotihuacan. Pan. Am. union
BUL., LI (Dec.) 596-604. [316
Translation of an article printed in La Revista ethnos, of Mexico. Also published in Spanish in the
Bolotin de la Uni<5n panamericana, LI (Dec.) 611-620.
Gerigk, Alfred. Die Bilderschrift der Azteken. Welt und Wissen (Berlin) V, 1914,
303-305. [316
Gibson, Herbert, and Leonard Cooper. Rock carvings on the Upper Paraguay river.
Man, XX (Apr.) 55-58. [317
Gonggrijp, J. W. Sporen van voorhistorische bewoners van Suriname. West-
Indische Gids, II, no. 1 (May) 1-16. [318
Gordon, George Byron. A marble vase from the Ulua river valley, Honduras. Art
AND ARCHAEOL., IX (Mar.) 141-145. [319
A prehistoric vase, the product of an ancient American culture contemporary with the Maya empire.
Harcourt, E-aoul d', and Marguerite d'Harcourt. La musique dans la Sierra Andine
de La Paz a Quito. Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 21-48. [320
A study of Indian music, ancient and modem, based on researches among the Indians of Peru.
Eeger, Franz. Sonderbar stilisierte Menschenfigur auf der Innenseite einer seit-
lichen Endplanke eines Holzkanus aus Franzosische Guayana. Anthrop. Gesells.
WiEN Mitteil., XLVI., 1916, 177-179. [321
Heger, Franz. Zeremonial- oder Prunkaxt aus Bronze aus dem Gebiete der Diagitas-
Kultur des nordwestlichen Argentiniens. Anthrop. Gesells. WifiN Mitteil.,
XLVI., 1916. 180-182. [322
Korschelmann, Werner von. Die Brasiliensammlung Spix und Martins. MiJnchnes
Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst, 1918-1920, fasc. ni-iv. [323
"Berichte des Museums iiir Volkenkimde (Ethnograph. Mus.) in Miinchen, hrsg. von L. Scherman,
VII, 1918-1920."
Jij6n y Gaamafio, Jacinto. Nueva contribuci6n al conocimiento de los aborigenes de la
I provincia de Imbabura de la republica del Ecuador. Soc. ecuatoriana estud.
hist. am. bol., IV (Jan.) 1-120. [324
A continuation of a study on the same subject published at Madrid (Blass y cia.) in 1912.
Josselin de Jong, J. P. B. de. De beteekenis van het archaeologisch onderzoek op
Aruba, Curasao en Bonaire. West-Indtsche Gids, Iste jrg., no. 2. [326
Josselin de Jong, J. P. B. de. The praecolumbian and early postcolumbian aborig-
inal population of Aruba, Curasao, and Bonaire. Internat. Arch. Ethnog., XXV,
1-26. [326
Contents.— Part I. Tho archaeological objects; preliminary comparative notes— Pottery.
Cont. from v. XXIV, 1918.
Karsten, Hafael. Beitrage zur Sittengeschichte der Siidamerikanischen Indianer.
Abo: Abo Akademi [Helsingfors: Druckerei der Finnischen Literatur-Gesellschaft]
[2], 104 p. illus. (Acta Academiae Aboensis, Humaniora 1:4) [327
Contents.— Das Pfeilgift der Stidamarikanischen Indianer. Berauschende und Narkotischo
Getranke uater den Indianern Siidamerikas. Zoremoniello Spiele unter den Indianem Siidamerikas.
20 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION". j
Karsten, Rafael. .Contributions to the sociology of the Indian tribes of Ecuador.
Three essays. Abo: Abo Akademi [Helsingfors: Printed by the Finnish literary
society] 75 p. (Acta Academiae Aboensis, Humanlora 1:3) [328
Contents.— Ideas and customs relating to agriculture among the Jibaros and Canelos Indians of
eastern Ecuador. Himting and fishing among the Ecuatorian Indians, Birth customs and ideas of
supernatural birth among some Indian tribes of eastern Ecuador. i
Karsten, Rafael. Studies in South American anthropology, I. Helsingfors [Finska i
vetenskap-societeten] viii, 232 p. (Oversigt av Finska vetenskaps-societens |
forhandlinger, bd. LXII, no. 2) [329 '
A contribution to the social anthropology and art, as weU as to the religion and magic of the South
American Indians, particular attention being paid to the religious or superstitious side of their customs,
Zreiohgauer, P. D. Alt- und neuweltliche Kalendar. Anthropos, XIV-XV,
578-580. [329a
Kreichgauer, P. D. Die Klapptore am Rande der Erde in der altmexikanischen
Mythologie und einige Beziehungen zur alten Welt. Anthropos, XII-XIII,
1917-1918, 272-312. [330
Kreichgauer, P. D. ''Medea" in alten Mexiko. Anthropos, XII-XIII, 1917-1918,
1115-1117. [331
Kreichgauer, P. D. Studien zum aztekischen Codex Borbonicus besonders iiber
dessen Astronomic. Anthropos, XII-XIII, 1917-1918, 497-512. [332
Loewenthal, John. Ein altmexikanisches Gottesurteil. Zeits. vergleich. Rechts- i
wissENS., XXXVII, 462^73. [332a [
Loewenthal, John. Tabu-Riten im altmexikanischen Strafrecht. Zeits. vergleich. i
Rechts WISSENS., XXXVII, 446-461. [332b \
I. Der Diebstahl an Gold und Edelsteinen, II. Der Diebstahl an Maiskolben. I
Mead, Charles W. A prehistoric poncho from Nazca, Peru. Natural hist., XXII [
(Sept.) 466-467. [333 i
Describes a tapestry poncho from Nazca, Peru, recently purchased for the American museum of |
natural history, N. Y. ;
Moodie, Roy L. Studies in paleopathology: ancient skull lesions and the practice '
of trephining in prehistoric times. Surgical clinics of Chicago, III, no. 3 (June 1
1919) 481-496. [334
Trephining in ancient Peru; p. 490-494.
Moodie, Roy L. Studies in paleopathology: the diseases of the ancient Peruvians, i
and some account of their surgical practices. Surgical clinics of Chicago, IV '
no. 1 (Feb.) 211-231. [336 i
Morley, Sylvanus Griswold. The inscriptions at Copan. Washington, D. C: The
Carnegie institution of Washington, xii, 643 p. illus., plates, map, fold, plans,
diagrs. (Carnegie institution of Washington. Publication no. 219) [336
"The present investigation is limited to a consideration of the chronological data found in the Copon
inscriptions." p. 33.
Bibli(^aphy: p. 617-628.
Appendices: A petrographic description of the material of the Copan monuments, by Fred E. Wright.
The correlation of Maya and Christian chronology. The nomenclattire of the Copan monuments. A
description of the ruins of Copan, by Diego Garcia de Palacio, in 1576. A description of the ruins of
Copan, by Francisco Antonio Fuentes y Guzm^Uj in 1689. The supplementary series. The hotun.
List of monuments marking the hotun-endiags durmg the Old Empire. The provenance and dates of
the Copan monuments. List of day-signs and month-signs found in the Copan mscriptions. A descrip-
tion of the ruins of Copan, by Juan Galindo in 1834. The distribution of the several branches of the
Mayance linguistic stock, by William Gates.
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (Aug.) 388-392.
Nimuendaju, Curt. Bruchstiicke aus Religion und Uberlieferung der Sipaia-Indianer;
Beitrage zur Kenntnis der Indianerstamme des Xingti-Gebietes, ZentralbrasiUen.
Anthropos, XIV-XV, 1002-1039. [336a
Nordenskiold, Erland. The changes in the material culture of two Indian tribes under
the influence of new surroundings. [London, N. Y., etc.: Humphrey Milford,
Oxford university press] xvi, 245 p. illus., plates, maps. (Comparative ethno-
graphical studies, II) [337
An ethno-geographical analysis of the civilization of two Indian tribes, the Chiriguano and the Chan6.
dwelling ia the southern part of Bolivia and northern part of Argentina. The Chiriguano are Guarani
Indians and the Chan6 are Guaranlzed Arawaks.
1920. 21
Palacios, Enrique Juan. What the hieroglyphics of the great monu tnent of Xochicalco
Bay. Jn Toronto. Ontario Provincial museum. Thirty-second annual archaeologi-
cal report, 1920. Toronto: Printed and published by Clarkson W. James, p.
55-65. [338
Interpretation o fthe hieroglyphs on the ruins of the ancient Toltec temple of Xochicalco, in Mexico.
Paul, George F. A visit to the pyramids of San Juan Teotihuacan, colossal monu-
ments of the Aztec kings. So. American, VIII (Oct.) 23, 27. [339
Preuss, Karl, Theodor. Forschungsreise zu den Kdgaba-Indianern der Sierra Nevada
de Santa Marta in Kolumbien; Beobachtungen, Textaufnahmen-und linguistische
Studien. Anthropos, XIV-XV, 314-404, 1040-1079. [339a
Radin, Paul. The sources and authenticity of the history of the ancient Mexicans-
Berkeley: University of California press. 150 p. plates. (University of Cali-
fornia publications in American archaeology and ethnology, v. XVII, no 1) [340
Rocheraux, Henri. Les Chitarera, anciens habitants de la region de Pamplona,
Colombie. Soc. Ambr. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 55-63. [341
Rock, Fritz. Die Gotter der sieben Planeten im alten Mexiko und die Frage eines
alten Zusammenhanges toltekisch«r Bildung mit altweltlichen Kultursystemen.
Anthropos, XIV-XV, 1080-1098. [341a
Roys, Ralph L. A Maya account of the creation. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (Oct.)
360-366. [342
It is found on plates 60, 61, and 62 of the Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel (Phila.: University
museum, 1913) (university of Pennsylvania. The Museum. Anthropological publications, v. V)
De mines van Mitla. Aarde, LVI, 1-7. [343
Salas, Julio C. Etnografia americana. Los indios caribes. Estudios sobre el origen
del mito de la antropofagia. Barcelona: Talleres grdf. "Lux." 233 p. [344
Sapper, Karl. Die Bevolkerung Mittelamerikas. Strassburg, 1914. 32 p. (Schriften
der Wissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft in Strassburg, XXII. Heft) [345
Saville, Marshall Howard. The goldsmith's art in anoient Mexico. N. Y.: Museum
of the American Indian, Heye foundation. 264 p. illus., plates. (Indian notes and
monographs) [346
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., IV (Aug. 1921) 498-499.
Schuller, Rudolf. Der Verfasser des Codex Magliabecchi. Anthropos, XIV-XV,
1137-1138. [846a
Schuller, Rudolf. Zur sprachlichen Verwandtschaft der Maya-Qu'its^ mit den
Carib-Aruac. Anthropos, XIV-XV, 465^91. [347
Seler, Eduard. Der Mythus der Symplegaden bei den Altmexikanern. Peter-
MANNS MiTTEIL., LXVI (Oct.) 229. [848
sepultures indiennes. A l'aventure (Paris) I, 452^53. [349
Skinner, Alanson. An image and an amulet of nephrite from Costa Rica. [N. Y.:
Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] [4], 111-113 p. plates.
(Indian notes and monographs, v. VI, no. 4) [350
Skinner, Alanson, Notes on the Bribri of Costa Rica. [N. Y.: Museum of the
American Indian, Heye foundation] 41-106 p. illus., plates. (Indian notes and
monographs, v. VI, no. 3) [351
A study of the cultural position and organization of the Bribri Indians, belonging to the Chibehan
stock.
Sommer, Frederico. Stone inscriptions and escutcheons. Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII
(Oct.) 388-391. [362
Translated by B. F. Schappelle. . .
Ck)neemed mainly -with investigations in the field of Brazilian stone inscriptions.
Spence, Lewis. The hieroglyphs of Central America. Discovert, I (Dec.) 369-374.
[353
Spence, Lewis. The origins of Mexican mythology. Discovery, I (June) 182-185.
364
Spence, Lewis. The origins of Mexican mythology. Edinburgh be v., CCXXXII
(Oct.) 342-360. [355
Not the same article as no. 354, but the subject matter is similar.
22 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. I
!
Spinden, Herbert J. Central American calendars and the Gregorian day. Nation.
ACAD. SCI. PROC, VI (Feb.) 56-59. [366 ;
Brings out the important fact of the practical identity of the Mayan and Aztecan time counts, as 1
demonstratod when brought together after each has been correlated to the Gregorian day. j
Spinden, Herbert J. The Stephens sculptures from Yucatan. Natural hist., XX I
(Sept.) 379-389. [367 i
Describes some choice examples of Maya art brought from Yucatan by John Lloyd Stephens about '
1841, and now preserved in the American museum of natural history, New York.
Termer, Franz. Ein Beitrag zum religiosen und kulturellen Leben der Guaimi-
Indianer im 16. Jahrhundert. Deutsche Gesells. Anthrop. Korresp.,
L. Jahrg., 1919, 52-55. [358 i
Termer, Franz. Ueber den Landbau im alten Mexiko. Naturwissenschaptliche i
Wochenschrift (Jena) n. f. XIX, nr. 47, 740-744. [358a i
XThle, Max. Apuntes sobre la prehistoria de la region de Piura. Soc. ecuatoriana
estud. hist. am. bol., IV (Jan.) 165-167. [359
TJrteaga, Horacio H. The throwing stick of ancient Peru. Pan Am. union bul.,
L (Apr.) 415-419. [360
English version of an article published in " Varledades" of Lima, Peru. Also published in Spanish
in the Boletin dela Unidn panamericana, L. (Feb.) 165-170.
Valletti, Marc F. Some points in the history of ancient Mexico that are not mythical.
Am. Cath. quar. rev., XLV (Oct.) 601-624. [361
Vemeau, Ken6. Statuettes en lave du Nicaragua. Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s.
XII, 195-198. [362
Describes four statuettes made of lava, found among ruins in the vicinity of Momotombo,
Nicaragua.
Vemeau, Een6. Sur la repartition en Am^rique des poteries decorees au "champ-
lev6". Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 1-10. [363
A study of ancient pottery of Mexico and South America decorated by the process of "champlevage"
Discovery and Exploration.
Alfonce, Jean i. e. Jean Fonteneau. _Les || voyages auantureux || dv capitaine Ian
Alfonce, Sainctongeois. || Auec Priuilege du roy.[| A Poitiers, au Pelican, par Ian
de Marnef [1559] [Boston, 1920] facsim.: 8 p. 1., 136 leaves. 25«^. [Americana
series; photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 10]
[364
Collation of original work: 4 p. 1., 88 numbered leaves.
"This appears to be the first issue of the undated edition . . . " — Church catalogue, t. I, p. 256.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the Henry E. Himtington library, Feb-
ruary 1920.
Alvord, Clarenc3 Walworth. An unrecognized Father Marquette letter. Am. hist.
RBV., XXV (July) 676-680. [366
Identifies the writer of a letter in the collection of the Duke of Portland at Welbeck Abbey, signed
Jacobus Macput, as Father Marquette. The letter is endorsed "Copy of Latin letter receiv'd by Coll.
Bird in Virginia in the winter 1675 [1673] from a Jesuit dated 4th August 1675 [1673] . . ."
Babcock, William H. Antillia and the Antilles. Geog. rev., IX (Feb.) 109-124.
[366
The writer concludes that the Antillia known to explorers of the pre-Columbian period, "was really,
as now, the queen of the Antilles."
Babcock, William H. The problem of Mayda, an island appearing on medieval
maps. Geog. rev., IX (Apr.) 335-346. [367
The writer concludes that Mayda was probably west of the middle Atlantic and that Bermuda,
Cape Cod, or Cape Breton is a likely candidate for identification.
Bayle, C. El centenario de Magallanes. Raz6n y pe, LVIII (Nov.) 308-325. [368
Backer, Jerfinimo. Diario de la primera partida de la demarcacion de limites entre
Espaiia y Portugal en America, precedido de un estudio sobre las cuestiones de
limites entre Espaiia y Portugal en America. Real soc. geog. bol., LXII, nos.
1-4, supplement, 80 p. [369
BeltrSn y RSzpide, Bicardo, and Antonio Bl^zquez y Delgado-Aguilera. Cronica del
Emperador Carlos V, compuesta por Alonso de Santa Cruz, su cosmografo mayor y
publicada por acuerdo de la Real acad^mia de la historia. Madrid: Imprenta de
nu^rfanos de intendencia 6 intervenci6n militares. xii, 541 p. [370
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 23
BIggar, H. P. The portrait of Champlain. Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 379-380.
[371
Shows that the portrait of Champlain which until rocently passed as authoutic is spurious.
Blfizquez y Delgado Aguilera, Antoaio. Fernando de Magallanea, Descripci6n de las
costas desde Buena Eeperanza a Leyquitos. Gin^s de Mafra, Descubrimiento del
Estrecho de Magallanes. Anonimo, Descripci6n de parte del Japon. Publicadaa
por acuerdo de la Real sociedad geografica. Madrid: Eatablecimiento tip. de Tor-
rent y c*. 221 p. (Biblioteca de historia hispano-americana, IV) [372
Copies of three unpublished documents from the collection in the Biblioteca nacional, Madrid. The
first is a "descripci6n de los reinos, costas, puertos e islas quo hay dosde el Cabo de Buena Esperanza
hastalos Leyquitos ".and is attributed to Magellan; the second is an account of the voyage of Magellan
probably by Gin^s de Mafra; and the third is a brief description of the coasts of Japan, which is probably
the earliest Spanish accovmt of Japan.
[Biazquez y Delgado-Aguilera, Antonio] Participacion de Espana en los grandes
descubrimientosdelglobo. Rev. geog. col. ymerc, XVII (Nov.) 385-387. [373-4
A list of 24 Spanish discoveries in the New world, 1345-1606.
Callender, Geoffrey. Was Drake guilty of murder? Discovert, I (Oct.) 293-300.
[376
A discussion of Drake's responsibility in ordering the execution of Thomas Doughty, who had plotted
against him, while on the voyage of circumnavigation.
Calzada, Rafael. La patria de Colon. Buenos Aires: Judn Roldan, editor, Librerla
"LaFacultad". 258 p. plate, facsims., map. [376
The writer believes that existing evidence proves that Columbus was a native of Gallcia, in Spain.
Catholic church. Pope. (Alexander VI) Copia dela bula dela concession q hizo
el papa Alexandre sexto || al Rey Z ala Reyna nuestros senores: delas Indias. || . . .
Datis rome apud sanctu || petru Anno incarnationis diiice millessimo quadring-
entessimo nonagessimo tertio quarto nonas maij pontificatus nfi anno primo. ||
[Alcala? Amaldo Guillen de Brocar? 1511? Boston, 1920] facsim.: 3 leaves.
45i X 29"°' fold, to 26 x 19*^=^. [Americana series; photostat reproductions by the
Massachusetts historical society, no. 12] [377
"... The famous Bull of Alexander VI dividing the newly discovered world between Spain and
Portugal ... As Conchillos became bishop of Catania in. . . 1509, and was translated . . . 1512,
Mr. A. W. Pollard believes this document was printed at Alcaic . . . about 1511, by Amaldo Guillen
de Brocar."— Catalogue of the John Carter Brown library in Brown imiversity. 1919. v. I, p. 51.
Reproductions of copies of the original broadsides in the John Carter Brown library and the Library
of Congress.
Ten copies reproduced, March 1920.
I Chapman, Charles E. Gali and Rodriguez Cermenho: exploration of California.
SouTHw. HIST. QUAR., XXIII (Jan.) 204-213. [378
Concerned with the voyage of Francisco de Gali^ commander of the Manila galleon of- 1584, and that
of Sebastian Rodriguez Cermenho, commander of tne galleon in 1595, to explore the coast of California.
Chapman, Charles E. Sebastian Vizcaino: exploration of California. Southw.
HIST. QUAR., XXIII (Apr.) 285-301. 379
An account of the two expeditions sent out from New Spain under the command of Sebastian Viz-
caino, in 1598 and 1602, for the purpose of exploring the California coast.
[Colombo, Cristoforo] Epistola de insulis noui || ter repertis. Impressa parisius In
campo gaillardi. || [1493 or 1494. Boston, 1920] facsim.: 9 leaves, illus. [Amer-
icana series ; photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no . 17]
[380
c/. Bibliographical notices. . . libr. of . . . John Carter Brown; Harrisse, Bibl. amer. vetus.; Major,
The bibliog. of the first [1] letter of . . . Columbus.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the Bodleian library. May 1920.
Compafila general de tabacos de Fillplnas. Colecci6n general de documentos rela-
tives a las Islas Filipinas existentes en el Archivo de Indias de Sevilla. Tomo III
(1519-1522). Barcelona [Imprenta de la viuda de Luis Tasso] vi, 383 p. [381
The documents here given relate in general to Magellan's voyage of circuminavigation.
Copie d'vne lettre || missive envoyee avx gov || uemeurs de la Rochelle, par les Capi-
taines jj des Galleres de France, sur la victoire au'il || ont obtenues centre les Mores
& Sau- [I uages, faisant le voyage de I'lsle de jl Floride, & du Bresil. |[ Ensemble
les manieres des viures tant des 1| Mores que les Sauuages, plus la traison || qu*^
voulu faire vn soldat des Nauires Fra- || goises, se disant truchement tant des Fran
11 gois que des Sauuages. Suyuant la coppie imprimee fi la Ro- || chelle par lean
JPortau. 1583. [Boston, 1920] facsim.: 8 numb, leaves. [Americana series;
photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 16] [382
Imperfect: all after 8th leaf wanting. John Carter Brown library has "Reprint. 12 p. 8'."
One of 10 photostat copias reproduced from the original in the BibIioth6que nationale, May 1920.
24 AMERICAIT HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Dark, Richard. The quest of the Indies. Oxford: Basil Blacktvell. xii, 241 p. ■
illus. (maps), plates, ports. [383
DePuy, Henry F. An early account of the establishment of Jesuit missions in Amer- I
ica. Am. antiq. soc. proc, n. s. XXX, pt. 1, 62-80. [384
Calls attention to an authoritative source as to the Jesuit missions — the Life of Francisco de Borja,
the third general of the Jesuits, written by Father Ribadeneyra and printed in Madrid in 1592. Re-
prints, in translation, the story of the attempt to establish the mission in Florida. |
Doublet, Edouard-Lucien. Les grandes d^couvertes maritimes du xv et xvi si^cle.
Bordeaux: Imp. J. Bi^re. 12 p. [335
Extract from the Revue de geographic commerciale, Bordeaux.
Esteves Pereira, Francisco Maria, ed. Cartas de Americo Vespucci. Soc. geog.
LiSBOA BOL., XXXVIII (Jan.) 3-6. [386
Contents. — Quarta viagen.
CoEft. from V. XXXVII, 1919.
Exqnemelin, Alexandre Olivier. Histoire des aventuriers, des boucaniers, et des
filibustiers d'Amerique, par A. (Exmelin. [Paris: Editions de La Sirene] 254 p.
illus. (incl. map and plan). (Collection des belles aventures. [i]) [387
"Traduite du hollandais."
Originally written in Dutch and first published in Amsterdam in 1678 under the title of "De Ameri-
caensche zee-roovers".
Fern&ndez Navarro, Lucas. L'6tat actuel du probleme de I'Atlantide. Rev. gen.
SOI. PURES ET APPLiQUEES, XXVII (July 30, Aug. 15, 1916) 425-429, 459-466. [387a
Fiore, L. B. La scoperta dell' America e gli umanisti del cinquecento. Arpino
[Italy] Tip. Arpinate. 62 p. [387b
Froidevaxix, Henri. Am6rique; la tradition colombienne de la d6couverte de I'Amer-
ique. Geographie, XXIV (July) 142-143. [388
Glorieuses decouvertea des grands navigateurs et explorateurs frangais. [Paris]
Tolmer, impr.-editeur. 32 p. maps. [389
Brlaf biographies of Cartier, La Salle and Lap6rouse. Written for children.
Gould, Alicia B. de. Nuevos datos sobre Colon y otros descubridores. Real acad.
HIST. BOL., LXXVI (Mar.) 201-214. [390
Great Britain. Foreign office. Historical section. Discoveries and acquisitions in
the Pacific. London: H. M. Stationery off. [8], 35 p. (Handbooks ... no. 139)
[390a '
Peace handbooks, v. XXII [no. 1]
G. W. Prothero, general editor.
The gres^ age of exploration (to about 1648): p. 4-13. Transition, 1648-1787: p. 13-19. ■
Gumma y Marti, Alfred. La participation beige au premier voyage de circum-
navigation. Soc. ROY. BELGE GEOG. BUL., XLIV, 283-241. [391
Harris, W. R. Etienne Brule, the man who broke the trail to Georgian Bay. In
Toronto. Ontario Provincial museum. Thirty-second annual archseological report, 1
1920. Toronto: Printed and published by Clarkson W. James, p. 38-47. [392 |
Harte, Walter J. Sir Francis Drake. London: Society for promoting Christian
knowledge. 64 p. (Pioneers of progress: Empire builders) [393
Henderson, W. A. The adventures of De Sota. Tenn. hist, mag., VI (July) 3-13.
[394
Concerned with the discoveries of Ferdinand de Soto, here spelled Sota.
Hernandez-Pinzfin y Ganzinotti, Jos6. Vicente Yaiiez Pinzon; sus viajes y des-
cubrimientos. IMadrid: Imp. del Ministerio de Marina. 72 p. [395
Ispiztia, Segundo de. Juan Sebastian de Elcano o del Cano? Cultura hispano-
AMERicANA, afio IX (Nov.) 14-17. [396
Leclercq, Jules. La d^couverte de 1 'Amerique par les Islandais. In Acad^mie
royale de Belgique. Bulletin de la classe des lettres et des sciences morales et
politiques . . . 1914— no. 5. Bruxelles, 1914. p. 249-256. [397
The writer concludes that Icelanders did discover America before Columbus, but that their expedi-
tion had no influence upon the destinies of the world.
Lloyd, Mary. Historic ships. Americana, XIV (July) 227-250. [398
Notes cotucdrulug sliips connected with the discovery and early settlement of America.
WRITIlirGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 25
Lnmmls, Charles F. Alvar Nlinez Cabeza de Vaca. Cultura hispano-americana,
afio IX (June) 39-45. [399
From his "Los exploradores espafioles delsiglo xvi" (Barcelona, 1916; English original, Chicago, 1893,
pub. under title: The Spanish pioneers).
Mazorriaga, Luis Gregorio. Francisco Pizarro. Barcelona: R, Sopena [1920?] 73 p.
ilhis., col. plates. (Biblioteca recreativa (historia)) [400
Merino, Abelardo. Inscripcion de la lapida colocada en Triana (Sevilla) para con-
memorar la salida de la expedicion que descubrio el estrecho de Magallanes. Rev.
GEOG. COL. Y MERC, XVII (Apr.) 116-132. [401
Replies to a letter written by Sr. D. Genaro Cavestany, Nov. 24, 1919, in which ho pointed out two
errors in the inscription on the monument mentioned above, the first criticism relating to the designa-
tion of the strait of Magellan as connecting the "Mar del Sur" with the "Mar del Norte"; the socond
referring to the statement that Magellan set out with the intent of finding the strait between the two seas
Sefior Merino believes the criticisms to be imfounded.
Miller, iimile. La d^couverte de la terre; les grands voyageurs du xii^ si^cle — L'evo-
lution de la g^ographie ^ la fin du moyen age. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIV
(Nov.) 259-272. [402-3
This installment ia concerned with the period of New world discoveries.
Oliger, Llvarius. The earliest record on the Franciscan missions in America, Cath.
HIST. REV., V (Apr.) 59-65. [404
Contributes, with notes, a copy of the contemporary accovmt of the first Franciscan missions in Amer-
ica, as it was written down at Niirnberg between 1508 and 1509 by the Franciscan chronicler Nicholas
Glassberger. It treats of the first endeavor made by the Franciscans to convert the inhabitants of the
West Indian islands.
Pastells, Pablo, and Constantino Bayle. El descubrimiento del Estrecho de Magal-
lanes. Madrid: Sucesores de Rivadeneyra. plates. [405
In commemoration of the 400th anniversary of the discovery.
Payne, Frank Owen. Our memorials of Columbus. Munsey's, LXXI (Oct.) 23-31.
[406
[Peckham, Sir George] A true reporte of the late discoveries and possession taken in
the right of the crowne of England e, of the Newfound landes: by that valiaunt and
worthy e gentleman, Sir Humfrey Gilbert, knight. Wherein is also breefely sette
downe Her Highness' lawfuU tytle thereunto, and the great and manifold e com-
modities that is likely to grow thereby to the whole realme in generall, and to the
adventurers in particular. Together with the easiness and shortness of the voyage.
Seene and allowed. At London, Printed by I. C. for lohn Hinde, dwelling in
Paule's church-yarde, at the signeof the Golden hinde. Anno. 1583. [Tarrytown,
N. Y.: Reprinted, W. Abbatt, 1920] 59 p. [The Magazine of history with notes
and queries. Extra number 68 [pt. 1]] [407
Pedreira Deibe, Felipe. La patria de Colon. Real soc. geog. bol., LXII, 432-436.
[408
Pissurlancar, Panduranga S. S. Recherches sur la d^couverte de I'Amerique par
les anciens hommes de rinde. Sanquelim-Goa [India] 22 p. [409
orter, Peter A. Niagara's earliest Indian legend of the white man. Grosvenor
LIB. bul., Ill (Dec.) 20-26. [410
From an Indian legend handed down in Seneca traditions, the writer deduces evidence to prove that
La Salle was the discoverer of Chautauqua Lake and Niagara Falls, both in 1669.
ovinciae sive || regiones in India || occidentali novi || ter repertae in || vltima
na- II vigatio- || ne: || [n. p., 1520. Boston, 1920] facsim. :_ 27 leaves. [Americana
Beries; photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 20] [411
Contains an account of the conquest by Diogo Velasquez of Cuba, from a Spanish relation as yet
unknown. </. Catalogue of the John Carter Brown library. 1919. v. I.
One of 10 photostat copies from the original in the John Carter Brown library, June 1920.
odriguez Navas, Manuel. Aclaraciones historicas acerca del descubrimiento de
America. Cultura hispano-americana, ano IX (Aug.) 4-8; (Sept.) 1-10; (Oct.)
5-10; (Nov.) 3-9; (Dec.) 4-12. [413
Items regarding Columbus and his voyages taken from contemporary manuscripts and documents.
odriguez Navas, Manuel. Juan Sebastian de Elcano, 4 de agosto de 1526. Cul-
tura hispano-americana, ano IX (Mar.) 8-11. [413
odriguez Navas, Manuel. Magallanes. Cultura hispano-americana, ano IX
(Jan.) 37-42. [414
onsset, Ricardo TJ. Crist6bal Col6n y el descubrimiento del nuevo mimdo. Re-
vista bimestre cubana, (Havana) (Sept.-Nov.) 185-202, 245-268. [41.")
111124'— 23 4
26 AMEEICAK HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Bufino, Eicardo. Diego VeUzquez de Cu^llar. Cultura hispano-americana
ano IX (Apr.) 37-39. [416
Bufino, Bicardo. Francisco Pizarro. Cultura hispano-americana, aiio IX (May)
39^2. [417
Bufino, Bicardo. Sebastian de Belalcdzar. Cultura hispano-americana, ano IX
(Jan.) 46-^9. [418
Butot, A. Pourrait-on retrouver les mines de la capitale des Atlantes? Bruxelles:
Hayez, imprimeur de TAcademie royale. 37 p. plans, map. (Academic royale
de Belgique. Classe des Beaux-Artes. M^moires, t. II, fasc. 1) [419
The writer believes that the lost Atlantis of Plato is to be identified as the region now known as I
Morocco, Algeria, and Tunis, and attempts to locate the ruins of Cerne, the capital of Atlantis, in this
region. He suggests that the prehistoric Toltecs of Mexico may have been the American descendants
of the inhabitants of the Atlantis of the ancients. ' !
Saville, Marsliall H. The earliest notices concerning the conquest of Mexico by*
Cortes in 1519. [N. Y.: Museum of the American Indian, Heye foundation] 54 p. 1
(Indian notes and monographs ... v. IX, no. 1) [4201
Bibliographical account of earliest letters describing the conquest of Mexico. I
Souchon, Paul, and Jean Tild. Christophe Colomb, In their Les grand es figures del
rhumanit^. Paris: Hachette. p. 64-75. [421
Spain. Sovereigns (Ferdinand V and Isabella I). Este es traslado bien y fielmente!
sacado de vna carta de priuilegio delos ca- tolicos reyes don Fernando y doiia Ysabel j
de gloriosa memoria: escrito en pergamino de cuero r firmado de sua reales nombresj
librado t firmado delos del su muy alto consejo r sellado con su real sello de ploraoj
pendiente en filos de seda a colores segun que enellos se contiene: su tenor del
qual es este q se sigue. [Burgos, 1497. Boston, 1920] facsim.: 8 leaves. [Ameri-j
cana series; photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. '
15] [422
Royal latter confirming the "privileges" of Christopher Columbus in the land discovered by him.
One of 10 photostat copies from ths original in th--^ poss^^ssiou of th? Duquesa de Berwick y de Alba.
Sprague, John Francis. Norombega. Spraque's jour. Maine hist., VIII (Aug.)!
91-96. [423-4!
[Vespucci, Amerigo] Mundus nouus. [Florence? 1503? Bostx)n, 1920] facsim. :j
8 leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts his-t
torical society, no. 18] [425 1
At head of text: Albericus vespucius Laurentio Petri de medicis salutem pluriraam dicit.
For description of the work cf. llarrisse, Bibl. amer. vetus., no. 22. For place and date of publication,
cf. Vignaud, Amcric Vespuce ... p. 8, no. 1.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the New York public library, June 1920 . i
[Vespucci, Amerigo] Mundus nouus. [Paris] Denis Roce [1503? Boston, 1920] I
facsim.: 16 leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproductions by the Massa-
chusetts historical society, no. 14] [426
Below the title is the printer's device of Denis Roce. Date in ms. 1503?
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the New York public library, April 1920.
An accovmt of the third voyage, probably printed in 1503 or 1504.
[Vespucci, Amerigo] Mundus nouus. [Paris?] Gilles de gourmont [1507? Boston,
1920] facsim.: 16 leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproductions by the
Massachusetts historical society, no. 9] [427'
Below the title is the printer's device of Gilles ae Gourmont. Date in ms.: 1507?
"We are inclined to afilx a comparatively late date [150|] to this edition of what seems . . . the first 1
duplicate of Vespuccius' third voyage. Gilles de Gourmont was a Paris printer . . . We can find !
no dated work of his bearing an earlier imprint than 1507 . . . Bnmot says that this Vespuccius 'doit I
6tre do I'ann^e 1504 k peu pres.' "— E'arrisse, Bibl. amer. vetus., no. 28.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the New York public library, February ,
1920. !
[Vespucci, Amerigo] I^iundus nouus. Albericus Vesputius Laurentio Petri de'
medicis Salutem plurimam dicit. [Nuremberg? 1504. Boston, 1920] facsim.:'
8 leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts his- 1
torical society, no. 22] [428 1
For description cf. Harrisse, Bibl. amer. vetus., no. 24; and Vignaud, Americ Vespuce, 1451-1512. '
no. 3.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the New York public library, August 1920.
Vignaud, Henry. The Columbian tradition on the discovery of America and of the !
part played therein by the astronomer Toscanelli; a memoir addressed to the
professors Hermann Wagner of the University of Gottingen and Carlo Errara of
Bologna. Oxford: The Clarendon press. 62 p. [489
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 13»-140.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 27
Vignaud, Henry. La tradition Colombienne et la d^couverte de I'Am^rique; lettrea
^ Monsieur le Professeur Carlo Errera de I'Universite de Bologne, et k rAcad^mie
des inscriptions et belles-lettres. Soo. Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 171-180.
[430
Wiener, Leo. Africa and the discovery of America, v. I. Phila,: Innes and sons,
xix, 290 p. plates, maps, facsims. [431
Concerned mainly with proving the fact of the introduction from Africa, "when the Guinea voyagers
were wafted across to Brazil", in all probability before the discovery of America by Columbus, of cer-
tain food products heretofore commonly supposed to be of Indian origin, such as yams, sweet potatoes,
manioc and peanuts, together with tobacco and the practice of smoking.
Rev. in: Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (Apr.) 17S-185; Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 102-103; Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., IV (Nov. 1921) 769-770.
Later Discovery and Exploration,
Bolt, Jolin. Bolt's log of the Columbia, 1790-1792. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LIII,
217-275. [431a
Journal ofthe voyage to the northwest coast of the ship "Columbia" of Boston, in the course of which
I the Columbia river was entered and named. The author of the joiimal was fifth officer on board the
"Colxmibia".
I The manuscript has recently been presented to the Massachusetts historical society.
Bonnecamps, Joseph Pierre de. Account of the voyage on the Beautiful river made
in 1749, under the direction of Monsieur de Celeron, by Father Bonnecamps.
Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXIX (Oct.) 397-423. [432
Reprinted from the " Jesuit Relations."
Celoron de Blainville, Pierre Joseph. C^loron's journal. Edited by A. A. Lambing.
I Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXIX (Oct.) 335-396. [433
ij Journal ofan expedition down the Allegheny and Ohio rivers in 1749. The original journal is pre-
i served in the archives ofthe D6partemente de la marine, Paris.
Fletcher, F. N. The trappers and explorers of the Great Basin. Nev. hist. soc.
pap., II, 1917-1920, 208-232. [434
The Great Basin country comprises all that portion of the United States lying between the western
) portions ofthe Rocky mountains on the east and the Sierras on the west; and between the watershed
of the Columbia river on the north and the Colorado on the south.
>albreath, C. B. The expedition of Celoron. Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar.,
I XXIX (Oct.) 331-334. [435
Expedition sent out by the Marquis de la Galissoni^re, governor-general of New France and Loiw-
i isiana, to establish more firmly the French claims to the Ohio country, in 1749.
karshall, O. H. De C^loron's expedition to the Ohio in 1749. Ohio archaeol.
and hist, quar., XXIX (Oct.) 424-450. [436
Republished from the Magazine of American history, v. II, Mar. 1878, p. 129-150.
lourelle, Francisco Antonio. Voyage of the Sonora in the second Bucareli expedi-
\ tion to explore the Northwest coast, survey the port of San Francisco, and found
Franciscan missions and a presidio and pueblo at that port; the journal kept in
1775 on the Sonora, by Don Francisco Antonio Mourelle, the second pilot of the fleet
constituting the sea division of the expedition; tr. by the Hon. Dames Barrington
i from the original Spanish manuscript; , . . San Francisco, Cal.: T. C. Russell.
I xii, 120 p. port., maps. [437
"Reprinted line for line and page for page from Barrington's Miscellanies published in London in
1781, with concise notes showing the voyages of th? earliest explorers on the coast, the sea and land
expeditions of Galvez and of Bucareli for settling California and for founding missions, and many other
1 interesting notes as well as an entirely new index to both text and notes, the de la Bodega Spanish
Carta general skowing Spanish discoveries, etc., on the coast up to 1791."
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Jan. 1922) 380-361.
ulte, Benjamin. Au lac Winnipeg, 1734. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIV (May)
140-142. [438
Treats of the explorations of La V^rendrye in the Northwest.
rgmaudan, A. H. de. Who was the Chevalier de la V^rendrye? Canad. hist.
REV., I (Sept.) 246-254. [438a
Presents evidence to show that of the four sons of La V6r«iidrye, it was the third, Frangois, who
became famous under the name of "le Chevalier".
UNITED STATES.
Description and Travel,
Akin, James. The journal of James Akin, jr., ed. by Edward Everett Dale. Norma
Okla., 1919. 32 p. illus. (map, facsims.) (University of Oklahoma bulletin, n. i
no. 172. University studies, no. 9) [4:
Describes his journey overland to Oregon from southeastern Iowa In 1852.
Bellessort, Andr6. Chateaubriand en Am6rique. Corresp., n. s. CCXLII (Mar. 1
905-926. [43!
Bolt, John. Boit's log of the Columbia, 1790-1792. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LII
217-275. [4^
Describes the voyage to the nori;hwest coast of the ship " Columbia" of Boston, in the course of whi
the Columbia river was entered and named. The author of the journal was fifth officer on board t
"Columbia." 1
The manuscript has recently been presented to the Massachusetts historical society. j
Earls, John Thomson. On the trail of the pioneers; romance, tragedy and triumpj
of the path of empire. N. Y.: George H. Doran co. xii, 15-319 p. plates, porl
maps. [4/
It is the purpose of this volmne to give glimpses of many of the great movements of population froj
the East to the West, the routes taken, and the sections to which emigrants went, rather than a detail
history of westward emigration.
Gilliam, James Skelton. A trip to the North. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneai
MAO., II (July) 294-309. [4^|
Copy of a manuscript journal, by James Skelton GiUiam, of Petersburg, Va., describing his trip I
Saratoga, N. Y., in 1816.
Jenks, Chancellor L. Following the westward star. Miss. Valley hist. assoJ
proc, X, pt. 1, 49-56. [4^
Based upon two original journals of westward emigrations, one written by Caleb Jenks in 18(
describing a pilgrimage by wagon from Providence, R. I., to Warren Center, Pa.; the second, by Livir
ston Jenks, covers his journey from Peonsylvania to the Mississippi valley in 1836.
Kelsey, Rayner Wickersham. At the forks of the Delaware, 1794-1811: chronic!
of early travel to Easton and neighboring parts of Pennsylvania and New Jerse;
including extracts from a hitherto untranslated and unpublished manuscript.
paper read at Easton, Pennsylvania, November 13, 1919, before the Northamptc
county historical and genealogical society. Haverford, Pa.: The Pennsylvan
history press, vii, 18 p. plates. [4^
Keyes, Willard. A journal of life in Wisconsin one hundred years ago. Wis. mai
HIST., Ill (Jan.-Apr.) 339-363, 443-465. [4^
Journal of the writer's trip from his home in Newfane, Vt., to the West in 1817, and of his life
Prairie du Chien, 1817-1819.
Knight, Sarah (Kemble). The ioumal of Madam Knight, with an introductory no
by George Parker Winship. Boston: Small, Maynard and co. xiv, 72 p. mai
[4^
Half-title: The private journal kept by Madam Knight, on a journey from Boston to New-Yor
in the year 1704. From the original manuscript.
First published 1825.
Lobenstine, William Christian. Extracts from the diary of William C. Lobenstin
December 31, 1851-1858; biographical sketch by Belle W. Lobenstine. [N. Y
Priv. print. 101 p. port., plate, facsim. [44|
Includes the journal of his trip from Wheeling, W. Va., to California, in 1851.
Loir, Adrien. Charles-Alexandre Lesueur, artiste et savant fran^ais en Am^riqii
de 1816 k 1839. Le Havre: Mus6um dliistoire naturelle. 108 p. 42 plates. [44i
The story of his travels in the Mississippi valley, 1816-1839, with reproductions of 42 of his sketch '
made during the trip, taken from a collection of some 1,600 of his drawings deposited ia the Mus6u:i
d'histofre naturelle, at Havre.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July) 751-752,
28
WRITINGS ON" AMERICAN HISTORY, 1900. 29
Luttlg, John C. Journalof a Jur-trading expedition on the upper Missouri 1812-1813.
Ed. by Stella M. Drumm. St. Louis: Missouri historical society. 192 p. plate,
ports., map, facsims. [449
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 839-840.
Mfimoire sur la partie occidentale du Canada, depuis Michillimackinac jusqu'au
fleuve du Mississippi. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Jan.-Feb.) 25-32, 56-64.
[450
A manuscript of unknown origpm, supposed to have been written about 1763. It describes the routes
from Mackinac to the Mississippi via the Fox river and Wisconsin, and by way of Chicago and the
lUinoiB river.
Parsons, John. A tour through Indiana in 1840; the diary of John Parsons of Peters-
burg, Virginia, ed. by Kate Milner Rabb. N. Y.: R. M. McBride and co. [8],
391 p. port., plates, facsims. [451
Perkins, Nathan. A narrative of a tour through the state of Vermont from April
27 to June 12, 1789. Woodstock, Vt.: The Elm Tree press. 31 p. port. [452
Smith, C. W. Journal of a trip to California, across the continent, from Weston,
Missouri, to Weber Creek, California, in the summer of 1850. Ed. by R. W. G.
Vail. N. Y.: Cadmus book shop. 79 p. [463
Sublette, William L. A fragmentary journal of William L. Sublette. Miss. Valley
HIST. REV., VI (June 1919) 99-100. [453a
Annotated by Harrison C. Dale.
Fragment of a journal and cash account of an expedition to the Rocky Moimtains from St. Louis, in
1843. The writer was a retired fur trader in this region.
Thompson, David. David Thompson's journeys in Idaho. Ed. by T. C. Elliott-
Wash. hist, quar., XI (Apr.-July) 97-103, 163-173. [454
Copy of the journal from Sept. 8, 1809, to Mar. 15, 1812, of David Thompson, the pathfinder for the
Northwest company during the years 1807-1812.
Tuckerman, Frederick. A horseback journey to the White Mountains in 1819.
Appalachia, XV, no. 1, 56-61. [456
Extract from the Memoir of Samuel Joseph May, Boston, 1873, giving an account of his tour of the
White Mountains and ascent of Mt. Washington by the then new Crawford path, in 1819.
Wetherell, James. Early travel on Lake Erie. Buffalo hist. soc. pub., XXIV,
375-377. [456
Extract from a letter written from Detroit, Sept. 15, 1815.
iWilde, Charlotte Endicott. Two journeys, by chaise, to the White Mountains in
I 1808 and 1809. Appalachia, XV, no. 1, 37-41. [457
j Extracts from a note-book written by William Ellis, of Dedham, Mass., in which he.had recorded
1 items regarding two trips to the White Mountains.
Williams, William. Major William Williams' journal of atrip to Iowa in 1849. Ann.
Iowa, 3d ser., XII (Apr.) 241-282. [458
The writer of this diary jeurneyed from his home in Westmoreland co., Pa^ to the West, with a
view to settlement, in 1849. The diary relates to the period of the Journey from St. Louis, Mo., to Fort
SneUiag, Minn., and on the return trip to Pennsylvania.
SVork, John. Journal of a trip from Fort Colville to Fort Vancouver and return in
1828. Ed. by William S. Lewis and Jacob A. Meyers. Wash. hist, quar., XI
(Apr.) 104-114. [469
Comprehensive.
Jamard, Howard Clive, ed. The expansion of the Anglo-Saxon nations; a short
history of the British Empire and the United States, by several contributors. Lon-
don: A. & C. Black, viii, 404 p. maps. [460
The early history of the British Empire (to 1713), by H. Clive Barnard: p. 1-53 [Concerned with
li the beginnmgs of English expansion, English colonization in North America, the West Indies and
West Africa] British North America (since 1713), by Arthur G. Dorland: p. 54^120. The United
States of America, by Lawrence H. Gipson: p. 121-185.
iirandon, Edgar E. Petite histoire des Etats-Unis d*Am6rique. Taxis: Hachette.
160 p. [461
Written for French readers, by an American in Paris.
Jrandon, Edgar E. A short history of the United States. London: Dent. 184 p.
[462
Svans, Lawton Bryan. America first: one hundred stories from our own history.
Springfield, Mass.: Milton Bradley CO. vii, 447 p. plates. [463-4
30 AMERICAIT HISTORICAL ASSOCIATTOIT. '
Koht, Halvdan. Amerikansk kultur i det nittende aarhimdred. [Kj0beiiliavT ;
Gyldendal, Nordisk forlag. ^ [8], 100 p. illus. (incl. ports.) (Det nittende aarhur'
drede skildret af nordiske videnskabsmsend, redigeret af Aage Friis, VI) [46
Contents.— Grundlaeggelsen. Rigets vekst. Samfunds-omdannelse og aandsvsekkelse. Stridei
om trseldommen. Demokratiets kulturkamp. |
Koht, Halvdan. Den Amerikanske nasjonen i upphav og reising. Kristiania: B
Aschelioug och co-. (W. Nygaard). [6], 194 p. [46'
Luckwaldt, Friedricli. Geschiclite der Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika. Berlin
Verlag der Vereinigung wissenschaftlicher Verleger. 2 v. [46;
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Oct. 1921) 127-128. |
Meyer, Eduard. Die Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika. Geschichte, Kultur, Vei;
fassung und Politik. Frankfurt a. M.: H. Keller, ix, 290p. illus., map. (Ange
wandte Geographie ... 5. ser., 1-2. Doppelhft.) [46i|
Smith, Elmer Boyd. The story of our country, N. Y. and London: Putnam. 44 p;
illus., col. plates. [46! I
Written for children. |
Wells, H. G. The outline of history, being a plain history of life and mankind I
N. Y.: Macmillan. 2 v. illus. (incl. maps). [47(1
Wilson, Woodrow. Histoire du peuple am^ricain. Traduit par Desire Roustanl
Preface de Emile Boutroux. Paris: Edit. Bossard, 1918-1920. 2 v. ports. [47]j
Text-books, Outlines, etc.
Barnes, Everett. American history for grammar grades. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] D. ci
Heath, xvii, 426, xxxii p. illus., ports., maps. [47§
1st ed. — 1913. In the present edition several chapters have been added bringing the work down u\
the year 1920.
Beard, Charles A., and William C. Bagley. A first book in American history. N. Y. j
Macmillan. xiv, 460 p. illus., maps. [473
Beard, Charles A., and William C. Eagley. The history of the American people.
N. Y.: Macmillan. xvi, 686 p. port., illus., col. plates, maps. [474
Beard, Charles A., and William C. Eagley. The history of the American people.j
Sacramento: California state printing department, xvi, 686 p. illus., port.,|
plates, maps. (California state series) [4761
Same as no. 474 above. I
Bennett, Helen B., and Joseph A. Haniphy, eds. Historical readings; an introductionj
to the study of American history. Introduction by George Burman Foster. Chicago
and N. Y.: Rand, McNally. xx, 440 p. illus., ports. [476
Burnham, Smith. The making of our country; a history of the United States for
schools, by Smith Burnham . . . illustrated with three hundred and thirty-four
engravings in black and white, fifty-one maps, and eight color plates from the
J. L. G. Ferris collection of American historical paintings, by special permission!
of the artist. Chicago, Phila. [etc.] Winston, xvi, 623 p. illus., col. plates, maps.)
[4771
[Cannon, Patrick Henry] Primary history of the United States. New, rev. ed.
N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Benziger brothers. 206 p. illus., maps. [478]
Churchill, George Morton. Historical program. D. A. R. mag., LIV (Oct.-Dec.) =
580-581,628,706. [479 1
A topical outline of American history, with references for reading. ',
I. Discovery and exploration. II. The English colonies, 16i50-1732. III. France and England in '
America, 1689-1763.
Eggleston, Edward. A first 1: ook in American history, with special reference to the [
lives and deeds of great Americans. Rev. and enl. N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Am.
bk. CO. viii, 227 p. illus., maps. [4801
A chapter relating to "America in the World war"has been added in this new edition. |
Evans, Lawton Bryan. The essential facts of American history. Rev. ed. Chicago, i
N. Y. [etc.] B. H. Sanborn, xi, 578 p. illus., maps. [481 i
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 31
Forman, S. E. The American democracy-, a text in government for use in high schools,
academies and normal schools. N. Y.: Century co. xviii, 474 p. illus. (maps),
plates, facsims., diagrs. [482
"Based onmy Advanced civics, but thechangesthat have been made are so many and so far-reacbing
that it has been thought best to give the new book a new name."— Pref.
Forman, S. E. A history of the United States for schools. Rev. ed. N. Y.: Century
CO. xi, 523 p. illus., port., maps. [483
Fox, Dixon Ryan. Harper's atlas of American history, selected from "The American
nation series " with map studies, N. Y. and London: Harper. [8], 84, [4], 101-180 p.
maps. [484
Contains 128 maps illustrative of American history. With them is a series of 27 map studies, offering
an extended course in the historical geography of the United States.
Griffith, G. L. Harlan's American history test in the New Trier township schools.
School rev., XXVIII (Nov.) 697-708. [485
Tast used in four schools of New Trier township, Illinois.
Guitteau, William Backus. Teacher's manual to accompany Our United States:
a history. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Silver, Burdett and co. 76 p. [486
Hall, E. G. A history of the United States for the grammar grades, by R. G. Hall,
Harriet Smither [and] Clarence Ousley. Dallas, Tex.: Southern pub. co. x, 520,
j xl p. illus., plate, i)orts., maps. [487
1 Hanford, James Holly. Our heritage; a study through literature of the American
tradition. Chapel Hill: The University. 51 p. (University of North Carolina
extension leaflets, [v. Ill, no. 7]) [488
The aim of this syllabus is to illustrate the forces which have gone to the upbuilding of Anglo-Saxon
civilization and to display the evolution of American life and American ideals.
] Hart, Albert Bushnell. School history of the United States. Revised. N. Y.,
1| Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 518, xxxiv p. illus. (part col., incl. maps). [489
Hill, Howard C. Political parties and the presidential campaign. Hist, outlook,
XI (Oct.) 272-276. [490
A topical outline for the teaching of the history of political parties and the presidential campaign.
Jones, Opal Rogers. History — seventh year. School news, XXXIV (Sept., Oct.,
1 Dec.) 30-34, 95-100, 220-224. [491
' Mace, William Harrison. Mace-Bogardus school history, by William H. Mace . . .
and Frank S. Bogardus. Chicago and N. Y.: Rand, McNally. xiv, 556, 63 p.
illus., maps. [492
"History of Indiana" (63 p. at end).
McMaster, John Bach. A school history of the United States. Rev. and enl. N. Y.,
Cincinnati [etc.] Am. bk. co. 504, 33 p. illus., maps. [493
Martz, Charles Ellsworth. A review of American history. [West Chester, Pa.: H. F.
Temple] 62 p. [494
i] Michigan state teachers' association. M. S. T. A. outline of Michigan history. Mich.
HIST. MAG., IV (Oct.) 765-775. [495
Montgomery, David Henry. The beginner's American history. New ed. Boston,
N. Y. [etc.] Ginn. vi, 297, xviii p. illus., plates, maps. {His Leading facts of
I history series) [496
Montgomery, David Henry. The leading facts of American history. New rev. ed.
Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Ginn. xii, 421, c. p. illus., maps. {His Leading facts of
history series) [497
Morris, Charles. An elementary history of the United States. Pennsylvania ed.
Phila.:Lippincott. xi, 380, viii p. illus., plate, maps. [498
j History of Pennsylvania: p. 291-380.
I Mnzzey, David Saville. An American history. Rev. ed. Boston, N. Y. [etc.]
Ginn. x, 537, xlvi p. illus., plates, ports., maps. [499
New Jersey. Dept. of public instruction. New Jersey geography, history and civics.
Prepared for the Department of public instruction. Trenton [The Department . . .]
47 p. [600
Contains outlines of study, m-*terial for use in connection therewith, and references to books.
32 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. j
New York (State) University. Syllabus for elementary schools. American l-istory >
. . . grades 5-6, biographic history, grades 7-8, narrative history. Albany: The!
University of the state of New York. 42 p. (Univeredty of the state of New York I
bulletin . . .no. 694. Sept. 15, 1919) [601
'* Reprint of 1910 syllabus, with additional topics." j
Percorini, Alberto. The story of America, prepared by Alberto Percorini for the
Massachusetts society of the colonial dames. Boston: Marshall Jones co. vii, I
2-237 p. [802 I
Added t.-p. in Italian. English and Italian on opposite pages. [
Intended as a text-book or reader for Italians in the United States.
I
Regents' questions and answers; American history with civics. Am. educ, XXIII 1
(Feb.) 279-281. [603 j
Rowland, Albert Lindsay. Heroes of early American history. Phila.r Franklin \
pub. CO. 224 p. illus. [504 ;
" This is a history reader for the fourth grade. Written primarily for Pennsylvania school children, ,
there is an emphasis on characters and incidents connected with the early history of Pennsylvania."—
Pref. I
A school history of the United States, abridged and comp. from the most reliable 1
sources. New rev. ed. N. Y., Cincinnati [etc.] Benziger brothers, viii, [9]-292 p. |
illus., maps. [606
Shippee, L. B. Syllabus for the study of the national period of the history of the j
United States. Minneapolis: Ferine book co. [606 e
The outline consists of sixty-three topics covering the period from 1760 to 1918. |
Smith, Clara H. A history outline for seventh and eighth grades. Sacramento: {
California state print, off. 49 p. [507 I
Thomas, S. E. U. S. history — eighth year. School news, XXXIII (Jan.-Apr.), i
274-275, 335-336, 396-397, 457-458. [608 [
Thv/aites, Reuben Gold, and Calvin Noyes Kendall. A history of the United States
foii grammar schools. [Rev. ed.] Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Houghton Mifflin, xxvi, I
519, xlii p. illus. (incl. ports.) col. plate, maps. (The Tappan-Kendall series of |
elementary histories) [509
Webster, Hutton, comp. Historical source book. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] D. C. Heath \
and CO. v, 211 p. [610 j
Supplementary reading for high-school students.
Consists of thirty-three documents selected to exhibit the historical development in England and I
America, and later on the Contineat, of constitutional and democratic govemmMit and to trace the I
growth of international law and relations. Among the documents Included are the Bill of rights, Declara- I
tion of independence. Constitution of the United States, and the Monroe doctrine. l
I
Zimmerman, Regina I. Outlines for the study of United States history. Normal
INSTRUCTOR, XXIX (Sept.) 42; (Oct.) 43; (Nov.) 40; (Dec.) 39. [611
I. European background of American history. II. The search for the Indies. III. Spain and her
rivals, 1498-1607. IV. Virginia and her neighbors.
National Characteristics and Ideals.
Canby, Henry Seidel. Everyday Americans. N. Y.: Century co. vi, 183 p. [612
Contents.— The American mind. Conservative America. Radical America. American idealism.
Religion in America. Literature in America. The bourgeois American.
Erskine, John. Democracy and ideals; a definition. N. Y.: George H. Doran co.
xi, [2], 15-152 p. [613
Reprinted in part from various periodicals.
Contents.— Democracy and ideals. American character. French ideals and American. Society
as a university. Universal training for national service. University leadership.
Fish, Carl Russell. American democracy. Minn. hist, bul., Ill (Feb.) 251-272.
[614
Gibbs, Sir Philip Hamilton. People of destiny; Americans as I saw them at home
and abroad, by Philip Gibbs. N.Y. and London: Harper. [10], 197 p. port.,
plates. [616
Halford, E. W. The nation: what it is — ^what it costs. Bergen co. hist. soc. rbp.,
XVIII, 34-42. [616
Coucornod with the moral and spiritual demands of Amerioan citizenship, not the money cost of the
nation.
WEITIITGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 33
Irvine, Leigli H. What is Americanism? An analysis of the fundamental principles
of the republic of the United States. N. Y. : Baker and Taylor co. ; Seattle, Wash. :
N. E. Coles and co. 32 p. [617
Old Colony tmst company. The spirit of America as shown by her great documents,
1620-1920. Boston, Mass.: Old Colony trust company. 99 p. [618
Consists of copies of the Mayflower compact, the Declaration of independence, Constitution of the
United States, Gettysburg address, and other documents which are expressive of the collective spirit of
the American people.
Elchardson, Jacob W. Educational ideals and Americanism. Harv. qrad. mag.,
XXIX (Dec.) 177-182. [819
Eichepin, Jean. L'ame americaine k travers quelques-uns de ses interpretes. Douze
conferences, 1918-1919. Paris: E. Flammarion. 317 p. [520
Contents.— La vielle terre des peaux-rouges. La m616e des races. La guerre d'ind6pendance—
Washington. Benjamin Franklin. Le president Abraham Lincoln. Le philosophe-poete Emerson.
Les humoristes— Marck Twain. Bret Harte et la Californie. Edgar Poe. Walt Whitman. Pontes
d'hier, d'aujourd'hui et de demain.
Territorial Expansion.
Shaw, William B. Our three centuries of expansion. Rev. of rev., LXII (Nov.)
507-510. [521
Relates to the growth of the United States, territorially and in population, since the time of the Pil-
grims.
Turner, Frederick Jackson. The frontier in American history. N. Y.: Holt. [8],
375 p. [522
Contents.— The significance of the frontier in American history. The first official frontier of the
Massachusetts Bay. The old West. The Middle West. The Ohio Valley in American history. The
significance of the Mississippi Valley in American history. The problem of the West. Dominant forces
in western life. Contributions of the West to American democracy. Pioneer ideals and the state uni-
versity. The West and American ideals. Social forces in American history. Middle western pioneer
democracy.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 542-543.
Miscellaneous.
Carroll, Mitchell. The story of our national monuments; historical introduction.
Art AND ARCHAEOL., X (July) 3-5. [523
Dodd, W. E. Nationalism in American history. Texas hist, teach, bul., VIII,
no. 2 (Feb. 15) 55-66. " [524
Fitzpatrick, John C . The * ' United States of America ' ' and the " U . S . A . " D . A . R .
mag., LIV (Jan.) 17-20. [626
The story of the official adoption of the term "Uaited States of America," and of the first official use
of the abbreviation "U. S. A.''
Halght, George I. Sketches of America and Americans. Chicago: Hanson Roach
Fowler co. [158] p. plates, ports. [528
Contents.— The Alamo. George Washington. Plymouth rock. Nathan Hale. Red Jacket.
George Rogers Clark. The battle of Bennington. A trip to Tanytown. John Paul Jones. Sam
Houston. Abraham Lincoln. Our Supreme court.
Hunter, William Howard. The collection of historical coins and medals relating to
American history, the Dominion of Canada and awards to Indian chiefs and British
regal and war medals formed by W. H. Hunter . . . and described by S. H. Chap-
man; and to be sold at auction in his rooms . . . Philadelphia, . . . December 9
and 10, 1920. [Federalsburg, Md.] 92 p. [527
Lawrence, Frederick W. The origin of American state names. Nation, geoq. mag.,
XXXVIII (Aug.) 105-143. [628
Yard, Robert Sterling. Natural and historic national monuments. Art and
ARCHAEOL., X (Aug.) 55-63. [629
Yoiing, Levi Edgar. Utah— Zion national park. Art and archaeol., X (Aug.)
37-38. [630
34 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOK.
Colonial History to 1763.
General.
Andrews, Matthew Page. The genesis of the United States. Educ. foundations
XXXII (Oct.) 81-91. [631
Consists of the first chapter of the writer's forthcoming " American history and government."
Concerned with the beginnings of English colonization in America.
Andrews, Matthew Page. Some historical perspectives in Anglo-American relations.
Landmark, II (June) 389-396. [532
Concerned mainly with Anglo- American colonization, particularly the Jamestown colony and tiie
Plymouth settlement, as the source of our political liberty and democratic institutions.
Baptists in the colonies till 1750. Baptist hist. soc. trans., VII, 31-48. [533
Anonymous. j
Bedwell, C. E. A. American Middle Templars. Am. hist, rev., XXV (July) 680- i
689. [634 I
Includes a list of the names, with date of admission, of students from America at the Middle Temple 1
from 1681 to 1835. ' I
Bedwell, C. E. A. The English church beyond the seas. Edinburgh rev., i
CCXXXII (July) 138-150. [635 1
Opens with a discussion of the relations between the Anglican episcopate and the American colonies.
Bolton, Herbert Eugene, and Thomas Maitland Marshall. The colonization of North
America, 1492-1783. N. Y.: Macmillan. xvi, 609 p. maps. [636
Designed as a text-book.
An attempt to bring into one account the story of European expansion in North America down to
1783. The aim has been to pre:;ont a text written from the standpoint of North America as a whole,
treating of the Spanish and French colonies and of the English colonies of the Bermudas, the West
Indies, Canada and the Floridas, as well as the 13 colonies which formed the nucleus of the United States.
The keynote has been expansion.
Contents.— The foundmg of the colonies. Expansion and international conGict. The revolt of the
English colonies.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 540-542; Canad. hist, rev., II (Dec. 1921) 371-372; Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., IV (Aug. 1921) 486-488.
Bond, Beverley W., jr. The colonial agent as a popular representative. Pol. sci,
QUAR., XXXV (Sept.) 372-392. [537
A study of the development of the colonial agent as the spokesman in England of the lower house of
the colonial legislature in controversies between that body and the governor and council.
Coad, Oral Sumner. Stage and players in eighteenth century America. Jour.
Eng. and Ger. philol., XIX (Apr.) 201-223. [538
Ellas, Johan E. Het voorspel van den eersten Engelschen oorlog. The Hague:
Nijhoff. 2 V. maps. [639
V. II describes Dutch expansion in Asia, Africa, and the Americas prior to the first English war (1652-
1654).
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 356-357.
Faust, Albert Bernhardt. Lists of Swiss emigrants in the eighteenth century to the
American colonies, v. I. Zurich, 1734-1744, from the archives of Switzerland.
Washington, D. C: National genealogical society, xi, [1], 122 p. facsims. [540
Prints a list of emigrants to Carolina and Pennsylvania, 1734-1744, from the canton of Zurich, now
first published from the original in the Staatsarchiv of Ziirich.
Introduction: Swiss emigration to the American colonies in the eighteenth century. Reprinted
from the American historical review, by Albert B. Faust: p. 1-25. Movements of Swiss emigrants in
the American colonies, by Gains M. Brumbaugh: p. 101-102.
Franklin, Thomas. Historical geography of Britain and the British Empire. Edin-
burgh: W. and A. K. Johnston; London [etc.] Macmillan. 2 v. maps. [641
A selection of facts showing the relation between geographical conditions and historical move-
ments, and the stages in the gradual development of Britain and her empire.
The second part of v. I extends from the period of maritime discoveries to the end of the 17th century
and shows how Britain by finally defeating her great rival France and by obtaining supremacy on the
se^ was able to establish her empire.
The conquest of Canada: p. 180-184. The American war of independence: p. 184-191.
Gillespie, James E. The influence of oversea expansion on England to 1700. N, Y.:
Columbia university, Longmans, Green and co., agents. 367 p. (Columbia univ.
stud., V. XCI, no. 1) [642
This treatise aims to emphasize the results for the mother land of the discovery, asploration, settle-
ment and occupation by the English of lands in America, Asia and Africa.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVH (Apr. 1922) 609.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 35
Great Britain. Commissioners for trade and plantations. Journal of the Commis-
sioners for trade and plantations from April 1704, to February 1708-9, preserved in
the Public record office. . . . London: Pub. by His Majesty's stationery office,
vi, 641 p. [642a
Tho journals of the Commissioners for trade and plantations are usually known as B(Mird o^ trade
journals. Previous journals are included in the volumes of Calendar of state papers, Colonial (Gt.
Brit. Public record office.)
Jones, E. Alfred. Sir William Pepperell's presentation silver. Art in America,
IX (Dec.) 41-42. [543
Description of the silver presented to Sir William Pepperell by Admiral Sir Peter Warren, who was
in command of the British naval force operating with the New England troops under Sir William Pep-
perell in the capture of Louisbourg, June 17, 1745.
Kernohan, J. W. Ulster Pilgrim fathers; an Irish "Mayflower". Landmark, II
(Oct.) 691-694. [544
Narrative of the attempted emigration of Ulster pilgrims to America in 1636, in the ship " Eaglewing",
which sailed from Ireland in that year.
Lloyd, Mary. Historic ships. Americana, XIV (July) 227-250. [646
Notes concerning ships connected with the discovery and early settlement of America.
Muir, Uamsay. A short history of the British commonwealth. In two volumes.
V. I. The island and the first empire (to 1763). London: George Philip and son.
XAd, 824 p. [646
Book VI (p. 645-814). The Whig oligarchy; and the establishment of maritime and colonial suprem-
acy (1714-1763). Contains sections on North American trade and Franco-British rivalry; the beginnings
of organized philanthropy: the colony of Georgia; Franco-British coniiiet overseas [French and Indian
war] and British lands oversea: their social character.
Muirhead, James F. American shrines on English soil. Landmark, II (Sept.-Oct.)
G29-634, 707-713. [547
Eichmond, Herbert "William. Colonial defence during the war, 1739-1748. In his
The navy in the war of 1739-48. Cambridge: The University press. (Cambridge
naval and military series) v. Ill, p. 268-278. [647a
Robertson, Hugh W. The theology of colonial America. Meth. quar. rev., LXIX
(July) 509-520. [648
Smith, William. The history of the post office in British North America, 1639-1870.
Cambridge [Eng.] The University press, ix, 356 p. port. [649
Beginnings of postal service in former American colonies: p. 1-17. Colonial post office under Queen
Anne's act — Early packet service: p. 18-26. The post office during the Revolution — its suppression:
p. 5&-73.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (Jime 1921) 201-205.
Some letters from the Dreer collection of manuscripts. Pa. mag. hist", XLIV (Oct.)
346-352. [660
Two letters of Cecil Calvert to Horatio Sharp, London, 1755 and 1757; and two letters of Robert Din-
widdie, written from Williamsburg, 1755, and London, 1764.
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. The Glasgow-weekly-history, 1743. Mass. hist. soc. proc,
LIII, 192-217. [661
a summary of the contents of a volume entitled, '-The Glasgow-weekly-history relating to the late
progress of the Gospel at home and abroad; being a collection of letters, partly reprinted from the London-
weekly-history, ... for the year 1742. Glasgow: Printed by William Dvmcan, 1743." The volume con-
sists of 52 numbers.
Reprints are here given of several numbers concerned with affairs in America, in particular, the
religious awakening of 1737-1742, and of letters of the Rev. Benjamin Cohnan, of Boston, to the Rev. Mr.
George Whitefield.
Wright, Irene A. Spanish policy toward Virginia, 1606-1612; Jamestown, Ecija, and
John Clark of the Mayflower. Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr.) 448-^79. [552
a communication based on documents in the archives of Seville and Stmancas, of which three are
here given. It is shown that from the beginning Don Pedro de Cuniga, Spanish ambassador at London,
kept his government informed concerning English activities in Virginia, but that the Spanish govern-
ment took no steps toward hindering these activities. Prints a copy of the deposition made in Havana
in 1611, by John Clark, afterward mate of the Mayflower, who had been captured by a Spanish expedition
under Captain Diego de Molina sent to explore the Virginia coast in 1611.
French and Indian War.
Amherst, Jeffrey. Letter of Jeffrey Amherst to John Bradstreet. Mass. hist. soc.
PROC, LIII, 24. [663
Written from the camp at Crown Point, Nov. 2, 1759.
86 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. w
Audet, Francis-J. Jean-Daniel Dumas, le h6ros de la Monongah^la; esquisse bio-
graphique. MontrM: G. Ducharme. 134 p. ports., plans, facsim. [664 |
Officer in the French colonial forces in America during the French and Indian war. He participated
in the battle of the Monongahela and in the defense of Quebec. 1
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (June 1921) 199-200. I
Riclimond, H. W. The influence of sea-power on the struggle with France in North i
America and India. Nation, rev., LXXV (May) 397-411. [555 |
Washington, George. Wasliington's note book: selections from a newly-discovered |
manuscript written by him while a Virginia colonel, in 1757. Ed. by Victor Hugo
Paltsits. [N. Y.] New York public library. 6 p. [566
Reprinted from the Bulletin of the New York public library, v. XXIV, August, 1920.
This notebook was used by Washington in 1757 when raising the two Virginia regiments during the
last of the intercolonial wars with the French of Canada, and part of it contains his memoranda for
correspondence while at Fort Stanwix.
Regional Colonial.
[Arranged geographically]
Chapin, Howard Millar. Dogs in early New England. Providence: Press of E. A.
Johnson and CO. lip. illus., plates. [667 j
Also pub. in the Rhode Island historical society collections, v. XIII, Oct. 1920. I
The writer has gathered numerous references from the records of early New England showing that 1
dogs played no small part in the lives and thoughts of our colonial ancestors. j
Colegrove, Kenneth. New England town mandates; instructions to the deputies in !
colonial legislatures. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XXI, 411-449. [658 '
One of the characteristics of the New England town-meeting system in colonial days was the prao- '
tice of voting instructions to the deputies in the popular assembUes. This practice continued until
the third decade after the adoption of the federal Constitution. The writer notes also the employment
by the towns of the initiative, the referendum, and the recall.
A Puritan publisher: John Bellamy. Congregational hist. soc. trans., VIII
(Aug.) 110-112. [659
A London publisher who printed several books relating to New England from 1622 to about 1646.
Swan, Frederick W. The spirit of New England. N. Y., Chicago. [etc.] Scribner.
[6], 53 p. illus., port., facsim. [560
With Parsons, G. The land of fair play; a text-book of American civics. New York, 1920.
An elementary text-book of early New England history, concerned mainly with governmental policy
and growth.
Wright, Thomas Goddard. Literary culture in early New England, 1620-1730.
New Haven: Yale univ. press; London: Humphrey Milford, Oxford univ. press.
322 p. [661
Not an appraisal of our colonial literature as Uterature, but rather an attempt to determine that which
lies back of that literature, the culture of the people and the relation between their culture and the lit-
erature which they produced.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 543-545.
O'Dwyer, George F. Sebastian Rale and the Puritans, Cath. world, CXII (Oct.)
45-51. [662
Pressey, Ernest A. Sir Ferdinando Gorges. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VII
(Feb.) 194-197. [563
Eobinson, Grace Louise. Saint George's at Popham; forerunner of all American
forts. Jour. Am. hist., XIV, no. 4, 233-235. [564
Fort built by the Popham colony in 1607.
Smith, Edgar Crosby. Maine lands east of the Kennebec river. Sprague's jour.
Maine hist., VII (Feb.) 188-191. [566
This article is an extract from chapter II of the History of Dover and Foxcroft, Maine, which is bemg
prepared by Judge Smith.
Sketches briefly the manner in which Massachusetts finally obtained complete and unquestioned
ownership of that part of Maine which lies east of the Kennebec river, a region which for many years
had been claimed both by England and France.
TJpham, George B. A ''barrier against the Indiana." Granite mo., LII (Aug.)
308-315. [666
"A new and accurate map of the present war in North America," published at London in 1757, shows
a dotted line extending straight from the Connecticut river at a point a little north of the present Charles-
town to a northern branch of the Contoocook river, evidently intended for the Warner river. This
line was to mark a line of defense against the Indians during King George's war and the years inter-
vening between that war and the French and Indian war.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 37
Upham, George B. The "great river Naumkeek" once the southern boundary of
New Hampshire. Granite mo., LII (May) 193-201. [567
Prints a copy of the only known map with the name "Naumkeek" thereon, which is also the only
known map showing New Hampshire as extending south of the Merrimack river. Its date is aboutl68').
Abbott, Lyman. Who were the Pilgrim fathers? 1620-1920. Outlook, CXXVI
(Dec. 8) 636-638. [668
Adcock, A. St. John. The men of the "Mayflower". Landmark, II (Sept.) 643-
646. [6G9
Ashley, William. The Pilgrim fathers and their place in history. Quar. rev.,
CCXXXIV (Oct.) 259-279. [570
Aubrey, Melbourne Evans. The meaning of the Mayflower. Biblical rev., V
(Apr.) 280-290. [571
Bamouw, A. J. The Pilgrim fathers in Leyden. Weekly rev.. Ill (Sept. 15; 225.
[573
Barton, James L. The meaning and significance of the Pilgrim tercentenary. Homi-
LETic REV., LXXX (Nov.) 345-349. [573
Bates, Esther Willard. A pageant of Pilgrims. A pageant setting forth the histori-
cal story of the Pilgrims, and interpreting the vital significance of their ideals and
actions of all man-kind. To be presented by churches, schools, colleges or com-
munities. Boston, and Chicago: The Pilgrim press, xii, 42 p. plates. [574
Bowman, George Ernest. Another Brewster imprint identified, with a Brewster
autograph on its title page. Maypl. desc, XXII (Jan.) 1-2. [575
[Bowman, George Ernest] A book printed by Elder William Brewster at Leyden,
Holland, in 1617, presented to this society. Mayfl. desc, XXII (July) 97-99.
[576
"An abridgement of that booke which the ministers of Lincolne diocese delivered to his Majestie
upon the first of December 1606 . . . Reprinted, Anno Dom. 1617."
Bowman, George Ernest. The Brewster imprint in Dutch. Mayfl. desc, XXII
(Oct.) 145-146. [576a
Note regarding a recently discovered book printed by Elder William Brewster in Holland, a copy of
which is to be found in the library of the late Hon. J. Hammond Trumbull, of Hartford, Conn.
Bowman, George Ernest. The Mayflower compact and its signers, with facsimiles
and a list of the Mayflower passengers, 1620-1920, ... in commemoration of the
signing of tiie compact, 21 November, 1620. Boston, Mass.: Massachusetts society
of Mayflower descendants. 19 p. facsims. - [577
Also pub. in the Mayflower descendant, t. XXII, April 1920.
Bowman, George Ernest. The Mayflower marriage records at Leyden and Amster-
dam. Mayel. desc, XXII (Jan.-Apr.) 12-17, 62-67. [678
Bowman, George Ernest. Why did only forty-one passengers sign the compact?
Mayfl. desc, XXII (Apr.) 58-59. [679
Bradford, William. Bradford's history of the Plymouth settlement, 1608-1650,
rendered into modern English by Harold Paget. N. Y.: Button, xxviii, 353 p.
[5U0
Originally published in 1909.
Brown, J. Irwin. The Pilgrim fathers in Holland; new discoveries in Leyden on
an obscure page of history. Homiletic rev., LXXIX (May) 364-366. [681
Brown, John. The Pilgrim fathers of New England and their Puritan successors.
4th ed. London: The Religious tract society. 352 p. illus., plates, port. [682
Bunnell, A. H. Tercentenary of Pilgrims' landing; story of Plymouth rock. State
service, IV (May) 423-430. [683
Burbank, Alfred Stevens, comp. A brief history of the Pilgrims, comp. from the
writings of Governor Bradford and Governor Winslow, and largely in their own
words. With alphabetical list of Mayflower passengers. Plymouth, Mass.: A. S.
Burbank [1920?] v, 57 p. [684
Burgess, Walter H. The pastor of the Pilgrims, a biography of John Robinson.
N. Y.: Harcourt, Brace and Howe; London: Williams and Norgate. xii, 426 p.
plates, map, plan, facsims. [^85
Printed in Great Britain.
Chronological table of the writings of John Robinson: p. 418-420.
R»T. in: Sag. hist, rev., XXXVI (Jan. 1921) 132-134; Weekly rev., HI (Oct. 27) 380.
38 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION".
Burgess, Walter H. The Pilgrim fathers. Landmark, II (Sept.) 578-584. [586
Burrage, Champlin. The earliest minor accounts of Plymouth plantation. Harv
THEOL. REV., XIII (Oct.) 315-344. [587
Burrage, Champlin, ed. An answer to John Robinson of Leyden by a Puritan friend,
now first published from a manuscript of a. d. 1609. Cambridge: Harvard univ'.
press; [etc.] xiii, 94 p. facsim. (Harvard theological studies. [IX]) [588
The manuscript referred to is catalogued as ms. Jones 30, in the Bodleian library, Oxford.
A reply to the letter from John Robinson, discussing "his seperation from that churche or parisho
dl St. Andrewes in Norwich of which he had lately beene a minister." The text of much of Robinson's
letter is incorporated.
Butter, Sir Geoffrey. The mind of a Pilgrim [John Robinson] Landmark, II (Sept )
639-642. [689
Campbell, Amelia Day. Myles Standish, military commander and brave defender
of the Plymouth colony. Americana, XIV (Oct.) 339-354. [590
Campbell, Amelia Day. The Pilgrim tercentenary at Provincetown, Mass., 1620-
1920. D. A. R. MAG., LIV (Dec.) 701-705. [591
Carter, C. Sydney. The Pilg«im fathers. London quar. rev., 5th ser., XX
(July) 34-45. [592
Carter, William. The Pilgrims and constitutional liberty. Homiletic rev., LXXX
(Nov.) 399^03. [593
An address delivered at Provincetown, Mass., Aug. 30, 1920, at the celebration of the 300th anni-
versary of the landing of the Pilgrim fathers and the signing of the compact of the Mayflower.
Gate, E. M. ten. De pilgrimvaders en hun apkomst. Vragen van den dag, XXXV,
481-484. [593a
Chamwood, Lord. Pilgrim and other fathers. Landmark, II (Sept.) 575-577. [594
Commemoration du troisieme contenaire de I'arrivee des peres p^lerins aux Etats-Unis
(28 novembre). Soc. hist, protestantisme pranp., LXIXe ann., 244-247. [695
Connecticut. Celebration as authorized by the Connecticut legislature of 1919 in
commemoration of the three hundredth anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims
at Plymouth Rock, 1620 . . . Hartford, Connecticut, December the twenty-first,
1920. [Hartford] [8] p. [596
Crawford, Mary Caroline. In the days of the Pilgrim fathers. Boston: Little, Brown,
and CO. xiv, 331 p. plates, ports., maps, facsims. [597
Crippen, T. G. The psalmody of the Pilgrims. Congregational hist. soc. trans.,
VIII (Aug.) 75-80. [598
Crothers, Samuel McChord. The Pilgrims and their contemporaries. Century,
C (May) 1-11. [699
Desprez, May McClellan. William Bradford, puritain (1589-1657). Rev. hebdo-
MADAiRE, XXIXe ann. (Sept. 25) 407-422. [600
Dinsmore, Charles A. The Pilgrims' contribution to literature. Homiletic rev.,
LXXX (Nov.) 349-353. [601
Duxbury, Mass. First church. Inauguration of a pastor at Duxbury, 1680. Boston
PUB. lib. bul., 4th ser., II (July) 184-185. [602
Copy of a letter signed by John Alden and Josiah Standish in the name of the church at Duxbury,
to the Rev. John Cotton, pastor of the church at Pljonouth, requesting that church to assist at the
ordination of Rev. Ichabod Wiswall.
Dyer, Walter A. The true-hearted of Plymouth. Bookman, LII (Oct.) 122-127. [603
Eekhof, A. Drie onbekende dokumenten betreffende de Pilgrim fathers in Holland.
Nederlandsch arch. v. kerkgeschiedenis, n. 8. XVI, 1-24. [604
Also published in English. See no. 606 below.
Eekhof, A. De nieuwste literatur over de Pilgrim fathers. Stemmen d. tijds, IXe
jrg., 123-134. [605
Eekhof, A. Three unknown documents concerning the Pilgrim fathers in Holland.
The Hague: M. Nijhoff. [4], 35 p. illus., 5 facsims. on 3 plates. [606
Facsimile in text.
Originals in the notarial documents in the citv archives of I>eyden.
The first document is dated 2 January 1621 anfl contains the personal signature of John Robinson;
the second is dated July 1620, and is si^ed by W'illiam iJradford; and the third is the testament of
Bridget Robinson, the widow of John Robinson, drawn up 28 October 1643.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 39
Eno, Joel N. The Pilgrim experiment in communism. Weekly rev., Ill (Dec. 15)
585-586. [607
Feasey, J. Eaton. The Mayflower pioneers; the story of the Pilgrim fathers. London :
Sunday school union. 90 p. [608
Fenn, WiUiam. Wallace. John Robinson's Farewell address. Harv. thkol, rev
XIII (July) 236-251. [609
Friederici, Qeorg. Die Grundlegung der Vereinigten Staaten von 300 Jahren. 15 p.
[609a
"Aus. Die Wage [Vienna] Nr. 5."
Fyfe, Hamilton. The Pilgrim fathers' lesson for us to-day. Landmark, II (Sept )
635-637. (610
Gamble, Henry R. The Pilgrim fathers. By the Dean of Exeter. Blackwood's
CCVIII (Sept.) 310-317. [6ii
Goodwin, John Abbot. The Pilgrim republic; an historical review of the colony of
New Plymouth, with sketches of the rise of other New England settlements, the
history of Congregationalism, and the creeds of the period. Tercentenary ed.
Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. xli, 662 p. illus., maps, facsims. [612
Griffis, William Elliot. The Dutch and the Pilgrims. Homiletic rev., LXXX
(Nov.) 357-363. [613
Grifiis, William Elliot. Why we Americans honour the Pilgrim fathers. Landmark
II (Sept.) 597-601. [614
Griffis, William Elliot. Young people's history of the Pilgrims. Boston and N. Y.:
Houghton Mifflin co. xi, 352 p. plates. [615
Hanks, Charles Stedman. Our Plymouth forefathers the real founders of our republic.
Boston, Mass.: Pub. by the Authors' publishing association. 339 p. illus., plate,
map. [616
Harris, Rendel. The finding of the ''Mayflower". Manchester: University press;
London [etc.] Longmans, v, 58 p. plates, facsim. [617
Describes the researches made by himself which led to the discovery of the remains of the "May-
flower", now forming a part of an old barn on Jordans Farm in Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire,
England.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 801-802.
Harris, Kendel. The last of the "Mayflower". Manchester: University press;
London [etc.] Longmans. [8], 122 p. [618
Traces the history and ownership of the "Mayflower" after the return voyage in 1621'.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 799-800.
Harris, Rendel, ed. Souvenirs of the ''Mayflower" tercentenary. Manchester:
The University press; London, N. Y. [etc.] Longmans. 4 nos. facsims. [619
Contents. — I. The documents concerning the appraisement of the "Mayflower". II. Refusal
of the Leyden authorities to expel the Pilgrims. III. I'he marriage certificate of William Bradford
and Dorothy May. IV. The Plymouth copy of the first charter of Virginia.
Hart, Albert Bushnell. The Pilgrims; who they were, what they were, and why
they came to America. Mentor, VIII, no. 17 (Nov.) 1-26. [620
Holt, Hamilton. The discovery of the "Mayflower". Indep., CIV (Oct. 9) 44-45,
61-62. [620a
Account of the writer's examination of the old bam in Chalfont Saint Giles, Buckinghamshire, Eng-
land, which is said to have been made from the timbers of the "Mayflower".
Holt, Hamilton. The old world's homage to the Pilgrims. Indep., CIV (Oct. 16)
78-79. [621
The writer's impressions of the recent "Mayflower" celebrations in Holland and in England.
Jameson, John Franklin. The arrival of the Pilgrims. A lecture delivered at Brown
universky, Providence, R. I., November 21, 1920. [Providence] Printed by the
University. 40 p. [622
Jerrold, Walter. The story of the "Mayflower". Landmark, II (Sept.) 647-650.
[623
Kingsley, Darwin P. The Pilgrims: the most successful adventurers in all history.
New Enq. soc. anniv. celeb., CXIV, 40-50. [624
This article has been reprinted in Munsey's magazine, LXIX, Mar. 1920.
40 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Kinnicntt, Lincoln. Plymouth's debt to the Indians. Harv. theol. rev., XIIIj
(Oct.) 345-361. [625
Kuyper, Henriette Sophia Suzanna. De Pilgrimfathers in Nederland, 1608-1620,1
door H. S. S. Kuyper. Kampen: J. H. Kok. 57 p. [626!
Law, Frederick Houk. Our Pilgrim legacy. Indep., CIV (Nov. 27) 292-293, 314.
[627'
Law, Frederick Houk. The unpuritanic Puritans. Indep., CIV (Oct. 23) 122, 143.1
[628'
A study of the Pilgrims, not the Puritans.
Lee, E. Rosalind. The Pilgrim fathers, their trials and adventures. Tercentenary
ed. London: The Sunday school association. 83 p. plates, map. [629 •
Letter on church attendance, 1639. Boston pub. lib. bul., 4th ser., II (Jan.) 13-16.
[630
This letter, the original of which is among the Cotton papers in the Boston public library, is probably
addressed to the Rev. John Cotton of Boston by the first ruling elder, William Brewster, and the second
regularly ordained pastor, John Reyner, of the Plymouth colony.
Lord, Arthur. Plymouth and the Pilgrims. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co.
[8], 177 p. (Brown university. The Colver lectures, 1920) [631
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 586-587.
Mackennal, Alexander. Homes and haunts of the Pilgrim fathers. A new ed. of ;
Dr. Alexander Mackennal's work, rev. and partly rewritten by H. Elvet Lewis. 1
London: The Religious tract society, xii, 13-143 p. illus. (incl. port., map, I
facsim.), col. plates. [632 •
Contents. — Gainsborough. William Brewster and the church at Scrooby. Austerfield— the home i
of Governor Bradford. Myles Standish and the Standish country. Boston. Cambridge and Corpus
Christi college. Governor Winslow of Droitwich. Holland and John Robinson. Delfshaven and far©- ■
well words. Southampton. Plymouth. ;
Another edition. — Phila.: G. W. Jacobs and co., 1920.
Marble, Annie Russell. The women who came in the Mayflower. Boston and I
Chicago: The Pilgrim press, vi, 110 p. [633 I
Mason, Thomas W. New light on the Pilgrim story, by the Rev. Thomas W. Mason I
with the Rev. B. Nightingale ... as collaborator. London: Congregational union [
of England and Wales, xviii, 176 p. plates, map. [634 [
"The aim of tMs book . . . is to caU attention to the important part played by Essex, the eastern 1
counties, and London in the Pilgrim movement." — Pref., p. x.
Mason, Thomas W. Some Mayflower family connections. Congregational hist. '
soc. TRANS., VIII (Aug.) 81-82. [635
Massachusetts. Dept. of education. The Pilgrim tercentenary, 1620-1920. Sugges- {
tions for observance in the schools, giving specimen programs, Pilgrim stories, a
pageant and a bibliography. Prepared by the Special committee on the school
observance of the Pilgrim tercentenary. [Bos'ton: Wright and Potter print, co.,
state printers] 102 p. illus. (Bulletin of the Department of education, 1920, no.
10. Whole no. 119) [636
Mathews, Basil. The Argonauts of faith; the adventures of the "Mayflower" Pil-
frims, by Basil Mathews; with a foreword by Viscount Bryce, o. m.; . . . London:
[odder and Stoughton limited, xiii, 192 p. illus. (maps), col. plates. [637
Another edition.— N. Y.: George H. Doran co. 185 p.
Maye, Lilian. In the footsteps of the Pilgrim fathers; Scrooby, in Nottinghamshire.
Landmark, II (Apr.) 261-264. [638
The Mayflower passengers. Mayfl. desc, XXII (Apr.) 52. [639
Prints a complete list of the 104 Mayflower passengers.
Mellors, Robert. Scrooby, the archbishop's palace and the Pilgrim fathers. Not-
tingham: J. and H. Bell. 64 p. [640
Minton, E. E. The sailing of the " Mayflower". Manchester quar., XXXIX (Oct.)
247-264. [641
Monk, Lillian Hoag. Old Pilgrim days. Los Angeles: H. A. Miller co. 188 p.
plates. [642
Mourt's relation, ^ The Cape Cod journal of the Pilgrim fathers, reprinted from Mourt'B
relation, with introduction and notes by Lyon Sharman. Provincetown: The
Advocate gift shop, xvi, 52 p. [643
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 41
Murray, Robert H. The Pilgrim fathers. Edinburgh rev., CCXXXII (Oct.)
256-275. [644
Nes, H. M. van. De Pilgrim fathers herclacht in Nederland en Engeland. Stemm.
D. TiJDS, Xe jrg., 15-30. [645
New York. Public library. The Pilgrim tercentenary exhibition in the New York
{)ublic library, by Victor Hugo Paltsits. [N. Y.: Printed at the New York public
ibrary] [4] p. [646
Parry, Hugh. The historical pageant of the "Mayflower," 1620-1920 (in a prologue
and four episodes) by Hugh Parry . . . with a foreword, council chamber scene and
epilogue by Dr. J. Rendel Harris. Issued under the auspices of the Mayflower
council of England. London: National council of the Evangelical Free churches
[1920?] vi, 57 p. [647
Parry, Hugh. The Plymouth "Mayflower" celebrations. Landmark, II (May)
302-304. ' [648
Account of celebrations at Plymouth, England.
Perrin, P. G. Edward Doty, Pilgrim father. Outlook, CXXVI (Dec. 8) 638-639.
[649
The Pilgrim fathers; their story and their connection with Southampton, 1620-1920.
Southampton, Eng.: "Hants Advertiser". 45 p. [650
Pilgrim treasures discovered. Lit. digest, LXVII (Oct. 16) 30-31. [651
An account of three documents recently found by Dr. Eekhof among the notarial archives of Leyden,
See no. 606 above.
I Pilgrims who came three hundred years ago. Lit. digest, LXVII (Oct. 2) 44-52. [652
Plooij, D., and J. Hendel Harris, eds. Leyden documents relating to the Pilgrim
fathers, permission to reside at Leyden and betrothal records; together with parallel
documents from the Amsterdam archives. Facsimile, transcript, translation and
annotations by Dr. D. Plooij of Leyden and Dr. J. Rendel Harris of Manchester.
74 phototypic plates. Under the auspices of the Netherlands America institute.
Leyden: E. J. Brill, xii, [2] p., ii numb, leaves, [2] p., iii-lxix numb, leaves,
[2] p., Ixx-lxxiv numb, leaves, [3] p. incl. facsims. [653
Numbered leaves printed on both sides.
Plumb, Albert Hale. William Bradford of Plymouth. Boston: R. G. Badger. 112 p.
front. [654
Plymouth, Mass. First church. Plymouth church records, 1620-1859. Part I,
Boston: Pub. by the society. Ixv, 470 p. plates, ports., facsims. (Col, soc. Mass.
pub., XXII) [655
"Of the material here presented, only a portion has hitherto appeared in print ... It is beUeved
that no more important contribution to the ecclesiastical history of New England has been made than
will be found in these voluroes." ^
List of pastors, associate pastors, elders, deacons, etc., 1620-1859.: p. li-liv. BibUographies, 1620-1859;
pastors and assocate pastors: p. Iv-lxii. Preface, 1680, by Nathaniel Morton: p. 3-6. History of the Ply-
mouth church, 1620-1680, by WilUam Bradford and Nathaniel Morton: p. 6-115. Dialogue, 1648, by
William Bradford: p. 115-141.
The records printed in this volume (Part I) cover the period from 1620 to 1799.
Includes comprehensive lists of births, baptisms, marriages, and deaths, which are of genealogical
value.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 837.
Pollard, Edward B. Elder Brewster, lay preacher of the Pilgrims. Homiletic rev.,
LXXX (Oct.) 264-2G8. [656
Pollock, Horatio M. Plymouth and the Pilgrims, after 300 years. Am. educ, XXIV
(Dec.) 161-163. [657
Porteus, Thomas Cruddas. Captain Myles Standish: his lost lands and Lancashire
connections. A new investigation. Manchester: The University press; London,
N. Y. [etc.] Longmans. [10], 115 p. illus. (incl. map), port., plates. (Publica-
tions of the University of Manchester. Historical series, no. XXXVIII) [658
On verso of t.-p.: University of Manchester publications, no. CXXXV.
Powicke, Frederick James. John Robinson (1575?-1625). London: Hodder and
Stoughton. xii, 132 p. [659
Powicke, Frederick James. John Robinson and the beginnings of the Pilgrim move-
ment. Harv. theol. rev., XIII (July) 252-289. [660
111124°— 23 ^5
42 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. j
I
Quinn, Arthur Hobson. Pilgrim and Puritan in literature. Scribner's, LXVIli
(May) 571-581. ' [661
Concerned with the literary products of the Pilgrims and Puritans.
Recapturing the spirit of the Pilgrims. Current opinion, LXIX (Nov.) 681-685. |
[6G2|
Repplier, Agnes. The masterful Puritan. Yale rev., X (Jan.) 262-274. [663!
Koberts, Richard. The Pilgrim spirit in the life of to-day. Homiletic rev., LXXXJ
(Oct.) 313-317. [664:
Robinson, aSiV H.Perry. The log of the "Mayflower." Landmark, II(Sept.) 624-626.
[665
Salmon, Edward. The blossoming of the "Mayflower." Unit, emp., n. s. XI (Sept.),
490-491. [666,
Schepers, J. B. De Pilgrimvaders. Em. Haard, XLVI, 32.3-326. [667'
Scullard, H. H. The theology of John Robinson and of the Pilgrim fathers. Hibbert
jour., XIX (Oct.) 84-92. [663
See, Anna Phillips. Life romances from Burial Hill. D. A. R. mag., LIV (Oct.)
575-579. [669,
Short sketches of Pilgrim romances. |
Shipley, Arthur E. What the Pilgrim fathers left behind them. Outlook, CXXVI '
(Nov. 10) 464-467. [670 1
Southampton, Eng. The Assembly books of Southampton, ed., with introduction,
notes and index, by J. W. Ilorrocks. v. II. 1609-1610. Southampton: Cox and]
Sharland. xliii, 119 p. (Publications of the Southampton record society. General
editor — Harry W. Gidden) 670a '■
The Introduction includes a discussion of the association of Southampton with the "Mayflower" |
(p. xxxi-xxxv) and of its association as a port and through its citizens with the opening up of the New
world, including some items regarding John Alden.
Stephenson, Walter, ed. Norwich and the Pilgrim fathers, the Mayflower tercen- 1
tenary. Norwich [Eng.] Jarrold and sons. 80 p. illus. [671 !
[Terry, Roderick] The early relations between the colonies of New Plymouth and ;
Rhode Island; a paper read before the Society, August 16, 1920, by the president. I
Newport, R. I. 32 p. (Newport hist. soc. bul., no. 34) [672 |
Caption title. 1
Thwing, Charles Franklin. The Pilgrims' motive and contribution. Hibbert jour. ;
XIX (Oct.) 77-83. [673 |
Tooley, Sarah A. The Pilgrim mothers. Landmark, II (July) 466-468. [674 j
Draws attention to the important part that women played in the founding of New England. |
Tracy, Louis. The Pilgrim fathers; three centuries of human progress. Landmark,
II (Sept.) 594-596. [675
Tunnicliff , Harry George. The story of the Pilgrim fathers, retold for young people.
N. Y., Chicago [etc.] Revell. [1920?] 157 p. plates. [676
U. S. Congress. Joint special committee on the Pilgrim tercentenary celebration.
Pilgrim tercentenary celebration . . . Report . . . [Washington: Gov. print, off.]
10 p. (66th Cong. 2d sess. House. Rept. 691) [677
The Joint special committer was appointed under the provisions of House concurrent resolution 14,
"to confer with ofhcials of the commonwealth of Massachusetts or any political subdivision thereof, and [
with oflicers of any organization or societies or with individuals relative to the contemplated observance ;
of the three hundredth anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims." I
W. G. Harding, O. W. Underwood. Joseph Walsh, C. N. McArthur, Richard S. Whaley, Frank E. !
Doremus, Joint special committee on Pilgrim tercentenary. i
Act creating first Pilgrim tercentenary commission; act creating second Pilgrim tercentenary
commission; further provisions for the second Pilgrim tercentenary commission; act creating Province- '
town commission: p. 5-8. ■
U. S. Congress. Joint special committee on the Pilgrim tercentenary celebration. '
Tercentenary of the landing of the Pilgrims. Report of the Joint committee ap- !
pointed pursuant to the concurrent resolution of June 30, 1919, to confer ^\4th the |
officials of the comm.onwealth of Massachusetts relative to the contemplated observ- ,
ance of the three hundredth anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims. Wasliing- i
ton: Gov. print, off. 12 p. (66th Cong., 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 239) [678 |
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 43
The voyagers in the "Mayflower." CoNaREGAiiONAL hist. soc. trans., VIII (Feb.)
3-15. [679
Prints a schedule giving personal iulormatiou about the Mayflower passengers, also those of the
"Fortune," 1621, and the "Anne," 1623.
Ware, Horace E. Swarra of ckadas in Plymouth colony, 1G33. Col. soc. Mass.
PUB., XX, 104-107. [680
In 1633 Governor Bradford speaks of an invasion of the colony during the spring by a vast swarm of
of insects, which were probably seventeen year cicadas.
Additional note on the periodical cicadas: p. 280-285. Regarding the several appcarajices of this pest
in New PJngland since the 1633 occurrence.
What the Pilgrim fathers mean in the life of to-day. Current opinion, LXVIIl
(May) 663-664. [681
Whitfield, H., ed. "Mother Plymouth"; a souvenir of the Mayflower tercentenary,
together with the story of the Pilgrim fathers, 1620-1920. Devonport: Whitfield
and Newman, illus. [682
Whitley, W. T. The mate of the Mayflower. Congregational hist. soc. trans
VIII (Aug.) 69-74. [683
The mate of the Mayflower has recently been identified by Miss Irene "Wright, from the Spanish
archives of Seville and Simancas, whence she has produced two of his depositions, with kindred papers,
He was John Clark, a Londoner.
Wood, Herbert George. Venturers for the kingdom; a study in the history of the
I Pilgrim fathers. London: Hodder and Stoughton. xiv, 254 p. [681
Appendices: I. The legal j)rocesses against the Pilgrims, by J. Rendel Harris. II. The date of the
formation of the Pilgrim church. III. Passengers in the "Mayflower."
Wrench, Winifride. In the footsteps of the Pilgrim fathers; Amsterfield, Yorkshire.
1 Landmark, II (Jan.) 44-48. [685
Abrams, A. W. Puritans going to church. Outlook, CXXVI (Dec. 8) 639. [686
Offers evidence to prove that the title of the well-loiown painting by George H. Boughton, represent-
ing a small com])any of early New England settlers marching thiough the snow to church, com-
monly given as "Pilgrims going to church", is erroneous and should be " Puritans going to church."
Bolton, Charles Knowles. A half-forgotten tragedy of 1755; when Phillis was
burned at the stake in Cambridge and Mark was hanged in chains. Old-time New
England, XI (July) 12-14. [687
The execution of two negroes convicted of murder.
Irigham, Clarence S. Elegy on Urian Oakes, 1681, by Daniel Gookin, jr. Col. soc
Mass. pub., XX, 247-252. [688
Includes a photostatic copy of an Elegy upon the death of Mr. Urian Oakes, presidept of Harvard
college, 1681, now printed for the first time, which adds another poem to the annals of early American
literature,
lapp, Clifford B. The gifts of Richard Baxter and Henry Ashurst to Harvard col-
lege. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 192-203. [689
Notes from early records pertaining to benefactions made to Harvard college by the Rev. Richard
Baxter and Henry Ashurst, alderman of London, in the late 17th century.
lough, Samuel Chester. Remarks on Cotton Hill and adjacent estates, Boston,
1650-1750. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 264-269. [680
lough, Samuel Chester. Topography of Boston, 1648. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XXI,
251-254. [691
CSorporation for the promoting and propagating the gospel of Jesus Christ in New
England. The New England company of 1649 and John Eliot. The ledger for the
years 1650-1660 and the record book of meetings between 1656 and 1686 of the Cor-
poration for the propagation of the gospel in New England. Printed from the original
manuscripts, with an introduction by George Parker Winship. Boston: The
Prince society. Ixxxv, 219 p. (The publications of the Prince society,
[v. XXXVI]) [692
)ocuments relating to Marblehead, Mass. [1702-1709] Essex inst. hist, coll., LVI
(Jan.-July) 70-80, 156-160, 202-208. [693
Cont. from v. LV, 1919.
3ow, George Francis. Essex county in the Massachusetts Bay colony as described
by early "travelers. Topsvield hist. soc. coll., XXV, 1-72. [694
)ow, George Francis, ed. Essex county quarterly court records relating to Topsfield
[1669-1672] Topsfield hist. soc. coll., XXV, 73-96. [695
44 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Edmonds, John Henry. Captain Thomas Pound, pilot, pirate, cartographer, and
captain of the royal navy. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 24-84. [696
In 1687 he was appointed pilot in the royal navy, during 1688-1689 he operated as a pirate off the
Massachusetts coast until captured on Oct. 4, 1689, and in 1690 he escaped to England. In 1691 there
was pubUshed in London a " New Mapp of New England from Cape Codd to Cape Sables . . . surveyed
by the author Tho Pound", a facsimile of which is here given.
Endlcott, William Crowninshield, contrib. Will of Governor Endicott, and Deposi-i
tion of Jeremiah Howchin, 1665. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 259-263. [6971
Harwell, Jolin Whittemore. A charter party, 1659. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XXI I
254-257. [698 i
A charter party dated at Boston, 22 October, 1659, between John .Tackson, of Boston, master of the
ketch Rebecca, and Mahalaleel Munnings of Boston, merchant, in behalf of John Allen of Barbados.
Farwell, John Whittemore. A horoscope of Dr. Joseph Warren [1743] Col. soc
Mass. pub., XX, 18-21. [699
Ford, Worthington Chauncey. Sewall and Noyes on wigs. Col. soc. Mass. pub :
XX, 109-128. [700 I
Discusses the prejudice against wigs so strongly expressed by a leading character in the colony of |
Massachusetts, Samuel Sewall, as an introduction to an essay on periwigs by the Rev. Nicholas Noyes,
1702/3, a reprint of which is here given. i
Goddard, Edward. Edward Goddard's journal of the peace commission to the east- j
ern Indians, 1726. Edited by Brewer Goddard Whitmore. Col. soc. Mass '
PUB., XX, 128-147. [701 ^
Ratification of the treaty with the Indians of Maine at Falmouth, in July 1726. \
Greenough, Chester N. John Dunton again. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XXI, 232-251. i
[702 I
A supplement to a paper read before the Society and printed in the Publications, v. XIV, 1913, in i
which the writer "tried to vindicate John Dunton from the charge of attempting to write history". '
Greenough, Chester N. On the authorship of Singing of Psalms a Gospel ordinance. [
Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 239-247. [703 i
A copy of the first edition (1647) of this work ascribed to John Cotton contains a memorandum in the j
handwriting of the younger Thomas Shepard to the ellect that his father, pastor of the church at Cam- ,
bridge, had the chief hand in composing it. |
Harvard college in need of help, 1672. Boston pub. lib. bul., 4th ser., II (July) *
183-184. [704 i
Prints a document of the year 1672 relating to an attempt to raise money by subscription for Har- I
vard college. It is taken from the Cotton papers, sec. VI, no. 14.
Kittredge, George Lyman. Dr. Robert Child the remonstrant. Col. soc. Mass. pub., |
XXI, 1-146. [705 I
Lefavour, Henry. Remarks on a "Copy of an excellent letter", written by the Rev. i
Joseph Eliot, 18 May, 1664. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 107-108. [706-7 I
Remarks on exhibiting a copy of the hitherto unknown first edition of this letter. '
Matthews, Albert. Early Sunday schools in Boston, Col. soc. Mass. pub., XXI,
259-285. [703 '
A summary of the facts known in regard to Sunday schools in Boston from early colonial days until ,
about 1820.
Newton, Caroline Cliflord. Letters of a New England exile. Americana, XIV i
(July) 208-226. [709 i
Includes abstracts from the letters of the regicide Goflfe while in New England. [
Nichols, Charles L. Is there a Mark Baskett Bible of 1752? Col. soc. Mass. pub.,
XXI, 285-292. [710 1
An attempt to determine the facts in regard to a Bible which was mentioned by Isaiah Thomas in j
his History of printing in America, 1810, as having been printed in Boston in the English language, ;
about the year 1752, with the imprint of the copy from which it was reprinted, viz: " London: Printed -
by Mark Baskett."
Perley, Sidney. Beverly in 1700. Essex inst. hist, coll., LVI (Jan.-July) 33-49,
98-110, 209-222. [711 j
Perley, Sidney. Rial Side: part of Salem in 1700. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VIII, i
33-58. [712 I
Petition for protection of Marblehead harbor, 1727, Essex inst. hist, coll., LVI '
(Oct.) 309-312. [713 j
Petition of the inhabitants of Marblehead to the General court of Massachusetts.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 45
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. Account of expenses of Governor Andres's journey from
Boston to Hartford, 1687. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 270-278. [714
Copies of original manuscripts giving expense accounts of the journey of Governor Andros to Con-
necticut to assume tlie government of that colony.
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. Land warrants issued under Andros, 1687-1688. Col. soc.
Mass. pub., XXI, 292-363. [715
In the name of the King, Andros claimed the title to all the lands, and obliged the payment of a quit
rent to secure a new survey and grant to confirm all former titles.
These warrants furnish some information as to the ownership of property in various places.
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. Remarks on a portrait of the Electress Sophia. Col. soc.
Mass. pub., XX, 96-103. [716
Includes several letters, now first printed, which relate to the portrait of the Electress Sophia, brought
by Jonathan Belcher on his return from Europe in 1705 as a present to the Province.
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. Remarks on a tradition relating to the regicides Goffe and
Whalley. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XXI, 449-452. [717
A tradition which has persisted in the P'isher family of Dedham relating to Lydia Fisher (1052-1737),
who was said to have waited upon the regicides (Jofle and Whalley for a time while they were in hiding
at Hadley.
Tuttle, Julius Herbert. Roger Williams' gift to John Endecott. Mass. hist. soc.
PROC, LIII, 8-9. [718
An old book now in the library of the Massachusetts historical society, which has written upon it,
in the handwriting of Roger Williams, "Liber Joliannis Endicott ex dono fraterculi in Christo indig-
nissimi Rogeri Williams".
Ware, Horace E. Note on Winthrop's course across the Atlantic. Col. soc. Mass.
pub., XX, 278. [719
Waters, Eleanor Louise. Probate records relating to Topsfield, 1658-1680. Tops-
field HIST. soc. coll., XXV, 101-120. [720
Watkins, Walter K., ed. Petition for a bridge between Boston and Charlestown,
1720. Boston pub. lib. bul., 4th ser., II (Jan.) 10-13. [721
Winship, George Parker. Letters of John Eliot, the apostle. Mass. hist. soc.
PROC, LIII, 189-192. [722
Wood, George Arthur. William Shirley, governor of Massachusetts, 1741-1756, a
history, v. I. N. Y.: Columbia university; [etc., etc.] 433 p. (Columbia univ.
stud., V. XCII; whole no. 209) [723
Published also as thesis (ph. d.) Columbia university, 1920.
The writer's plan has been to "place a colonial administrator in his proper setting'', which he finds
to be rather imperial than colonial.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 545-516; Canad. hist, rev., II (Sept. 1921) 276-277.
Arnold, Fred A. How the accession of King George II was proclaimed at Warwick,
R. I. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XIII (Jan.) 37-38. [724
Birket, James. Rhode Island in 1750. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XIII (Apr.) 60-65.
[725
Account of his visit to Rhode Island in 1750, reprinted from the book entitled "Some cursory remarks
made by James Birket in his voyage to North America, 1750-1751" (New Haven: Yale univ. press,
1916).
Chapin, Howard Millar. Rhode Island in the colonial wars. A list of Rhode Island
soldiers & sailors in King George's war, 1740-1748. Providence: Printed for the
Society. 38 p. [726
Seal of the Rhode Island historical society on t.-p.
Moriarty, G. Andrews, jr. The Scotch prisoners at Block Island. R. I. hist. soc.
coll., XIII (Jan.) 28-35. [727
Notes identifying some of the prisoners taken by Cromwell at Dunbar and Worcester, 1650 and 1651
who were sold as servants in the English colonies, and in 1661 made the first settlement of "the town
of New Shoreham, alias Block Island in the county of Suffolk in the colony of the Massachusetts Bay".
Potter, George R. Roger Williams and John Milton. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XIII
(Oct.) 113-129. [728
Ehode Island (Colony) Court of trials. Rhode Island court records; records of the
Court of trials of the colony of Providence Plantations, 1647-1662. v. I. Provi-
dence [Rhode Island historical society] 80, viii p. [729
Howard M. Chapin, editor.
Eobert Jeoflrey's seal; perhaps a genealogical clue. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XIII
(Apr.) 52-53. [730
46 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. i
I
[Terry, Roderick] The early relations between the colonies of New Plymouth anc.
Rhode Island; a paper read l.efore the Society, August 16, 1920, by the president'
Newport, R. I. 32 p. (Newport hist. soc. bul., no. 34) [73:!
Caption title. 'I
Fitch, Thomas. The Fitch papers. Correspondence and documents during Thomai
Fitch's governorship of the colony of Connecticut, 1754-1766. v. II: January
1759-May 1766. Hartford: Connecticut historical society, xxii, [2], 457 p. (Conni
hist. soc. coll., XVIII) [73S|
Albert C. Bates, editor. '
A considerable number of the letters and documents relate to matters connected with the French anc
Indian war.
Index of soldiers: p. 403-423.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 366-367.
Bolton, Reginald Pelham. New York city in Indian possession. N. Y.: Museurc,
of the American Indian, Heye foundation. [4], 223-395 p. facsims., map. (Indiarl
notes and monographs, v. II, no. 7) [733*
An effort to determine the boundaries of the lands belonging to the Indian tribes in and about what '
is now New York city, and their tribal inter-relationships. ,
Includes an index of native names recorded in deeds of sale for lands. I
Broshar, Helen. The first push westward of the Albany traders. Miss. Valley hist.
REV., VII (Dec.) 228-241. [734
Concerned with the trade with the Indians in the West carried on by the British traders at Albany,
mainly during the period from 1684 to 1G92. ,
Corwin, Charles E. The influence of Luther upon Manhattan Island during its',
childhood days. Phesbytepjan hist. soc. jour., X (June) 230-236. [7351
Corwin, Charles E. The introduction of the English language into the services ofj
the Collegiate Dutch church of New York city. Presbyterian hist. soc. JouR.,i
X (Mar.) 175-188. [736
The elusive monument erected to General James Wolfe. N. Y. hist. soc. BUL.,IVi
(Oct.) 74-75. [737 1
The writer has gleaned from various sources the few notices which could be found describing this }
monument which was erected in New York city, about 1762. i
Ford, Worthington C. The earliest years of the Dutch settlement of New Netherland. I
N. Y. STATE HIST. ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 1919, 74-86. [738 I
Hall, Edward Hagaman. The manor of Philipsborough; address written for the New'
York branch of the Order of colonial lords of manors in America. Baltimore. 35 p. i
illus., plates. [Order of colonial lords of manors in America. New York branch.*
Publications] [739 '
LeFavre, Ralph. The Huguenots of New Paltz. Hug. soc. S. C. trans., XXV, l
103-109. [740 i
Loyalty vindicated from the reflections of a virulent pamphlet called ^A letter from ,
a gentleman of New- York, concerning the troubles which happened in that province, !
in the time of the late happy revolution> wherein the libellous author falsely i
scandalises those loyal gentlemen, who couragiously threw off the al^solute slavery '
that provijice then lay under: and declar'd for His present Majesty, the Protestant j
religion and the English laws. [Boston: Printed by Bartholomew Green and ;
John Allen, 1698. Boston, 1920] facsim.: 28 numb, leaves. [Americana series;
photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 7] [741
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the New York historical society library,
January 1920.
Relates to the administration of Governor Jacob Leisler.
The pamphlet was first reprinted in the Collections of the New York historical society for the year
1868. Publication fund series, v. I, p. 365-394.
[An Act for reversing the attainder of Jacob Leisler and others]: p. [25]-28.
Mead, Nelson P. Growth of religious liberty in New York city. N. Y. state hist,
ASSOC PROC, XVII, 1919, 141-153. [742
Mainly concerned with the colonial period.
The New-York gazette. 1732-1736. Numbers 378-581. [Reproductions] [N. Y.:
Issued by the New York historical society] 4 v, [743
The issues for 1726-1729 were reproduced in 1919, in 4 v.
New York historical society. Collections for the year 1919. N. Y.: Printed for the
Society. [8], 448 p. (The John Watts DePeyster publication fund, LII) 743a
Contents.— The letters and papers of Cadwallader Golden, v. Ill, 1743-1747.
"lie is most familiarly known as the tory lieutenant-governor of New York at the outbreak of the
Revolutionary war." The letters are valuable material lor the study of the history of the province.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 47
Severance, Frank Hayward. Soaie Enpflish governors of Now York and thoir par*
in the development of the colony. N. Y. state hist, assoc. proc, XVII, 1919.
124-140. [741
Severance, Frank Hayward. Western New York under the French. Rochester.
N. Y.: Pub. by the Lewis II. Morgan chapter of the New York state archeological
association. 40 p. (Its Researches and transactions, v. II, no. 2) [745
The Van Cortlandt manor; anonymous address read by the late Mrs. James Marsland
Lawton, president-general of the Order of colonial lords of manors in America, at
the sixth annual meeting of the New York branch held in the city of New York,
Janua,ry 26, 1918. Baltimore, 27 p. illus., plates, ports. [Order. of colonial lords
of manors in America. New York branch. Publications] [746
Abstracts of New Jersey commissions, civil and military, from liber a. a. a. of com-
missions in the secretary of state's office at Trenton [1713-1714] Pa. geneal. soc.
PUB.,. VII, no. 3 (Mar.) 236-244. [747
Cont. from v. VII, no. 2, March 1919.
Godfrey, Carlos E. The Dutch trading post at Trenton. N. J. hist. soc. proc,
n. s. V (Oct.) 224-230. [748
Carson, Hampton L. The genesis of the charter of Pennsylvania. Pa. mag. hist..
XLIII (Oct. 1919) 289-331. [749
A study in the development of the coloninl policy of the crown. Opens with an analysis of the his-
torical antecedents of the charter, the charters granted to other American colonies during the period
from 1606 to 1681, introductory to an analysis of the Pennsylvania charter of 1681.
Darlington, Mary Carson, ed. History of Colonel Henry Bouquet and the western
frontiers of Pennsylvania, 1747-1764. [n. p.] Priv. print. [16], 224 p. port., plate,
maps, plans. [760
Contents. — Frontier of Pennsylvania. Logstown. Claims of Virginia. Virginia's claim to western
Pennsylvania. Trent's journal. E. Ward's deposition, 1756. Fort Du Quesne. George Croghan.
Extracts from letters of General Shirley. Thomas Pownall. General Edward Braddock. Colonel
Bouquet. Fort Pitt. Redoubt of Fort Pitt. Pittsburgli. Loyalists. Canada and Spain. Bouquet
papers from British museum. Floods in the rivers at Pittsburgh.
Denny, H. L. L. Memoir of His Excellency Colonel William Denny, lieutenant-
governor of Pennsylvania, etc. Pa. mag. hist., XLIV (Apr.) 97-121. [751
Includes several letters of the years 1756-1759, relating to his administration, taken from the "Penn
papers" in the Historical society of Pennsylvania.
Frame, Richard. A Short description of Pennsilvania, Or, A Relation What things
are known, enjoyed, and like to be discovered in in [!] the said Province. [Pre-
sen]ted [?] as a Token of Good Will [to the people?] of England. By Richard Frame.
Printed and Sold by William Bradford in Philadelphia, 1692. [P-oston, 1920]
I facsim.: 8 leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproductions by the Massachu-
I setts historical society, no. 25] [762
In verse.
Title-page of the original badly mutilated. For words supplied cf. C. R. ITildeburn, A century of
printing . . . 1885, v. I, p. 20.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the collection of the Library company of
Philadelphia, September 1920.
Gnichtel, Frederick W. The Trenton decree of 1782 and the Pennamite war. An
address delivered before the Trenton historical society, November 18, 1920.
Trenton, N. J.: The Trenton historical society. 12 p. [763
The "Trenton decree", rendered at Trenton, N. J., on Dec. 30, 1782. terminated a dispute begun
in 1757, and known as the Pennamite war, involving a claim on the part of Connecticut to the ownership
of a portion of northern Pennsylvania.
Pittsburgh and vicinity in 1761. Western Pa. hist, mag., Ill (Oct.) 198-200. [764
Reprinted from "Father Abraham's almanac", for the year 1761.
Hammond, John. Hammond versus Heamans. Or, An answer To an audacious
Pamphlet, published by an impudent and ridiculous Fellow, named Roger Hea-
mans, Calling himself Commander of the Ship Golden Lion, wherein he endeavours
by lies and^holy expressions, to colour over his murthers and treacheries com-
mitted in the Province of Maryland, to the utter mine of that flonshing Plantation;
I Having for a great sum sold himself to proceed in those cruelties; it being altogether
answered out of the abstract of credible Oaths taken here in England. In which
' is published His Highnesses absolute (though neglected) Command to Richard
Bennet Esq; late Governour of Virginia, and all others, not to disturbe the Lord
Baltamores Plantation in Maryland. . . . Printed at London for the use of the
48 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Author, and are to be sold at the Royall Exchange in Cornhill. [1655. Boston, I
1920]. facsiin.: 2 p. I., 17 numb, leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproduc- I
tions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 24] [755 {
Written in answer to "An additional brief narrative of a late bloody design against the Protestants in I
Ann Arundel county, and Severn, in Maryland ... by Roger Ileaman . . . 1655." i
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the British museum, August 1920.
Heaman, Boger. An additional brief narrative Of a late Bloody Design Against The
Protestants in Ann Arundel County, and Severn, in Maryland in the Country of i
Virginia. As also Of the extraordinary Deliverance of those poor oppressed people, j
Set forth by Roger Heaman Commander of the Ship Golden Lyon, an eye witness
there. London, Printed for Livewell Chapman at the Crown in Popes-Head-Alley.
1655. [Boston, 1920] facsim.: 2 p. 1., 14 numb, leaves. [Americana series;
photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 23] [756
Relates to the battle fought at Providence. Md., March 25, 1655.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced 'from the original in the British museum, August 1920.
Howard, McHenry. Some early colonial Marylanders. Md. hist, mag., XV (Mar.-
Dec.) 65-71, 168-180, 292-303, 312-324. [757
Cont. from v. XIV, 1919.
Contents.— Attorney General Thomas Burford, d. 1686/7. Three George Platers. Christopher and
John Rousby. Lieutenant Colonel John Barboe.
Marique, Marie T. Catholic day. U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XIV, 182-193. [768
An essay on " Cathoiic day'- , March 25, 1634, on which day was celebrated the first mass on St. Clement
Island, in the Potomac, and the colony of Maryland was established by Lord Baltimore.
Marye, William B. The Old Indian road. Md, hist, mag., XV (June-Dec.) 107-124,
208-229, 345-395. [769
A highway in northern Maryland known in colonial times as the Old Indian road.
Skirven, Percy G. Seven pioneers of the colonial eastern shore. Md. hist, mag.,
XV (Sept.-Dec.) 230-251, 395-419. [760
Contents.— Robert Vaughan. Joseph Wickes. Thomas Hynson. James Ringgold. Augustine
Herman. Richard Tilghman. Simon Wilmer.
Steiner, Bernard C. Presbyterian beginnings. Md. hist, mag., XV (Dec.) 305-311.
[761
Historical address on the occasion of the unveiling of the monument at North Point, on Oct. 27, 1920,
to cojnmemorate the first services of the Presbyterian church held within the bounds of the present
presbytery of Baltimore, in 1714.
Steiner, Bernard C. The royal province of Maryland in 1692. Md. hist, mag., XV
(June) 125-168. [762
Byrd, William. Letters of William Byrd, first [1691] Va. mag. hist., XXVIII (Jan.)
11-25. [763
Clark, J. Murray. The Virginia experiment — socialism and starvation. Canad.
bankers' ASSOC. JOUR., XXVIII (Oct.) 105-112. [764
An account of the settlement of the Virginia colony, considered as an experiment in socialism or com-
munism. The writer points out that the starvation which resulted was not due to the "barrenness or
defect of the couutrie" but to socialism.
Clark, J. Murray. Why the "lawes of Virginia". Va. law reg., n. s. VI (June)
81-100. [765
Concerning the reasons which moved the people of Nova Scotia in 1721, to adopt the "lawes of Vir-
ginia" as a basis for the establishment of the first court of judicature to administer English law in what
fs now Canada, the reason emphasi?ed being that Virginia had adopted so closely the English principles
of liberty and justJice embodied in the Common law.
Groome, H. C. The finding of Fauquier. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag.,
II (July) 314-319. [766
Regarding the early histo*;^ of Fauquier county.
[Harrison, Fairfax] The Devon Carys. N. Y.: Priv. print., The De Vinne press.
2 V. plates, ports., maps, geneal. tabs. [767
Preface signed: F. H. (i. e. Fairfax Harrison).
A history of the Cary family of Devon, England.
Vol. II contains a chapter (p. 561-669) on " The family of the Virginia emigrant," Miles Cary, 1623-
1667. It contains many historical notes relating to conditions in Virginia at the time.
History of York county in the seventeenth century. Tyler's quar. hist, and
geneal. mag., I (Apr.) 231-275. [768
Jernegan, Marcus W. Compulsory education in the southern colonies. School
rev., XXVIII (Feb.) 127-142. [769
Contents.— II. Virginia.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 49
Jemegan, Marcus W. Slavery and the beginnings of industrialism in the American
colonies. Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan.) 220-240. [770
Concerned with the employment of slaves In industries other than those purely agricultural. Em-
phasis is placed on conditions in two colonies, South Carolina and Virginia.
Kemper, Charles E. Documents relating to the boundaries of the Northern Neck.
Va. mag. hist., XXVIII (Oct.) 297-318. [771
From the originals in the British public record office.
Consists of two letters from Governor Gooch, 1729 and 1732/3, in regard to the boundaries of the North-
ern Neck, Maryland and Pennsylvania, and the report of the commissioners to settle the boundaries,
made in 1736.
Land certificates for Northampton county. Va. mag. hist., XXVIII (Apr.) 142-151.
[772
List of those to whom certificates were issued for taking up land in Northampton county, In 1640.
Eomance in American history; the beginnings of the United States in the colony of
Virginia. Americana, XIV (July) 187-207. [773
Shelton, Thomas W. Why the "lawes of Virginia". Central law jour., XCI
(Oct. 8) 262-263. [774
Discusses an article by the Hon. J. Murray Clark, of Toronto, printed in the Virginia law register,
Jime 1920, concerning the reasons which moved the Nova Scotia people to adopt the "lawcs of Viiginia"
as a basis for their gOA^ernment, instead of those of some other of the colonies. See no. 765, above
Tyler, Lyon G. The arrested charter of 1676. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal.
MAG., II (July) 289-293. [776
Tyler, Lyon G. Flowerdew Hundred and Sir George Yardley. Tyler's quar. hist.
AND geneal. mag., II (Oct.) 115-129. [776
Flowerdew Hundred was a plantation belonging to Sir George Yardley, which was included in a
tract of land granted to him by the Indians in 1617.
Virginia. Council and General court. Minutes of the Council and General court,
1622-1629. Va. mag. hist., XXVIII (Jan.-Oct.) 3-10, 97-108, 219-224, 319-327.
[777
This installment covers the years 1626 and 1627.
Cont. from v. XXVII, 1919.
Virginia company of London. By His Maiesties Counseil for Virginia. A brief e
declaration of the present state of things in Virginia, and of a diuision to be now
made, of some part of those lands in our actuall possession, as well to all such as have
aduentured their monyes, as also to those that are planter's there. [London, 1616?
Boston, 1920] facsim.: 8 numb, leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproduc-
tions by the Massachusetts liistorical society, no. llj [778
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the John Carter Brown Ubrary, March 1920.
Virginia in 1681-83. Va. mag. hist., XXVIII (Jan.-Oct.) 41-53, 117-127, 225-234,
, 354-358. [779
! Abstracts of documents from collections in the Virginia state library.
Includes copies of instructions to Lord Culpeper, and reports about conditions in Virghiia, at that
date. There are also several letters and documents giving accounts of the "plant cutting" disturbances,
when many colonists attempted to increase the value ol tobacc© by destroying a large part of the growing
crop,
Virginia quit rent rolls. 1704. Va. mag. hist., XXVIII (July-Oct.) 207-218, 328-339.
! [780
I Consists of copies of lists, which were transmitted to the British government for the annual quit rent.
gving the names of the land owners and the amount each owned, for the year 1704, of Henrico and
Prince George counties.
Clark, Rosamond. A sketch of Fort Dobbs. N. C. booklet, XIX (Apr.) 133-138.
[781
] Colonial fort in North Carolina.
llConnor, R. D. W. Race elements in the white population of North Carolina. [Ral-
I eigh, N. C] The college. 115 p. (North Carolina state normal and industrial
college. Historical publications, no. 1) [782
A study of the origins and characteristics of the races in North Carolina during the colonial period.
ooper, Francis H. Some colonial history of Craven county [ N. C] James Sprunt
hist, pub., XVII, no. 1, 29-74. [783
Goodpasture, A. V. Pepys and the proprietors of Carolina. Tenn. hist, mag., VI
(Oct.) 166-176. [784
Notes regarding the proprietors of Carolina mentioned by Pepys in his Diary.
50 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION". i
I
Graffenried, Christoph von. Christoph von Graff enried 's account of the foundinj
of New Bern; ed. with an historical introduction and an Enj^lish translation, b;i
Vincent H. Todd, in cooperation with Julius Goebel. Raleigh: Edwards ani
Broughton print, co., state printers. 434 p. (N. C. hist. com. pub.) [78 1
German and French versions, with an English translation of each. |
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Oct. 1921) 157. |
Voigt, Gilbert P. Swiss notes on South Carolina. S. C. hist, mag., XXI (Julyf
93-104. [78i|
Concerned with the German-Swiss emigration to South Carolina in 1736, and the settlement of Ne\
Windsor.
Webber, Mabel L., contrib. A bill of complaint in chancery, 1700. S. C. hist. mag.
XXI (Oct.) 139-143. [78'
Copied from a paper found among some unindexed documents in the office of the clerk of the Court
Charleston.
Great Britain. Sovereign (George II). The two royal commissions issued to Johi'
Reynolds as governor of the province of Georgia. Ga. hist, quar., IV (Dec. 1
159-178. [781 1
Oglethorpe's treaty with the Lower Creek Indians [1739] Ga. hist, quar., IV (Mar. |
3-16. [788
Copy of a document in the possession of the Georgia historical society, containing a copy of the treaty
[Le Challeux, Nicolas] A true and perfect description, of the last voyage or Nauiga
tioii, attempted by Capitaine lohn Rybaut, deputie and generall for the Frencl
men, into Terra Florida, this yeare past. 1565. Imprinted at London l:>y Hem-)
Denham, for Thomas Hacket, and are to be soldo at his shop in Lumbart streat(|
[1566] [Boston, 1920] facsim.: 56 leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproduc I
tions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 13] [78j{
Preface, "The authour to his friend," signed: At Deepe the .xxij day of May. 1566 . , . N. h'
Shalleux. [
For French editions published in 1566 cf. Brunet, Sabin, and Catalogue of the John Carter Browi
library . . . 1919, v. I.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the British museum, April 1920. j
Aivord, Clarence WaUvorth. The Illinois country, 1673-1818. Pub. by the Illinoif|
Centennial commission. Springfield. [20], 524 p. plates, ports., maps, charts!
(Illinois centennial publications, pub. by authority of the Illinois Centennial com-i
mission. The centennial history of Illinois, Clarence Walworth Aivord, editor-in'
chief, V. I) [79C,
Chapts. I-XI (p. 1-245) are concerned with the period of exploration and the French regime. Chaptsj
XII-XVI (p. 246-357') are devoted to the British occupation and the Kevolution. The remainder of
the book treats of the early years of the American occupation.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 341-344; Canad. hist, rev., II (Sept. 1921) 27.5-276. |
Campbell, Thomas J. Eusebio Kino, 1644-1711. Cath. hist, rev., V (Jan.) 353-376.1
[791-
Jesuit missionary in Mexico and the Southwest from 1683 to 1711. His " Historical memoir of Pimerisj
Alta; a contemporary account of the beginnings of California, Sonora, and Arizona", translated andi
edited by Herbert Eugene Bolton, was published in 1919 (Cleveland: A. H. Clark co.).
Ceioron de Blainville, Pierre Joseph. Celoron's journal. Edited by A. A. Lambing.
Ohio archaeol. and hist, quar., XXIX (Oct.) 335-396. [792|
Journal of an expedition down the Allegheny and Ohio rivers in 1749. The original journal is pre-j
served in the archives of the Departemente de la marine, Pans. )
Corrigan, Gertrude. Two hundredth anniversary of Fort Chartres. III. Cath. hist.:
REV., II (Apr.) 474-488. [7931
An article commemorating the building in 1720, by the French, of a fort sixteen miles above Kaskaskia
in the Illinois country. I
Dart, Kenry P., ed. Cabildo archives. La. hist, quar., Ill (Jan., July-Oct.) 71-99, j
279-360, 509-569. [794j
Text copied and translations made by Mrs. Heloise H. Cruzat.
Documents ironi the archives of the French and Spanish periods of Louisiana history, preserved in'
the Cabildo, at New Orleans. '
They extend over the period 172&-1770, fifteen of them being prior to the transfer to Spam in 1763. The|
July number contains records of criminal trials, 1720-1766.
Les Frangais sur les cotes occidentales des Etats-Unis au xviii^ si^cle. Rev. hist.
COLONIES FRAN?., VHP auu., l'' trimestro, 184-188. [795
Brief summary of documents which concern the activities of the French in the Southwest, to be foun(
in the "Catalogue of aiaterialsin the Archivo general de Indias for the history of the Pacific coast and]
the American Southwest. By Charles E. Chapman (Berkeley: University of CaUforma press, 1919)"
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 51
Goodwin, Cardinal. The Louisiana territory from 1682-1803. La. hist, quar., Ill
(Jan.) 5-25. [796
Harrison, Margaret Hayne. The lost manuscript of Father Kino. Cath. world, CX
(Feb.) 653-660. [797
A inanuscrip»t discovered a few years ago by Dr. Herbert Bolton, among the Mexican archives. It
contains the original historical memoir of Father Xinc, the Jesuit pioneer of our Southwest, and gives
an account of the beginnings of California, Sonora and Arizona, during the years between 1683 and 1711.
The manuscript was published in 1919 under the title "Kino's historical memoir of Pinieria Alta".
Henderson, Archibald. The conquest of the old Southwest; the romantic story of
the early pioneers into Virginia, the Carolinas, Tennessee, and Kentucky, 1740-
1790. N. Y.: Century co. xxiv, 395 p. plates, ports., map, facsims. [798
Holweck, F. G. Origin of the Creoles of German descent. St. Louis Cath. hist.
REV., II (Apr.) 114-122. [799
An account of German emigration to Louisiana in the early 18th century, and the settlement of the
"German coast" of Louisiana.
Pradel de Lamase, Martial de. Un ofRcier colon en Louisiane, le chevalier de Prade
(1692-1764). Paris: Societe de I'histoire des colonies frangaises (en vente chez
Edouard Champion), p. 109-134. [800
Reprinted from the Revue de Thistoire de§ colonies frangaises, t. VIII, 1920.
Price, William. Records of the Superior council of Louisiana — X. La. hist, quar.,
Ill (July) 403-448. [801
Consists of a calendar of the records, 1726-1727.
Cont. from v. II, October 1919.
Reeves, Arthur B. Old and new South sea bubbles — II. World's work, XLI (Dec.)
195-200. [802
This installment deals with John Law and the Mississippi bubble.
Snyder, John F. Captain John Baptiste Saucier, at Fort Chartres in the Illinois,
1751-1763. III. hist. soc. trans., for the year 1919, 215-262. [802a
" Reprinted, with some additions, and correction of certain errors in the first edition [Peoria, III., 1901] "
A sketch of a captain of the French army, who assisted in designing the plans of the second Fort
Chartres, and in its construction.
Villiers, Marc de, baron. A history of the foundation of New Orleans (1717-1722).
Translated from the French by Warrington Dawson. La. hist, quar., Ill (Apr.)
157-251. [303
The original French edition was published at Paris (Imprimerie nationale) in 1917.
17631783.
Sources and Documents.
Banister, John. Letter from John Banister to Elisha Tupper, Guernsey. Va. mag.
j hist., XXVIII (July) 266-273. [804
Written from Virginia, July 11, 1775.
Beatty, Joseph M..,jr.,ed. Letters of the four Beatty brothers of the Continental army,
! 1774-1794. Pa. MAG. HIST., XLIV (July) 193-263. [805
Clark, George Rogers. The conquest of the Illinois, by George Rogers Clark; ed. by
Milo Milton Quaife. Chicago: R. R. Donnelley and sons, xx, 190 p. port.,
facsim. (The Lakeside classics) [80^
Clark's "Memoir" of the conquest of the Illinois coimtry in 1778-1779.
Clarke, Willikm Butler, contrib. Col. John Brown's expedition against Ticonderoga
and Diamond Island, 1777. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIV (Oct.)
284-293. [^^"^
Consists of some correspondence between Col. Brown and Gen. Lincoln, in 1777, relating to the opera-
tions of Col. Brown's command against Ticonderoga and Diamond Island.
Icorrespondence of Col. William Aylett, commissary general of Virginia [1777]
Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag., I (Jan.) 145-161. [808
Cent, from v. I, no. 2, 1919.
?ord, Worthington nhauncey. Some papers of Aaron Burr. Am. antiq. soc. proc
n. s. XXIX, pt. 1, 43-128. [80^
A coUection of letters to and by Aaron Burr covering the period 1772 to 1818 They were presented
to Mrs. John Davis, of Worcester, Massachusetts, by Matthew L. Davis, in 1839.
52 AMERICAK HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Fox, Dixon R., ed. Minutes of the Presbytery of New York, 1776-1782. N. Y. state
HIST. ASSOC. JOUR., I (Jan.-Oct.) 48-49, 109-111, 178-188, 244-258. [810
Cont. from v. I, no. 1, Oct. 1919.
The Presbyterian clergy were leaders in the separatist party at the time of the Revolution.
Haslewood, William. Journal of a British officer during the American revolution.
[Ed. by Louise Phelps Kellogg] Miss. Valley hist, rev., VII (June) 51-58. [811
The writer of the diary was Captain William Haslewood of the Sixty-third British infantry, which
was sent to Boston in 1775. It contains information regarding the battle of Bunker Hill, the siege of
Boston, the campaign on the Hudson, and the operations around Philadelphia.
Henderson, Archibald. An interesting colonial document. Va. mag. hist., XXVIII
(Jan.) 54-57. [812
Prints a copy of a document containing a series of declarations at a " General meeting of the freeholders
of the county of Meckieubiirg on the 29th day of July, 177-t," expressing views m regard to the rights
of taxation in America.
Hewes, Elihu. Letter of Elihu Hewes to Joseph Hewes. Mass. hist. soc. proc
LIII, 25-27. [813
Written from Fort Pownal, June 10, 1775.
Holten, Samuel. Journal of Doctor Samuel Holten while in the Continental congress,
May, 1778, to August, 1780. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VIII, 97-130. [814
Cont. from v. VII, 1919.
Also published in the Essex institute historical collections, v. LV, July-October 1919, and v. LVl,
Jan. -Apr. 1920.
Kite, Elizabeth S. Extracts from the diplomatic correspondence of Conrad Alexander
Gerard, first minister plenipotentiary to the United States, July, 1778 to October,
1779. Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXXI (Sept.) 215-228. [816
Notes copied from private papers in the Archives of foreign affairs, Paris.
Lincoln, Benjamin. Letter of Benjamin Lincoln to John Lowell [May 31, 1781]
Mass. hist. soc. proc, LIII, 24-25. [816
Lyons, Elizabeth Henry. Yellowed leaves. (From original mss. in possession of the
Lyonsfamily, Mercercounty, Ky.) D. A. R. mag., LIV (Sept.) 527-530. [817
Extracts drawn from the journal of one of the writer's Revolutionary ancestors, October, 17S1.
Mackall, Leonard L. A letter from the Virginia loyalist John Randolph to Thomaa
Jefferson in 1779. Am. antiq. soc. proc, n. s. XXX, pt. 1, 17-31. [818
Print sahithertounknownlettcr, written by theloyalist attorney-general of Virginia, JohnRandolph.
Morris, Margaret. Revolutionary journal of Margaret Morris of Burlington, New i
Jersey. Friends' hist. soc. bul., IX, no. 3 (May) 103-114. [819 1
The third and concluding instalment of the journal. ,
The scene of this revolutionary journal was Creen Bank, Burlington, New Jersey. The period cov- j
ered in this instalment extends from January to June, 1777. j
Morris, Robert. Letters of Chief Justice Morris, 1777-'79. N. J. hist. soc. proc, \
n. s. V (July) 108-178. , [820 |
The writer was chief justice of t h e Supreme court of New Jersey, 1777-1779,
Neisser, George. Items of history of York, Penna., during the Revolution. Pa. J
MAG. hist., XLIV (Oct.) 309-324. [821
Items selected from the diaries of the Moravian congregation at York, Rev. George Neisser, pastor. '
New York. Committee of association for the city and county of New York. A letter '
from the Committee of the association of New York to the lord mayor and corpo- I
ration of the city of London, 5th May, 1775. [London] Printed under the direc- \
tion of the Library committee of the corporation. [14] p. facsim. [822 |
Prefatory note, followed by the letter in facsimile: p. [9]-tl4] !
" The New York Committee of correspondence had been succeeded in November, 1774, by a Commit-
tee of observation chosen to carry out the measures adopted by Congress at Philadelphia. So disturbed
were conditions in New York after the battle of Lexington that this committee proposed the formation
of an association to prevent mob-rule and to support the civil authority. Accordingly on April 29th
[1775] the articles of association were read and signed at a public meeting by over one thousand free-
holders, freemen, and inhabitants of the city and county of New York, and a few days later the com-
mittee of the association, as nominated by the Committee of observation, was elected by the ordinary
voters in the wards."— p. [5]-[6]
Pickering, Timothy. Letter of Timothy Pickering [June 4, 1777] Mass. hist. soc.
PROC, LIII, 22-23. [823
Preston papers from the originals in the Virginia state library. Va. mag. hist.,
XXVIII (Apr.-Oct.) 109-116, 241-246, 346-353. [824
Cont. from v. XXVII, 1919.
Papers of Col. William Preston, the great Virginia frontier-fighter, 1781-1782.
^
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 53
Slouch, Matthias. Letters of Col. Matthias Slough to Rohert Morris. Ed. ]jy Charles
I. Landis. Lancastp^r co. hist. soc. pap., XXIV, no. 3, 59-65. [825
Ten letters written from Lancaster, Pa., during the year 1778.
General.
Altamira, Rafael. Un libro espanol del siglo xviii acerca do los Estados Unidos.
EsTADOS Unidos, num. 7 (Jan.) 2-5. [826
Double column, Spanish and English text.
A brief summary of a book entitled, "Noticia del establecimiento y poblaci^n de las colonias inglpsas
en la America septentrional; religi.n, orden de gobierno, leyes y costumbres de sus naturales y habi-
tantes . . . Sacada de varios autores por Don Francisco Alvarez. Madrid: Antonio Fernandez, ano
de 1778."
Bolton, Herbert Eugene, and Thomas Maitland Marshall. The colonization of
North America, 1492-1783. N. Y.: Macmillan. xvi, 609 p. maps. [827
The revolt of the English colonies: p. 425-555.
I McElroy, Robert McNutt. The representative idea and the American revolution.
N. Y. STATE HIST. ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 44-55. [828
O'Shiel, Kevin R. The making of a republic. Dublin: The Talbot press limited.
xi, 150 p. maps. [829
A history of the American revolution.
Ireland's part in the American revolution: p. 126-139.
Thatcher, Herbert. The true cause of the American revolution. Landmark, II
(July) 469-474. [830
The writer, who is a London schoolmaster, believes that the American colonists did not revolt be-
cause they were taxed without being represented in ParUament, or against the principle of taxation,
but against the retention of the garrison for the support of which the taxation was to be applied.
Special.
Armbnister, Eugene L. The Wallabout prison-ships, 1776-1783. [Brooklyn, N. Y.:
The author] 29 p. illus. [831
Bailey, Edith Anna. Influences toward radicalism in Connecticut, 1754-1775.
Northampton, Mass.: Dept. of history and governmont of Smith college. [4], 179-
252 p. (Smith, coll. stud, in hist., v. V, no. 4, July 1920) [832
The purpose of the writer is to show that the radical position taken by Connecticut in the Revolu-
tionary movement, was mainly the result of British opposition to her efforts at expansion, which oppo-
sition came out most clearly in the history of the Susquehanna company.
Bernardy, Amy A. La mission di Beniamiho Franklin a Parigi nei dispacci degli
ambasciatori Veneziani in Francia (1776-1786). Archivio storico italiano
(Florence) anno LXXVIII, v. I, no. 1, 237-262. [833
The appendix (p. 256-262) consists of three dispatches and another document taken from the Archi-
vio di stato di Venezia. I. L'Ambasciatore Marco Zeno d\ notizia al Senato della missionc di Benia-
mino Franklin a Parigi (Dec. 30, 1776). II. L'Ambasciatore Daniel Dolfm ragguaglia il Senato circa
I'azxone e i propositi di Bcniamino FrankUn (Mar. 30, 1783). III. L'Ambasciatore Daniel Df)lfin rcnde
con to al Senato dei suoi rapporti con Beniamino Franklin (Aug. 11, 1783). IV. Proposta di trattato
di amicizia e commercio fra gu Stati Uniti d'America e la Repubblica di Venezia, indirizzata all' Ambas-
ciatore Dolfin dai plenipotenziarii americani Adams, Franklin e Jefferson; e risposta relativa (Decem-
ber 1784).
Browne, George Israel. Whom should history rank next to Washington among the
heroes of our war for independence? Jour. Am. hist., XIV, no. 4, 206-230. [834
The writer oCers twelve specific reasons for giving to Gen. Israel Putnam the second rank among
Revolutionary heroes.
Calver, W. L^ "Connecticut village" located. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., IV (Oct.)
71-73. [835
Brief notice of the work of the Field exploration committee of the New York historical society. It
is believed that discovery has at last been made of the elusive "Connecticut village," the winter camp
of the Connecticut troops in the Hudson highlands during the Revolution.
Conrotte, Manuel. La intervencion de Espana en la independencia de los Estados
Unidos de la America del Norte. Madrid: V. Suarez. 298 p. [836
A study of the attitude of Spain in the American revolution, mainly based upon diplomatic corre-
spondence contained in the Archivo historico nacional at Madrid. •
Rev. m: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 837-838; Am. jour, intcrnat. law, XV (Jan. 1921) 308-309.
De Laporte, Helen Reed. Revolutionary records of northern Dutchess. D. A. R.
MAG., LIV (Mar.) 160-162. [837
Reyolutiouary records of Dutchess comity, N. Y.
54 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Ditmas, Charles Andrew. The life and service of Major-General William Alexander
also called the Earl of Stirling. Brooklyn, N. Y.: Printed for the Society [by the i
Brooklyn Eagle ^ press] 15 p. port. (Kings county historical society. Contri- I
butions to American history, no. 1) [838 i
Dorsey, Ella Loraiae. Revolutionary pension records aid in Americanization 1
D. A. R. MAG., LIV (July) 377-388. [839 |
Doughty, Joshua, jr. Washington's march from Princeton to Morristown. N. J. [
HIST. soc. PROC, n. s. V (Oct.) 240-246. [840 1
Dye, E. V. Pelatiah Wel>ster and the Revolutionary currency. In Michigan acad- {
emy of science. Twenty-first annual report. Fort Wayne, Ind.: Fort Wavne i
print. CO. p. 43-46. [841 j
Fitzpatrick, John C. The continental army uniform. D. A. R. mag., LIV (Nov )
629-639. [842
Fitzpatrick, John C. A sea captain of the Revolution. D. A. R. mag., LIV (Aug.)
444^48. [843
The story of Andrew Paton, captain of the ship Lady Margareta which sailed from Cadiz, Spain, for
Edenton, North CaroUna, in the winter of 1777-1778, with a miscellaneous cargo of supplies.
Fitzpatrick, John C. Washington's headquarters in seven states. D. A. R. mag.,
LIV (Feb.) 61-79. [844
Fowler, Raymond F. The old defenses of West Point. In Martelaer's Rock associa-
tion. Third annual report and year book . . . 1919-1920. West Point, N. Y.
[The association] p. 29-32. [845
Concerned with the period of the Revolutionary war.
Froidevaux, Henri. Les armements du Havre pendant la guerre de I'ind^pendance
americaine. Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 265-267. [846
Consists of data regarding supi)lies sent from the port of H avre to the American colonists duringthe
Revolutionary war, and enumerates the ships which carried the armament.
Gardner, Monica M. Kosciuszko, a biography. London: G. Allen and Unwin ltd.;
N. Y.: C. Scribner's sons. 211 p. [847
The fight for American freedom: p. 37-52. [
Gipson, Lawrence Henry. Tared Ingorsoll; a study of American loyalism in relation i
to British colonial government. New Haven: Yale university press; [etc., etc.] j
432 p. (Yale historical publications. Miscellany, VIII) [848 |
"This essay was awarded the John Addison Porter prize, Yale university, 1918."
An interpretation of the life of Jared InperFoll, of Mew ];aven, agent for the colony ofConnecticutin ■
London, 1758-1761, 1764-1765, and stamp distributor for the colony in 1765, from the point of view of the
relationship existing between England and her American colonies. Includes a chapter dealing with )
his connection with the Susquehanna^, dispute. i
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 807-808. I
Goebel, Julius. Christian Wolff and the Declaration of independence. Deutsch- I
Am. Geschichtsblatter, XVIII-XIX, 69-87. [849 !
Expounds the theory that the political philosophy of the Declaration of independence was based I
upon the jus naturale laid down for the first time in the system of Christian Wolft'.
Hall, H. Duncan. The old colonial system and the American revolt. In his The I
British commonwealth of nations; a study of its past and future development.
London: Methuen. p. 14-21. [850
Harlow, Ralph. V. Economic conditions in Massachusetts during the American
revolution. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 163-190. [851
Among the economic difficulties existing at that time were financial inflation, increased cost of living,
and iU-will between the mercantile and agricultural sections of the state.
Hastings, George E. The Cock-fighter; an unpublished poem by Francis Hopkinson.
Pa. mag. hist., XLIV (Jan.) 73-76. [852
A bit of doggerel written by Francis Hopkinson in 1770. The writer of the present article identifies
the person ridiculed in the poem as Captain James De Lancy of New York.
Hayward, M. C. The loyalists of New Brunswick, Canada. Tyler's quae. hist.
AND GENEAL. MAG., II (July) 325-326. [853
James, James A. To what extent was George Rogers Clark in military control of the
Northwest at the close of the American revolution? Am. hist, assoc. rep., for
the year 1917, 313-329. [854
A review of events in the Northwest beginning in 1780 with Clark's plans and preparations fc^r the
expedition against Detroit, and concluding with his campaign against the Shawnee strongholds in 1782.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 55
Jameson, J. Franklin. The association. Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year 1917,
305-312. [855
Discusses the history of the institution called the "association," of which Die Association of 1774 is
an example.
Jones, E. Alfred. A literary, political and military watchmaker in America. Art
IN America, VIII (Oct.) 308-310. [856
Isaac Heron, loyalist, who served in the N. Y. loyal militia in the Revolution.
Jones, E. Alfred. Lost objects of art in America. Art in America, VIII (Apr.-
June) 137-144, 187-192. [857
Concerned with the havoc wrought to objects of art during the American revolution.
Jones, E. Alfred. The plate of the British peace commissioners to America in 1778.
Burlington mag., XXXVII (Aug.) 96-100. [858
It was the custom in England at that time to provide British ambnssadors with silver for their use in
embassies in foreign capitals. There is here printed a list of the plato allowed for the use of the peace
commissioners to America, found in the Public record office, Lord Chamberlain's books, series I.
Kings county historical society. Dedication of monument and altar to liberty on
Battle Hill, Greenwood cemetery, August 27, 1920, 144th anniversary of the battle
of Long Island — the first battle of the nation — fought August 27, 1776. Programme
of ceremonies of Kings county historical society, Brooklyn, N. Y. [N. Y.: The De
Vinne press] 23 p. illus. (inch port.) [859
Kite, Elizabeth S. Conrad Alexandre Gerard. Md. hist, mag., XV (Dec.) 342-344.
[860
Extracts from the Archives historiques du Ministore dcs affaires etrang^res, 1778-1779. Gerard came
to America in 1778, as the first French minister to the United States.
La Roncigre, Charles de. Un grand navigateur parisien (d'apres des documents
inedits). Rev. hebdomadaire, XXIXe ann. (Nov. 20, 27) 335-349, 458-408. [861
A sketch of Louis-Antoine de Bougainville, who was aide-de-camp to Montcalm in the defence of
Canada, founder of a colony at the Isles Malouines (Falkland Islands), 1761-1767, and later served in the
French navy in the American revolution.
Lefferts, Charles M. The Connecticut grenadier cap. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., IV
(Apr.) 21-23. [862
Describes a cap in the possession of the New-York historical society, said to have been worn in the
battle of Fort Griswold or Groton, in IVSl, which was undoubtedly the headdi-ess of sojno independent
grenadier company formed in the colony of Connecticut previous to the Revolutionary war.
The liberty pole on the commons. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., Ill (Jan.) 109-130. [863
Consists of abstracts from contemporary documents, with facsimiles, giving an account of five liberty
' poles erected in New York city between the years 1766 and 1770. Includes also a proposal to erect in
City E all park a liberty pole as a memorial to the patriotism of the New York troops who served in the
World war.
IMarten, C. H. K. The stamp act of 1765. Discovery, I (Feb.-Mar.) 52-54, 74-77.
! [864
I. The conditions and circumstances preceding the act. II. What George Grenville did — and what
he ought to have done.
Merlant, Joachim. Soldiers and sailors of France in the American war for independ-
j ence (1776-1783). Authorized ed., tr. from the French by Mary Bushnell Coleman.
N. Y.: Scribner. xvii, 213 p. plate, ports. [865
The French edition (Paris: Alcan, 1918) has title: La France et la guerre de I'ind^pendance americaine
(1776-1783).
orison, Samuel E. Remarks on economic conditions in Massachusetts, 1775-1783.
Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 191-192. [866
icolay, Helen. The boys' life of Lafayette. N. Y. and London: Harper. [12],
307 p. plates, ports. [867
Dailies, vicomte de. Souvenirs d'Amerique et d'Orient. Paris: Les Editions fran-
yaises de la Nouvelle revue nationale. 243 p. , [868
Partial contents. — Les principaux artisans frangais de I'indc^pendance des !fitats-Unis d'Amerique
(1778 a 1783). Les Frangais aux fetes du centenaire de Yorktown, en 1881. . . .
Dwen, William O., ed. The Medical department of the United States army (legis-
lative and administrative history) during the period of the Revolution (1776-1786).
N. Y.:P. B. oeber. [10], 226 p. ports. [869
First published in the Annals of medical history, v. I, nos. 2, 3 and 4, 1917.
56 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. j
Pierce, Grace M. The military organizations of the American revolution. D. A. R,
MAG., LIV (Jan., Aug.) 21-25, 449^53. [87(
Cont. from v. LIII, Sept. 1919.
Piggott, Sir Francis. The freedom of the seas, historically treated. London, N. Y
[etc.] Humphrey Milford, 1919. ii, 90 p. [870i
Published for the Historical section of the Foreign office. Another edition issued in 1920 (London,
H. M. Stationery office) as no. 148 of tlie Foreign office handbooks, and v. XXIII, no. 1, of the Peaci'
handbooks. [
The war of American independence, 177&-83: p. 39-41.
[Priest, Josiah] A true history of the feats, adventures and sufferings of Matthe'w
Calkins in the time of the Revolution. In the Magazine of history with notes anc
queries. Tarrytown, N. Y. Extra number, no. 70 [i. e. 69] p. 80-104. [87]
Baffety, F. W. Edmund Burke and America from a British point of view. Land
MARK, II (May) 297-301. [87^
Schuyler, S-obert Livingston. The recall of the legions: a phase of the decentraliza-
tion of the British Empire. Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 18-36. [873*
Outlines the steps leading up to the transfer of the burden of miUtary defense to the self-governing'
colonies. Opens with a brief study of tlie system of niihtary defense in the American colonies particu-1
larly daring the period from 1703 to the Revolution. ;
Shriner, Charles E. New Jersey in the Revolution; some scenes in and about whali
is now the city of Paterson. Americana, XIV (Apr.) 97-128. [874|
Siehert, Wilbur H. Kentucky's struggle with its loyalist proprietors. Miss. Valle-j,
HIST. REV., VII (Sept.) 113-126. [875 i
Siebert, Wilbur H. The loyalists of Pennsylvania. Columbus: Pub, by the Uni-
versity at Columbus. 117 p. (Ohio state univ. bul., v. XXIV, no. 23. Contri-I
butions in history and political science, no. 5) [876J.
Contents. — The loyalists on the upper Ohio. The loyalists of northeastern Pennsylvania. The
repression of loyalists and neutrals in southeastern Pennsylvania. The British invasion of southeastern!
Pennsylvania, August 25, 1777, to June 18, 1778. Whig reprisals upon loyaUsts during and after thej
BriMsli occupation of Philadelphia. The purchase of the Indian tract on Lake Erie. The survival of
loyalism after the departure of the British from the state. The pardon of attainted loyalists by the
Supreme executive council, 1780-1790. The sale of forfeited estates. The emigration of Pennsylvania
loyalists.
Sons of the American revolution. Connecticut society. Unveiling of memorial
tablet to Daniel Bissell, the patriot spy of the Revolution, at Windsor, Conn.,
October 18, 1919. Under the auspices of Colonel Jeremiah Wadsworth branch,
Connecticut society of the Sons of the American revolution. [8] p. illus. [877,
Stony Point battlefield; its Revolutionary history. In the Twenty-fifth annual
report of the American scenic and historic preservation society, 1920. Albany:
J. B. Lyon co., printers, p. 39-73. [878
Story of Benedict Arnold's treason. State service, IV (Mar.) 219-221. [879
Taylor, Frank Hamilton. Valley Forge; a chronicle of American heroism. Issued
under the authority of the Valley Forge park commission. Phila., Pa. : W. S. Slack.
87 p. illus., ports., plate, map. [880
Tyler, Lyon G. The battle of Point Pleasant. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal.
MAG., II (July) 320-321. [881
Battle of Point Pleasant, Va., Oct. 10, 1774.
Tyler, Lyon G. Virginia and the Revolution. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal.
MAG., II (Oct,) 76-77. [082
Urtaz^n, Valentin. Historia diplomatica de America. Primera parte. La emanci-
pacion de las colonias britanicas. Tomo I. La alianza francesa. Pamplona: i
Higinio Coronas, xi, 561 p. [883 1
Worthen, Samuel Copp. Bedel's rangers at the siege of St. Johns. Granite mo.,
LII (Nov.) 448-451. [884;
The first formal siege of a British fortress by colonial troops in the Revolutionary war, in 1775. j
Yvignac, Henry d'. Les Bretons et I'ind^pendance americaine; etude historique. |
Paris: Les Editions frangaises de la Revue nationale. 96 p. [885
L
WRITINGS OIT AMEEICAISr HISTORY, 1920. 57
Revolutionary Soldiers: Names.
Brumbaugh, G. M. Commutation warrants issued to 2201 Revolutionary war officers,
including rank, regiment, and state. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., IX (Apr.-
July) 1-13, 17-29.
"These records amplify and further identify the service of the officers given by name and warrant
numbers, and amounts, m . . . Seventeenth report of the National society of the Daughters of tt(
American revolution—' Pierce's register'."
Colonel John Gibson. Western Pa. hist, mao., Ill (Jan.) 31-32. [887
Colonel of a Virginia regiment in the Revolution.
Includes a list of officers assembled at Chesterfield, Va., for service in General Greene's army.
Condict, Lewis. The Condict Revolutionary record abstracts. N. J. hist. soc. proc,
n. 8. V (Oct.) 236-240. ' [888
Copies of the war records of Revolutionary soldiers of New Jersey, abstracts of whose testimony in
applying for pensions were kept by Dr. Lewis Condict, attorney, of Morristown.
JFaunce, Solomon Elmer, comp. Copies of warrants issued by the auditor of the
Treasury department and certijfied by the comptroller of the Treasury department,
from May 31, 1828, to Aug. 5, 1828, in favor of certain surviving officers and soldiers
of the army of the revolution in the Continental army. Nation, oeneal. soc.
I QUAR., VIII (Jan.) 49-55. [889
Flagg, Charles A. An alphabetical index of Revolutionary pensioners living in
Maine. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VII (Feb.) 214-226; VIII (Aug.-Nov.)
I 121-124, 154-179. [890
Contents .—Ha wa was — Z ouldth wait .
Cont. from v. VII, no. 3, Nov. 1919.
i Georgia. Dept. of archives and history. Georgia's roster of the Revolution, con-
taining a list of the state's defenders; officers and men, soldiers and sailors; partisans
and regulars; whether enlisted from Georgia or settled in Georgia after the close of
hostilities. Comp . under authority of the legislature from various sources, including
official documents, both state and federal, certificates of service, land grants, pension
rolls, and other records, by Lucian Lamar Knight . . . state historian and d^'rector
of the Department of archives and history. Atlanta, Ga. : Index print, co. 658 p.
[891
;Goodyear, Edward B. Revolutionary war pay roll, 1777. Nation, geneal. soc.
quar., IX (Oct.) 45. [892
Transcript from a book of Stephen Goodyear, great grandfather of the compiler, Edward B. Good-
year, Naugatuck, Conn.
Silliman, Sue Imogene, comp. Michigan military records, the D. A. R. of Michigan
historical collections: records of the Revolutionary soldiers buried in Michigan; . . .
Lansing: Michigan historical commission. 244 p. plates, ports. (Michigan his-
torical commission. Bulletin, no. 12) [893
Revolutionary soldiers buried in Michigan, whose graves have been officially reported, located, or
marked, by the Daughters of the American revolution of Michigan: p. 13-80. Pensioners of territorial
Michigan: p. 81-147.
irginia state troops in +he Revolution. Va. mag. hist., XXVIII (Jan.-July) 58-
64, 247-255, 359-360. [894
Copies of several loose sheets from an old account book, found among the papers transferred from the
state auditor's office to the state library. %
Cont. from v. XXVII, 1919.
k
Revolutionary Societies.
Overman, Viola Virginia M. D. A. R. chapters named for celebrated trees. D. A. R.
MAG., LIV (Nov.) 641-646. [895
Among them are the Liberty Tree chapter, of Boston, the Oak Tree chapter, of Salem, New Jersey,
and the Witness Tree chapter, of Columbia, Pa.
1783-1789.
prombault, lieut. -colonel. Les Etats-Unis au lendemain de la guerre d'ind^pendance,
d'apr^s la correspondance d'Otto. Sabretache, XXIII (Jan.) 9-12. [896
Notes from the correspondence of Louis Guillaume Otto, comte de Mosloy, French diplomat who
served in America from 1779 to 1792.
111124°— 23 6
58 AMERICAN HISTORICAI. ASSOCIATIOK.
Wood, F. J. Paper money and Shays rebellion. Stone and Webster jour., XXVI I
(May-June) 333-345, 422-434. [897
Contents.— The unsound currency. The rebellion.
Wood, F. J. Unrest in the early days of the republic. D. A. R. mag., LIV (Jii1v)|
391-397. [888 j
1789-1829.
Sources and Documents. i
I
Ford, Worthington Channcey. Some papers of Aaron Burr. Am. antiq. soc. pboc j
n. s. XXIX, pt. 1, 43-12S. [893 j
A collection of letters by and to Aaron Burr, covering the period 1772 to 1818. They were presented '
to Mrs. John Davis,of Worcester, Massachusetts, by Matthew L. Davis, in 1839. *
Selections from the correspondence of Judge Richard Peters of Belmont [1793-1807] i
Pa. mag. hist., XLIV (Oct.) 325-342. [900 1
Includes several letters from Timothy Pickering discussing political affairs at Washington. \
Wait, Thomas B. Letter of Thomas B. Wait to James Savage. Mass. hist, soc I
PROC, LIII, 335-337. [901
Written from Washington, Feb. 7, 1816, and describing affairs before Congress of which the writer '
was a member from Massachusetts, The treaty-making power was then imder coui^idoration in !
Congress, i
Wirt, William. Letter of William Wirt, 1819, Am. hist, rev., XXV (July) 692-695. \
[902
Letter written by William Wirt, attorney-general of the United States, to his friend John Coalter,
of Richmond, dated Washington, Oct. 25, 1819. It gives the writer's opinion in regard to the measmes
proposed to meet the refusal of the king of Spain to ratify the treaty for the cession of Florida, namely,
the occupation of Florida and Texas.
Miscellaneous.
Brown, Everett Somerville. The constitutional history of the Louisiana purchase,
1803-1812. Berkeley: University of California press, xi, 248 p. (University of
California publications in history, v. X) [903
A study in the constitutional history of the territorial expansion of the United States. This treatise
has been confined principally to the lower part of the province of Louisiana, that which was organized
as Orleans Territory.
Carroll, Thomas F. Freedom of speech and the press in the federalist period: the
sedition act. Mich, law rev., XVIII (May) 615-651. [984
Farrar, Victor J. The reopening of the Russian -American convention of 1824, Wash,
hist, quar., XI (Apr.) 83-88. [905
A study of a phase of the relations between Russia and the United States in regard to trade on the
northwest coast of America, then under Russian control.
Galbreath, C. B, Lafayette's visit to Ohio valley states, Ohio archaeol, and
HIST. QUAR., XXIX (July) 163-266. [906
Henderson, Archibald. Isaac Shelby and the Genet mission. Miss. Valley hist,
rev., VI (Mar.:> 451-469. [907
Concerned with the project instigated by Genet for the enlistment of a force in Kentucky for an expe-
dition against the Spanish dominions on the Mississippi, in 1793, at the time of intense hostility towards
Spain on account of her failure to grant free navigation on the Mississippi, and with the attitude of Gov.
Shelby of Kentucky in regard to the expedition.
Hill, Joseph J. An unknown expedition to Santa Fe in 1807. Miss. Valley hist. I
rev., VI (Mar.) 560-562. [908
Contributes a copy of a letter from Joaquin del Real Alencaster, governor of New Mexico, to the com-
mandant at San Eleceario, Dec. 12, 1807. which gives information regarding an expedition made by the
French merchant, James (or Jacques) Clamorgan, from St. Louis to Santa Fe in 1807. ,
Matthews, Biander. The centenary of a question. Scribner's, LXVII (Jan.)
41-46. [909 I
Concerned with the attitude of British writers towards America in 1820. The question referred to is !
that asked by Sydney Smith in an article in the Edinburgh review for January 1820, "Who reads an ;
American book?".
I
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 59
Parsons, Edward Alexander, Louisiana completa; a centenary relation of West
Florida and the treaty wdth Spain 1819-1821. La. hist, quak., Ill (Oct.) 455- ^fiO.
[909a
Ad'lress rlelivered at the centenary celebration commemorating the treaty between Spain and the
United States transferring the territories of East and West Floridi to the United States.
Quaife, Milo Milton. An experiment of the fathers in state socialism. Wis. mag.
HIST., Ill (Jan.) 277-290. [910
A study of the Indian trading-house system of the national government, in the latter part of the 18th
century and the beginning of the 19th.
Eose, John C. The interpreter of American nationalism. Review, II (Feb 28)
204-206. [911
I A review of "The life of John Marshall. By Albert J. Beveridge. (Boston: Houghton MifQin co.
' 1916-1919)" 4v.
Wilson, Samuel Mackay. A review by Samuel M.Wilson of "Isaac Shelby and the
Genet mission," by Dr. Archibald Henderson. Lexington, Ky. 52 p. [912
See no. 907, above.
Woodbury, Margaret. Public opinion in Philadelphia, 1789-1801. Northampton,
Mass.: Dept. of history of Smith college. 138 p. (Smith college studies in history.
... V. V, nos. 1 and 2; Oct., 1919-Jan., 1920) [913
An analysis of newspaper and pamphlet literature of Philadelphia, of the Federislist period, which
throws light upon public opinion upon political and constitutional questions of the day.
Contents.— Preface. Newspapers and editors. The financial system. Foreign relations. Political
parties. Conclusion. Bibliography.
War of 1812.
Coleman, Cliristoplier B. The Ohio valley in the preliminaries of the War of 1812.
Miss. Valley hist, rev., VII (June) 39-50. [914
The writer advances the theory that it was the Ohio valley section, aided by elements in the South,
that virtually brought on the war, and that the "aim was nothing other than the conquest of Canada."
Fojrtescue, J. W. A history of the British army. v. IX [-X] London: Macmillan.
2 V. [915
Contents.— v. IX, 1813-1814. The American war: p. 99-181. v. X, 1814-1815. The American war:
p. 306-349.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (Sept. 1921) 284-289.
Hamlin, L. Belle, ed. Selections from the Gano papers, I-II. Cincinnati: The
Abingdon press. 2 v. (Ohio hist, and phil. soc. pub., v. XV, nos. 1-2, 3) [316
Selections from the military manuscripts which belonged to Maj .-Gen. John Stites Gano; commandant
of the 1st division of the Ohio militia. They cover the period from 1797 to 1817 and consist of lists of
Ohio militia companies, commissions, orders, etc., and are of value as source material for the history of
the Old Northwest, and the war with Great Britain, 1812-1815.
JHarris, Samuel Devens. Service of Capt. Samuel D. Harris; sketch of his military
career as captain in the Second regiment of light dragoons, during the War of 1812.
I Buffalo hist. soc. pub., XXIV, 327-342. [917
MEunro, "Wilfred H. Extracts from the log book of the private armed schooner Block-
ade, Manly Sweet, commander. R. I. hist. soc. coll., XIII (Oct.) 131-139. [918
The "Blockade" sailed from Bristol on a cruise, November 19, 1812.
unro, Wilfred H. The last cruise of the privateer Yankee. R. I. hist. soc. coll.
XIII (Apr.) 66-68. [919
List of officers, seamen, and marines of the privateer Yankee, dated, Bristol, Rhode Island, Sept. 30,
1814: p. 67-68.
Paine, Kalph Delahaye. The fight for a free sea; a chronicle of the War of 1812. New
Haven: Yale university press; [etc., etc.] xi, 235 p. plates, ports., map. (The
chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XVII) [920
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 320-322.
oy, Pierre Georges. Le g^n^ral Moreau et la guerre de 1812. Bul. recherches
HIST., XXVI (Aug.) 245-247. [921
Regarding the rumor, current in 1812, that the command of an American army of invasion was to be
Offered to Gen. Victor Moreau, one of Napoleon's generals then in exile in the United States.
Wood, William, ed. Select British documents of the Canadian war of 1812. In 3 v.
V.I. Toronto: The Champlain society, xvi, 678p. ports., maps, facshns. (Cham-
plain soc. pub., XIII) [923
The documents in this volxune are arranged in two large groups as follows.— I. Preparation. II.
1 Brock, 1812.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Apr. 1922) 588-589; Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 408-411.
u
60 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
1829-1861.
Miscellaneous.
Beard, W. A. The autobiography of Martin Van Buren. Tenn. hist, mag., VI
(Oct.) 145-165. ' [923
A review of the "Autobiography of Martin Van Buren, ed. by John C. Fitzpatrick." Pub. by
the American historical association. See no. 931 below.
Binkley, William Campbell. The question of Texan jurisdiction in New Mexico
under the United States, 1848-1850. Southw. hist, quar., XXIV (July) 1-38.
[924
Concerned with the controversy over the boundary between New Mexico and Texas and the claims of
Texas to the section of New Mexico east of the Rio Grande, when that region became a part of the United
States following the Mexican war.
Blow, George. Nullification and war. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag., I
(Apr.) 276-281. [925
Copy of a letter of George Blow to John Y. Mason, without date, but evidently written not long after
President Jackson's proclamation against nullification in South Carolina.
The Fillmore correspondence. Grosvenor lib. bul., Ill (Dec.) 1-13. [926
A number of letters from the manuscript collection of Mr. A. Conger Goodyear, which were written
to President Fillmore, 1850-1855.
Hunt, Wasliington. Letter of Washington Hunt to George Dawson. Mass. hist.
soc. proc, LIII, 57-58. [927
It is written from Washington, Jan. 26, 1845, and is mainly concerned with the passage by the House
of the joint resolution admitting Texas into the Union, and the writer's apprehension in regard to the
extension of slavery.
Lawrence, Amos Adams. Letters of Amos Adams Lawrence. Mass. hist. soc.
PROC, LIII, 48-57. [928
Letters written during a visit to AVashington in January, 1836. They record the writer's impressions
of political events and personages of the day and recount the proceedings of Congress from personal
observation.
Lee-Thornely letters, 1840-1847. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LIII, 275-325. [929
An exchange of letters between Henry Lee, of Boston, and Thomas Thornely, a member of Parliament,
containing discussions of currency and tariff questions in America, and similar problems in England.
Nott, Eliphalet. Letter of Eliphalet Nott to Chesselden Ellis [Feb. 4, 1844] Mass. '
hist, soc proc, LIII, 332-334. [930 I
Includes a discussion of political affairs and the approaching presidential election. j
Van Buren, Martin. The autobiography of Martin Van Buren, ed. by John C. Fitz- i
patrick. Washington: Gov. print, off. 808 p. (Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year I
1918 ... V. II) [931 j
Fourteenth report of the Historical manuscripts commission, 1919. '
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXI (Oct. 1921) 133-134.
Webster, Daniel. Letter of Daniel Webster, 1833. Am. hist, rev., XXV (July) '
695-697. [932
Written from Washington, January 18, 1833. It is concerned with the tariff and nullification in South
Carolina.
Mexican War,
Buley, R. C. Indiana in the Mexican war. Ind. mag. hist., XVI (Mar.) 46-68. [933
Contents.— The Buena Vista controversy.
Cont. from v. XV, 1919.
Koebel, W. H. The United States and Mexico in the forties. New world, III
(Aug.) 231-235. [934
A review of "The war with Mexico, 1846-1848, by Justin H. Smith (N. Y.: Macmillan, 1919)."
Santa Anna, Antonio L6pez de. Letters of General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
relating to the war between the United States and Mexico, 1846-1848. Ed. by
Justin II. Smith. Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year 1917, 355-431. (Thirteenth
report of the Historical manuscripts commission) [936
Smith, Justin H. La Republica de Rio Grande. Am. hist, rev., XXV (July) 660-
675. [936
Describes a movement for independence in the northeastern provinces of Mexico, resulting in the
organization in 1840 of the Republica de Rio Grande. The present article is mainly concerned with the
relations between the United States and the republic during the period of the Mexican war.
WRITINGS OlsT AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 61
Slavery.
Cochran, William Cox. The Western Reserve and the fugitive slave law; a prelude
to the Civil war. Cleveland, O. 235 p. (Publication no. 101. Collections,
The Western Reserve historical society) [937
Discussed under the following headings.— The elements of discord; The fugitive slave law of 1793.
Ohio from 1802 to 1851. The fugitive slave law of 1850. The Oberlin-Wellington rescue cases. Growth
of anti-slavery sentiment. The captors of Jolm Price indicted for kidnapping; prosecution of
Oberlin-Wellington rescuers abandoned.
Cromwell, John W. The aftermath of Nat Turner's insurrection. Jour, negro
HIST., V (Apr.) 208-234. [938
Account of a negro insurrection in Southampton county, Virginia, in 1831 and of race troubles in
other states.
Hunt, Gaillard. William Thornton and negro colonization. Am. antiq. soc. proc,
n. 8. XXX, pt. 1,32-61. [939
Landon, Fred. Henry Bibb, a colonizer. Jour, negro hist., V (Oct.) 437-447.
[940
Henry Bibb was an escaped slave who organized the Refugees' home society, at Detroit, to assist
fugitive slaves in establishing homes in Canada.
Landon, Fred. The negro migration to Canada after the passing of the fugitive slave
act. Jour, negro hist., V (Jan.) 22-36. [941
1861-1865.
Miscellaneous.
Abemethy, Alonzo. Incidents of an Iowa soldier's life; or. Four years in Dixie.
Ann. Iowa, 3d ser., XII (Oct.) 401-428. [942
The writer enlisted as a private in the 9th Iowa infantry, and rose to be lieutenant-colonel.
Allan, William. History of the campaign of Gen. T. J. (Stonewall) Jackson in the
Shenandoah Valley of Virginia from November 4, 1861, to June 17, 1862. So.
HIST. soc. proc, XLIII, 111-294. [943
Andrews, Matthew Page. The women of the South in war times. Baltimore: The
Norman, Remington co. xvii, 466 p. pi., ports. [944
Depicts the life of the Southern people during the Confederacy.
Arnold, Eugenia Hill. The Christian character of our great leaders. Confed. vet.,
XXVIII (Feb.) 53-55. [945
Refers to the leaders of the Confederacy.
Blake, Thomas B. The artillery brigade at Sailor's Creek. Confed. vet., XXVIII
(June) 213-216. [946
The battle of Sailor's Creek, Va., Apr. 6, 1865.
Boyce, Joseph. The evacuation of Nashville. Confed. vet., XXVIII (Feb.) 60-62.
[947
Bradwell, I. G. The battle of Fisher's Hill. Confed. vet., XXVIII (Sept.) 338-
340. [948
The battle of Fisher's Hill, Shenandoah valley campaign, Sept. 22, 1864.
Bradwell, I. G. Cold Harbor. Lynchburg, Valley campaign, etc., 1864. Confed.
VET., XXVIII (Apr.) 138-139. [949
Bradwell, I. G. Early's march to Washington in 1864. Confed. vet., XXVIII
(May) 176-177. [950
Bradwell, I. G. Early's Valley campaign, 1864. Confed. vet., XXVIII (June)
218-221. [951
Bradwell, I. G. Gordon's brigade after the Valley campaign. Confed. vet.,
XXVIII (Nov.) 418-420. [952
Bradwell, I. G. Second day's battle of the Wilderness, May 6, 1864. Confed.
VET., XXVIII (Jan.) 20-22. [953
Bradwell, I. G. Spotsylvania, May 12, 13, 1864. Confed. vet., XXVIII (Mar.)
102-103. [964
62 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Bradwell, I. G. Spotsylvania, Va., May 8 and 9, 1864. Confed. vet., XXVIII |
(Feb.) 56 57. ' [965 1
Bradwell, I. G. The Valley campaign after the battle of Cedar Creek. Confed. I i;
VET., XXVIII (Oct.) 374-376. [956 |
Buford, M. M. Surrender of Johnston's army. Confed. vet., XXVIII (May) 170- (I
172. [967 I i
Burrage, Henry Sweetser, comp. Civil war record of Brown university. Providence,
R. i. X, 69 p. [958 1
Calvert, Henry Murray. Reminiscences of a boy in blue, 1862-1865. N. Y. and
London: Putnam, vii, 347 p. [959
The author served as an ofRcer of "Scott's nine hundred volunteer cavalry," later the 11th New York
cavalry regiment
Capron, Thaddeus H. War diary of Thaddeus H. Capron, 1861-1865. III. hist, i
soc. JOUR., XII (Oct. 1919) 330-406. [960 \
Extracts from letters written by Major Thaddeus H. Capron during his service in the 55th Illinois
volunteer infantry regiment.
Childs, H. T. The second battle of Manassas. Confed. vet., XXVIII (Mar.) 100-
101. [961
Cooke, Chauncey H. A Badger l)oy in blu,e; the letters of Chauncey H. Cooke [1862-
1863] Wis. mag. hist., IV (Sept.-Dec.) 75-100, 208-217. [962
The writer served in tlie 25th Wisconsin infantry, in the campaign against the Sioux in Minnesota,
in 18.2.
Dame, William Meade. From the Rapidan to Richmond and the Spottsylvania
campaign; a sketch in personal narration of the scenes a soldier saw. Baltimore:
Green-Lucas co. xvi, 213 p. ports. [963
Personal narrative, Confederate side.
Davidson, Laura Lee. The services of the women of Maryland to the Confederate
states. Confed. vet., XXVIII (Sept.) 332-336. [964
Duval, capitaine. La combat de Mobile (5 aout 1864). Rev. maritime, n. s., no. 7 Wp
(July) 73-97. [965 p^
Edwards, John N. Shelby's expedition to ^Mexico, an unwritten leaf of the war. n Bull
Mo. hist, rev., XIV (Jan.-Apr.) 246-264, 474-493. [966 hl^^^
Cont. from the 1919 volume. yj tr.
Extracts from the account of "Shelby's expedition to Mexico," written by a participant, John N. ■ •^'
Edwards. It was published at Kansas City, Mo., in 1872, and is now out of print and rare. | a
Ford, Worthington Chauncey, ed. A cycle of Adams letters, 1861-1865. Boston
and N. Y.: Houghton Mifllin. 2 v. plates, ports. [967
A series of family letters of the Adams family of Massachusetts (Charles Francis Adams, senior and
junior, and Henry Adams). Their "description of social conditions, discussion of public questions,
and the wide relations held by the writers, make them a contribution to the social, military and diplo-
matic history of the war of secession, unequalled in scope and concentrated interest."
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 516-548.
George, Charles E. The Supreme court of the Confederate states of America. Va.
LAW REG., n. 8. VI (Dec.) 592-599. [968
Goodwin, Martha. The ram Arkansas, Confed. vet., XXVIII (July) 263-264.
Hamilton, W. R. New York's new monument at Antietam; a fine memorial that
recalls the bloodiest day of battle in American history. Munsey's, LXXI (Dec.)
431^39. [970
Hay, Thomas Robson. The South and the arming of the slaves. Miss. Valley hist, i
rev., VI (June 1919) 34-73. [970a I
Hurst, John. Archer's brigade at Chancellorsville. Confed. vet., XXVIII (July) j
261-262. [971
Kansas. Vicksburg national park memorial commission. Report of the Kansas
Vicksburg national park memorial commission. December 1, 1920. Topeka:
Printed >)y Kansas state printing plant, Imri Zumwalt, state printer. 23 p. illus.,
plate. [972
Ira F. Collins, Theodore Gardner, W. W. Bowman, members of commission.
to
1^
WRITIITGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 63
Landon, Fred. Canadian opinion of southern secession, J 860-61. Canad, hist, rev.,
I I (Sept.) 246-254. [973
Livermore, Thomas Leonard, Days and events, 1860-1866. Boston and N. Y.:
Houghton Mifflin co. x, 485 p. illus., port., fold, plate. [974
Narrative of Colonel Livermore's war experience. He was colonel of the 18th New Hampshire volim-
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXV (July) 731-735.
McClellan, Edwin N. Capture of Fort Fisher. Marine corps gazette, V (Mar.)
59-80. [975
Fort Fisher, Wilmington, N. C, was captured on Jan. 15, 1865.
M'Neilly, James H. End of Vicks'ourg campaign. Confed, vet., XXVIII (Mar.)
96-99. [97G
M'Neilly, James H. General Johnston's campaign for the relief of Vicksburg.
CoNPED. vet., XXVIII (Feb.) 58-60. [977
M'Neilly, James H. In winter quarters at Dalton, Ga. Confed. vet., XXVIII
(Apr.) 130-132. [973
j A description of life in the Confederate army during the winter of 1863-64.
I Marshall, Robert A. When Missouri went into the war. Confed. vet., XXVIII
(Jan.) 18-19. [970
Mattern, Johannes. The employment of the plebiscite in the determination of
sovereignty. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins press. 214 p. (Johns Hopkins uuIa'.
stud., ser. XXXVIII, no. 3) [980
Includes an account of several instances of a resort to the plebiscite in the history of the United States—
the secession decisions of the southern states, the vote on the ordinance of separation of West Virginia,
and the plebiscite in the Danish \V est Indies in favor of annexation to the United States, in 1865.
Matthews, Albert. Origin of butternut and copperhead. Col. soc. Mass. pub.,
XX, 205-237. [981
Traces the origin and history of the political terms butternut and copperhead as applied to Northern
opponents of the Civil war.
Michigan. Shiloh soldiers' monument commission. Michigan at Shiloh; report of
the Michigan Shiloh soldiers' monument commission. Lansing: Michigan his-
torical commission. 27 p. plates, ports. (Michigan, Historical commission.
Bulletin, no. 13) [982
Morgan, James Morris. The St. Lawrence and the Petrel. U; S. N. inst. proc,
XLVI (Aug.) 1219-1221. [983
Sketch of the engagement between the U. S. frigate "St. Lawrence" and the Confederate cruiser
"Petrel," privateer belonging to the South Carolina navy, off the Atlantic coast shortly after the out-
break of the war.
Moses, Armida. The Confederate navy. Confed. vet., XXVIII (May) 181-182.
[984
Osgoode, J. A. The first Confederate capital; its present and past. Confed. vet.,
XXVIII (Mar.) 88-90. [985
Montgomery, Ala.
Parkhurst, Clinton. A few martial memories. Palimpsest, I (Oct.) 111-128. [986
Reminiscences of the Civil war, written by a member of the 16th Iowa infantry.
Purifoy, John. Jackson's last battle. Confed. vet., XXVIII (Mar.) 93-96. [987
The battle of Chancellorsville, Va., May, 1863.
[Putnam, Elizabeth Cabot] comp. Memoirs of the war of '61. Colonel Charles
Russell Lowell, friends and cousins. Boston: Press of Geo. H. Ellis co. xvi, 66 p.
ports. [988
Contents.— Foreword, with sketch of Governor Andrew [signed: Elizabeth C. Putnam] C. R.
Lowell. H. L. Higginson. S. G. Perkins. James Savage, jr. Wilder Dwight. R. G. Shaw. H. S.
Russell. J. J. Higginson. J. J. Lowell. W. L. Putnam. C. J. Russel. Samuel Storrow. Sumner
Paine.
Quisenberry, A. C. Kentucky union troops in the Civil war. Ky. hist. soo. reg.,
XVIII (Sept.) 13-18. [989
Eich, Joseph W. Gen. Lew Wallace at Shiloh; how he was convinced of an error
after forty years. Ia. jour, hist., XVIII (Apr.) 301-308. [990
^4 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOlSf.
Rotli, Lawrence V., ed. John Bright and the American Civil war. [Boston: Old
South association] 28 p. (Old South leaflets, no. 218) [991
Extracts from the letters and speeches of John Bright, the great English champion of Americim
union during the Civil war.
Smith, James Power. With Stonewall Jackson in the Army of northern Virginia.
So. HIST. soc. PAP., XLIII, 1-110. [9921
Sprunt, James. Derelicts; an account of ships lost at sea in general commercial
traffic and a brief history of blockade runners stranded along the North Carolina
coast, 1861-1865. Wilmington, N. C. xii, 304 p. front. [993
Steel, S. A. Lee at Appomattox. Meth. quar. rev., LXIX (Apr.) 317-332. [994
Stillwell, Leander. The story of a common soldier of army life in the Civil war,
1861-1865. 2d ed. [Erie? Kan.] Franklin Hudson pub. co. 278 p. porta. [995
The writer served in the 61st regiment, Illinois infantry.
Thatcher, J. W. Letter from a citizen of the southern confederacy. Ann. Iowa,
3d ser., XII (July) 366-368. [996
Letter written by J. W. Thatcher, of Virginia, May 12, 1861, to his brother in Ohio, which reflects
the intense feeling that frequently divided families in the border states during the war.
Thompson, Robert Means, and Richard Wainwright, eds. Confidential correspond-
ence of Gustavus Vasa Fox, assistant secretary of the navy, 1861-1865. v. II.
N. Y.: Printed for the Naval history society by the De Vinne press, 1919. xx,
492 p. ports. (Naval hist. soc. pub., v. X) [997
Imprint reads: 1919, but the volume was copyrighted and published in 1920.
V. I, pub. in 1918.
Contents.— Foreword by Caspar F. Goodrich. Flag officer Foote and Flag officer Charles Henry
Davis to Assistant Secretary Fox. Correspondence between Rear-Admiral Porter and Assistant Secre-
tary Fox, 18G1-1864. Correspondence between Eear-Admiral S. P. Lee and Assistant Secretary Fox,
April 22, 1862-April 4, 1864. Miscellaneous correspondence.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 841-842.
)^
What constituted the supreme court of the Confederate states of America from 1861
to 1865? Lawyer and banker, XIII (July) 195-202. [998
Zell, Robert R. The raid into Pennsylvania — the first armored train. Confed. vet., W'2
XXVIII (July) 260-261. [999 1 ^
Regimental Histories.
Kentucky cavalry. Quisenberry, A. C. The first Kentucky cavalry, u. s. a.
Ky. hist. soc. REG., XVIII (May) 15-20. [1000
New York infantry. Cunningham, John L. Three years with the Adirondack
regiment. 118th New York volunteer infantry. [Priv. print.] vi, 286 p. illus.
1000a
Morris, Ira K. Sickles' Excelsior brigade, United States volunteers. Statb
SERVICE, IV (Jan.-Feb.) 69-74, 166-172.
Cont. from v. Ill, 1919.
Texas CAVALRY. Creager, J. A. Ross's brigade of cavalry. Confed. vet,, XXVIII
(Aug.) 290-292. [1002
1865-1920.
Miscellaneous.
Dodd, William E. Woodrow Wilson and his work. N. Y.: Doubleday, Page and co. I
xiv, 369 p. port., maps. [1003 j
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Jan. 1922)334-337; Pol. sci. quar., XXV (Dec.) 651-653.
Haworth, Paul Leland. The United States in our own times, 1865-1920. N. Y.,
Chicago [etc.] Scribner. viii, 563p. maps. [1004
Primarily iDteaded as a college text, but also intended for the general reader.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 349-350.
Libhy, Orin Grant, ed. The Arikara narrative of the campaign against the hostile
Dakotas, June, 1876. Bismarck, N. D. 276 p. pi., ports., map, plans. (No.
Dak. hist, coll., v. VI) [1006
Half-title : Collections of the State historical society of North Dakota.
Preseuts, as a matter of justice to the Arikara Indian scouts, their version of the campaign under
Custer in the Dakota Indian war of 1876 and the battle of the Little Big Horn. The narrative here
given was taken down from the personal testimony related by nine survivors of these scouts, in
August, 1912.
Il
WRI'TINGS OIT AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 65
Lingley, Charles Ramsdell. Since the Civil war. N. Y.: Century co. ix, 635 p.
maps, diagrs. (The United States, Max Farrund, editor, III) [1006
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Apr. 1922) 620 621.
M'Neilly, James H. In the days of Reconstruction. Confed. vet., XXVIII (July)
253-256. [1007
Spanish-American War.
Beach, Edward L. Manila Bay in 1898. U. S. N. inst. proc, XLVI (Apr.) 587-602.
[1008
Personal reminiscencos of the writer's experiences while he was attached to the U. S. S. Baltimore,
in Dewey's squadron at Manila.
Risco, Alberto. La escuadra del almirante Cervera (narracion documentada del corn-
bate naval de Santiago de Cuba) 2. ed. (aum.) Madrid [Jimenez y Molina, im-
presores] 286 p. illus., ports, [1009
European War.
Bibliography,
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VIII (Feb.) 82-98. [lOio
List of about 2000 pieces of sheet music of the v/ar in the possession of the University of Texas.
Histories of the great war. Teaching, V, no. 4 (Oct.) 25-26. [1011
Lydenberg, H. M. Right arrangement of war material. Pub . libraries, XXV (Nov )
507-508. [1012
Smith, Miinroe. War books by American diplomatists. Pol. sci. quar., XXXV
(Mar.) 94-125. [1013
TJ. S. Library of Congress. Division of documents. Tentative check list of state
publications relating to the European war. 1917-1919. Washington: Gov. print,
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"Includes state war publications issued during 1917-1919 which were received by the Library of
Congress."
Miscellaneous.
A. E. F., greatest American army, officially comes to an end. Lit. digest, LXVI
(Sept. 25) 67-69. [1015
Alden, Carroll Storrs. American submarine operations in the war. U. S. N. Inst
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American war casualties. Cur. hist, mag., XI, pt. 2 (Mar.) 405-409. [1017
American women's vast war-work as revealed by an official report. Lit. digest
LXVI (Aug. 21) 54-57. [1018
Brief summary of the report of the Women's committee of the United States Council of national
defense.
The Americans in the great war. Clermont-Ferrand: Michelin and cie. 3 v.
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Printed ui the United States.
Contents. -I. The second battle of the Marne (Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Fismes). II. The battle
j of St. Mihiel (St. Mihiel, Pont-a-Mousson. Metz). III. The Meuse-Argonne battle-fields (Montfaucon,
Romagne, Sainte-Menehould).
Bakewell, Charles M. The story of the American Red cross in Italy. N. Y.: Mac-
millan. viii, [4], 253 p. plates, ports., maps. [1020
Baldwin, Marian. Canteening overseas, 1917-1919. N. Y.: Macmillan. [12], 200 p.
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Belknap, Reginald R. The Yankee mining squadron; or, Laying the North Sea mine
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Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVf (Oct.) 98-101.
Bernstorff on the witness stand; German ex-ambassador's testimony on why Presi-
dent Wilson's peace efforts failed. Current HISTORY, XI (Mar.) 513-519. [1025'
Bingham, Hiram. An explorer in the air service. Hew Haven: Yale univ. press; j
[etc.] xiv, 260 p. illus., plates, facsims., map. [1026 j
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 596-597.
Bouchor, Joseph Felix, illus. The American army in France (1917-1919) from pictures ;
by J. F. Bouchor, with text l)y Captain David Gray, and an introduction by Lieu- 1
tenant-Colonel Theodore Roosevelt . . . Boston: L. Phillips. 4 preliminary
leaves, xl mounted colored plates. [1027 f
[Brown, B,aymond Shiland] Base hospital no. 9, A. E. F.; a history of the work of
the New York hospital unit during two years of active service, written by the
padre. N. Y. [New York hospital] 221 p. illus., plates. [1028 \
On cover: The Now York hospital in France, Base hospital no. 9, A. E. F. \
Chase, Joseph Cuminings. Soldiers all; portraits and sketches of the men of the
A. E. F. N. Y.:Doran. xxvi, [4], 15-475, [4] p. ports. [1029 1
Alternate pages blank.
Half-title: Victory edition of Soldiers all to which has been especially added the story of how Marshal
Foch's portrait was painted . . . with an original sketch signed by the artist-anthor.
Clark, V/atson G. The location of Camp Merritt at Tenafiy, N. J., from an engineer's
viewpoint. Bergen co. hist. soc. rep., XVIII, 55-58. [1030
Coolidge, Julian Lowell. An American liaison officer in Paris. Harv. grab, mag.,
XXVIII (Mar.) 394-408. [1031
Creel, George. How we advertised America; the first telling of the amazing story of
the Committee on public information that carried the gospel of Americanism to every
corner of the globe. N. Y. and London: Harper, xvii, 466 p. plate, ports. [1032
Creel, George. The war, the world and Wilson. N. Y. and London: Harper. [10]
366 p. ports. [1033
Gresson, William Penn. How Americans fought in Belgium. Cur. hist, mag., XI,
pt. 2 (Jan.) 113-120. [1034
Crowell, J. Franklin. Government war contracts. N. Y.: Oxford univ. press,
American branch, xiv, 357 p. (Preliminary economic studies of the war, ed. by
David Kinley, no. 25) [1035
At head of title: Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of economics and history,
John Bates Clark, director. i
Crozier, William. Ordnance and the World war; a contribution to the history of i
American preparedness. N. Y.: Scribner. xi, 292 p. [1036
Curtiss, Elmer H. Going and coming as a doughboy. [Palo Alto, Cal.: Press of
F. A. Stuart] 39 p. port. [1037
Diego Fernandez, Salvador. La mision del Conde Bernstorf en Washington, Rev.
HEX. DERECHO INTERNAC, II (DcC.) 534-542. [1038
Duncan-Clark, Samuel John. History's greatest war; a pictorial narrative, by S. J.
Duncan-Clark . . . Hon. Josephus Daniels . . . in a special article on the marines,
Gen. John J. Pershing on the American expeditionary forces and Admiral William
S. Sims on the navies of the world; . . . [Chicago: Geographical pub. co.] 352,
Ixiii p. illus., ports., maps. [1039
Egan, Maurice Francis, and John B. Kennedy. The Knights of Columbus in peace
and war. New Haven, Conn.: Knights of Columbus. 2 v. plates, ports., diagrs.
[1040
EUinwood, Ralph E. Behind the German lines, a narrative of the everyday life of
an American prisoner of war. N. Y.: Knickerbocker press, ix, 162 p. port.,
plates. [1041
Elliott, Paul B., ed. On the field of honor; a collection of war letters and reminiscences
of three Harvard undergraduates who gave their lives in the great cause. Boston:
Printed for their friends [by the Merrymount press] xii, 121 p. ports. [1042
Lettered on cover: On the field of honor; Francis Reed Austin, Albert Edgar Angier, Eugene Galligan.
ludi
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 67
Federal council of the churches of Christ in America. General war-time commission
of the churches. War-time agencies of the chiirchos; dinctory and handlook, ed.
by Margaret Renton. N. Y.: General war-time commission of the churches fete]
337 p. [1043
I Galbally, Edward J. Knights of Columbus war activities in Philadelphia. Am.
Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXXI (June) 144-156. [1044
Garey, E. B. American guide book to France and its lattle-fields. ByE.B.Garey,
0. O. Ellis [and] R. V. D. Magoffin. N. Y.: Macmillan. xvii, 331 p. plates,
j ports., maps. [1045
Garner, James Wilford. International law and the World war. London, N. Y. [etc.]
Longmans. 2 v. [1046
Giraud, Victor. Histoire de la grande guerre; I'entree en scene dcs Etats-ITnis et la
revolution russe. Bibliotheque universelle et Revue Suisse, XCVII (Mar.)
" 369-388. [1047
Hanson, Joseph Mills. The first complete story of our combat operations. Indep ,
CI (Mar. 27) 463-465, 490-493; CII (Apr. 24) 119-120, 149-153, (May 29) 278-279,
298-305, (June 19) 390-391, 422-428; CIII (July 24) 104, 121-124, (Aug. 28) 236-237,
252, (Sept. 25) 368-369, 389-393; CIV (Oct. 30) 150-151, 173-175, (Nov. 27) 296-297,
j 315-317, (Dec. 25) 423, 443-446. [1048
Contents.— Up tholiQt^ from Cantigny. Those desperate days at Chateau Thierry. Zero hour alo ng
j the Afame. One day's work at St. Mihiel. Covered with mud and glory. Getting on to Berlin. Our
greatest victory. The battle of Blanc Mont. Breaking the Jdlindcnburg line. The Americans in
\ Belgium.
Hardie, Martin, and Arthur K, Sabin, eds. War posters iasued by belligerent and
neutral nations 1914-1919. N. Y.: Macmillan. xvi, 46 p. plates. [1049
II Also pul). at London (A. and C. Black).
Haslett, Elmer. Luck on the wing; thirteen stories of a sky spy. N. Y.: Button,
xxvii, 303 p. port., plates. [1050
The writer's experiences as an aerial observer at the front, including the battles of Chateau- Thierry,
St. Mihiel and the Argonne.
Hayes, Carlton J. H. A brief history of the Great war. N. Y.: Macmillan. xiv,
i 461 p. maps. [1051
History of the American field service in France, ^'Friends of France," 1914-1917;
told by its members. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifliin co. 3 v. illus., plates,
ports., maps, plans, facsims., diagrs. [1052
j The aim of these volumes is to fill in the gaps and finish the story told in the volume published in
11 1910, under the title of " Friends of France." The stories have been composed in the main of excerpts
from articles, diaries and home letters of different members.
Bibliography of the field service: v. Ill, p. 552-572. Glossary of French expressions in the text: v. Ill,
p. 559-572.
Contents. — v. I. Prefatory note. Introduction: The field service, by A. P. Andrew. Some of the
j early problems, by A. P. Andrew. The effort in America, by II. D. Sleeper. The growth of the service,
' by S. Galatti. The ambulance sections [one-nine]. The Vosges detachment, v. II. The ambulance
sections [ten-seventy-two] Field service havmts and friends, v. III. The camion sections. Literature
of the field service: Introduction. Sketches. Poems. Humorous sketches. Lighter verse. End of
the war sketches and verses. Appendices.
The history of base hospital no, 18 (Johns Hopkins unit) in the Great war. Johns
Hopkins alumni mag., VIII (Jan. -June) 98-128, 183-223, 291-327. [1053
Hungerford, Edward. With the doughboy in France; a few chapters of an American
effort. N. Y.: Macmillan. [12], 291 p. plates. [1054
Describes the work of the American Red cross In France.
James, Bessie R. For God, for country, for home, the National league for woman's
service; a story of the first national organization of American women mobilized for
war service. N. Y, and London: Putnam, xv, 260 p. plates, ports. [1055
Johnston, R. M. First reflections on the campaign of 1918. N. Y.: Holt, x, 79 p.
[1056
The writer was attached to the General staff at General Pershing's headquarters in France for a period
I of twelve months.
Jones, Hufus M. A service of love in war time; American Friends relief work in
i Europe, 1917-1919. N. Y.: Macmillan. xv, 284 p. illus., map. [1057
Also published ia Philadelphia (Friends bookstore) as v. V of the "Pennsbury series."
68 AMERICAlSr HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION".
Kimber, Arthur Cliiford. The story of the first flag, an account of the mission of
Arthur Clifford Kimber, who, in the month of May, 1917, carried to France the first
American flag authorized by the United States government; comp. from his letterg
and other documents by Clara E. Kimber; with an introduction by William T.
Manning, letters from Newton D. Baker, David Starr Jordon, Ray Lyman Wilbur,
and Henry D. Sleeper. San Francisco: Pub. under the auspices of the Friends of
France, xiii, 64 p. illus., port. [1058
Kimmel, Stanley Preston. Crucifixion; the experiences of a Red cross ambulance
driver in France. Overland, n. s. LXXV (Jan.-Apr.) 36-40, 158-162, 236-240,
277-282. [1059
Knappen, Theodore Macfarlane. Wings of war; an account of the important contri-
bution of the United States to aircraft invention, engineering, development and
production during the World war. N. Y. and London: Putnam, xv, 289 p.
plates. [1060
Lanier, Henry W. Lest we forget; what the training camps did for four million Amer-
icans. World's work, XXXIX (Jan.) 275-279. [1061
Litman, Simon. Prices and price control in Great Britain and the United States
during the World war. N. Y. [etc.] Oxford univ. press, ix, 331 p. diagrs. (Pre-
liminary economic studios of the war, cd. by David Kinley, no. 19) [1062
At head of title: Caraegio endowment for intomational peace. Division of economics and history,
John Bates Clark, director.
McCIellan, Edwin North. American marines in Siberia during the World war.
Marine corps gazette, V (June) 173-181. [1063
McCIellan, Edwin North. Capture of Hill 142, battle of Belleau Wood, and capture
of Bouresches. Marine corps gazette, V (Sept.-Dec.) 277-313, 371-405. [1064
McCIellan, Edwin North. Operations of the fourth brigade of marines in the Aisne
defensive. Marine corps gazette, V (June) 182-214. [1065
McCormick, B,obert R. The army of 1918. N. Y.: Harcourt, Brace and Howe.
276 p. [1066 I
McMaster, John Bach. The United States in the World war (1918-1920). [v. II]
N. Y. and London: Appleton. [6], 510 p. [1067
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 554-556.
V. I, pub. in 1918.
McPherson, William L. A short history of the Great war, dealing particularly with
its military and diplomatic aspects and the part played in it by the United States.
N. Y. and London: Putnam, x, 410 p. [1068
MacVeagh, Ewen Cameron, and Lee D. Brown. The Yankee in the British zone.
N. Y. and London: Putnam. _ xxii, [2], 418 p. plates. [1069
Markle, Clifford Milton. A Yankee prisoner in Hunland. New Haven, Conn.:
Wliitlock's book store. 52 p. plates, ports. [1070
Mason, Monroe, and Arthur Furr. The American negro soldier with the Red Hand
of France. Boston: Cornhill co. 180 p. plates, port., plan. [1071
Mattox, W. C. Building the emergency fleet; a historical narrative of the problems
and achievements of the United States shipping board emergency fleet corpora-
tion. Cleveland: Penton pub. co. xix, 279 p. illus., ports., diagrs. [1072
Maurras, Charles Marie Photius. Les trois aspects du president Wilson; la neu-
tralite, 1' intervention, 1' armistice. [2. ed.] Paris: Nouvelle librairie nationals,
xvi, 208 p. [1073
Mayo, Katherine. "That damn Y " ; a record of overseas service. Boston and N. Y.:
Houghton Mifflin co. xi, 432 p. plates, ports. [1074
Account of the war work of the Y. M. C. A.
Moore, William E., and James C. Russell. U. S. oflicial pictures of the World war,
showing America's participation; selected from the official files of the War depart-
ment, with unoflicial introductory photographs. Washington, D. C: Pictorial
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Moss, James A., and Harry S. Rowland. America in battle; with guide to the
American battlefields in France and Belgium. Menasha, Wis.: Geo. Banta pub.
CO.; Paris: Souvenir shop, xi, 615 p. illus. (incl. facsim.), plates, porta. [1076
Brief historical sketches of the divisions which were in France: p. 548-578.
ISujenl
m
iipr,
M.I
1 il
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 69
Muirhead, Findlay, ed. Belgium and the western front, British and American.
N. Y. and London: Macmillan. Ixxx, 3G8 p. maps, plans. (The })lue guides)
[1077
, Orcutt, Louis E. Supplementary volume to the Great war history, from the armis-
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The story of the service of the yacht "Corsair" in the American navy during the war.
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i President Wilson; d'apres des documents allemands. Corresp., n. s. CCXLII
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\ I Parsons, William Barclay. The American engineers in France. N. Y. and London:
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jl XXVI (Oct.) 54-76. [1084
Pershing, John J. General Pershing's final report; complete official story of the
American operations in the World war. Current history, XI (Jan.-Feb.) 50-68,
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Reynolds, Francis J., and Allen L. Churchill, eds. The nations and the Great war.
N. Y.: Collier, ix, 593 p. plates. (The history of nations, Henry Cabot Lodge,
editor-in-chief, v. XXVI) [1085a
The United States: p. 525-573. United States possessions: p. 574-577.
Robinson, William J. Forging the sword; the story of Camp Devens. [Concord,
N. H.: The Rum ford press] xi, 172 p. illus. [1086
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l| [1087
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McClurg. vi, 263 p. maps, diagrs. [1088
Most of the chapters in this book were pubUshed in the North American review during 1919. cf.
Pref.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 792-793.
Schiemann, Theodor. Aus General Pershings offiziellem Bericht iiber die ameri-
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V. IV. America and Russia, v. V. The victory of armistice.
Sims, William Sowden. The victory at sea, by William Sowden Sims, in collabo-
I ration with Burton J. Hendrick. Garden City, N. Y.: Doubleday, Page and co.
xiii, 410 p. port., maps. [1092
Also published in World's work, XXXIX-XL, 1919-1920.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 332-334.
jSkillman, Willis Bowland. The A. E. F.; who they were, what they did, how they
did it. Phila.: Jacobs. 231 p. illus., plates, port., map, diagrs. [1092a
jSoldiers of the Great war . . . comp. by W. M. Hauslee, F. G. Howe [and] A. C.
Doyle. Washington, D. C: Soldiers record pub. assoc. 3 v. plate, ports. [1093
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Miss. Valley hist, assoc. proc, X, pt. 1, 79-94. [1094
Phomas, Shipley. The history of the A. E. F. N. Y.: Doran. xxiv, [2], 27-540 p.
I illus., port., plates, diagrs. [1095
i
70 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. i
I
Thwing, Charles Franklin. The Americasi colleges and universities in the Great (
war, 1914-1919; a history. N. Y.: Macmillan. [10], 276 p. [1096
Trabue, Edmund F. Law of the sea and the Great War. Va. law rev., VI (Jan.) 240-
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I. Interception of neutral goods. II. Seizure of our mails. III. Our controversy v/ith Holland.
rv. Our submarine controversy with (Germany. ,
The first two sections are also published in the Joitrnal issued by the American bar association, v.' ,
VI, Dec. 1920, and continued in the January, 1921, number.
U. S. Bureau of navigation (Navy dept.) Officers and enlisted men of the United 1
States navy who lost their lives during the World war, from April 6, 1917, to No- i
vember 11, 1918. Washington: Gov. print, off. 812 p. [1098
U. S. General staff. War plans division. Historical branch. Operations of the
2d American corps in the Somme offensive, August 8th to November 11, 1918. I
Washington: Gov. print, off. 40 p. maps. (Monograph no. 10) [1099
On verso of title-page: War department. Document no. 1016. OfTice of the adjutant general.
U. S. Navy dept. Office of naval records and library. Historical section. Digest
catalogue of laws and joint resolutions, the navy and the World war. Washington:
Gov. print, off. 64 p. ([Publication] number 3) [1100
TJ. S. Navy dept. Office of naval records and library. Historical section. German
sul>marine activities on the Atlantic coast of the United States and Canada.
Washington: Gov. print, off. 163 p. plates, charts, facsims. (Publication num- i
ber 1) [1101 ;
U. S. Navy dept. Office of naval records and library. Historical section. "The |
northern barrage" (Taking up the mines) Washington: Gov. print, off. 79 p. i
plate, chart. (Publication number 4) [1102
TJ. S. Navy dept. Office of naval records and library. Historical section. The
northern barrnge and other mininfj activities. Washington: Gov. print, off. 146 p.
port., plates, charts, diagr. (Publication number 2) [1103
War camp community service. Retrospect; how a nation served its sons in army
and navy through organized community hospitality. N. Y. : War camp community
service. 32 p. illus. [1104
Washington and Berlin 1916/17; originals of the correspondence exchanged between
Count Bernstorff and Berlin, with documents on the German peace proposal of
1916. Amsterdam: Meulenhoff. iv, 128 p. [1105
Documents from the official German archi-^'cs, placed at the disposal of the inquest commission on
the origin and conduct of the war appointed in accordance with the German Mational assembly's de-
cision of August 20, 1919.
Watkins, Gordon S. Labor problems and labor administration in the United States
during the World war. Urbana: University of Illinois. 2 v. (Univ. of 111. stud,
in the social sciences, v. VIII, nos. 3^) [1106
Wise, Jennings C. The turn of the tide, American operations at Cantigny, Chateau
Thierry, and the second battle of the Marne. N. Y.: Holt, x, 255 p. illus., maps.
[1107
[Young, Smyth, Field company] Pen pictures of the great world war, 1917-18; the
personal experiences of our boys in the service. [Phila.: Press of Young, Smvth,
Field CO.] 235 p. illus., ports. [il08
War narratives by men in the service.
Young men's Christian associations. Le Mans region. History of the Y. M. C. A.
in the Le Mans area. [Portland, Or.: The Arcady press and mail advertising co.]
218, [2] p. illus. (incl. ports.) map. [1109
Caption title: Summary of service, Y. M. C. A., in the embarkation center from December 1918 to
July 1919. Comp. and ed. by Regional staff at Le Mans; under direction of Helen Sinclair, editor-in-
chief; V. O. Winlcenwieder, managing editor; Hallie Jameson . . . James E. Tracy, associate editor[s];
Blanche C. Grant, photographer; M. E. Nellums, statistician.
[Young men's Christian associations. National war work council] Summary of
World war work of the American Y. M. C. A.; with the soldiers and sailors of
America at home, on the sea, and overseas; with the men of the allied armies and
with the prisoners of war in all parts of the world. N. Y. vii, 239 p. [1110
"Tor private distribution."
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 71
State and Local Participation,
Bieer, William, Louisiana state war activities. Miss. Valley hist, assoc. proo.,
X, pt. 1, 108-111. [1111
Benson, Albeit Emerson, ed. Saint Mark's school in the war against Germany.
Privately printed for the school. [Norwood, Mass.: The Plimpton press] x, 27« p.
ports. [1112
Bowen, Mrs, Joseph T. The war work of the women of Illinois. III. state hist.
soc. JOUR., XII (Oct. 1919) 317-329. [1113
Also pub. in the Transactions of tlio Illinois state historical society for the year 1919, p. 93-100.
California, Historical survey commission. War history dept. California in the
war. Suggested outline for a state or county history , . . Issued by the War
history department of the California historical survey commission, Doe library,
Berkeley. Sacramento: California state print, off. 26 p. [1114
Century association, New York, Record of service rendered in the Great war.
[N. Y. : De Vinne press] 173 p. [1115
Cobh, Walter Westray, ed. The final roster, a roster of the soldiers who saw service
in the Great war from Nottoway county, Va. [Lynchburg, Va.: Printed by J, P.
Bell CO.] 240 p. [1116
Cottman, George S, Jefferson county in the World war; an historical and sociological
study of one Indiana county during the war period, 1917-1918. Written for the
Indiana historical commission under the authority of the Jefferson county council
of defense. Madison, Ind.: The Jefferson county historical society. [4], 125 p.
[1117
Cross, Arthur Lyon. The University of Michigan and the training of her students
for the war, Mich, hist, mag., IV (Jan.) 115-140, [1118
Eilers, T. D. Buena Vista's part in the World war, one Iowa county's record of
service and sacrifice. Storm Lake, la.: T. D. Eilers. 709 p. illus., ports. [1119
Ezekiel, Herbert T., and Gaston Lichtenstein, camps. World war section of The
history of the Jews of Richmond. Richmond, Va.: H. T. Ezekiel, [4], 381-443 p.
[1120
Gutsch, Milton B, Texas and the preservation of war history materials. Miss,
Valley hist, assoc. proc, X, pt. 1, 95-107. [1121
Hall, Clifford J., and John P, Lehn, eds. York county and the World war, being
a war history of York and York county, and a record of the services rendered to
their country by the people of the community. [York, Pa.: The editors] 424 p,
illus. (incl. ports.) [1133
Haworth, Clarence V. History of Howard county in the World war. Indianapolis:
W. B. Burford, printer. 352 p. illus., ports. [1123
A history of the great World war; a chronological record of every event and engage-
ment, and the causes that led up to the greatest struggle the world has ever known;
illustrated with photographic reproductions of the men from Granville county who
took part in this unparalleled conflict. [Oxford, N. C: E, G. Hulse] Press of
Oxford orphanage, 214 p. illus., plates, ports., map. [1124
Cover-title: With the colors from Granville county, 1917, 1918, 1919, North Carolina, U. S. A.; running
title: GranviUe county in the World war.
Howe, M. A. De Wolfe. Memoirs of the Harvard dead in the war against Germany.
V. I, Cambridge: Harvard univ, press. [8], 200 p. porta. [1125
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev,, XXVI (Apr, 1921) 595-596.
Landrum, Charles H. Michigan in the Great war. Mich, hist, mag,, IV (Apr.)
478-484. [1126
McCain, George Nox. War rations for Pennsylvanians; the story of the operations of
the federal Food administration in Pennsylvania, including personal and biograph-
ical sketches of its officers and members, with dramatic, humorous and unusual
episodes in the experience of county administrators during the World war. Phila.:
Winston. 273 p, plate, ports. [1127
McCree, George W, Recruiting engineers for the World war in Minnesota. Minn.
HIST. BUL., Ill (May) 331-359. [1128
72 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Maryland. Council of defense. Report of the Maryland Council of defense to the
governor and General assembly of Maryland. [Annapolis?] 334 p. facsims.,
tables. [1139
This report was printed in a first edition in December, 1919, and copies of it were distributed to the
state officers and members of the (general assembly. It was then held back in order that it might include,
in a second edition, the history of the work of the Council to the day of its dissolution— June 30, 1920.
The book was compiled by Lynn R. Meekins."— Pref.
Massachusetts institute of technology. Alumni association. War records com-
mittee. Technology's war record; an interpretation of the contribution made by
the Massachusetts institute of technology, its staff, its former students and its
undergraduates to the cause of the United States and the allied powers in the great
war, 1914-1919. Pub. by the War records committee of the Alumni association of
the Massachusetts institute of technology. [Cambridge, Mass.: The Murray print.
CO.] ix, 747 p. illus., ports. [1130
Foreword signed: John H. Ruckman, editor.
Missouri. University. School of mines and metallurgy. War records. RoUa, Mo.
88 p. facsim. (Its Bulletin, v. XII, no. 1) [1131
Compiled by G. E. Ebmeyer. cf. Pref.
Nelson, Arthur M., comp. Martin county [Minn.] in the World war, 1917-1919.
Fairmont, Minn.: Sentinel pub. co. 316, xxxii p. illus. (incl. ports., maps)
diagrs. [1132
Reeves, George W. Jefferson county [N. Y.] in the World war. Watertown, N. Y.
197 p. illus., maps. [1133
Saint George's school, Middletown, R. I. Alumni association. Saint George's
school in the war. [Boston] Printed for the Alumni association of Saint George's
school, xii, 168 p. plates, ports. [1134
Foreword signed: Herbert French Preston.
Sons of the revolution. Pennsylvania society. War service of members of Pennsyl-
vania society. Sons of the revolution, 1917-1919. Phila.: Priv, print., John. T.
Palmer co. 31 p. [1135
Sweeney, Daniel J., ed. History of Buffalo and Erie countv, 1914-1919, comp. by
Daniel J. Sweeney, editor; puJ3. by Committee of one hundred, Finley H. Greene,
chairman, under authority of the city of Buffalo, July 4, 1919. [Buffalo] 733 p.
illus., ports., maps. [1136
Trimble, Clifford Russell, comp. Honor roll, 1917-1918-1919. [Princeton, 111.:
C. R. Trimble] 300 p. illus., plates., ports., map. [1137
Lettered on cover: Bureau county, Illinois.
Wait, Clara Hadley, "Mrs. William Henry Wait." Report of the war work of the
Daughters of the American revolution of Michigan from April 1915 to April 1919.
Mich. hist, mag., IV (Jan.) 193-242. [1138
West Virginia. Dept. of military census and enrollment. Organization and the
execution of the Selective service act in the state of West Virginia. Charleston,
W. Va.: Tribune print, co. [1920?] 1029 p. [1139
Regimental Histories.
Acker, John C. Thru the war with our outfit, being a historical narrative of the 107th
ammunition train. [Sturgeon Bay, Wis.: Door county pub. co.] 215 p. illus.
[1140
Ashburn, Thomas Q. History of the 324th field artillery, United States army.
N. Y.:Doran. 141 p. plates. [1141
Association of the 27th engineers. History of the 27th engineers, U. S. A., 1917-
1919. Pub. by the Association of the 27th engineers and presented to the members
of the regiment as a record of their services in training in the United States and in
fighting in Europe in the Great war. N. Y. [8], 94 p. illus., port. [1142
Preface signed: W. R. Ingalls.
Bach, Christian A., and Henry Noble Hall. The Fourth division; its services and
achievements in the World war, gathered from the records of the division. Issued
by the division. [Garden City, N . Y.: The Country life press] xvi, 368 p. plates,
ports., maps. [1143
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 593-594.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 73
Bacliman, William Elmer. The delta of the triple elevens; the history of Battery D,
311th field artillery, United States army, American expeditionary forces. Hazle-
ton, Pa.: Standard-Sentinel print. CO. 143 p. illus. (incl. ports.). [1144
[Bacon, William J.] ed. History of the Fifty-fifth field artillery brigade . . . 1917,
1918, 1919. [Nashville: Printed by Benson print, co.] 335, [5] p. illus. (incl.
ports., maps). [1145
Pref. signed: William J. Bacon, editor.
Baker, Leslie S. The company history; the story of Company B, 106th machine gun
I battalion, 27th division, U. S. A. N. Y.: Pub. by the company. 135 p. illus.
(incl. ports., map). [1146
j "C" battery book, 306th F. A., 77th div., 1917-1919. [Brooklyn: Braunworth and co.]
I xxxi, 162 p. illus. (incl. ports.). [1147
I Chastaine, Ben H. Story of the 36th; the experiences of the 36th division in the
World war. Oklahoma City : Harlow pub. co. [2], ii, 291 p. illus., port. [1147a
[Clark, Glenn W.] ed. S. S. U. 503 of the U. S. army ambulance service with the
j French army. [Phila.: Westminster press] [60] p. plate, ports. [1148
I " By the Coimnittee on history of the S.S.U.503 association" . . . Glenn W. Clark, editor; Douglas
1 J. McHenry, assistant editor; Francis F. Bodine, historian.
Colyer, Charles M. The history of the 323rd regiment of field artillery, 158th F. A.
brigade, 83rd division, 32nd division. [Cleveland, O.: The Britton print co.]
135 p. illus., ports., maps. [1149
! Cooper, George W. Our Second battalion; the accurate and authentic history of the
Second battalion 111th infantry. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Second battalion book co.
I vi, [10], 299 p. ports. [1160
Crawford, Gilbert H., ed. The 302nd engineers, a history. Board of editors, Gilbert
H. Crawford, Thomas H. Ellett, John J. Hyland. [N. Y.] 140 p. illus., plates,
ports., maps. [1161
[Crowell, Thomas Irving] ed. A history of the 313th field artillery, U. S. A. N. Y.:
Thomas Y. Crowell co. xii, 299 p. illus., plates, ports., map. [1152
Written by various members of the regiment, and edited by T. I. Crowell, jr.
Cutler, Frederick Morse. 55th artillery (0. A. C.) in the American expeditionary
j forces, France, 1918. Worcester, Mass.: Commonwealth press. 413 p. illus.
I (incl. maps) plates, ports. [1153
' [Duell, Holland Sackett] ed. The history of the 306th field artillery, cpmp. by the
; men who participated in the events described. N. Y.: Knickerbocker press.
vi, 169 p. illus. (incl. maps) plates, ports. [1154
English, George H., jr. History of the 89th division, U. S. A.; from its organization
in 1917, through its operations in the World war, the occupation of Germany and
until demobilization in 1919; with maps, photographs, official reports, honor and
casualty lists, etc. . . . pub. by the War society of the 89th division. [Denver:
Smith-Brooks print, co.] 511 p. illus., ports., plate, maps. [1155
Fort Sheridan association. The history and achievements of the Fort Sheridan officers'
training camps. [Chicago?] The Fort Sheridan association. 487 p. illus. (incl.
ports.). [1155a
I Prefatory note signed: Fred Girton.
George, Albert E., and Edwin H. Cooper. Pictorial history of the Twenty-sixth divi-
sion, United States army, with official government pictures made by United States
ji signal corps unit under command of Captain Edwin H. Cooper. Boston: Ball pub.
I CO. [8], 320 p. ports., plates. [1156
Hall, James Norman, ed. The Lafayette flying corps, ed. by James Norman Hall and
Charles Bernard Nordhoff; associate editor: Edgar G. Hamilton. Boston and
N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin CO. 2 v. illus., ports., plates, facsim. [1157
[Herr, Charles Ryman] Company F history, 319th infantry ; pub . as a matter of record
b y the officers and men of the company . [Somer ville , N . J . : Unionist-gazette ass 'n . ]
103 p. illus., plate, maps. [1158
Preface signed: Ryman Herr.
111124°— 23 1
74 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Historical board of the 315tli infantry. The official history of the 315th infantryJ
U. S. A. ; being a true record of its organization and training, of its operations in the]
World war, and of its activities following the signing of the armistice, 1917-1919,
comp. and pub. by the Historical board of the 315th infantry. [Phila.] 383 p.
illus., ports., maps, plates. [11591
History of the 322d field artillery. New Haven: Priv. print, under direction of thpl
Yale university press. 511 p. illus., port., maps. [1160|
Captain Philip R. Mather, editor ia chief.
Jacobson, Gerald F. History of the 107th infantry, U. S. A. New York city [Del
Vinne press] xvi, 546, [4] p. illus., plates, ports., maps, facsims. [116l|
Kenamore, Clair. The story of the 139th infantry. St. Louis, Mo.: Guard pub. co.i
167 p. illus., ports., map. [1162(
Klausner, Julius, comp. Company B, 307th infantry, its history, honor roll, com-
pany roster, Sept., 1917, May, 1919. [N. Y.: Burke-Kelly post no. 172, American!
legion] 31 p. illus. (incl. ports., maps). [1163
Lee, Jay M. The artilleryman; the experiences and impressions of an American]
artillery regiment in the World war. 129th F. A., 1917-1919. Kansas City, Mo.
Press of Spencer print. CO. x, 359 p. illus.., plate, maps. [1164
Loomis, Ernest L., comp. History of the 304th ammunition train. Boston: R. G.
Badger. 244 p. plates, ports. [1165 1
McCarthy, William S. Memories of the 309th field artillery. [Rochester, N. Y.
Henry Conolly print, co.] 193 p. illus. (incl. ports., maps). [11661
[McGrath, John F.] comp. War diary of 354th infantry; Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska,
Colorado, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Arizona, Illinois; 89th division. Trier, Germany:
Printed by J. Lintz [1920?] 243 p. plates, port., maps. [1167 1
On vers ) of cover-title: Compiled by Lt. John F. McGrath, regimental historian, assisted by In-
telligence staff.
Macomber, Alexander, and Meade Brunet, eds. The 56th engineers in the World
war; company data furnished by company commanders; platoon rosters by platoon
commanders. [Albany: The Brandow print, co.] 105 p. plates, ports. [1168
Miller, Henry E-ussell. The First division. [Pittsburgh: Crescent press] vii, 49 p.
[1169
Moorhead, Robert L. The story of the 139th field artillery, American expeditionary
forces . . . including a history of each battery as written by members of the
organization while in France, together with a roster of each unit as of date of
demobilization. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill co. [8], 468 p. illus. (incl. ports.,
facsim.). [1170
[Morse, Daniel P.] The history of the 50th aero squadron; being the log and opera-
tions of the squadron while with the American expeditionary force in France, 1918-
1919, . . . [N. Y.: Blancliard press] 94 p. illus., port. [1171
Introduction signed: Daniel P. Morse, jr.
Mozley, George. Our miracle battery. [Lowell, Mass.: Sullivan brothers, printers]
[12], 78 p. illus., port. [1172
Battery F, 102d regiment, field artillery.
Kainsford, W. Kerr. From Upton to the Mouse with the Three hundred and seventh !
infantry; a brief history of its life and the part it played in the Great war. N. Y.
and London: Appleton. xxix, 297 p. illus. (maps) plates. [1173 |
[Reynolds, Frederick C] ed. 115th infantry, U. S. A., in the World war. [Balti- j
more: The Read-Taylor co., printers] 241 p. illus., plates, ports., maps. [1174 \
Foreword signed: F. C. Reynolds, editor-in-cliief.
Riggs, McDonald Howard, and Rutherford Hayes Piatt, jr. A history of Battery F, i
323d field artillery. Cleveland, O.: Priv. print, by J. B. Dempsoy. xx, 154 p. |
illus. [1176 j
Shepard, Nelson M. Insignia of A. E. F. aero squadrons. D. A. R. mag., LIV j
(Mar.) 121-138. [1176 \
Shively, George J., ed. Record of S. S. U. 585, prepared for the unit by George J. '
Shively, editor-in-chief. [N. Y.] Printed for the unit by E. L. Hildreth and co., |
under the direction of the Brick row book shop, xii, [2], 286 p. facsims. [1177 ;
Half-title: S. S. U. 585. Yale ambulance unit with the French army, 1917-1919.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 75
Taylor, Emerson Gifford. New England in France, 191 7-1919; a history of the Twenty-
sixth division, U. S. A. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. [10], '325 p.
plates, port., maps. [1178
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 594-595.
Thorn, Kenry C.,jr. History of the 313th U. S. infantry, "Baltimore's own." N. Y.:
Printed by Wynkoop, Hallenbeck Crawford co. 77 p. illus. (inch ports., maps).
[1179
[U. S. Army. A. E. F. 82(1 division] Official history of 82nd division American
expeditionary forces, "All American" division, written by divisional officers,
designated by the division commander. 1917-1919. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merritl
CO. vii, 310 p. plates, port., maps. [1180
U. S. Army. Aero squadron. 639th aero squadron book, being a record of the squad-
ron's activities, with brief biographical sketches of its members. Organized Sep-
tember, 1917; with A. E. F., January, 1918, to May, 1919; demobilized June, 1919.
[Berkeley, Cal.] The 639th aero squadron. 126 p. illus., port., plan. [1181
Editorial staff: editor in chief, T. F. Norton; associate editors: C. W. Stockwell, J. B. Burns, W. F.
Galtes; artist, N. Terminiello.
U. S. engineers. 2d regt. The official history of the Second regiment of engineers
and second engineer train, United States army, in the World w^ar. [San Antonio,
Tex.: San Antonio print, co.] 257 p. illus., ports. [1182
Lettered on cover: Compiled by the Regimental headquarters, Second engineers.
U. S. engineers. 301st regt. The Three hundred and first engineers; a history, 1917-
1919. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. xxiii, 310 p. illus., plates, map,
facsim. [1183
\ U. S. engineers. 304tli regt. The official history of the Three hundred and fourth
I engineer regirrient. Seventy-ninth division, U. S. A., during the World war. Pub.
by the regiment under supervision of its commanding officer. [Lancaster, Pa.:
Press of Steinman and Foltz] xxi, [2], 415 p. illus., plates, ports., maps. [1184
U. S. infantry. 63d regt. A history of the Sixty-third U. S. infantry, 1917-1919.
[New Ygrk city] Pub. by members of the Sixty- third U. S. infantry, xvi, [2],
393 p. illus., plates, ports. [1186
: U. S. infantry. 332d regt., Co. D. The Company log from September 7th, 1917, to
j May 2nd, 1919. [Cleveland: Britton print, co.] 75 p. illus., ports. [1186
] "Compiled, edited, and financially supported by the enlisted personnel 'D,' Three hundred and
thirty-second regiment, United States infantry."
Wisconsin. War history commission. The 32nd division in the World war, 1917-1919.
Issued by the joint war history commissions of Michigan and Wisconsin. [Mil-
waukee: Wisconsin print, co.] 319 p. ports., illus., maps. [1187
REGIONAL (LOCAL) HISTORY.
General.
Barce, Elmore, The savage allies of the Northwest. Ind. mag. hist., XVI (June) j
152-171. [1183 i
A sketch of the allied Indian tribes in the Old Northwest, during the ISth century. I
Bass, WiHiam Wallace. Adventures in the canyons of the Colorado by two of its'
earliest explorers, James White and W. W. Hawkins, with introduction and notes, i
Grand Canyon, Ariz.: The authors, 38 p. illus., port., facsims, [1189
Baxter, James Phinney, A New England temple of honor. New Eng, hist, and'
GENEAL. REG., LXXIV (Apr.) 121-124. [1190 1
Advocates the erection of a memorial building in honor of the fathers of New England. i
Bridgman, Howard Allen. New England in the life of the world; a record of adven-
ture and achievement. Boston and Chicago: The Pilgrim press, xiii, 395 p. I
illus. (maps), ports. [1191!
" This book attempts to bring within the field of vision the influence which New England has exerted 1
upon states and lands beyond its own borders." '
Browne, George Waldo. The river of broken waters: the Merrimack; the romance,!
tradition, history, folklore, scenery, people, literature and industry of "The busiest I
river in the world." Manchester, N. H.: Standard book co. 34 p, illus., plates,'
ports. (New England river series) [1191a {
Bryan, George S. Pioneers of the West. Mentor, VIII, no. 1 (Feb. 16) 1-12. [1192 1
Connelley, William E. Origin of Indian names of certain states and rivers. Ohio|
ARCHAEOL. AND HIST. QUAR., XIX (Oct.) 451-454. [1193!
statements relative to the derivation and meaning of the names of the states of Iowa, Missouri, Mis-
sissippi, Ohio and Kentucky, and the rivers Ohio, Mississippi, Missouri and Neosha. ;
Dahlinger, Charles W, The Moravians and their missions among the Indians of the ,'
Ohio valley. Western Pa, hist, mag., Ill (Apr.) 45-67. [1194
Delaney, Matilda J. (Sager). A survivor's recollections of the Whitman massacre.
Spokane, Wash.: Sponsored by Esther Reed chapter, Daughters of the American;
revolution. 46 p. illus., port. [11951
Elliott, T. C. The strange case of Jonathan Carver and the name Oregon. Ore.i
hist. soc. QUAR., XXI (Dec.) 341-368. [1196;
The name Oregon was used in a book by Jonathan Carver, published in London in 1778, entitled;
"Travels through the interior parts of North America," as applied to the "river of the west," now the]
Columbia river. '
The writer here gives the results of his researches regarding Carver and his book, and suggests sources
for Carver's use of the name Oregon.
EUwanger, Ella Hutchinson. Famous steamboats and their captains on western
and southern waters. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVIII (Jan.) 21-32; (May) 33-45. [1197 '
Hart, Albert Bushnell. The Ohio river. Mentor, VIII, no. 12 (Aug. 2) 1-11. [1198 j
An account of pioneer days on the river, early traffic and trade, and the Ohio vaUey in history. j
Henderson, Archibald. The conquest of the old Southwest; the romantic story of the
early pioneers into Virginia, the Carolinas, Tennessee, and Kentucky, 1740-1790.
N. Y.: The Century co. xxiv, 395 p. plates, ports., fold, map, facsims. [1199
The story of southward and westward migration and settlement.
The state of Franklin: p. 306-328.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 116-117.
Henderson, Archibald. Daniel Boone and the American pioneer. Century, C
(Sept.) 708-713. [1200
Holliday, Carl. The first great expansion of the South. Meth. quar. rev., LXIX
(July) 536-543. [1201
Deals with the history of the South during the first half of the 19th century.
76
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 77
Howay, F. W. The voyage of the Hope: 1790-1792. Wash. hist, quar., XI (Jan.)
3-28. [1202
An account of the voyage of one of the early Boston ships to the northwest coast in the days of the
maritime fur trade, based on the journal of the ship's captain, Joseph Ingraham.
Howay, F. W., ed. Captains Gray and Kendrick: the Barrell letters. Wash. hist.
QUAR., XII (Oct. 1921) 243-271. [1203
A series of letters written by Capt. Robert Gray and Capt. John Kendrick, which throw light upon
certain problems connected with the voyage of the Columbia and the Washington to the Pacific coast,
1787-1790.
Jenson, Andrew. Origin of western geographic names associated with the history
of the "Mormon" people, Utah geneal. and hist, mag., XI (Jan.-Oct.) 34-40,
82-91, 141-144, 170-177. [1204
Cont. from v. X, October 1919.
Kenny, Laurence J. The Jesuit in the Mississippi valley. Miss. Valley hist.
ASSOC. PROC, X, pt. 1, 135-143. [1205
M'Neilly, James H. Southern civilization. Confed. vet., XXVIII (Dec.) 444-445.
[1206
Morison, Samuel Eliot. Letters on the Northwest fur trade. Wash. hist, quar.,
XI (July) 174-177. [1207
Copies of letters of Capt. Eliah Grimes, master of a Boston merchant ship trading in the Pacific North-
west, written to the owners in 1822, giving information which was important for business reasons.
Old Colony trust company. New England old and new; a brief review of some his-
torical and industrial incidents in the Puritan "New English Canaan," still the
Land of promise; pub. by the Old Colony trust company of Boston, commemorating
the tercentenary of the first landing at Plymouth in 1020. [Boston] 62 p. illus.,
mounted col. plates. [1208
Priestley, Herbert Ingram. The log of the Princesa: by Estovan Jose Martinez; what
does it contribute to our knowledge of the Nootka Sound controversy? Portland,
Or.: The Ivy press. 11 p. [1209
Reprinted from the Oregon historical quarterly, v. XXI, no. 1, 1920.
An analysis of a diary of the Spanish expedition to Nootka Sound in 1789, written by the commander
of the Princesa, a copy of which has recently been secured from the Depdsito hidrografico at Madrid, for
the Academy of Pacific coast history, Bancroft library.
Quaife, Milo M. Jonathan Carver and the Carver grant. Miss. Valley hist, rev.,
VII (June) 3-25. " [1210
Tells the story of Carver's explorations in the upper Mississippi valley region in 1760-1767, and of
the grant to him of upwards of 10,000 square miles of land lying in the present states of Wisconsin and
Minnesota, contained in a deed which purports to have been made to Carver by two rSioux chiefs on
May 1, 1767. The writer inclines to the conclusion that the grant was in fact made to Carver.
Roberts, William M. The letters of the Rev. William M. Roberts, third superin-
tendent of the Oregon mission. Ed. by Robert Moulton Gatke. Ore. hist. soc.
QUAR., XXI (Mar.) 33-48. [1211
As the third superintendent of the Oregon mission of the Methodist Episcopal church between the
years of 1847 and 1849, the writer of these letters directed the newly founded church through the period
of the Indian troubles and the rush for California at the time of the gold discovery.
Shippee, Lester Burrell, ed. Report of inspection of the ninth military department,
1819. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VII (Dec.) 261-274. " [1212
Copy of the report of Col. Arthur P. Hayne, of the 9th military department, including Fort Arm-
strong and Fort Edwards, taken from the "Inspection record, 1814-1823," Inspector General's office,
U. S. War department.
The department headquarters were at Belle Fontaine in Missouri territory.
Skinner, Constance Lindsay. Adventurers of Oregon; a chronicle of the fur trade.
New Haven: Yale university press; [etc., etc.] x, 289 p. plates, ports., map.
(The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXII) [1213
Contents.— The river of the West. Lewis and Clark. The reign of the trapper. The Tonquin.
Astor's overlanders. Astoria under the nor'westers. The king of old Oregon [John McLoughlin].
The fall of the fur kingdom. Bibliographical note. Index.
I Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 117-118; Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 318-319.
'smith, Charles W. An old Quaker magazine. Wash. hist, quar., XI (Oct.) 250-
! 253. [1214
I Consists of extracts of items relating to Oregon and to Cahfornia from v. Ill of a weekly publicatiou
f called the " Friends' review," published in Philadelphia, 1849^-1850.
78 AMERICAN HISTORICAL, ASSOCIATIOIT.
State street trust company. Towns of New England and old England, Ireland and
Scotland . . . Part I, . . . Printed to commemorate the tercentenary o£ the land-
ing of the Pilgrims; issued by the State street trust company. Boston, Mass. 225 |
p. illus., plates. [1215
"TConnecting links between cities and towns of New England and those of the same name in Eng-
land, Ireland and Scotland; containing narratives, descriptions, and many views, some done from old
prints; also much matter pertaining to the founders and settlers of New England and to their menao-
rials on both sides of the Atlantic."
Review: Am. hist. rev., XX VII (Apr. 1922) 613-614.
Sturgis, William. The Northwest fur trade, and the Indians of the Oregon coun-
try, 1788-1830. [Boston: The Old South association] 20 p. (Old South leaflets,
no. 219) [1216
Reprints parts of two lectures, delivered in 1846 by WilUam Sturgis, who had been actively engaged
in the Northwest fur trade between Bostgri, the Pacific coast, and China; also extracts from his journal.
Turner, Frederick Jackson. Middle western pioneer democracy. Minn. hist.
BUL., Ill (Aug.) 393-414. [1217
Williams, Samuel C. The conquest of the old Southwest. Tenn. hist, mag., V
(Jan.) 212-215. [1218
A review of "The conquest of the old Southwest, by Archibald Henderson." See no. 1199 above.
Young, F. G. Spain and England's quarrel over the Oregon country. Ore. hist.
soc. QUAR., XXI (Mar.) 13-20. [1219
"An introductory statement to furnish a setting for the incidents in the log of the Princesa used by
Professor Priestley to throw new hght on the Nootka Sound affair of 1789."
Alabama.
Matthews, Mrs. Pitt Lamar. History stories of Alabama. Dallas, Tex.: Southern
pub. CO. 343 p. illusj"^ plates, ports. [1220
Alaska.
Holt, William Sylvester. Beginning of mission work in Alaska by the Presbyterian
church. Wash. hist, quae., XI (Apr.) 89-93. [1221
Arkansas.
Goodwin, Cardinal L. Early explorations and settlements of Missouri and Arkansas,
1803-1822. Mo. hist, rev., XIV (Apr.) 385-424. [1222
Roselli, Bruno. An Arkansas epic. Century, XCIX (Jan.) 377-386. [1223
"The dramatic story of Tontitown, a medieval ItaMan city located in Arkansas, and all that remains
of the Italian plan instituted by Austin Corbin about fifty years ago."
California.
Bepler, Doris West. Santa Clara county; brief history of. the county and its chief
city, San Jos^. Grizzly Bear, XXVII (June) 6, 8. [1224
Brackett, Frank Parkhurst. History of San Jose rancho. [Los Angeles: Historic
record co., printer] 34-203 p. plates, ports. [1226
Canfield, Chauncey de Leon, ed. The diary of a forty-niner. Boston and N. Y.:
Houghton Mifflincd. xviii, 253 p. map. [1226
First published in 1906.
The diary " purported to be the experiences of Alfred T. Jackson, a pioneer miner who . . . worked
on Rock Creek, Nevada comUy, California."— Pref., p. ix.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 592-593.
Colton, Walter. California in 1846-1848. [Boston: Old South association] 16 p.
(Old South leaflets, no. 22a) [1227
Ed. by S. E. Morison.
Extracts from the journal of Walter Colton, who went to CaUfornia with Commodore Stockton's
Pacific squadron, which was given the task of securing California for the United States.
His journal forms an important source for the period of transition from Mexican to American rule.
Coy, Owen Q. Mission San Diego de Alcala. Grizzly Bear, XXVI (Apr.) supple-
ment, p. 8. [1228
Founded by Father Junipero Serra, July 16, 1769.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 79
Coy, Owen C. Presidential elections in California. Ghizzly Bear, XXVII (Nov.)
supplement, p. 4. [1229
A brief statistical summary of the results of former presidential elections in the state.
Gushing, Cliarles S. The acquisition of California; its influence and development
under American rule. Cal. law rev., VIII (Jan.) 67-85. [1230
Ellas, S. P. Anniversary Stanislaus county's creation recalls historic early-day Cali-
fornia political battle. Grizzly Bear, XXVI (Apr.) 30, 32. [1231
Account of the political contest over the organization of Stanislaus county, in 1854, and its bearing
on the election of David C. Broderick to the U. S. Senate.
Ellas, S. P. An early day California newspaper. Grizzly Bear, XXVI (Jan.) 3.
[1232
"The Ferry Bee," issued at Knights Ferry, San Joaquin county, in 1859.
Engelhardt, Charles Anthony, in religion Zepliyrin. San Diego mission, by Fr.
Zephyrin Engelhardt. San Francisco, Cal.: James II. Barry co. xiv, 358 p.
illus. (incl. port., maps, plans, facsims., music) (The missions and missiona,ries
of California. New series. Local history) [1233
Garouette, Eudora. Study outline of California history. Sacramento: California
state printing office. 15 p. [1234
At head of title: California state library.
Reprinted from News notes of California libraries, January 1920.
Hall, Trowbridge. Californian trails, intimate guide to the old missions; the story
of the California missions. N. Y.: Macmillan. 243 p. plates. [1235
Hawley, Walter Augustus. The early days of Santa Barbara, California, from the
first discoveries by Europeans to December, 1846. Santa Barbara [The Schauer
printing studio] i03 p. illus. (incl. plans) plates. [1236
Jones, Thomas K. Fiftv years ago in California; a resume of interesting happenings
in . . . 1870. Grizzly Bear, XXVI (Jan.) 7; (Feb.) 5, 8; (Mar.) 5; (Apr.) 12;
XXVII (Mav) 5, 21; (June) 9, 17; (July) 2, 7; (Aug.) 6-7; (Sept.) 12-13, 24; (Oct.)
4; (Nov.) 4, 20; (Dec.) 5-7. ^ [1237
McCabe, John H. The drama in California '49 and '50. Grizzly Bear, XXVI
(Mar.) 3. [1238
Priestley, Herbert I. Franciscan exploration of California. Cath. hist, rev., VI
(July) 139-155. [1239
"This narrative . . . will make evident the durable side products of Franciscan evangeUcal activities,
especially their contribution to early geographical knowledge of the state, its nomenclature and
ethaology."
Southworth, John Tl. Santa Barbara and Montecito, past and present. Santa Bar-
bara, Calif .: Oreha studios. 267 p. illus. [1240
Vandegrift, Holland A. San Francisco, queen city of the Pacific; principal episodes
in history set forth in rapid review. Grizzly Bear, XXVII (Sept.) 3-6, 8. [1241
Vandegrift, Kolland A., and Lloyd Mecham. San Diego City. Grizzly Bear, XXVI
(Apr.) 1-3, 42. [1242
A history of the city from the early period under Spain.
Colorado.
Marshall, Thomas Maitland, ed. Early records of Gilpin county, Colorado, 1859-1861.
Boulder [Univ. of Colorado?] xvi, 313 p. map. (University of Colorado historical
collections, v. II. Mining series, v. 1) [1243
A compilation of records relating to the early mining settlements in this county.
Parsons, Eugene. The history of Colorado. Denver, Col.: Herrick book and station-
ery CO. 77 p. [1244
With Hatch, Dorus R. Civil government of Colorado. Denver, 1920.
m-
Connecticut,
Alvord, Samuel Morgan. A historical sketch of Bolton, Connecticut, for the Bolton
bicentennial celebration, September 4, 1920. [Manchester, Conn.: The Herald
print. CO.] 29 p. plates. [1245
80 AMERICAiq- HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION^,
I
I
Bailey, Edith Anna. Influences toward radicalism in Connecticut, 1754-177.'5. North- !
ampt-on, Mass.: Dept. of history and government of Smith college. [4], 179-252 p. I
(Smith coll. stud, in hist., v. V, no. 4, July 1920) [1246
Howard, Daniel. Connecticut history stories. [Hartford: Connecticut Board of
education] 78 p. ([Connecticut. Board of education] Connecticut school docu-
ment no. 1—1920. Whole number 437) [1247
Seymour, Morris Woodruff. Historic Litchfield ; address delivered at the bi-centennial
celebration of the town of Litchfield, August 1, 1920. [Litchfield? Conn.: Priv.
print.] [2], 13 p. [1248
Sufiield, Conn. 250th anniversary of the settlement of the town of Suffield, official i
program. 64 p. illus., plates. [1249 1
Wallingford, Conn. Two hundred and fiftieth birthday anniversary of Wallingford, i
Connecticut, September 4, 5, 6, 1920; ofiicial program. [Wallingford? Conn.] [2],
31 p. illus. [1260
White, Alain Campbell, corajp. The history of the town of Litchfield, Connecticut,
1720-1920. Comp. for the Litchfield historical society. Litchfield, Conn.: En-
quirer print, xvi, 360 p. plates, ports. [1251
Delaware.
Moore, Mrs. Francis Hardy. The removal and restoration of the old First Presby- \
terian church of Wilmington, Delaware. Presbyterian hist. soc. jour., X i
(June) 208-210. [1252 I
District of Columbia.
Anderson, Mrs. Isabel Weld (Perkins). Presidents and pies; life in Washington 1897- I
1919, by Isabel Anderson. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. xiv, 290 p. I
plates. [1253 i
Reprinted in part from the National magazine.
Burr, Charles R. A brief history of Anacostia, its name, origin and progress. Colum- i
BiA HIST. SOC. REC, XXIII, 167-179. ' [1254 j
Frye, Virginia King. St. Patrick's — first Catholic church of the federal city. Colum- I
BIA HIST. soc. REC, XXIII, 26-51. [1255 I
Hood, James Franklin. The cottage of David Burnes and its dining-room mantel. }
Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXIII, 1-9. [1256 |
Larner, John B. List of principal municipal authorities of the cities of Washington, ,
Georgetown and the District of Columbia. Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXIII,
180-187. [1257 I
Tindall, William. Naming the seat of government of the United States, a legislative
paradox. Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXIII, 10-25. [1258 \
Georgia. !
Graham, Stephen. Marching through Georgia, following Sherman's footsteps to-day. ■
Harper's, CXL (Apr.) 612-620. ' [1259
Contrasts the Georgia of half a century ago with that of to-day.
Idaho.
Elliott, T. C. David Thompson and beginnings in Idaho. Ore. hist. soc. quar., i
XXI (June) 49-6L [1260 ,
In 1S09 David Thompson, a partner of the Northwest company of Canada crossed the Rocky moun- j
tains on an exploring expedition into what is now the state of Idaho.
1920. 81
Illinois.
Alvord, Clarence Walworth. The Illinois country, 1673-1818. Pub. by the Illinois
Centennial commission. Springfield. [20], 524 p. plates, ports., maps, charts,
diagr. (Illinois centennial publications, pub. by authority of the Illinois Cen-
tennial commission. The centennial history of Illinois, Clarence Walworth Alvord,
editor-in-chief, v. I) [1261
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 341-344.
Alvord, Clarence Walworth, ed. Governor Edward Coles. Springfield, 111.: The
trustees of the Illinois state historical library, viii, 435 p. port., facsims. (111.
hist, lib. coll., V. XV. Biog. ser., v. I) [1262
Published in celebration of the centenary of Illinois.
Includes a reprint of" Sketch of Edward Coles, second governor of Illinois, and of the slavery struggle
of 1823-4 . . . by E. B. Washburne . . . Chicago . . . 1882." (p. 3-201).
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Apr. 1922) 615-616.
Earnhardt, John D., jr. The rise of the Methodist Episcopal church in Illinois from
the beginning to the year 1832. III. hist. soc. jour., XII (July 1919) 149-217.
[1263
Beaubien, Frank G. The Beaubiens of Chicago. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Jan.)
348-364. [1264
Cont. from v. II, July 1919.
Bogart, Ernest Ludlow, and Charles Manfred Thompson. The industrial state,
1870-1893. Pub. by the Illinois Centennial commission. Springfield. [16],
553 p. ports., charts, diagrs. (Illinois centennial publications, pub. by authority
of the Illinois Centennial commission. The centennial history of Illinois, Clarence
Walworth Alvord, editor-in-chief, v. IV) [1265
Rev. in: Am. econ. rev., XI (Dec. 1921) 667-668; Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 548-550.
Bogart, Ernest Ludlow, and John Mabry Mathews. The modern commonwealth,
1893-1918. Springfield: Illinois Centennial commission. [14], 544 p. port.,
charts, diagrs. (Illinois centennial publications, pub. by authority of the Illinois
Centennial commission. The centennial history of Illinois, C. W. Alvord, editor-
in-chief, V. V) [1266
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (July 1922) 806-807.
Brown, J. Stanley. Will county Baptist history. III. hist. soc. jour., XII (Oct.
1919) 417-421. [1267
Davenport, Eugene. On the agricultural development of Illinois since the Civil
war. III. hist. soc. trans., for the year 1919, 101-106. [1267a
Eminent men honored at Illinois college; tablet unveiled to commemorate services
of three pioneers. III. hist. soc. jour., XII (July 1919) 264-270. [1268
Addresses and proceedings at the unveiling of a tablet to commemorate the services of three pioneers
in education, Governor Joseph Duncan, pioneer advocate of free schools, Jonathan Baldwin Turner,
originator of the federal and land grant college plan, and Newton Bateman, organizer of the public
school system of Illinois.
Gaither, Mary E., contrih. Harrisoji festival in Tremont in 1840. III. hist. soc.
JOUR., XII (July 1919) 231-251. [1269
Article concerning the Harrison festival reception at Tremont, copied from the Peoria register and
Northwestern gazetteer, of Feb. 22. 1840.
Galbreath, C. B. Lafayette in Illinois. III. Ca.th. hist, rev., Ill (Oct.) 176-195.
I [1270
Gallery, John Ireland. The Chicago Catholic institute and Chicago lyceum. III.
I Cath. hist, rev., II (Jan.) 303-322. [1271
The Chicago Catholic institute, organized in 1854, was the first Catholic literary society in Chicago.
Garraghan, Bedelia Keiioe. Reminiscences of early Chicago. III. Cath. hist.
I REV., II (Jan.) 261-268. [1272
! Illinois. Centennial commission. The centennial of the state of Illinois. Report
of the Centennial commission. Comp . by J essie Palmer Weber, secretary of the com-
mission. [Springfield: Illinois state journal co., state printers] 222, xxiv, 223-
489 p. plates, ports. [1273
Kenny, Laurence J. Some first ladies of Illinois. Ill„ Cath. hist, rev.. Ill (Oct.)
117-125. [1274
Short sketches of the wives of three early governors of Illinois who were Catholics, Mrs. John Rey-
nolds, Mrs. Thomas Ford, and Mrs. William, H. Bissell.
MacMlUan, Thomas C. The Scots and their descendants in Illinois. III. hist.
soc. TRANS., for the year 1919, 31-85. [1274a
82 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Marks, Anna Edith. William Murray, trader and land speculator in the Illinois!
country. III. hist. soc. trans., for the year 1919, 188-212. [1274bi
Moore, Blaine F. The history of cumulative voting and minority representation in
Illinois, 1870-1919. Rev. ed. Urbana: The University of Illinois. 70 p. tables.
(Univ. of Illinois studies in the social sciences, v. VIII, no. 2) [12761
The writer's History of cumulative voting and minority representation in Illinois 1870-1908, was pub- '
lished in 1909, as the University of Illinois studies in the social sciences, v. III. no. 3. |
O'Dwyer, George F. Irish colonization in Illinois. III. Gath. hist, rev., Ill (July)
73-76. [12761
Putnam, Elizabeth Duncan. The life and services of Joseph Duncan, governor of*
Illinois, 1834-1838. III. hist. soc. trans., for the year 1919, 107-187. [1276al
Risley, Tlieodore G. The pioneers of Wabash county; an address delivered ... I
at the dedication of McClearv's Bluff monument, June 8th, 1919. III. hist, soc'
JOUR., XII (July 1919) 218-233. [1277 i
Shackleton, Robert. The book of Chicago. Phila.: Penn pub. co. [8], 354 p.i
illus., plates. [1278 [
Smith, George Washington. A student's history of Illinois. 4th rev. ed. Chicago::
Hall and McCreary co. [6], 276 p. illus. (incl . ports., maps). [1279 \
Dates in Illinois history: p. [269]-272. '
Thompson, Joseph J. Catholic statesmen of Illinois. III. Oath. hist, rev., Illi
(Oct.) 196-216. [1280 ;
Thomrjson, Joseph J. The Irish in Chicago. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Apr.) 458-473; j
III (Oct.) 146-169. [1281,
Thompson, Joseph J. The Irish in early Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Jan.)|
286-302. [1282
Indiana.
Boggs, Mary. Americanism 100 years ago. Ind. mag. hist., XVI (Mar.) 42-45.
a letter written from Pine Township, October 30th, 1816, describing pioneer life in Indiana.
Buley, B. C. Indiana in the Mexican war. Ind. mag. hist., XVI (Mar.) 46-68.
[1284
Contents.— The Buena Vista controversy.
Cont. from v. XV, 1919.
Canup, Charles E. Temperance movements and legislation in Indiana. Ind. mag.
hist., XVI (Mar .-June) 3-37, 112-151. [1285 |
Clark, J. S. Pioneer life in Indiana. Overland, LXXV (Jan.) 13-21. [1286 |
Clarke, Grace Julian. Wayne coimty and the "inward light". In the Proceedings,'
of the State history conference under the auspices of the Society of Indiana pioneers, i
Indianapolis, December 10-11, 1919. Fort Wayne, Ind.: Fort Wayne print, co. '
(Indiana historical commission. Bulletinno.il) p. 94-99. [1287!
A study of the history of the Quakers and Quakerism in Wayne county, Indiana. j
Davidson, Catherine M. Noble. A pioneer wedding. Ind. mag. hist., XVI (Dec.) '
303-307. [1288 ^
Letter written by Catherine M. Noble Davidson, from Indianapolis, May 6, 1840, describing her j
wedding. i
With notes by Esther U. McNitt.
De la Hunt, Thomas James. The Pocket in Indiana history. Ind. mag. hist., j
XVI (Dec.) 308-316. [1289 .
The Pocket comprises the southwestern section of the state lying east of Blue river and south of
White river. '
Harter, Edwin P. Recollections of the campaign of 1856. Ind. mag. hist., XVI }
(Mar.) 69-72. [1290
The presidential campaign of 1850.
Loftin, Fred Thurston. The Indianapolis centennial guide book, showing location
of places of interest, organizations, roster of officials, floor arrangement of public
buildings, facts about Indianapolis, car lines, etc. . . . Indianapolis [Enquirer
print, and pub. co.] 24 p. illus. (incl. plans). [1291
n
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 83
Painter, Carl. The Progressive party in Indiana. Ind. mag. hist., XVI (Sept.)
173-283. [1292
Parsons, John. A tour through Indiana in 1840; the diary of John Parsons of Peters-
burg, Virginia. N. Y.: R. M. McBride and co. [8], 391 p. port., plates, facsims.
[1292a
Sharp, Walter Rice. Henry S. Lane and the formation of the Republican party in
Indiana. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VII (Sept.) 93-112. [1293
State history conference. Proceedings of State history conference under auspices of
the Society of Indiana pioneers, Indianapolis, December 10-11, 1919. Fort Wayne,
Ind.: Fort Wayne print, co. 102 p. (Indiana, flistorical commission . . .
Bulletin no. 11) J1294
Partial contents.— [Indianal State history: its lmi)ortance; how to interest people in it; how to
preserve it, by Thomas F. Moran. The Indiana historical society, by Jacob P. Dunn. The Indiana
state library and the Indiana historical commission, by H'arlow Lindley. The Indiana magazine of
history, by James A. VVoodburn. The Indiana magazine of history, by George S. Cottman. The
Society oi Indiana pioneers, by Jolm IT. Holliday. Co-operation among historical agencies, by John W.
Oliver. Study and teaching of state history: From the view point of the schools, by Herbert Briggs.
The libraries, by Virginia M. Tutt. The Daughters of the American revolution, by Mrs. Frank Felter.
The Sons of the revolution, by Charles T. Hanna. The Grand army of the republic, by ^Villiam F.
Medsker. The American legion, by Walter Myers. The Indiana federation of clubs, by Mrs. E. C.
Rumpler. The importance of collecting and preserving local history, by James A. Woodburn. His-
toric shrines of Indiana, by Kate Milner Rabb. The problems ofthe local historical society, by George S.
Cottman. What thB State conservation commission can do, by William A. Guthrie. The Society of
Indiana pioneers, its reason for existence, its purpose, by John H. Holliday. History after the war,
by Thomas F. Moran.
Werich, Jacob Lorenzo. Pioneer hunters of the Kankakee. [Logansport, Ind.:
Chronicle printing co.] 196 p. plates, ports. [1296
Wilson, George B., ed. Hindostan, Greenwich and Mt. Pleasant. The pioneer
towns of Martin county. — Memoirs of Thomas Jefferson Brooks. Ind. mag. hist.,
XVI (Dec.) 285-302. [1296
Women's club of Madison. The liistory of Madison. Ind. mag. hist., XVI (Dec.)
317-351. [1297
Iowa.
Aurner, Clarence Eay. History of education in Iowa. v. V. Iowa City, la.: State
historical society of Iowa, x, 371 p. [1298
Rev. in: Am. lust, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 812-843.
Cheney, J. W. Rev. Daniel Lane and his Keosauqua academy. Ann. Iowa, 3d ser.,
XII (Apr.) 283-306. ■ [1299
An academy founded by the Rev. Daniel Lane, at Keosauqua, Iowa, in 1851.
Hansen, Marcus Lee. Welfare campaigns in Iowa. Iowa City, la.: The State his-
torical society of Iowa, xiv, 320 p. (Iowa chronicles of the World war) [1300
At head of title: Chronicles ofthe World war, ed. by Benjamin F. Shambaugh.
Herriott, F. I. A neglected factor in the anti-slavery triumph in Iowa in 1854.
Deutsch-Am. Gesciiichtsblatter, XVIII-XIX, 174-352. [1301
An attempt to explain the cause of the triumph of the anti-slavery party in the election of James W.
Grimes as governor of Iowa in 1854. The writer considers that an important factor in the result was the
discontent of the Germans with the course of the Democratic party in matters affecting their status
and welfare.
Horack, Frank E. Child le^^islation in Iowa. Iowa City: The University. 35 p.
(Univ. of Iowa studies in child welfare ... v. I, no. 6) [1302
Ingalsbe, J. L. Northwestern Iowa in 1855. Ia. jour, hist., XVIII (Apr.) 271-300.
[1303
iMcMurry, Donald L. The soldier vote in Iowa in the election of 1888. Ia. jour.
hist., XVIII (July) 335-356. [1304
; Parish, John C. Threejnen and a press. Palimpsest^ I (Aug.) 56-60. [1305
story of the first newspaper in Iowa, "The Dubuque Visitor", issued in 1833, by John King, William
; Gary Jones, and Andrew Keesecker.
Price, Eliphalet. The trial and execution of Patrick O'Connor at the Dubuque mines
in the summer of 1834. Palimpsest, I (Sept.) 86-97. [1306
84 AMERICAIsr HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION". j
Sac and Fox Indian council of 1841. Ann. Iowa, 3d ser., XII (July) 321-331. [1307 i
Copy of the "minutes of a treaty held at the Sac and Fox Indian agency in the territory of Iowa on
the loth day of October 1841 by and between . . . commissioners on the part of tlie United States and
the chiefs, braves, warriors and head men of the confederated tribes of Sac and Fox Indians." The I
minutes were recorded by James W. Grimes, secretary of the commission. The original is on file in the '
Bureau of Indian affairs, Washington.
Sac and Fox Indian council of 1842. Ann. Iowa, 3d ser., XII (July) 331-345. [1308
Copy of the " minutes of a council held by Governor Chambers with the chiefs, braves and headmen of
the Sac and Fox mission, commencing on the 4th of October, 1842, at the Sac and Fox agency, Indian
Territory for the sale of tneir lands."
Recorded by John Beach, secretary.
Smith, Milo P. Recollections of Marengo. Ann. Iowa, 3d ser., XII (Oct.) 429-445.
[1309
Through European eyes. Palimpsest, I (Nov.) 144-165. [1310
Extracts from the writings of certain European travellers in America, Giacomo Constantino Beltrami
(1823), Charles Augustus Murray (1835), Fredrika Bremer (1850), and Robert Louis Stevenson (1879),
giving their comments on the Iowa country.
Upham, Cyril B. Historical survey of the militia in Iowa, 1865-1898. Ia, jour.
HIST., XVIII (Jan.) 3-93. [1311
Upham, Cyril B. Historical survey of the militia in Iowa, 1898-1916. Ia. jour, i
HIST., XVIII (July) 413-440. [1312 |
Van der Zee, Jacob. Indexing the compiled code. Ia. jour, hist., XVIII (Oct.) !
534-551. [1313 J
Van der Zee, Jacob. A review of the work of the Iowa code commission. Ia. jour. ,
HIST., XVIII (Oct.) 477-533. [1314
Kansas.
Bridgman; Edward P. Bleeding Kansas and the Pottawatomie murders. [Ed. by
M. M. Quaife] Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (Mar.) 556-560. [1316
Copy of a contemporary letter, written by Edward P. Bridgman, a free state settler of Kansas, describ-
ing the murders of May 24, 1856, at the Pottawatomie river.
Eldridge, Shalor Winchell. Recollections of early days in Kansas. Topeka: Kansas
state print, plant. 235 p. illus., ports. (Kansas hist. soc. pub., v. II) [1316
Harrington, W. P. History of Gove county, Kansas, to the organization of the county
in 1886. Gove City, Kan.: Republican-gazette office. [32] p. [1317
Malm, G. N. Coronado Heights. Am. Scandinavian rev., VIII (Nov.) 857-859.
[1318
A Swedish settlement in Kansas.
Kentucky,
Neuman, Fred G. Story of Paducah. Paducah, Ky.: Young print, co. 104 p.
illus. (incl. ports). [1319
Obrecht, Edmund M. History of the Trappists in Kentucky. Ky. hist. soc. reg.,
XVIII (Jan.) 47-49. [1320
Excerpts from the narrative of Gethsemani abbey, Trappist , Ky., on the occasion of the golden jubilee
of its foundation, 1899.
Porter, W. L. Some great lawyers of Kentucky. In Kentucky state bar association.
Proceedings of the nineteenth annual meeting . . . 1920. Louisville: Press of
Westerfield-Bonte co. p. 102-114. [1321
Quisenberry, A. C. Kentucky — mother of United States senators and representa-
tives. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVIII (Jan.) 79-97. [1322
Quisenberry, A. C. Kentucky union troops in the Civil war. Ky. hist. soc. reg.,
XVIII (Sept.) 13-18. [1323
Railey, W. E. Woodford county, Kentucky. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVIII (Jan.)
53-70; (May) 59-101; (Sept.) 27-88. [1324
Brief account of Woodford county and its citizenship from pioneer days.
Stephenson, Mary A. "Old Town park", Harrodsburg, Ky. Ky. hist. soc. reg.,
XVIII (May) 49-58. [1325
Trabue, Alice Elizabeth. "Spring Hill", Oldham county, Ky., the home of Major
William Berry Taylor. Ky. hist. soc. reg., XVIII (May) 23-29. [1326
'«^
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 85
Louisiana.
Cruzat, Heloise Hiilse. Loiiisianians descendants of Galvez soldiers. In the Year
book of the Louisiana society Sons of the American revohition for 1919-1920. New
Orleans, La. p. 103-109. [1327
A sketch of some of the soldiers who fought under Bernardo de GAlvez in tlie Spanish expeditions
against the British in West Florida, 1779-1780.
Dart, Henry P., ed. Cabildo archives. La. hist, quar., Ill (Jan., July-Oct.) 71-99,
279-360, 509-569. [1328
Text copied and translations made by Mrs. Heloise H. Cruzat.
Documents from the archives of the French and Spanish periods of Louisiana history, preserved in
the Cabildo, at New Orleans.
They extend over the period 1725-1770, fifteen of them being prior to the transfer to Spain in 176.3.
The July number contains records of criminal trials, 1720-1766.
Dimitry, Charles Patton. The old "Mobile landing", head of the basin in New
Orleans. La. hist, quar., Ill (Jan.) 131-135. [1329
Dimitry, Charles Patton. The story of the ancient Cabildo. La. hist, quar.. Ill
(Jan.) 57-67. [1330
A review of the historical associations connected with the building in New Orleans, where the Cabildo
or Supreme council of Louisiana, held its sessions during the Spanish period.
Dunn, Milton. History of Natchitoches. La. hist, quar., Ill (Jan.) 26-56. [1331
Favrot, Charles A. An historical sketch of the construction of the Custom house of
the city of New Orleans. La. hist, quar., Ill (Oct.) 467-474. [1332
Goodwin, Cardinal. The Louisiana territory from 1G82-1803. La. hist, quar., Ill
(Jan.) 5-25. [1333
Lafargue, Andre. The New Orleans French opera house; a retrospect. La. hist.
QUAR., Ill (July) 368-372. [1334
Parsons, Edward Alexander. The Latin city; a plea for its monuments. La. hist.
QUAR., Ill (July) 361-367. [1336
An account of the old French city of New Orleans.
Phillips, Horace P. Bonded debt of New Orleans 1822 to 1920 inclusive. La. hist,
QUAR., Ill (Oct.) 596-611. [1336
Renshaw, James A. Liberty monument. La. hist, quar., Ill (July) 259-278.
[1337
Monument erected in New Orleans in 1874.
Richardson, Frank L. My recollections of the battle of the fourteenth of September,
1874, in New Orleans, La. La. hist, quar., Ill (Oct.) 498-501. [1338
The writer's recollections of the revolt against the rule of the Republican radical party in Louisiana
during the Reconstruction period.
Eobinson, Henry Warmoth. Galvez. In the Proceeding,? of the Louisiana society
Sons of the American revolution for 1918. New Orleans, La., 1919. p. 51-56.
[1339
Concerned with the Spanish ejcpeditions against the British in West Florida, under the command of
Bernardo de Galvez. governor of Louisiana, in 1779 and 1780.
Publishes a list of the officers in the Galvez armies of 1779 and 1780.
Sons of the American revolution. Louisiana society. Our work in Seville, Spain.
In the Year book of the Louisiana society Sons of the American revolution for 1919-
1920. New Orleans, La. p. 64-102. - [1340
Copies of documents, in translation, from the Archivo general de Indias, at Seville, relating to Louisi-
ana, particularly of the period of the governorship of Don Bernardo de Galvez, 1779-1781, and the
reports of Miss Irene A. Wright, covering research work that she has carried on for the Society in the
same archives.
Theard, Delvaille H. The founding of New Orleans. La. hist, quar., Ill (Jan.)
68-70. [1341
Villiers, Marc de, haron. A history of the foundation of New Orleans (1717-1722).
Translated from the French by Warrington Dawson. La. hist, quar., Ill (Apr.)
157-251. [1342
The original French edition was published at Paris (Imprimerie nationale) in 1917.
86 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. I
Maine.
Atkinson, Minnie. Hinckley Township; or, Grand Lake Stream plantation, a
sketch. Newburyport, Mass.: Printed by the Newburyport herald press. [10],
122 p. plates. [1343
Bassett, Norman L. History of the Blaine mansion [at Augusta]. Sprague's jour.
Maine hist., VIII (Dec.)*196-201. [1344
Favor tavern, Dover. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VIII (June) 47-49. [1345
Hall, Robert E. Maine's admission to the Union. Sprague's jour. Maine hist.,
VIII (June) 8-18. [1346
Lombard, Lucina H. The first Baptist church in Maine. Sprague's jour. Maine
hist., VIII (June) 34-35. [1347
Eobinson, William A. Maine's century of statehood. Granite mo., LII (Apr.) ■
170-171. [1348 ;
Sawtelle, William Otis. William Gilley, an early settler of Mount Desert Island.
Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VII (Feb.) 192-193. [1349
See, Anna Phillips. A grandmother among women's clubs. D. A. R. mag., LIV
(May) 285-292. [1360
A sketch of the " Female charitable society of Wiscasset," Maine, organized in 1805. •
Smith, Edgar Crosby. Short biographies of the members of the first Maine senate, i
Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VIII (June) 22-26. [1351
Sprague, John Francis. Indian treaties in Maine. Sprague's jour. Maine hist.,
VIII (Dec.) 183-195. [1352
Sprague, John Francis. Maine as a district and as a state has had two successful
immigration enterprises. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VIII (June) 38-41.
[1353
Regarding the settlement of German immigrants at Broad Bay, now Waldoboro, in 1753, and tke
colonization of New Sweden, in 1870.
Starkey, Glenn Wendell. Maine, its history, resources and government. Boston,
N. Y. [etc.] Silver, Burdett and co. x, 249, xii p. illus. (inch map). [1354
Maryland.
History of Caroline county, Maryland, from its beginning; material largely contrib-
uted by the teachers and children of the county, rev. and supplemented by Laura
C. Cochrane, Lavinia R. Crouse, Mrs. Wilsie S. Gibson, A. May Thompson, Edward
M. Noble, of the Caroline county schools. [Federalsburg, Md.: Printed by the
J. W. Stowell print, co.] xvi, 348 p. illus. (inch ports., maps). [1355
Introduction signed: Edward M. Noble.
Smith, Delos H. Colonial houses at Annapolis. Arch, rev., X (Mar.) 69-72, 91.
[1366
Tayloe, Benjamin Ogle. American gentlemen of the olden time, especially in Mary-
land and Virginia. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag., II (Oct.) 85-97.
[1367
Written by Mr. Tayloe in 1851, and contributed by him to the New York "Spirit of the Times."
Wood, Fred J. The turnpikes of Maryland. D. A. R. mag., LIV (Oct.) 565-574.
[1358
Massachusetts.
"Argument settlers"; what has happened on and around Nantucket. A complete
history of Nantucket in condensed form. [2d ed.] [Nantucket, Mass.: The In-
quirer and mirror press] 76 p. [1359
Foreword signed: Harry B. Turner.
Babson, Helen Corliss. The Finns in Lanesville, Massachusetts. Los Angeles,
Calif.: Southern California sociological society. University of Southern California.
12 p. (Studies in sociologv; sociological monograph no. 13. v. IV, no. 1. Octo-
ber 1919) " [1360
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 87
Bangs, Mary Rogers. Old Cape Cod; the land, the men, the sea. Boston and N. Y.:
Houghton Mifflin co. [10], 298 p. plates. [13G1
I Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 588.
Bodfish, Annie W. Old Main street. Nantucket hist, assoc. proc, XXVI, 57-61.
' [1362
Bradford, Gershom. Historic Duxbury in Plymouth county, Massachusetts. Bos-
ton. 44 p. plates. [1363
Brigham, Albert Perry. Cape Cod and the Old colony. N. Y. and London: Putnam.
xi, 284 p. plates, maps, diagr. [1364
I Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 587-588.
Browne, William Bradford. The Mohav^rk trail, its history and course with map and
illustrations. Together with an account of Fort Massachusetts and of the early
j turnpikes over Hoosac Mountain. Pittsfield, Mass.: Sun print, co. 40 p. illus.,
plates, map. [1365
Bull, Sidney Augustus. History of the town of Carlisle, Massachusetts, 1754-1920;
with biographical sketches of prominent persons. Cambridge, Mass.: The Murray
printing co. xi, 365 p. plates, ports. [1366
Carrick, Alice Van Leer. The Revolutionary home of Paul Pvevere. Country life,
XXXIX (Dec.) 63-65. [1367
The Paul Revere house, Boston.
Chamberlain, George Walter. Glimpses of the past; miscellaneous facts concerning
ancient Maiden. Malden hist. soc. reg., VI, 47-57. [1368
The Choate bridge, Ipswich, Mass. Old-time New England, XI (Oct.) 88-89. [1369
Bridge across the Ipswich river, Imilt in 1764.
Cobum, Frederick William. Historj'^ of Lowell and its people. New York city:
Lewis hist. pub. co. 3 v. plates, ports. [1370
Corey, Deloraine Pendre. "The Old Brick." Malden hist. soc. reg., VI, 6-12.
[1371
Historical sketch of the brick meeting house in Maiden, dedicated January 19, 1803.
Dow, George Francis. Newspaper items relating to Topsfield, copied from Boston
newspapers, 1704-1780. Topsfield hist, soa coll., XXV, 97-100. [1372
Edes, Henry Herbert. Middlesex registry of deeds, 1776. Col. soc. Mass. pub.,
XXI, 452^53. [1373
Remarks in communicating copies of two receipts, dated 26 and 30 April, 1776, showing that the
record books and papers of the Middlesex registry of deeds had been lodged for safekeeping at the house
of John Reed of Bedford.
Edmonds, John H. A northeast view of Newburyport, Mass. [1774] Old-time
New England, XI (Oct.) 56. [1374
Edwards, Agnes. The old Coast road from Boston to Plymouth. Boston and N. Y.:
Houghton Mifflin co. xxix, 203 p. illus., plates. [1375
Agnes Edwards, pseudonym for Agnes Edwards Rothery.
Evans, George Hill. The seven against the wilderness; a brief account of the settle-
ment of Woburn, Mass., and of its founder, Capt. Edward Johnson, [n. p.] 24 p.
[1376
An address before the Somerville historical society, April 12, 1920.
Forbes, Harriette M. Early Cambridge diaries. Cambridge hist, soc. pub., XI,
57-83. [1377
Includes a list of diaries kept by Cambridge people, 17th and 18th centuries, with place of publication,
if published, or location of the original diary.
Forbes, Harriette M. Elias Carter, architect, of Worcester, Mass. [b. 1781] Old-
time New England, XI (Oct.) 58-71. [1378
Fowler, Samuel P. The old town of Danvers in 1765. Danvers hist. soc. coll.,
Vlli, 61-65. [1379
Fuller, Timothy. Excerpts from the diary of Timothy Fuller, jr., an undergraduate
in Harvard college, 1798-1801. By his grand-daughter, Edith Davenport Fuller.
Cambridge hist. soc. pub., XI, 33-53. [1380
88 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Greenleaf, Stephen. Sheriff Greenleaf's account, 1761-62, Mass. hist. soc. proc
LIII, 21-22. [1381
"County of Suffolk, to Stephen Groenleaf, dr.," dated Boston, Jan. 12th, 1702.
Harlow, Ralph V. Economic conditions in Massachusetts during the American revolu-
tion. Col. soc. Mass. PUB., XX, 163-190. [1382
Haven, Gilbert. The original Methodist church of Maiden Center. Malden hist. ,
soc. REG., VI, 31-46. [1383 ,
Hooper, John H. Medford turnpike corporation. Medford hist, reg., XXIII '
(Mar.) 1-10. [1384
Incorporated in 1803, for tlie purpose of building a road from Medford to Charlestown.
Hooper, John H. More about the grist mill. Medford hist, reg., XXIII (Dec.)
71-75. [1385
The first grist mill in Medford.
Hooper, John H. Sewage in Mystic river; the efforts of the town of Medford to prevent ■
the pollution of the Mystic river. Medford hist, reg., XXIII (Sept.) 45-53. ^
[1386 I
Lane, William Coolidge. Two mathematical note books written out by students in
Harvard college. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 147-151. [1387 I
One by Ephraim Eliot of the class of 1780, the other by Samuel Griffin ofthe class of 1784. Two water- j
colordrawingifrom the book of Samuel Griffin, representing scenes in Cambridge and the college yard, !
are here reproduced. ' !
Licensed innholders in Danvers, 1694-1845. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VIII \
131-132. [1388 I
Mann, Charles Edward. The governor's lady; why one of Maiden's public parks is i
called "Coytmore Lea." Malden hist. soc. reg., VI, 13-30. [1389 j
The story of Martha Coytmore, daughter of Thomas Coytmore, of Maiden. She was the fourth wife I
of Governor John Winthrop.
Mann, Moses W. Dr. Osgood's house. Medford hist, reg., XXIII (June) 38-40. I
[1390 I
The house of Reverend David Osgood, built in 1785. 1
[Mann, Moses W.] Medford, condita, 1628. Medford hist, reg., XXIII (Dec.) |
65-69. [1391 I
[Mann, Moses W.] Medford branch canal. Medford hist, reg., XXIII (June) I
25-30. [1392 I
[Mann, Moses W.] Medford saltmarsh corporation. Medford hist, reg., XXIII i
(June) 30-34. [1393 ;
A business concern in Medford, incorporated in 1803. |
[Mann, Moses W.] Medford's first gristmill. Medford hist, beg., XXIII (Sept.) J
53-58. [1394 ;
[Mann, Moses W.] The mills on the Medford turnpike, Medford hist, reg.,
XXIII (Mar.) 18-24. [1395
Mann, Moses W. More about the turnpike. Medford hist, reg., XXIII (Mar.)
10-15. [1396 I
The turnpike from Medford to Charlestown, built in 1803.
[Mann, Moses W.] Parson Smith's farm, Medford hist, reg,, XXIII (June) i
35-38. [1397 |
The farm in Medford belonging to the Rev. William Smith, pastor of the church at Weymouth, i
1734^1783. I
Mann, Moses W. The Touro house and its owner. Medford hist, reg., XXIII '
(Dec.) 78-83. [1398
The summer home, in Medford, of Abraham Touro, Boston merchant who died in 1822. ;
Massachusetts, Secretary of the commonwealth. Historical data relating to coun- ,
ties, cities and towns in Massachusetts. Prepared by the secretary of the common-
wealth. Division of public records. Boston: Wright and Potter print, co., state
printers. 73 p. [1399
Matthews, Albert, Remarks on the Spunker club, 1772-1775. Col. soc. Mass, pub.,
XX, 462-463. [1400
A club at Boston, mentioned iu letters of the period 1772-1775.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 89
Millar, Donald. A seventeenth century New England house; the Parson Capen
house at Topsfield, Massachusetts. Old-time New England, XI (July) 3-8. [1401
Morgan, Eleanor W. Old Nantucket gardens. Nantucket hist, assoc. proc,
XXVI, 41^6. [1402
Morison, Samuel E. Remarks on economic conditions in Massachusetts, 1775-1783.
Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 191-192. [1403
Northend, Mary Harrod. Quaint old Boston. Century, C (July) 368-375. [1404
Nye, Everett I. History of Wellfleet, from early days to present time. [Hyannis,
Mass.: F. B. and F. P. Goss, printers] 48 p. plates, port. [1405
O'Dwyer, George F. The Irish Catholic genesis of Lowell. Lowell, Mass. [The
author?] 80 p. [1406
Piper, Fred S. Lexington, the birthplace of American liberty; a handbook contain-
ing an account of the battle of Lexington — Paul Revere 's narrative of his famous
ride — a sketch of the town and the places of historic interest — inscriptions on all
historic tablets — directory — map and numerous illustrations. 6th ed. Lexington:
Lexington historical society. 44 p. illus. (incl. ports., facsim.) map. [1407
Place, Charles A. The New South church, Boston, Mass. Old-time New England,
XI (Oct.) 51-53. [1408
Potter, Edgar. Who made the first straw bonnet in Massachusetts? Old-time New
England, XI (Oct.) 72-78. [1409
The Roxbury committee of vigilance, 1834-1835. Mass. hist. soc. proc, LIII, 325-
331. [1410
Copies of contemporaneous papers pertaining to a committee of vigilance formed in Roxbury after
the burning of the convent in Charlestown and intended to protect the nuns who had taken temporary
refuge in Roxbury.
Roxbury's historical landmarks. Roxbury hist. soc. yr. bk., 7-10. [1411
Smith, William Christopher. Congregational church in Chatham, 1720-1920. Hia-
i torical address on the two hundredth anniversary of the organization of the church.
[Chatham, Mass.] Chatham monitor print. 31 p. illus. [1412
Story, Joseph. Letter of Joseph Story to H. A. S. Dearborn. Mass. hist. soc. proc,
, LIII, 331-332. [1413
i Written from Cambridge, Sept. 19, 1844.
jTapley, Charles S. Dan vers ships and ship masters; from the registers of the district
of Salem. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VIII, 84-96. - [1414
Tapley, Harriet S. Old tavern days in Danvers. Danvers hist. soc. coll., VIII,
1-32. [1416
iThwing, Annie Haven. The crooked & narrow streets of the toAvn of Boston 1630-1822.
Ij Boston: Marshall Jones co. xi, 282 p. plates, fold, plans. [1416
[The Washington news room; from the records now in possession of this society.
" Danvers hist. soc. coll., VIII, 59-61. [1417
The Washington news room society was instituted on April 1, 1831, for the purpose of providing
current newspapers to the public of Danversport.
[Willard, Susanna, ed. Extracts from letters of the Reverend Joseph Willard, presi-
dent of Harvard college and of some of his children, 1794-1830. Selected and
annotated by his grand-daughter, Susanna Willard. Cambridge hist. soc. pub.,
XI, 11-32. [1418
Michigan.
Brennan, Mary K. Pioneer reminiscences of Delta county. Mich. hist, mag., IV
(Jan.) 156-167. [1419
Buell, Mahlon H. The war record of Hillsdale college. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Oct.)
737-740. [1420
Chase, Lew Allen. Fort Wilkins, Copper Harbor, Mich. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Apr.)
608-611. [1421
Cooper, Leigh G. Influence of the French inhabitants of Detroit upon its early
political life. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Jan.) 299-304. [1422
111124°— 23 8
90 AMERICAN" HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Dougherty, Fred. The Marquette pageant. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Oct.) 753-764.
[1423
Historical pageant at Marquette, July 5, 1920.
Dustin, Fred. The treaty of Saginaw, 1819. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Jan.) 243-278.
[1424
Treaty with the Chippewa Indians of Saginaw by which they ceded the largest part of their lands
situated in northeastern Michigan to the U. S. government, Sept. 24, 1819.
History of Fort Mackinac. Wis. mag. hist., Ill (Apr.) 471-473. [1426
Jones, H. Bedford-. The story of a famous mission, Mich. hist, mag., IV (Apr.)
596-607. [1426
The old Jesuit mission to the Ottawas at I'Abre Croche (the Cross Village of to-day), established in
1741.
Landrum, Charles H. Michigan war legislation, 1917. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Oct.)
799-833. [1427
Littell, Joseph. Leland; an historical sketch. [Indianapolis: Indianapolis print, co.]
61 p. [1428
McLoughlin, Aloysia. Historic sites of St. Joseph county. Mich. hist, mag., IV
(Apr.) 520-529. [1429
Patton, Constance Saltonstall. Reminiscences of life at Mackinac, 1835-1863: a
tribute to old memories of the "Isle of beauty". Mich. hist, mag., IV (Apr.) 492-
513. [1430
Potter, William W. Address delivered at the dedication of the General Shafter
monument at Galesburg, August 22, 1919. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Apr.) 485-491.
[1431
Sawyer, Alvah L. Our society: how help it to serve. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Oct.)
680-687. [1432
A paper prepared for the fifth annual Upper Peninsula meeting of the Pioneer and historical society
at Sault Ste. Marie, 1920.
Silliman, Sue Imogene. Michigan military records, the D. A. R. of Michigan
historical collections: records of the Revolutionary soldiers buried in Michigan; the
pensioners of territorial Michigan; and the soldiers of Michigan awarded the
''medal of honor." Lansing: Michigan historical commission. 244 p. plates,
ports. (Michigan. Historical commission. Bulletin, no. 12) [1433
Silliman, Sue Imogene. Paper villages of St. Joseph county. Mich. hist, mag., IV
(Apr.) 588-595. [1434
Regarding early projects for laying out villages in this region, for which surveys were made and deeds
recorded, but whose settlement did not materialize.
The "Soo" pageant. (Adapted from the Evening News, Sault Ste. Marie, June 15, 16,
17). Mich. hist, mag., IV (Oct.) 741-752. [1436
Describes the pageant at Sault Ste. Marie, June 15 and 16, depicting the history of the city.
Stocking, William. Detroit commercial organizations. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Apr.)
435-477. [1436
Turner, F. N. Early days in Lansing. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Apr.) 612-616. [1437
Minnesota. *'
Babcock, Willoughhy M., jr. The Goodhue press. Minn. hist, bul.. Ill (Feb.) 291-
294. [1438
Establishes the validity of the claim of the Minnesota historical society to the possession of the hand-
press which was brought to St. Paul in 1849 and on which the Minnesota Pioneer, the first newspaper
in the state, was printed.
Foss, Louis O. History of Stony Brook township. From the first settlement to 1918.
[Minneapolis: Augsburg publishing house] 280 p. illus. (incl. ports.). [1439
Hoshour, Har^'ey. Boundary controversies between states bordering on a navigable
river. Minn, law rev., IV (June) 463^82. [1440
Devoted to a discussion of the Minnesota-Wisconsin case.
Johnson, Bichard W. Fort Snelling and its history. Western mag., XV (July) 44-
46; XVI (Oct.) 170-173. [1441
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 91
Kelley, Frances Elizabeth. A history of public school support in Minnesota, 1858 to
1917. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, ix, 103 p. ( [Minnesota. TJni-
versity] Current problems, no. 12) [1442
Lapham, Julia A. Recollections of the Sioux massacre of 1862. Wis. maq. hist.,
IV (Dec.) 222-223. [1443
Minnesalbum med en illustrerad historik utgifen af Svejiska Evangeliskt Lutherska
Beckville-Forsamlingen i Meeker county, Minn., med anledning af dess femtioars-
jubileum, den 28-30 juni 1919. Rock Island, 111., 1919. 120 p. illus. [1444
Minnesota historical society. Exercises at the dedication of the Minnesota historical
building. Minn. hist, bul., Ill (Aug.) 415-437. [1445
Former homes and administration of the Minnesota historical society, by Warren Upham: p. 426-
429. The functions and ideals of the Minnesota historical society, by Solon J. Buck: p. 429^36.
JBoddis, Louis H. The last Indian uprising in the United States. Minn. hist, bul.,
' III (Feb.) 272-290. [1446
A Chippewa Indian uprising at Leech Lake, in northern Minnesota in October, 1898.
Satterlee, Marion P. Authentic list of the victims of the Indian massacre and war
I 1862 to 1865. Minneapolis, Minn. [The compiler] 1919. 8 p. [1447
TJpham, Warren. Minnesota geographic names, their origin and historical significance.
St. Paul: Minnesota historical society, viii, 735 p. (Minn. hist. soc. coll., v. XVII)
[1448
Mississippi.
Lafargue, Andr6. The founding of Biloxi. La. hist, quar., Ill (Oct.) 617-623.
[1449
Rowland, Dunbar. Old Biloxi, the first settlement in Mississippi. An address
delivered at the dedication of a monument, commemorating the settlement of old
Biloxi and Fort Maurepas, April 8, 1920. [Jackson, Miss.: Hederman bros.] 14 p.
[1450
I Missouri.
Bek, William Q. The followers of Duden. Mo. hist, rev., XIV (Jan.-Apr.) 217-
j 232,436^58. [1451
I Letters and diaries written by early German immigrants in Missouri, 1833-1834.
Britton, Kollin J. Earlv days on Grand river and the Mormon war. Mo. hist, rev.,
XIV (Jan.-Apr.) 233-245, 459-473. ' [1462
Byars, William Vincent. A century of journalism in Missouri. Mo. hist. rev.
XV (Oct.) 53-73. [1453
DeMenil, Alexander Nicolas. A century of Missouri literature. Mo. hist, rev.,
XV (Oct.) 74-125. [1454
Glenn, Kobert A. The Osage war. Mo. hist, rev., XIV (Jan.) 201-210. [1455
The O^age. war (1837) marked the final determined effort of the people of Missouri to rid the state
I forever of the Red man.
Soodwin, Cardinal. Early explorations and settlements of Missouri and Arkansas,
1803-1822. Mo. hist, rev., XIV (Apr.) 385-424. [1456
Kenny, Laurence. The MuUanphys of St. Louis. U. S. Oath. hist, rec, XIV,
70-111. [1457
a prominent Catholic family of St. Louis.
McClure, Clarence Henry. History of Missouri; a text book of state history for use
in elementary schools. Chicago and N. Y.: The A. S. Barnes co. xi, 268 p. illus.
(incl. ports., maps). [1458
Mangold, George B. Social reform in Missouri, 1820-1920. Mo. hist, rev., XV
(Oct.) 191-213. [1459
lilarsh, S. Louise Cotton. Missouri's centennial, 1821, August 10th, 1921. [Webster
Groves?] 30 p. col. plate. [1460
MEeriwether, Lee. A century of labor in Missouri. Mo. hist, rev., XV (Oct.) 163-175.
^ [1461
en, Mary Alicia. Social customs and usages in Missouri during the last century.
Mo. HIST. REV., XV (Oct.) 176-190. [1463
92 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. j
!
Sauer, Carl Ortwin. The geography of the Ozark highland of Missouri. Chicago, Ill.r ;
The University of Chicago press, xviii, 245 p. illus. (maps), plates. [1463
Thesis (pii. d.) — University of Chicago, 1915.
" The Geographic society of Chicago, Bulletin no. 7." I
This study is divided into three parts. The first part is concerned with the "Environment"; the
second part considers the influences of environment on the settlement and dovelopment of the different
parts of the highland; and the third part is devoted to recent economic conditions. I
Scott, Mary Semple, ed. History of the woman suffrage movement in Missouri
Mo. HIST. REV., XIV (Apr.) 281-384. [1464
Stephens, E. W. Little Bonne Femme church, Boone county, Missouri. Mo. hist ■
REV., XIV (Jan.) 193-200. [1466 '
Address at its centennial, August 28, 1919.
Bonne Femme Baptist church was organized in December 1819.
Stephens, F. F. Banking and finance in Missouri in the thirties. Miss. Valley!
HIST. ASSOC. PROC, X, pt. 1, 122-134. [1466!
Stevens, Walter Barlow. The travail of Missouri for statehood. [St. Louis] State I
historical society of Missouri. 35 p. plates, ports., maps. [1467
Reprinted from the Missouri historical review, v. XV, no. 1, October, 1920.
Viles, Jonas. Missouri in 1820. Mo. hist, rev., XV (Oct.) 36-52. [1468
White, Edward J. A century of transportation in Missouri. Mo. hist, rev., XV
(Oct.) 126-162. [1469
Williams, Henry Sullivan. The development of the negro public school system in *
Missouri. Jour, negro hist., V (Apr.) 137-165. [1470 '
Woodson, William H. History of Clay county, Missouri. Topeka and Indianapolis: I
Historical publishing co. [24], 65-777 p. plates, porta. [1471 ]
Biographical history: p. 338-777. i
i
Nebraska. i
Buecliler, A. F., ed. History of Hall county, Nebraska; a narrative of the past, with j
special emphasis upon the pioneer j)eriod of the county's history, and chronological
presentation of its social, commercial, educational, religious, and civic develop- '
ment from the early days to the present time, and special analysis of its military ;
and civil participation in the late world war, by A. F. Buechler and R. J. Barr, I
editors in chief; Dale P. Stough, associate compiling editor; advisory editorial j
board: Judge Bayard H. Paine, G. H. Menck [and others] Lincoln, Neb.: Western
publishing and engraving co. xxii, 965 p. illus., ports. [1472
Morton, Julius Sterling, and Albert Watkins. School history of Nebraska, based on |
the Ilistory of Nebraska by J. Sterling Morton and Albert Watkins; abridged and !
com J), for the publishers; ed. by James A. Beattie. Lincoln, Neb.: Western !
publishing and engraving co. xxxvi, 317 p. illus., ports., maps. [1473
Nevada.
Peckham, George E. Reminiscences of an active life. Nev. hist. soc. pap., H,
1917-1920, 1-205. [1474
Reminiscences of pioneer life in Nevada. • >.
New Hampshire.
Dublin, N. H. The history of Dublin, N. H., containing the address by Charles
Mason, and the proceedings at the centennial celebration, June 17, 1852, with a
register of families, by Rev. Levi W. Leonard, d. d., continued and additional
chapters to 1917, by Rev. Josiah L. Seward, d. d. Dublin, N. H.: Pub. by the
town of Dublin, xxiv, 1018 p. plates, ports., facsims. [1475
"Reprinted and augmented edition."
An historic event, Wolfeboro celebrates its one-hundred and fiftieth anniversary.
Granite mo., LII (Oct.) 375-408. [1476
Kingsbury, Mabel Hope. Turnpikes, toll-gates and stage-coach days in New Hamp-
shire. Granite mo., LII (Apr.) 145-156. [1477
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 93
TTphain, George B. The great road to the north, through the upper Connecticut
valley. Granite mo., LII (Feb.) 50-56. [1478
Historical items associated with this highway.
TTpham, George B. New Hampshire town boundaries determined by Mason's Curve.
Granite mo., LII (Jan.) 19-27. [1479
According to the description of the territory granted by the Mason Patent of 1629, a curve line drawn
at a distance of "threescore miles" inland from the mouths of the Merrimac and Piscataqua rivers was
to be the western boundary of the patent.
Upham, George B. The Province road. Granite mo., LII (Nov.) 428-442. [1480
A road from Charlestown on the Connecticut river to Boscawen on the Merrimac river, built in 1769
or 1770.
New Jersey.
Benedict, William H. New Jersey as it appeared to early observers and Iravellera.
N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. V (July) 150-168. [1481
Boyer, Charles S. The old houses in Camden, New Jersey; an address delivered
before the City history society of Camden, New Jersey. Rev. and reprinted from
the West Jersey press, October 23, 1920. [Camden] Priv. print, [by S. Chew and
sons CO.] 15 p. plates. (Annals of Camden, no. 1) [1482
Greene, Robert Hill. Old days in Leonia. Bergen co. hist. soc. rep., XVIII,
42-51. [1483
Hutchinson, Elmer T. The old "Wheat Sheaf" inn. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. V
(Oct.) 246-248. [1484
The famous stage-house and inn, built about 1730, and located about two and a half miles from Eliza-
bethtown, on the King's highway, later known as the Old Philadelphia post road.
Lafayette in New Brunswick in 1824. N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. V (Apr.) 112-116.
[1485
landis, Charles K. Journal of Charles K. Landis, founder of Vineland. Vineland
hist, mag., V (Jan.-Oct.) 81-85, 101-104, 121-125, 142-146. [1486
This installment covers the periods from May 27 to July 2, 1868, and from July 3 to July 14, 1874.
Cont.fromv. IV, 1919.
Nelson, William, and Charles A. Shriner. History of Paterson and its environs (the
silk city); historical— genealogical — biographical. N. Y. and Chicago: Lewis hist,
pub. CO. 3 V. illus., plates, ports., map, coat-of-arms. [1487
New Jersey. Old Fort Nassau colonial monument commission. Report of Old
Fort Nassau colonial monument commission of New Jersey, 1920. Camden, N. J.:
I. F. Huntzinger co., printers. 37 p. ports., plate, maps. [1487a
Sketch of Old Fort Nassau settlement; address by John Henry Fort: p. 14-26.
New Jersey historical society. Our seventy-fifth anniversary. N. J. hist. soc.
proc, n. s. V (July) 138-150. [1488
New Jersey society of Pennsylvania. Addresses at the thirteenth annual banquet,
December 18th, 1919. Philadelphia [The society] 93 p. ' [1489
Historical notes about West Jersey, by Frank H. Stewart: p. 43-59. Tablet unveiling [addresses at
the unveiling of a bronze tablet bearing the first page in script of the original "concessions and agree-
ments of the proprietors, freeholders and inhabitants of the province of West J ersey in America*' attached
to the outside walls of the surveyor general's office in Burlington, N. J.j p. 61-68.
Nichols, Walter S. Early Newark as a Puritan theocracy in colonial New Jersey.
N. J. hist. soc. proc, n. s. V (Oct.) 201-224. [1490
The originalsettlement of Newark was made by colonists from the New Haven colony, in 1066.
Purvis, Wilson J. One hundred years of history of the old Malaga road. Vineland
hist, mag., V (Jan.-July) 93-97, 114-118, 134-138. [1491
Shinn, Henry C. An early New Jersey poll list. Pa. mag. hist., XLIV (Jan.) 77-81.
[1492
Prints a copy of the poUlist of an election of members of the Council and Assembly, held in Burlington,
New Jersey, Oct. 9, 1787.
Shriner, Charles A. New Jersey in the Revolution; some scenes in and about what
ifl now the city of Paterson. Americana, XIV (Apr.) 97-128. [1493
94 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION,
New Mexico,
Harrington, J. P. Old Indian geographical names around Santa Fe, Now Mexico
Am. anthrop., n. s. XXII (Oct.) 341-359. [1494
Besides being of local interest, the place names throw certain light on the archaeology of the region
James, George Wharton. New Mexico, the land of the delight makers; the history
of its ancient cliff dwellings and pueblos, conquest by the Spaniards, Franciscai
missions; personal accounts of the ceremonies, games, social life and industries oi
its Indians; a description of its climate, geology, flora and birds, its rivers andi
forests; a review of its rapid development, land-reclamation projects and educational
system; with full and accurate accounts of its progressive counties, cities and towns.
Boston: Page co. xxvii, 469 p. illus. (music), plates, ports., map. ("See America
first "series) [149fi
New York,
I
About Buffalo and where to find the facts. Grosvenor lib. bul., II (Mar.) 2-21,1
[14961
Notes regarding important events connected with the history of Buffalo.
Baiiret, James L. Growth of New York and suburbs since 1790. Sci. mo., XI (Nov. 'I
404-418. [149-/1
Berry, Caroline Williams. Sleepy Hollow cemetery. Americana, XIV (Oct.'l
369-372. [1498 j
Bradley, Catherine Eaton. Sketches: the Olean rock city; historic glimpses of OleanJ
New York; the Bradford oil district; historic glimpses of Bradford, Pennsylvania.!
[Olean, N.Y.] 54 p. plate. [14991
Chamberlain, Helena M. Historic sites in and around Newburgh. N. Y. state!
HIST. ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 1919, 216-223. [150QI
Corwin, Charles E. Epidemics in old New York. Presbyterian hist. soc. jour.,
X (Mar.) 190-191. [1501
Delamater-Ericsson commemoration; important chapter of national and local history
recalled. In the Twenty-fifth annual report of the American scenic and historic
preservation society, 1920. Albany: J. B. Lyon co., printers, p. 202-213. [1502
Commemoration of the eightieth anniversary of the meeting of Cornelius H. Delamater and CaptainI
John Ericsson, and their fifty years of patriotic service. \
A chapter in the history of the commercial and industrial development of New York city and of the|
U.S. naval and merchant marine. Many of the ships designed by Ericsson were built, and his inven-l
1
tions worked out, at the Delamater iron works in New York.
Dow, Harriet E. Brown. Rochester, the city of beginnings. N. Y. state hist.j
ASSOC. JOUR., I (July) 165-177. [1603|
Fox, Dixon Ryan. The landed gentry and their politics a hundred years ago. N. Y.
STATE hist. ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 1919, 200-215. [1504
A study of the expansion of the New York gentry, and the story of how Federalist families came to
build their homes in lands cleared from the forests. The spread of Federalist influence in St. Lawrence
county, in particular, is here considered.
The freedom of the city of New York; list of recipients from 1702 to 1919. In the
Twenty-fifth annual report of the American scenic and historic preservation society,!
1920. Albany: J. B. Lyon CO., printers, p. 275-284. [1505|
Haddock, John. Letters of John Haddock. Buffalo hist. soc. pub., XXIV, 371-|
875. [1506|
Two letters written from Buffalo, January 1815, and September 1817, which describe conditions in
Buffalo at the time.
Halsey, Francis Whiting. The beginnings of daily journalism in New York city.
N. Y. state hist. ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 1919, 87-99. [1507;
Houghton, Frederick. The history of the Buffalo Creek reservation. Buffalo'
hist. soc. PUB., XXIV, 4-181. [1508
The Seneca Indian reservation in the valley of Buffalo Creek. '
Huntington historical society. Long Island's domestic architecture: old churches,
mills; special exhibition . . . April 9 to June 11 (inclusive) 1920. Huntington,
N. Y.: Hiintington historical society. [8] p. illus. [1609 1
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 95
; The marble statue of Alexander Hamilton, erected and destroyed in 1835. N. Y.
HIST. soc. BUL., IV (Oct.) 76-78. [1510
Describes a statue of Alexander Hamilton which was placed in the rotunda of the Merchants ex-
change, Wall street, in April 1835, and destroyed in the great fire of December 16-17, 1835.
More names for New York Hall of fame; New York university soon to elect five more
distinguished Americans. State service, IV (May) 434-437. [1611
j Morris, Ira K. Early history of Staten Island. N. Y. state hist, assoc. proc,
j XVII, 1919, 183-199. [1612
Paine, Silas H. Soldiers of the Champlain valley. N. Y. state hist, assoc. proc,
I XVII, 1919, 301-428. [1613
An index list of soldiers of the Champlain valley who fought in any of the early wars.
Parsons, Samuel. History of the development of Central Park. N. Y. state hist.
ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 1919, 164-172. [1614
Potts, Adam E. Constitution Island — historical sketch. In Martelaer's Rock asso-
ciation. Third annual report and year book . . . 1919-1920. West Point, N. Y.
p. 19-27. [1616
Constitution Island was formerly called Martelaer's Rock.
The Prince of Wales and Buffalo — 1860. Grosvenor lib. bul., II (Dec.) 14-19.
[1616
Items regarding the visit of the Prince of Wales to Buffalo in 1860.
Beed, Edgar P. Rochester and the shoe industry. N. Y. state hist, assoc jour.,
I (Oct.) 241-243. [1617
Skinner, Charles B. New York's forty-four governors. State service, IV (Feb.)
147-152. [1518
Vosburgh, Boyden Woodward. History of the Reformed Protestant Dutch churches
of Herkimer and German Flatts. New York city [New York genealogical and
biographical society] 163 numbered leaves, facsims. (incl. maps). 36 x 28^ cm.
(Records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church of Herkimer ... v. Ill) [1519
Autographed from type-written copy.
Wall, A. J. The statues of King George iii and the Honorable William Pitt erected
in New York city 1770. N. Y. hist, soc bul., IV (July) 37-57. [1520
Wood, Simon. A history of Hauppauge, Long Island, N. Y., together with genealo-
gies of the following families: Wheeler, Smith, Bull Smith, Blydenburgh, Wood,
Rolph, Hubbs, Price, McCrone. Ed. by Charles J. Werner. N. Y.:. C. J. Werner.
92 p. port. [1621
North Carolina,
Curtis, N. C. St. Philip's church, Brunswick county, N. C, a typical colonial meet-
ing house of the south Atlantic coast. Arch, rec, XLVII (Feb.) 181-182. [1622
Situated about twelve miles below Wilmington, N. C.
Dunlap, Lily Doyle. Old Waxhaw. N. C. booklet, XIX (Apr.) 139-144. [1623
Hamilton, J. G. de Boulhac, ed. The papers of Thomas Ruffin [1859-1870] v. III-IV.
Raleigh: Edwards and Broughton print, co., state printers. 2 v. (N. C. hist.
com. pub.) [1524
V. I-II, pub. in 1918.
The editor has selected for inclusion "all such letters as may throw light upon the history of the state
[North Carolina] and nation, or upon the personality and character either of Judge RuflBn or the writers."
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 810-811.
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96 AMERICAN HISTORICAL. ASSOCIATION. \
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Ohio.
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a panic caused by fear of an uprising of Indians in Wisconsin, as an aftermath of the Sioux massacre
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WRITINGS ON^ AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 103
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II. The Fond du Lac trading post and early settlement. III. Taycheedah, a memory of the past.
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An article written in 1870.
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; The story of the first constitution of Wyoming and of the convention of 1889 which framed it.
IChaplin, W. E. The development and evolution of the Union Pacific railroad in
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'Davis, Scott. The story of the Cheyenne-Deadvvood treasure coach hold-up at Cold
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BIOGRAPHY.
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WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1D20. 105
Worcester bank and trust company. Forty immortals of Worcester &.its county. A
brief account of those natives or residents who have accomplished something for
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Contents.— Daniel Gookin. Artemas Ward. Rnfns Putnam. Timothy Bigelow. Levi Lincoln.
Isaiah Thomas. Aaron Bancroft. Dwight Foster. Eli Whitney. Samuel Slater. Levi Lincoln, jr.
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Des^cribes a miniature of Washington painted by Robert Field, 1799, Wasliington portrait by "J. T."
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plessis, a composite FrankUn and Washington statuette, Staffordshire, England, and a portrait of
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[Arranged alphabetically by subject]
Adams. Adams, Henry. Letters to a niece and Prayer to the Virgin of Chartres,
by Henry Adams, with A niece's memories Ly Mai el La Farge. Boston and N. Y.:
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Adams, Henry. Seventeen letters of Henry Adams. Ed. by Frederick Bliss
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Baldensperger, Fernand. Les scrupulcs d'un americain attard^; "L'educa-
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Bradford, Gamaliel. Henry Adams. Atlantic, CXXV (May) 623-634.
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Coleman, H. T. J. Henry Adams; a study in multiplicity. Queen's
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La Farge, Mabel. Henry Adams: a niece's memories. Yale rev., IX
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Shafer, B,obert. Henry Adams. Inter- Am erica, IV (May) 10-17. [1G79
Translation of an article in the International journal of ethics, October 1919.
Sherman, Stuart. Evolution in the Adams family. Nation, CX (Apr. 10)
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Adams, Riley M. Journal of Riley M. Adams, a cadet at Capt. Partridge's
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V (Jan.-Oct.) 85-87, 107-110, 127-130, 153-159. [1681
Cont. from v. IV, 1919.
Allen. Crockett, Walter Hill, ed. Allen letters in the possession of the Vermont
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Correspondence of Ira Allen during the latter part of his life, 1789-1812.
Bankhead. Capt. John HoUis Bankhead, c. s. a. [1842-1920] Confed. vet.,
XXVIII (June) 207-208. [1683
U. S. senator from Alabama, 1907-1920.
Bayley. Bayley, Edwin A. An address commemorative of the life and public
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a neglected patriot of the Revolution. Vt. hist. soc. proc , 55-92. [1684
Benjamin. Pilclier, Joseph Mitchell. Judah Philip Benjamin [1811-1884] or Jewish
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Benton. Oliphant, John A. Recollections of ThomasH. Benton. Mo. hist, rev.,
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Berrien. Hon. John Macpherson Berrien [1781-1856] N. J. hist. soc. proc,
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111124°— 23 ^9
106 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. I
I
BiCKERDYKE. Erlandsoii, E. V. The story of Mother Bickerdyke. Am. jour. '
NURSING, XX (May) 628-631. [1688 j
Mary A. Bickerdyke, 1817-1901, Northern army nurse during the Civil war. I
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BoQUET. Robbins, Edward E. Life and services of Colonel Henry Boquet. West- j
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Brief biography of Boquet (Bouquet) and a description of the battle of Bushy Run, in August 1763. |
Bowers. Risley, Theodore G. Colonel Theodore S. Bowers [1832-1866] III. hist. '
soc. JOUR., XII (Oct. 1919) 407-411. [1691 '
Bray. Folsom, Joseph F, Daniel Bray, patriot of the American revolution.
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Burr. Alston, Theodosia Burr. Letter of Theodosia Burr Alston to Mrs. Madison
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Containing a request that Mrs. Madison should apply to the President for the removal of the prose-
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Caldwell. Sweetser, Kate Dickinson. The " fighting parson" of New Jersey.:
D. A. R. MAG., LIV (Mar.) 140-145. [1694 '
A sketch of the Rev. James Caldwell, chaplain of the New Jersey militia, and also quartermaster
general of the New Jersey troops in the Revolution.
Campbell. Connor, Henry Groves. John Archibald Campbell, associate justice of \
the United States Supreme court, 1853-1861. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin I
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Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 119-120.
Carnegie. Carnegie, Andrew. Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie. Boston and
N.Y.: Houghton Mifflin CO. xii, 385p. plates, ports, [1696
Editor's note signed: John C. Van Dyke. 1
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 368-369; Weekly rev., HI (Dec. 22) 620-621. i
• In memory of Andrew Carnegie, his life and work; a meeting held under the !
auspices of the Author's club, New York public library. Oratorio society. Saint j
Andrews society. United engineering society . . . New York, April 25, 1920.
[N. Y.: The Marchbanks press] 47 p. [1697 j
Published also with slight changes in the Year book of the Carnegie endowment for international |
peace, 1920, p. 187-208. i
Contents. — Introduction, by J. V. Davies. "Mr. Carnegie and his relation to engineering and ,
industry", address by J. V. Davies. "He was a weaver's lad", address by J. H. Finley. "The life f
and work of Andrew Carnegie", address by Elihu Root. [Letters from;] Lord Morley, Viscoxmt Bryce, i
and William H. Taft. Peace-hymn of the republic, by H. Van Dyke. !
Lynch, Frederick Henry. Personal recollections of Andrew Carnegie.
N. Y., Chicago [etc.] Revell. 184 p. port. [1698
Totten, John R. Andrew Carnegie. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, LI
(Jan.) 1-7. [1699 i
Carpenter. Eshleman, H. Frank. The legislative career of Emanuel Carpenter. '
Lancaster go. hist. soc. pap., XXIV, no. 7, 153-168. [1700 I
Concerned with political affairs in the province of Pennsylvania from 1756 to 1772, during which 1
period Emanuel Carpenter represented Lancaster in the provincial Assembly. '
Magee, D. F. Emanuel Carpenter, the law giver [d. 1780] Lancaster co.
HIST. soc. PAP., XXIV, no. 7, 144-152. [1701
Carroll. Byrne, Laura Laurenson. Charles Carroll of CarroUton [1737-1832] Berke-
ley, Calif.: Newman club of the University of California [1920?] 25 p. [1702
At head of title: Newman hall prize essay, 1918 [/. c. 1919]
■ Extracts from the Carroll papers. Md. hist, mag., XV (Mar. -Sept.) 56-65,
194-201, 274-291. 1703
Correspondence between Charles Carroll of CarroUton and his son Charles, Mar. 25th-Dec. 3d, 1773.
Cont. from v. XIV, 1919.
Carver. Browning, William. The early history of Jonathan Carver. Wis. mag.
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Catron. Dunlap, Boutwell. Judge John Catron of the United States Supreme court.
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Justice of the Supreme court from 1837 to 1865.
1920. 107
Champe. Sergeant Major Champe. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag., II
(July) 331-334. [1706
Sergeant Major John Champe, of Lee's legion, in the army of the Revolution.
Reprint of the report of the Committee on Revolutionary claims, Feb. 25, 1846, issued as Report
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Choate. Martin, Edward Sandford. The life of Joseph Hodges Choate [1832-1917]
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Martin, Edward Sandford. Mr. Choate in England; extracts from hia
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Claiborne. Fleming, William. Concerning William C. C. Claiborne. Tenn.
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— Parker, George F. Grover Cleveland's career in Buffalo, .1855-1882. Sat-
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Clinton. Beatty, Joseph M., jr. Notes on the English ancestry of George Clinton,
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[1712
Hasbrouck, Gilbert D. B. Governor George Clinton [1729-1812] N. Y.
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Cody, William Frederick. An autobiography of Buffalo Bill (Col. W. F. Cody)
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[1716
Coles. Alvord, Clarence Walworth, ed. Governor Edward Coles [1786-1868] ed.
with introduction and notes. Springfield, 111.: The trustees of the Illinois state
historical library, viii, 435 p. port., facsims. (111. hist. lib. coll., v. XV. Biog.
ser., v. I) [1716
Published in celebration of the centenary of Illinois.
Includes a reprint of "Sketch of Edward Coles, second governor of Illinois, and of the slavery
struggle of 1823-4 . . . by E. B. Washburne . . . Chicago . . . 1882" (p. 3-201).
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Apr. 1922) 615-616.
CooLiDGE. Barton, Bruce. A governor who stays on the job; a sketch of Calvin
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Cooper. Ellis, H. M. Thomas Cooper — a survey of his life. Ft. I. England,
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First of a series of articles, preparatory to a larger work in which his significance as an author, scien-
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Corliss. George Henry Corliss [1817-1888] Americana, XIV (Apr.) 178-184. [1719
Cox. Gen. William Ruflan Cox [1832-1919] Confed. vet., XXVIII (Feb.) 45-46.
[1720
Crockett. Campbell, Mrs. A. A. David Crockett, the "go-ahead" man. Confed.
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CusHiNG. Rugg, Arthur P. William Cushing [1732-1810] Yale law jour., XXX
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Associate justice of the U. S. Supreme court, 1789-1810.
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I Fleming, Walter L., cd. Some documents relating to Jefferson Davis at
West Point. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VII (Sept.) 146-152, [1725
108 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION".
Davis. Shepherd, Kenry E. Comment on Gordon's biography of Jefferson Davis.
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Refers to the -'Life of Jefferson Davis," by Armistead C. Gordon, published in 1918.
Denny. Denny, H. L. L. Memoir of His Excellency Colonel William Denny, lieu-
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Dickinson. Shilling, D. C. John Dickinson, statesman and patriot [1732-1808]
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The purpose of this article is to suggest that, as one of the leading spirits in the colonies just prior to
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Douglas. Howland, Louis. Stephen A. Douglas [1813-1861] N. Y.: Scrihner.
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Dreyer. Jahr, Torstein. Andreas Dreyer (Andries Draeyer) commander at Fort
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Holt. Paltsits, Victor Hugo. John Holt, printer and postmaster [1721-1784] some
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Hovey. The Nathan Eovey incident. Essex inst. hist, coll., LVI (Apr.) 111-
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ican ancestry. His descendants bearing the name Purington, Purrington, Purinton,
and other forms of spelling. Brainerd, Minn. [1920?] 234 numbered leaves. [2034
Tjrpe-written.
Reed. Sinnett, Charles N. The Reed family of Topsham and Brunswick, Maine.
Brainerd, Minn. 34 leaves. [2036
Type-written.
Rhodes. [Rhoades, Nelson Osgood] Ancestral lineages of Nelson Osgood Rhoades
and Frances James (Brown) Rhoades . . . Reprint from the Colonial families of
the United States of America, volume vii. [N. Y. and Boston: The Grafton
press] 21 p. coat of arms. [2036
Contains also the Richmond, Osgood and Moulthrop families.
Rich. Hill, Edwin A. The Rich family of eastern Connecticut. N. Y. geneal.
and biog. rec, LI (July) 222-232. [2037
Ring. Bowman, George Ernest. The will of Eleazer Ring [1738] Mayfl. desc,
XXII (Oct.) 160-162. [2038
Bowman, George Ernest. The will of Samuel Ring [1768] Mayfl. desc
XXII (Oct.) 169-170.
Bowman, George Ernest. The will of William Ring of Plymouth [1730] deeds
of Hannah (Sherman) Ring and the estates of their sons William and Eleazer.
Mayfl. desc, XXII (Jan.) 38-43. [2040
Rogers. Sinnett, Charles N. History of the Rogers families in Maine. Brainerd,
Minn. 42 leaves. [2041
Type-written.
I WRITTNGS ON AMEEICAN HISTORY, 1920. 125
RuGGLES. Buggies, Henry Stoddard. Ancestors of Benjamin Rup^o^les, senator
from Ohio, 1815-1833, John Ruggles, senator from Maine, 1834-1840, Nathaniel
Ruggles, M. C. from Massachusetts, 1813-1819, Charles Herman Ruggles, M. C,
from New York, 1821-1823. [n. p., 1920?J 61 numbered leaves, coat of arms,
I ports. [2042
j In manuscript.
Russell. Russell-Baldwin families. Americana, XIV (Jan.) 72-84. [2043
I Samson. Elijah Samson's estate [1805] Mayfl. desc, XXII (July) 109-110. [2044
Scott. Scott, Thomas Jefferson, ed. Our clan; a biological and genealogical account
of the family of Rev. Andrew Scott, its ancestry and posterity, ed.^ by Thomas
Jefferson Scott, assisted by Wilfred W. Scott; with contributions by members of the
clan. [Lancaster, Pa.] Priv. print, xiv, 124 p. plates, ports., geneal; tab. [2045
Shaw. Frost, Josephine C. Ancestors of Amyntas Shaw and his wife Lucy Tufts
Williams, showing Mayflower lines never before published from Myles Standish,
John Alden, William Mullines and Thomas Rogers, comp. for their daughter Isabella
M. Knowlton by Josephine C. Frost (Mrs. Samuel Knapp Frost). [N. Y. ?] 84 p.
plates, ports. [2046
Shepard. [Shepard, Walter Joy] Genealogical record. Shepard family. [Albany]
geneal. tab. [2047
Photostat reproduction made al Albany, N. Y., March 1920, of chart prepared by Walter Joy Shepard,
printed about 1893; with manuscript marginal notes and additions by Charles Shepard. Troy, N. Y.,
April 4, 1920.
Sherman. Sherman, Thomas Townsend. Sherman genealogy including families
of Essex, Suffolk and Norfolk, England, some descendants of the immigrants. Cap-
tain John Sherman, Reverend John Sherman, Edmund Sherman and Samuel Sher-
man, and the descendants of Honorable Roger Sherman and Honorable Charles R.
Sherman. N. Y.: T. A. Wright, xvi, 473 p. plates, ports., facsims., coats of
arms. [2048
Simmons. Simmons, Frederick Johnson. A genealogy of a few lines of the Simmons
family of Maine and Massachusetts: descendants of Moses Simmons (Moses Symon-
son), "Fortune", 1621. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VII (Feb.) 198-209; VIII
(Aug., Nov.) 97-107, 136-150. [2049
Cont. from v. VII, no. 3, Nov. 1919.
SiNNETT. Sinnett, Charles N. James Sinnett, pioneer of the Granville, Ohio,
colony: ancestry and descendants. Brainerd, Minn. ] 9 numbered leaves. [2050
Type-written.
Snow. Bowman, George Ernest. The estate of William Snow [1726] Mayfl.
DESC, XXII (Jan.) 47-48. [2051
■ Bowman, George Ernest. Lieut. Jabez Snow's estate [1691] Mayfl. desc,
XXII (Oct.) 165-167. [2052
— • Sinnett, Charles N. The history of the Snow families of Maine. Brainerd,
Minn. 55 leaves. [2053
Tjrpe-written.
The will of Benjamin Snow [1738] Mayfl. desc, XXII (July) 99-100. [2054
Stackpole. Stackpole, Everett. History and genealogy of the Stackpole family.
2d ed. [Lewiston, Me.: Journal printshop and bindery] 352 p. plates, ports.,
coat of arms. [2055
Stewart. Stewart, A. W. Ancestry of the Stewarts; early settlers of Howards-
town, Canaan, Bloomfield, Skowhegan. Sprague's jour. Maine hist., VIII (Nov.)
151-153. [2056
Thacher. Col. John Thacher's will [1713] Mayfl. desc, XXII (July) 110-113.
[2057
Thompson. Thompson, Josiah H., comTp. Autobiography of Dea. John Thompson
of Mercer, Me., with genealogical notes of his descendants. Farmiogton, Me.:
Franklin journal co. 152 p. plate, port. [2058
TiBBETTS. Coons, William Solyman. The Tibbitts or Tibbetts family, descendants
of George Tippett of Yonkers, N. Y. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, LI (Jan.-Oct.)
63-74, 103-116, 266-276, 346-359. [2059
Cont. from v. L. 1919.
i
126 AMEKICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOl^.
TiCHENOR. [Teachenor, Richard Bennington] A partial Mstory of the Ticlienor
family in America, descendants of Martin Tichenor of Connecticut and New Jer-
sey, and a comj)lete genealogy of the branch of the family descending from Isaac
Tichenor, of Ohio, spelling the name Teachenor, with some references to the prob-
able collateral lineage descended from William Ticknor of Massachusetts. Kansas
City, Mo., 1918-20. 39 p. illus. (incl. ports.), col. coat of arms. [2060
Edited by Richard Bennington Teachenor from information compiled by James Tichenor and his
son. Rev. Isaac Taylor Tichenor. cf. Introd.
Addenda. May 1920: p. 33-39.
Maternal ancestry; the Givauden family: p. 38-39.
Titus. Titus, Edmund D. Titus family — corrections and additions. N. Y.
GENEAL. AND BioG. REC, LI (Jan.) 74-82. [2061
Todd. Todd, John Edwards. The Todd family in America; or. The descendants
of Christopher Todd, 1637-1919, being an effort to give an account, as fully as pos-
sible of his descendants. Comp. by John Edwards Todd, d. d., ed. by George Iru
Todd. Northampton, Mass.: Press of Gazette print, co. 721 p. plates, ports.
[2061a
ToMSON. Bowman, George Ernest. The estates of Peter Tomson [1731] and his son
James [1739] Maypl. desc, XXII (July) 135-142. [2062
TooMEY. Toomey, Thomas Noxon. The O'Toomeys of Croom, and their descend-
ants. Saint Louis, Mo,: Printed for private distribution. 17 p. ports. [2063
Truslow, Adams, James Truslow. Notes on the families of Truslow, Horler, and
Horleyfrom English records. Bridgehampton, L. I.: Priv. print. [19] p. [2064
Notes from the English records which may be helpful in tracing the descent of the American branch
of the Truslow family.
Van Husen. Becker, Edith Van Heusen. Van Husen (Van Heusen, Van Hoesen)
genealogy. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, LI (Oct.) 285-299. [2065
Van Rensselaer. Van Rensselaer and allied families. Americana, XIV (July)
274-304. [2066
Wadsworth. Wadsworth-Shead families. Americana, XIV (Oct.) 373-389.
[2067
Wainwright. Matthews, Albert. Note on the Wainwright family. Col. soc. Mass.
PUB., XX, 152-156. [2068
Wanzer. Wanzer, William David. History of the Wanzer family in America, from
the settlement in New Amsterdam, New York. 1642-1920. Medford, Mass.:
Medford Mercury press. 121 p. plates, ports.
Ward. Hatfield, Abraham, jr. Ward [pedigree] N. Y. geneal. and bigg, rec,
LI (Apr.) 162-164. [2070
Warren. Bowman, George Ernest. Nathaniel Warren's will [1707] and the agree-
ment of the heirs. Mayfl. desc, XXII (Jan.) 43-17. [2071
Waterman. Robert Waterman's will [1744] MaYFL. desc, XXII (July) 126-128.
[2072
Weaver. Weaver-Forsyth families. Americana, XIV (Jan.) 90-93. [2073
Wheelwright. Holman, Mary Lovering. The mother of Rev. John Wheelwright.
New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIV (Jan.) 51-53. [2074
White. White, Mrs. Emma (Siggins). ^ Genesis of the White family, a connected
record of the White family beginning in 900 at the time of its Welsh origin when
the name was Wynn, and tracing the family into Ireland and England. . . . Emi-
gration to America was in 1740. Their descendants are to be found in every state
of the Union. Supplemental records, biographical sketches and coats of arms of
nearly seventy allied families. Comp. by Emma Siggins White, assisted by Martha
Humphreys Maltby. Kansas City, Mo.: Tiernan-Dart print, co. xi, 346 p. illus.,
plates, ports., col. coats of arms. [2075
Contains the lineage of John Barber White.
Wildes. Shepard, Charles. The Wildes family of Burlington county, New Jersey.
Albany, N. Y. geneal. tab. 31 x 50^ cm. [2076
Blue print.
Address the author: Burlington, N. J.
WRITIl^GS ON" AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 127
Williams. Bowman, George Ernest. The estate of DeacoD Nathaniel Willhims [1692]
Mayfl. desc, XXII (Apr.) 60-62. [2077
WiNCHELL. Sinnett, Charles N. The Winchell family of Maine. Brainerd, Minn.
21 leaves. [2078
Type-written.
Wood. Wood, Casey Albert. The Wood family of Shelf, Halifax Parish. Yorkshire,
England, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Long Island, N. Y., and Canada. ' Written by
Colonel Casey A. Wood ... for his second cousin S. Casey Wood, the third. To-
ronto, Canada. Chicago, 111, 39 leaves. [2079
Autographed from type-written copy.
Wood and allied families. Americana, XIV (Apr.) 163-171. [2080
Wright. Hoppin, Charles Arthur. Some descendants of Richard Wright, gentleman,
of London, England, and Northumberland, Virginia, 1655. Tyler's quar. hist.
AND geneal. mag., I (Jan.) 177-191. [2081
Wyatt. [Wyatt, James Bosley Noel] The Wyatt family of Baltimore [by] J. B . N . W .
[n. p.] 19 p. [2082
Young. Gates, Susa Young, and Mabel Young Sanborn. Brigham Young gene-
alogy. Utah geneal. and hist, mag., XI (Jan.-Oct.) 21-27, 49-55, 127-134,
177-180. [2083
Regional Genealogy, Vital Records, etc.
Alexandria, Va. Powell, Mary G. Marriage records of Alexandria, Va., copied from
the marriage records of the old Presbyterian church of Alexandria, Va., 1789-1825.
D. A. R. MAG., LIV (Aug., Oct.) 454-456, 586-587. [2084
Allegheny go., Pa. Abstracts of wills and administrations of Allegheny county,
registered at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania [1804-1813] Pa. geneal. soc. pub., VII,
no. 3 (Mar.) 226-235. [2085
Cont. from v. VII, no. 2, March 1919.
Bakerspield, Vt. Denio, Herbert Williams. Inscriptions in the town cemetery at
the village of Bakersfield, Vt. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIV (Apr.-
Oct.) 150-155, 167-178, 310-319. [2086
Barnstable co., Mass. Bowman, George Ernest. Abstracts of Barnstable county,
Mass., probate records. Mayfl. desc, XXII (Oct.) 185-188. [2087
Cont. from v. XIX, 1917.
Bowman, George Ernest. Unrecorded Barnstable county deeds. Maypl.
DESC, XXII (July-Oct.) 142-144, 167-169. [2088
Cont. from v. XXI, 1919.
Berwick, Me. Records of the Second church of Berwick, Me., 1755-1857. New
Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIV (July-Oct.) 211-230, 246-267. [2089
Brookline, Mass. Cummings, Harriet Alma, comp. Burials and inscriptions in
the Walnut street cemetery of Brookline, Massachusetts, with historical sketches
of some of the persons buried there. Brookline: The Riverdale press, printers.
135 p. illus. [2090
Brunswick co., Va. Notes from the records of Brunswick county. Va. mag.
hist., XXVIII (Apr.) 161-168. [2091
Deeds and wills, 1733-1826. Marriage bonds, 1754-1801.
Canaan, N. Y. Records of the First Presbyterian church of Canaan at Canaan
Center in the town of Canaan, Columbia county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New
York genealogical and biographical society. Ed. by Hoyden Woodward Vosburgh.
New York city. [4], ii, 27 numbered leaves. [2092
With Springfield Center, N. Y. First Baptist church of Springfield. Records . . .
Autographed from type-written copy.
Catonsville, Md. Keidel, George C. Catonsville pioneers of the Lutheran faith.
Nation, geneal. soc. quar., IX (July) 29-31. [2093
Charleston, S. C. Cemetery inscriptions from Christ Church parish. Collected by
Anne King Gregorie. S. C. hist, mag., XXI (Apr.-July) 73-76, 132-135. [2094
128 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATTOK.
Charleston, S. C. Webber, Mabel L., comp. Marriage and death notices from the
Charrleston Morning post and daily advertiser, and its successor the City gazette
[1787-1793] S. C. hist, mag., XXI (Jan.-Oct.) 24-29, 77-87, 121-131, 153-160. [2095
Webber, Mabel L., comp. The register of Christ church parish [1751 -1777]
S. C. HIST. MAG., XX:i (Jan.-Oct.) 31-35, 52-58, 105-111, 141-149. [2096
Cont. from v. XX, 1919.
Cherry Valley, N. Y. Records of the First Presbyterian church of Cherry Valley,
in Otsego county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and bio-
graphical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city. [4],
viii, 136 numb, leaves. 36x28^'==^. [2097
Autographed from type-written copy.
Contents.— Baptisms, 1799-1849. Marriages, 1809-1849, 1878-1883. Elders of the church, 1801-
1810. Members, 1804-1839. Deaths, 1822-1898.
CoLRAiN, Mass. Early vital records of Colrain, Mass. New Eng. hist, and geneal.
REG., LXXIV (Jan.) 7-13. [2098
Concluded from v. LXXIII, 1919.
CooPERSTOWN, N. Y. Records of the Presbyterian church of Cooperstown, in Otsego
county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and biographical society.
Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city. [4], iii, 127 numb, leaves.
36 X 28^^°^. [2039
Autographed from type-written copy.
Contents.— Baptisms, 1800-1803. Marriages, 1800-1863. Deaths, 1800-1818, 1838-1864. Church
members, 1800-1869.
Darien, Conn. Mead, Spencer. Abstract oi church records of the town of Darien,
county of Fairfield, and state of Connecticut, from the earliest records extant to
1850. [n. p.] 135 numbered leaves. [2100
Type-written.
Deerfield, Mass. Vital records of Deerfield, Massachusetts, to the year 1850.
Comp. by Thomas W. Baldwin. Boston, Mass. [Wright and Potter print, co.]
328 p. [2101
District of Columbia. Marriage licenses of the District of Columbia, Alexandria
county, D. C, 1801-1820. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., VIII (Jan.) 55-57. [2102
Cont. from v. VIII, no. 1, April 1918.
Durham, N. Y. Kecords of the First Presbyterian church in the village of Durham,
town of Durham, Greene county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical
and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city.
V, 87 numb, leaves. 36 by 28^''°^. [2103
Autographed from tjrpe- written copy.
With this is bound: Records of the Second Presbyterian church of Durham . . . N. Y. New York
city, 1920. See no. 2105 below.
Partial contents.— Baptisms, 1798-1857. Church members, 1792-1852. Members received, 1815-
1851. Members dismissed, 1811-1851.
Records of the Reformed Dutch church in Oak Hill in the town of Durham,
Greene county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and biograph-
ical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, v, 65 numb,
leaves. 36 x 28 1'=^. [2104
Autographed from t5T)e- written copy.
Partial comtents.— Baptisms and births, 179-1-1832. Marriages, 1798-1830. Church members, 1791^
1829. Church officers, 1800-1832. Members suspended and excommunicated, 1824-1830.
Records of the Second Presbyterian church of Durham in the village of
West Durham, town of Durham, Greene county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New
York genealogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh.
New York city, iv, 40 numb, leaves, inch 8 facsims. 36 x 28^"™ [2105
Autographed from tjrpe-written copy.
Partial contents.— Baptisms, 1816-1872. Church members, 1816-1831. Dismissions, 1818-1860.
Members received, 1817-1862. History of the Second Presbyterian church of "West Durham, by Rev.
L. H. Fellows.
Essex co., Mass. Massachusetts (Colony) Probate court. The probate records
of Essex county, Massachusetts, v. III. 1675-1681. Salem, Mass.: The Essex
institute, xi, 490 p. [2106
V. I, 1635-1664, pub. in 1916. v. II, 1665-1674, pub. in 1917.
Germantown, N. Y. Rockefeller, Henry Oscar, comp. Germantown, Columbia
county, N. Y., graveyard inscriptions . . . New York city [New York genealogical
"and biographical society] [4], 68 numb, leaves. 32 x 26«™. [2107
WRITINGS ON AMEEICAN HISTORY, 1920. 129
Ghent, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church, called Christ church, in
the town of Ghent, Columbia county, N. Y. Transcri}3ed by the New York gene-
alogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Yosburgh. New
York city, vii, 150 numb, leaves. 36 x 28*=™. [2108
Autographed from type-written copy.
With this is bound: Records of the Congregational church of New Concord in the town of Chatham,
Columbia county, N. Y, New York city, 1920. See no. 2121 below.
Contents.— Introduction. Baptisms and births, 1775-1919. Members received, 1775-1790, 1819-
1919. Marriages, 1785, 1790, 1882-1916. Acts and resolutions of the consistory, 1775-1801. Transcripts
and abstracts from the minutes.
Greenville, N. Y. Records of the Presbyterian church in the town of Green-
ville, Greene county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and
biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city.
vi, 69 numb, leaves. 36 x 28^*==^. [2109
Autographed from type-written copy.
Partial contents.— Baptisms, 1789-1824. Marriages, 1789-1824. Church members, 1790-1824.
Members received, 1802-1850. Members dismissed, 1791-1849.
Heidelberg, Pa. Gruber, Michael Alvin. Tombstone inscriptions, St. Daniel's
(Corner) church, Berks county, Pa. Nation, geneal. soc. quar., IX (Oct.) 33-
37. [2110
Inscriptions from tombstones of persons born prior to the year 1776, and buried in the graveyard of
the Lutheran church of Heidelberg township, Berks county. Pa.
Kinderhook, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church of Kinderhook in
Kinderhook, Columbia county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical
and biographical society, v. I. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New
York city. 133 leaves. [2111
Contents.— Baptisms, 1716?-1757. Marriages, 1717-1744. Members received, 1716-1756. Transfer
of seats, 1743-1774. Members of the consistory, 1716-1799.
KisKATOM, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church of Kiskatom
in the town of Catskill, Greene county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York
genealogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New
York city, ii, 21 numb, leaves. 36 x 28^^™. [2112
Autographed from type-written copy.
Contents.— Members, 1842, 1847-1850. Baptisms and births, 1842-1850. Deaths, 1843, 1848-1850.
Marriages, 1842-1850.
Knox CO., Tenn. White, Kate. Marriage record of Knox county, Tennessee [1792-
1837] Tenn. hist, mag., VI (Apr.-Oct.) 10-17, 58-68, 187-199. [2113
Lebanon, Conn. Connecticut cemetery inscriptions. — Lebanon. New Eng. hist.
AND geneal. REG., LXXIV (Jan.) 53-67. [2114
Cont. from v. LXXXIII, 1919.
Leeds, N. Y. Records of the Protestant Reformed Dutch church of Leeds in the
town of Catskill, Greene county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical
and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city.
ii, 141 numb, leaves, maps (facsims.). 36 x 28J<'°'. [2115
Autographed from type-written copy.
With this is bound: Records of the Reformed Protestant Dutch church of Kiskatom in the town
of Catskill, Greene county, N. Y. New York city, 1920. See no. 2112 above.
Contents. — Births and baptisms, 1833-1888. Marriages, 1833-1878. Members and members received,
1833-1878. Members dismissed, 18.33-1878. Members died, 1857-1868. Records of funerals, 1869-1884.
Catskill marriages, 1856-1858. History of the Protestant Reformed Dutch church of Leeds.
Loudoun co., Va. Loudoun county, Virginia, marriages, 1793-1795. Nation.
GENEAL. soc. QUAR., IX (Oct.) 47-48. [2116
Louisville, Ky. Jennings, Kathleen. Louisville's first families; a series of gene-
alogical sketches. Louisville, Ky.: The Standard print, co. 176 p. plates, ports.
[2117
Contains the Bullitt, Prather, Clark, Churchill, Pope, Speed, Joyes, Veech, Thruston, Taylor, Bate
and Floyd families.
Mendon, Mass. Vital records of Mendon, Massachusetts, to the year 1850. Comp.
by Thomas W. Baldwin. Boston, Mass. [Wright and Potter print, co.] 518 p.
[2118
Middleborough, Mass. Middleborougli, Mass., vital records. Mayfl. desc,
XXII (Oct.) 146-153. [2119
Records from about 1742 to 1762.
Cont. from v. XX, 1918.
130 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
MuiTZESKiLL, N. Y. Records of the Reformed Dutch church of Schodack at Muitzes-
kill in the town of Schodack, Rensselaer county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New
York genealogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh.
New York city. 2 v. in 1. facsims. 36 x 28^'''". [2120
Autographed from type-written copy.
Contents.— Baptisms and births, 1770-1847. Marriages, 1781, 1788-1846. Members and members
received, 1770-1847. Members dismissed and died, 1801-1846.
New Concord, N. Y. Records of the Congregational church of New Concord in the
town of Chatham, Columbia county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York gene-
alogical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New
York city, viii, 37 numb, leaves, facsims. 36 x 28"™. [2121
Autographed from type- written copy.
Contents.— Introduction. Members received, 1781-1831, 1835-1854. Members dismissed, 1806-1833.
Deaths, 1815-1833. Baptisms, 1803-1832, 1850-1854. Marriages, 1821-1831.
New England. Ancestral heads of New England families. Americana, XIV (Jan.-
Apr., Oct.) xxxiii-lxxx, [2122
Contents. — Brimblecombe-Fanning.
Cont. from v. XIII, 1919.
New York city. Records of the Reformed Dutch church at Greenwich in the city
of New York. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and biographical society.
Ed. by Rovden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, iii, 298 numb, leaves.
36 X 28i''^. " [2123
Autographed from type- written copy.
Contents.- Infant baptisms (and births), 1806-1858. Adult baptisms, 1809-1858. Marriages, 1808-
1859. Register of members, 1804-1859. History of the Reformed Dutch church at Greenwich. Pastors
of the church.
Newbury, Mass. Newbury church records. Essex inst. hist, coll., LVI (July)
222-224. [2124
18th century records of admissions, etc.
Norfolk cc, Mass. Old Norfolk county records. Essex inst. hist, coll., LVI
(Oct.) 298-308. [2125
Continued from the Essex antiquarian for July 1909.
Northampton co., Va. Nottingham, Stratton. A list of marriage bonds — North-
ampton county, Virginia, 1706-1800. Tyler's quar. hist, and geneal. mag.,
I (Jan.) 192-211; II (July) 338-356. [2126
Orange co., Va. Orange county marriages [1810-1818] Va. mag. hist., XXVIII
(Apr.-Oct.) 152-160, 256-265, 360. [2127
• Cont. from v. XXVII, 1919.
Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania gravestone inscriptions. Pa. geneal. soc. pub.,
VII, no. 3 (Mar.) 218-225. [2128
Contents.— Norriton Presbyterian church. Lower burying ground. Brandy wine Manor Presby-
terian church, Chester covmty. Seceder burying ground, Presbyterian church, Brandywine Manor,
Seventh Day Baptist graveyard, French Creek, Chester county.
Philadelphia, Pa. Early minutes of Philadelphia monthly meeting of Friends
[1719-1725] Pa. geneal. soc. pub., VII, no. 3 (Mar.) 251-263. [2129
Cont. from v. VII, no. 2, March 1919.
Plymouth, Mass. Plymouth, Mass., vital records. Mayfl. desc, XXII (Jan.,
July-Oct.) 31-36, 105-108, 178-184. [2130
Cont. from v. XXI, 1919,
Plymouth colony, Mass. Bowman, George Ernest. Plymouth colony vital rec-
ords. Mayfl. desc, XXII (Apr.-July) 92-96, 114-117. [2131
Cont. from v. XXI, 1919.
Provincetown, Mass. Provincetown, Mass., vital records. Mayfl. desc, XXII
(July) 101-104. [2132
Cont. from v. XV, 1913.
Rhode Island. Inscriptions in family burial grounds at North Kingstown and
Exeter, R. I. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIV (Jan.) 13-16. [2133
Salford, Pa. Wanger, George F. P., comp. Tombstones, Price burial ground,
Lower Salford township, Montgomery co.. Pa. Nation, geneal. soc quar.,
VIII (Jan.) 62-64; IX (Apr.) 14-15. [2134
I
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 131
SiLOAM, N. J. Siloam cemetery inscriptions. Copied bj^ Frank D. Andrews. Vine-
land HIST. MAG., V (Jan.-Oct.) 98-100, 119-120, 139-140, 160. [2135
Contents.— Drake-Hill.
Cont. from v. IV, 1919.
SoMERSWORTH, N. H. Tate, Joseph. The diary of Master Joseph Tate of Somers-
worth, N. H. New Eng. hist, and geneal. reg., LXXIV (Jan.-July) 34-50,
124-130, 179-199. [2136
Consists of records of births, marriages, and deaths, from about 1750 to 1775.
Springfield Center, N. Y. Records of the First Baptist church of Springfield in
Springfield Center, Otsego, county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealo-
gical and biographical society. Ed. by Roy den Woodward Vosburgh. New York
city. 39 numb, leaves. 36 x 28^''™. [2137
Autographed from type-written copy.
Partial contents.— Pastors of the church, 1788-1852. Register of deacons, 1789-1836. Members
received, 1787-1852. Members dismissed, suspended, excommunicated, 1788-1850. List of members,
1837-1852.
Strawberry, S. C. Webber, Mabel L., comp. Inscriptions from the church-yard
at Strawberry chapel. S. C. hist, mag., XXI (Oct.) 161-170. [2138
LTtica, N. Y. Records of the First Presbyterian church of Utica in Oneida county,
N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealogical and biographical society. Ed.
by Boyden Woodward Vosburgh. New York city, x, 196 numb, leaves, incl.
facsims. 36 x 28«"^. [2139
Autographed from type- written copy.
Contents.— Baptisms, 1813-1852. Marriages, 1813-1850. Church members, 1797-1850.
Vineland, N. J. Vital records of Vineland. Vineland hist, mag., V (Jan.-Oct.)
90-92, 110-113, 131-134, 150-152. [2140
Birth, marriage and death records, 1868-1870.
Cont. from v. IV, 1919.
Virginia. Curry, Cora C, comp. Virijinia marriages performed by Rev. Paul
Henkel [1792-1796] Nation. Geneal. ^soc. quar., IX (Oct.) 46-47. [2141
Rockingham, Shenandoah, Augusta, Pendleton, and Botetourt counties are shown in the record.
Glencross, Reginald M. Virginia gleanings in England. Va. mag. hist.
XXVIII (Jan.-Oct.) 26-40, 128-141, 235-240, 340-345. [2142
Wawarsing, N. Y. Vosburgh, Royden Woodward, ed. Records of the Reformed
Dutch church of Wawarsing. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, LI (Jan.-July)
47-62, 138-147, 233-240. [2143
Record of marriages, 1748-1852. Register of members, 1745-1852.
Cont. from v. L, 1919.
Westchester co., N. Y. Bristol, Theresa Hall. Westchester county, N. Y., mis-
cellanea. N. Y. geneal. and biog. rec, LI (Jan., July) 39-i6, 252-258. [2144
Cont. from v. L, 1919.
Whitesboro, N. Y. Records of the First Presbyterian church of Whitesboro in the
i town of Whitest© wn, Oneida county, N. Y. Transcribed by the New York genealo-
gical and biographical society. Ed. by Royden Woodward Vosburgh. New York
city, vi, 137 numb, leaves. 36 x 28^'=^. [2146
Autographed from type-written copy.
Contents.— Marriages, 1795-1891, 1897-1898. Register of members, 1793-1850. Infant baptisms,
1851-1889. Members received and dismissed, 17Q7-1851.
MILITARY AND NAVAL HISTORY.
Barnett, Lelia Sinclair Montague. Commodore Sinclair and the ** Nautical school".
D. A. R. MAG., LIV (Oct.) 553-563. [2146
Commodore Arthur Sinclair, hero of the War of 1812 and founder of the first "Nautical school for
officers " in the United States navy in 1821. [
Elser, Frank B. General Pershing's Mexican campaign. Century, XCIX (Feb.)
433-447. [2147
Jones, Roger. Gen. Brown's inspection tour up the Lakes in 1819. Buffalo hist.
soc. PUB., XXIV, 295-323. [2148
Copy of a journal of an expedition of observation, conducted by Gen. Jacob Brown to the various
posts on the Lakes in 1819. The journal was kept by Capt. Roger Jones.
Krafft, Herman F., and Walter B. Norris. Sea power in American history; the in- \
fluence of the navy upon American development. With an introduction by Rear- I
Admiral William S. Benson. N. Y.: Century co. xxii, 372 p. plates, ports., |
maps, facsims., diagrs. [2149 j
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 589-591. i
McClellan, Edwin North. The capture of New Orleans. Marine corps gazette, !
V (Dec.) 360-370. [2150 |
Concerned particularly with the participation of the marines in the capture of New Orleana f
by Farragut in April 1862. I
McClellan, Edwin North. The capture of the barrier forts in the Canton river, China.
Marine corps gazette, V (Sept.) 262-276. [2151 1
The story of the capture by U. S. naval and marine forces of the barrier forts in the Canton river, I
Nov. 16-22, 1856, to avenge the insult to the flag when Chinese forces fired on American naval vessel* '
which had been sent to protect American citizens and interests diu"ing the second war between Great
Britain and China.
Meissner, Sophie (Radford) de. Old naval days; sketches from the life of Eear i
Admiral William Radford, u. s. n. [1809-1890] ' by his daughter Spohie Radford de ,
Meissner. N. Y.: Holt, x, 389 p. plates, ports."^ [2152 J
Owen, William O., ed. The Medical department of the United States army <legi8- !
lative and administrative history> during the period of the revolution <1776-
1786> N. Y.: P. B. Hoeber. [10], 226 p. ports. [2153
First published in the Annals of medical history, v, I, nos. 2, 3, and 4, 1917.
Smith, Harry A. Four interventions in Mexico; a study in military government.
Infantry jour., XVII (July-Aug., Oct.) 30-34, 125-131, 372-380. [2164
Stevens, William Oliver, and Allan Westcott. A history of sea power. N. Y.:
George H. Doran co. 458 p. illus., maps. [2155
The rise of English sea power — The war of American independence: p. 200-221. Revolution in
naval warfare — Hampton Roads: p. 286-296. Rivalry for world power — The Spanish American war:
p. 312-328.
Rev. in: Am. jour, internat. law, XVI (Jan. 1922) 154-155.
Upham, Cyril B. Historical survey of the militia in Iowa, 1865-1898. Ia. jour.
HIST., XVIII (Jan.) 3-93. [2156
TJpham, Cyril B. Historical survey of the militia in Iowa, 1898-1916. Ia. jour.
HIST., XVIII (July) 413-440. [21«
132
POLITICS, GOVERNMENT, AND LAW.
j
Diplomatic History and Foreign Relations.
Balch, Thomas Willing. The beginnings of international law in the United Statea
of America. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XX, 2-9. [2168
Bernstorff, J. H. A. H. A., graf von. Deutschland undAmerika; Erinnerungen aus
i dem fiinfjahrigen Kriege. Berlin: Ullstein. 414 p. [2159
Bemstorff, J. H. A. H. A., graf von. My three years in America. N. Y.: Scribner.
[8], 428 p. [2160
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 98-101.
Brum, Baltasar. El internacionalismo americano. Rev. mex. derecho internac,
II (June) 227-248. [2161
Cap6 Rodriguez, Pedro. Aspectos juridicos de las relaciones entre los Estados Unidoa
y Puerto Rico. Washington, D. 0. vi, 73 p. [2162
Originally published, in English in the American journal of international law, v. IX, 1915, v. X, 1916,
and V. XIII, 1919, and later in Spanish in the Revista americana de derecho internacional (Washington).
Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of intercourse and education.
American foreign policy, based upon statements of presidents and secretaries of
! state of the United States and of publicists of the American republics, with an intro-
duction by Nicholas Murray Butler. 2ded. Washington, D. 0. vii, 132 p. {Its
Publication no. 17) [2163
1st ed. (vii, 128 p.) pub. in 1920.
\ "There are here brought together those official statements by successive presidents and secretaries
i of state which, having been formally or tacitly accepted by the American people, do in effect constitute
! the foundation of American foreign policy."
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVl (Oct.) 141-142.
Colquhoun, A. H. U. British ministers at Washington. Canad. mag., LIV (Jan.)
195-202. . [2164
Brief review of the activities of the British ministers at Washington from 1783 to the dismissal of Lord
Sackville-West in 1888.
El congreso de Panama de 1826. Cultura hispano-am eric ana, ano IX (July) 5-10.
[2165
1 Gumming, C. K., and Walter W. Pettit, comps. and eds. Russian-American relations,
March, 1917-March, 1920; documents and papers. N. Y.: Harcourt, Brace, and
Howe, xxviii, 375 p. [2166
\ Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 371-372.
; Diego Fernandez, Salvador. La mision del Conde Bernstorf en Washington. Rev.
mex. derecho internac, II (Dec.) 534-542. [2167
Farrar, Victor J. The reopening of the Russian-American convention of 1824. Wash.
HIST. QUAR., XI (Apr.) 83-88. [2168
a study of a phase of the relations between Russia and the United States in regard to trade with the
northwest coast of America then under Russian control.
Fish, Carl Russell. An introduction to the history of American diplomacy. N. Y.:
I Macmillan. vi, 63 p. (Helps for students of history) [2169
Golder, Frank A. The purchase of Alaska. Am. hist, rev., XXV (Apr.) 411-425.
[2170
Concerned mainly with the diplomatic and political phases of the transaction.
Hanotaux, Gabriel. La Comit6 France-Amerique ; son activite de 1909 a 1920. Paris;
Comite France-Amerique, siege social. 40 p. (Bibliotheque du Comite France-
Amerique) [2171
133
134 V AMEEICAK HISTOEICAL. ASSOCIATION'. j
Hovde, Brynjolf Jakob. Diplomatic relations of the United States with Sweden and
Norway, 1814-1905. Iowa City: The University. 70 p. (University of Iowa
studies in the social sciences ... v. VII, no. 4) [2172
Latane, John HoUaday. The United States and Latin America. Garden City, N. Y.:
Doubleday, Page and co. 346 p. map. [2173
"Based on a smaller volume issued by the Johns Hoplrins press in 1900 under the title 'The diplo-
matic relations of the UjiitcJ States and Spanish America.' "
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 351-352; Am. jour, intemat. law, XV (Apr. 1921) 323-325;
Hisp. Am. hist, rev., Ill (Nov.) 571-574. j
Lewis, William Ray. The Hayes administration and Mexico. Southw. hist, quar., i
XXIV (Oct.) 140-153. [2174 '
Lindsay, Arnett G. Diplomatic relations between the United States and Great
Britain bearing on the return of negro slaves, 1783-1828. Jour, negro hist., V '
(Oct.) 391-419. [2175 i
Lockey, Joseph Byrne. Pan-Americanism: its beginnings. N. Y.: Macmillan. [10],
503 p. [2176
Thesis (ph. d.)— Columbia university, 1920. '
Published also without thesis note. !
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 559-561; Hisp. Am. hist, rev., IV (Nov. 1921) 754-755.
McGrane, B. C. The American position on the revolution of 1848 in Germany.
Hist, outlook, XI (Dec.) 333-339. [2177
Martin, Percy Alvin. The second Pan American financial conference. Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., Ill (May) 202-213. [2178
The second Pan American financial conference was held at Washington in January, 1920.
Mills, Joseph Travis. Great Britain and the United States; a critical review of their
historical relations. London, N. Y. [etc.] H. Milford. 68 p. [2179
Extracts from lectures delivered to various units of the American army of occupation in Germany
during May and June, 1919. cf. Pref.
Piggott, Sir Francis. The freedom of the seas, historically treated. London, N. Y.
[etc.] Humphrey Milford, 1919. ii, 90 p. [2179a
Published for the Historical section of the Foreign office. Another edition was issued in 1920 (Lon-
don: H. M. Stationery off.) as no. 148 of the Foreign office handbooks and v. XXIII, no. 1 of the Peace
handbooks.
A chapter on the "Period between 1783-1800," includes a discussion of the relations between Great
Britain and the United States in regard to neutral trade at the beginning of the French wars.
Priestley, Herbert Ingram. The relations of the United States and Mexico since 1910.
[Berkeley, Cal.] 16 p. . [2180
Reprinted from the University of California chronicle, v. XXII, no. 1, Jan. 1920.
La question cubaine en 1825. Nouv. rev., 4e ser., L (Nov. 15) 115-133. [2181
Signed: Transtamare.
Concerned with the Cuban question in 1825 from the viewpoint of international law, in particular
the appKcation of the Monroe doctrine thereto. Prints from the archives at Petrograd, copies of a des-
patch from Henry Clay to the American ambassador to Russia and of a note in reply from the Russian
secretary of state, Count Nesselrode, in 1825.
Bidden, William Renwick. When international arbitration failed. Canad. law
TIMES, XL (May) 351-360. [2182
Concerned with the failure of the international commission appointed by Great Britain and the United
States, in 1797, under Jay's treaty, to settle the claims owing in the United States to British subjects.
Bippy, J. Fred. Diplomacy of the United States and Mexico regarding the Isthmus
of Tehuantepec, 1848-1860. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (Mar.) 503-531. [2183
Boig de Leuchsering, Emilio. La ocupacion de la Repiiblica Dominicana por los
Estados Unidos y el derecho de las pequeiias nacionalidades. Rev. mex. derecho
intern AC, II (June) 249-296. [2184
Saner, B. E. L. When President Diaz sought recognition; similarity of conditions
imperiling Mexican- American relations in Hayes administration and international
difficulties preceding Obregon's election. Am. bar. assoc. jour., VI (Dec.) 195-
197. [2185
Sears, Louis Martin. Jefferson y el derecho de las naciones. Inter-America, IV
(Sept.) 181-193. [2186
Translation of an article in the American political science review, v. XIII, August 1919.
WRITINGS OIT AMERICAN- HISTORY, 1920. 135
Urmtia, Francisco Jose. La evolucion del principio de arbitraje en America. La
Sociedad de naciones. Madrid: Editorial- America. 298 p. (Biblioteca Avacucho
. . . [XLVII]) [2187
Wister, Owen. A straight deal; or, The ancient grudge. N. Y.: Macmillan. vii,
287 p. [2188
A review of our relations with Great Britain from the Revolution. The ancient grudge is American
ill-will towards England.
Zehallos, E. S. La diplomatie des Etats-Unis dans TAmerique du Sud. Rev pol
I ET PARL., CIV (Sept.) 328-346. [2189
I Zoelen, R. Groeninx van. De ontwikkeling van de Internationale positie van de
Vereenigde Staten. Opbouw, 2e jrg., 945-967. [2190
|i Signed: Aquarius (R. Groeninx van Zoelen).
Monroe Doctrine.
Benton, Elbert J. The Monroe doctrine as an adventure in foreign policy. Weekly
REV., II (June 30) 670-672. [2i9i
( Brown, Philip Marshall. The Monroe doctrine and the League of nations. Am. jour.
INTERNAT. LAW, XIV (Jan.) 207-210. [2192
Escobar Lara, Rafael. The Monroe doctrine and the League of nations. Inter-
l America, III (June) 283-294. [2193
Hall, Arnolds. The Monroe doctrine and the Great war. Chicago: McClurg. xiii,
177 p. [The national social science series, ed. by F. L. McVey] [2194
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 150-151; Am. Jour, internat. law, XIV (Oct.) 696-697.
Hall, Arnold B. The past, present and future of the Monroe doctrine. [N. Y.: The
Institute of international education] 24 p. (Institute of international education.
I International relations clubs. Syllabus, no. ii) [2195
Kulp, C. A. Venezuela and the Monroe doctrine. Pan-American mag., XXX (Jan.)
131-140. [2196
Concerned with the Venezuela-British Guiana boundary arbitration.
Lannoy, Charles de. La doctrine de Monroe et le Facte des nations. Rev. droit
internat., 3^ ser., I, 364-384. [2197
Mexico y la doctrina de Monroe. Rev. mex. derecho internac, I (June 1919) 176-
218. [2198
Oliveira Lima, Manuel de. Monroeism. Pan-American mag., XXX (Jan.) 166-
168. [2199
Translation of an article published "recently" in the "Jornal do Brasil."
Pierson, William Whatley, jr. Alberdi's views on the Monroe doctrine. Hispanic
Am. hist, rev.. Ill (Aug.) 362-374. [2200
I Quesada, Ernesto. La doctrina de Monroe; su evoluci6n historica. In Buenos
Aires. Universidad nacional. Facultad de derecho y ciencias sociales. Anales
. . . t. XX. p. 65-. [2201
Rivas, Francisco. La doctrina Monroe. Rev. mex. derecho internac, II (Mar.)
105-112. [2202
I Robertson, William Spence. Hispanic American appreciations of the Monroe doc-
! trine. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (Feb.) 1-16. [2202a
A paper read, in part, at the conference on Hispanic American history of the American historical
association at Clevdand on December 30, 1919.
Tower, Charlemagne. The origin, meaning and international force of the Monroe
doctrine. Am. jour, internat. law, XIV (Jan.) 1-25. [2203
; Tower, Charlemagne. El origen, significado y valor intemacional de la doctrina de
I Monroe. Washington: La Dotacion. 24 p. (Folletos editados en castellano por la
Dotacion Carnegie para la paz intemacional. Division de derecho internacional,
num. 1) [2204
Translation of the article given abovej no. 2203.
I
136 AMERICAN HISTOKICAL ASSOCIATION. i
Constitutional History and Law. j
Bacon, Charles W. The American plan of government; the Constitution of the
United States as interpreted by accepted authorities, by Charles W. Bacon, ...
assisted by Franklyn S. Morse, with an introduction by George Gordon Battle. !
3d ed., rev., with new material. N. Y. and London: Putnam, xxi, 493 p.
[2205 I
Brown, Everett Sonierville. The constitutional history of the Louisiana purchase, '
1803-1812. Berkeley: University of California press, xi, 248 p. (University of
California publications in history, v. X) [2203
An investigation of the constitutional history of the territorial expansion of the United States, being
a discussion of the constitutional questions which arose as a consequence of the purchase of Louisiana.
Gives a detailed account of the Senate debate on the BrecMnridge bill and sheds light on the status of
inhabitants of territories, the control of slavery by Congress, and the Indian and land questions.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct. ) 143.
Butler, Nicholas Murray. America's contribution to liberty. Homiletic rev.,
LXXX (July) 59-61. [2207
Defines America's massive contributions to the cause of liberty as the following: A new adaptation
and use of the federal principle; a government of defined and limited powers, with aclear definition of the
field of civil liberty; and a judicial authority to protect CAcn the huTiiblest individual from the invasion
of hiscivil liberties by even the most popular of executives or the most powerful of legislatures.
Caldwell, Robert Granville. The settlement of interstate disputes Am. jour.
INTERN AT. LAW, XIV (Jan.) 38-69. [2207a
It is the purpose of this paper to review the methods and the principles involved in the quasi-inter-
national jurisdiction exercised to settle the disputes which have arisen between the members of the '■
great federations sprung from the British Empire of the seventeenth century. I
Contents.— Colonial origins [disputes between the colonies] The Privy council. South Africa, j
Canada. Axostralia. Controversies under the Articles of confederation. The constitutional conven- /
tion. Classes of cases before the Supreme court of the United States. j
Carson, Hampton L. The evolution of representative constitutional government. [
Am. BAR ASSOC. JOUR., VI (Oct.) 69-75. [2208 |
"Traced from Anglo-Saxon institutions, through city, trading and colonialcharters, the original state
constitutions and articles of conMeration, to our present Constitution."
Chow, S. E.. Le controle parleraentaire de la politique etrang^re en Angleterre, en
France, et aux Etats-Unis. Paris: Ernest Sagot et cie. 326 p. [2209
Rev. in: Am. jour.internant.law, XV (Oct. 1921) 616-G19.
Corwin, Edward S. Freedom of speech and press under the first amendment: a
resume. Yale law jour., XXX (Nov.) 48-55. [2210
Corwin, Edward S. The power of Congress to declare peace. Mich, law rev.,
XVIII (May) 669-675. [2211
Corwin, Edward S. The worship of the Constitution. Const, rev., IV (Jan.) 3-10.
[2212
Davis, John William. The treaty -making power in the United States; an address,
by the Hon. John W. Davis, ambassador of the United States, delivered at Oxford
on February 20, 1920. London, N. Y. [etc.] H. Milford, Oxford univ. press. 18 p.
(Oxford university. Britisli-American club. Paper no. 1) [2213
A study of the history and scope of the treaty-making power in the United States.
Also pub. in Am. bar assoc. jour., VI (Sept.) 1-7.
Grinnell, Frank W. Limitations of the kind of amendments to the federal Constitution
provided for b)^ article V — The Rhode Island case — The views of George Ticknor
Curtis — The origin of the tenth amendment. Mass. law quar., V (Feb.) 116-
131. " [2214
Grinnell, Frank W. Some forgotten history about the duty of courts in dealing
with unconstitutional legislation. Am. law rev., LIV (May) 419-430. [2216
Hayden, Ralston. The Senate and treaties, 1789-1817, the development of the treaty-
making functions of the United States Senate during their formative period. N. Y.
and London: Macmillan. xvi, 237 p. [University of Michigan publications.
Humanistic papers] [2216
OoNTENTS. — The first exercise of the treaty-maldng power. Development of treaty-malcing power
through action on treaties with Indian tribes, 1789-1795. The treaties with Algiers and Spain, 1790-1796.
The Jay treaty. The CreeV treaty of 1796. Treaties of the administration of John Adams. The Senate
and the treaties of Thomas Jefferson. The genesis of the Senate committee on foreign relations. The
treaty-making powers of the Senate at the end of the formatix e period, 1815-1817.
Rev. in: Am. hist. rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 591.
WRITINGS OIT AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 137
Hill, David Jayne. Our charter of law and liberty. Const, rev., IV (Apr.) 75-87.
[2217
Address before the Sons of the American revolution at Boston, at the celebration of September 17th,
1919, as Constitution day.
i Hunt, Gaiilard, and James Brown Scott, eds. The debates in the Federal conven-
* tion of 1787, which framed the Constitution of the United States of America, reported
by James Madison, a delegate fromthe state of Virginia. International ed. N. Y.
[etc.] Oxford university press, xcvii, 731p. facsims. (Publication of the Carnegie
endowment for international peace. Division of international law, Washington")
[2218
Lawrence, John S. The Constitution in the light of history. Const, rev., IV (July)
131-141. [2219
Lay, George C. Interstate controversies. Am. law rev., LIV (Sept.) 705-717. [2220
A review ofcertain cases cited in James Brown Scott's "Judicial settlement of controversies between
states of the American union . . . Oxford: Clarendon press, 1919."
\ Lloyd, William H. Pylkington's case and its successors, Univ. of Penn. law rev.,
LXIX (Nov.) 20-34. [2221
An historical review of cases and decisions bearing upon the question of the power of 'the courts to
pass on the constitutionality of legislation.
McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningliam. Steps in the development of American democ-
racy. N. Y. and Cincinnati: Abingdon press. 210 p. [Wesleyan university.
George Slocum Bennett foundation. Lectures ... 1st ser. — 1918-1919] [2222
Contents. — Emergence of principles in the colonial period. The theories of the Revolution: the
formation of state constitutions. The critical years after the Revolution: The Federal constitution.
Jeit'ersonian democracy. Jacksonian democracy. Slavery and antislavery. Developments of recent
I years: Individualism vs. social control. The implications and responsibilities of democracy to-day.
i Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 344-345; Am. pol. sci. rev., XV (Feb. 1921) 121-122.
MacMaster, Donald. The United States Senate and the treaty-making powers.
Jour. soc. comp. legis., 3d ser., II, pt. 3, 189-195. [2223
Mallison, Albert Grant. The political theories of Roger B. Taney. Southw. tol,
SCI. QUAR., I (Dec.) 219-240. [2224
"Chief Justice Roger B. Taney had three principal political theories— curbing the rights of corpora-
tions, state rights, and slavery."
Morrow, William W. The Americanism of the Constitution of the United States.
Cjnst. REV., IV (Jan.) 21-38. • [2225
Ralston, Jackson H. Judicial control over legislatures as to constitutional questions.
Am. law rev., LIV (Jan.-Mar.) 1-38, 193-230. - [2226
An historical study of the question, opening with a summary of cases involving the question under
discussion which arose prior to the formation of the Constitution .
Bidden, William Renwick. The constitutions of the United States and Canada;
a comparison. Minn, law rev., IV (Feb.) 165-189. [2227
Rogers, Lindsay. The power of the President to sign bills after Congress has ad-
journed. Yale law jour., XXX (Nov.) 1-22. [2228
An examination of the constitutional pro\'ision, the federal precedents, and the state decisions in
! regard to this practice.
i Scott, James Brown. The United States of America: a study in international organ-
ization. N. Y. [etc.] Oxford university press, xix, 605 p. (Publications of the
Carnegie endowment for international peace. Division of international law, Wash-
i ington) [2229
I In the beliefthat the experience of the American states, free and independent commonwealths, would
be of value in any attempt to f trengthen that larger union of states called the Society of nations, the
writer treats of some of the international (interstate) problems met and solved by the framers of the
Union.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Oct. 1921) 128-129; Am.jour.internat.law, XV (Apr. 1921) 331-333.
Scott , Mary Semple, ed. History of the woman suffrage movemen* in Missouri. Mo.
HIST. REV., XIV (Apr.) 281-384. [2230
Smith, Herbert A . The American Supreme court as an international tribunal . N . Y. :
Oxford univ. press, Am. branch; London [etc.] viii, 123 p. [2231
"PrintedinU. S. A."
Draws an analogy between the Supreme court of the United States when sitting as a tribunal to
try cases involving sovereign states, and any international court that may hereafter be established.
Rev. in: Am. jour, internal, law, XV (Apr. 1931) 333-335.
111124°— 23 11
138 AMERICAN HISTORICAL. ASSOCIATIOH".
Politics.
Andrews, Norman P. The negro in politics. Jour, neoro hist., V (Oct.) 420-436. 1
[3232 ;
Deals with the reconstruction period and following years.
Boucher, Chauncey S. The annexation of Texas and the Bluffton movement in ;
South Carolina. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (June 1919) 3-33. [2232a
A study of the political controversy in South Carolina which centered around the annexation of Texas,
particularly as it appeared in the presidential campaign of 1844. !
Cannon, Joseph G. Dramatic scenes in my career in Oongress-II. When Reed ;
counted a quorum. Harper's CXL (Mar., May) 433^41, 813-823. [2233 !
Clark, Champ. My quarter century of American politics, N. Y. and London: Har- |
per. 2 V. plates, ports. [2234
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIV (Nov.) 713-716; The Review, II (May 1) 460.
Clymer, Ernest Fletcher. Political summary of the United States, 1789-1920. N. Y.:
E. P. Button. 32 p. [2235
Dupriez, L. La legislation centre les partis aux Etats-Unis. In Academie royale
de Belgique. Bulletin de la classe des lettres ... 1920, nos. 9-10. Brussels
[Academie royale de Belgique] p. 435^52. [2236
A study of the American political system.
Harlan, Richard D. The phrase that boat Blaine; an inside story of a decisive
incident in American politics. Outlook, OXXVI (Dec. 8) 649-651. [2237 ;
Refers to the phrase " Rum, Romanism and rebellion." I
Herriott, F. I. A neglected factor in the anti-slavery triumph in Iowa in 1854.
Deutsch-Am. Geschichtsblatter, XVIII-XIX, 174-352.
An attempt to explain the cause of the triumph of the anti-slavery party in the election of James i
W. Grimes as governor of Iowa in 1854. The writer considers that an important factor in the result was I
the dissatisfaction of the Germans with the course of the Democratic party in matters affecting their !
status and welfare. j
Herriott, F. I,, ed. Memories of the Chicago convention of 1860; being interviews i
with General Grenville M. Dodge of Council Bluffs and Judge Charles C. Nourse of
Des Moines. Ann. Iowa, 3d ser., XII (Oct.) 446-466. [2239 |
These Interviews were obtained in the course of a search for data bearing upon the assertions of two ;
historians relative to the actions of the representatives of the Republicans of Iowa at thecon vention which I
nominated Lincoln for the presidency. i
Holmes, Charles Nevers. The first Republican -Democratic presidential campaign. !
Jour. Am. hist., XIV, no. 1, 41^8. [2240
The campaign of 1856 and the election of Buchanan as president. It was the initial presidential
contest between the two great parties which still exist.
Hoyt, Albert E. Politics in the days of David B. Hill; his experience with hostile
legislatures while he was governor; story of the bitter Maynard campaign and
incidents which led up to it. State service, IV (Apr.) 313-315. [2241
Concerned with New York state politics from 1885 to 1892.
Johnson, Willis Fletcher. History of the Republican party, what it has stood for,
and what it stands for to-day. N. Y.: The Century history co. v, 118 p. [2242
Campaign literature, 1920.
Jordan, Henry D. Daniel Wesley Voorhees [1827-1897] Miss. Valley hist, eev.,
VI (Mar.) 532-555. [2243
Mainly concerned with his political career after the Civil war. He was a member of the House of
representatives (Indiana democrat) 1860-1865, 1868-1872, and U. S. senator, 1862-1897.
McMurry, Donald L. The soldier vote in Iowa in thc^ election of 1888. Ia. jour.
HIST., XVIII (July) 335-356. [2244
Concerned largely with the influence of the Grand army of the republic in the presidential election
of 1888 in Iowa.
Merriam, Charles Edward. American political ideas; studies in the development of
American political thought 1865-1917. N. Y.: Macmillan. [10], 481 p. [2246
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 551-552; Am. pol. sci. rev., XV (Feb. 1921) 119-120.
Mittelman, Edward B . Chicago labor in politics 1877-96. Jour. pol. econ., XXVIII
(May) 407-427. [2246
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 139
Moore, Blaine Free. The history of cumulative voting and minority representation
in Illinois, 1870-1919. Rev. ed. Urbana: The University of Illinois. 70 p.
tables. (University of Illinois studies in the social sciences, v. VIII, no. 2) [2247
The writer's History of cumulative voting and minority representation in Illinois 1870-1908, was
published in 1909, as the University of Illinois studies in the social sciences, v. Ill, no. 3.
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XV (Feb. 1921) 123-124.
Palrter, Carl. The Progressive party in Indiana. Ind. mag. hist,, XVI (Sept.)
173-283. [2248
Parker, George Frederick. Grover Cleveland's career in Buffalo, 1855-1882. Sat-
urday EVENING POST, CXCIII (Aug. 28) 6-7. [2249
Parker, George Frederick. How Grover Cleveland was nominated and elected presi-
dent. Saturday evening post, OXOII (Apr. 24) 22-23, 168, 170, 173-174, 177-178,
181-182. [2250
Parker, George Frederick. Some decisive quarrels and jealousies in American politics.
Saturday evening post, CXCIII (Sept. 4) 6-7, 160, 162, 165-166, 169. [2251
PauUin, Charles Oscar. The national ticket of Broom and Coates, 1852. Am. hist.
REV., XXV (July) 689-691. [2252
Note regarding a long-forgotten ticket of the American, or Know-Nothing party, in the presidential
election of 1852.
Boss, Earl D. Samuel J. Tilden and the revival of the Democratic party. So.
Atlan. quar., XIX (Jan.) 43-54. [2563
St. John, Robert Porter, and Raymond L. Noonan, eds. Landmarks of liberty; the
growth of American political ideals as recorded in speeches from Otis to Wilson,
ed. with introduction and notes. N. Y.: Harcourt, Brace and Howe, xii, 267 p.
[2254
Sharp, Walter Rice. Henry S. Lane and the formation of the Republican party in
Indiana. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VII (Sept.) 93-112. [2256
Sioussat, St. George L. Andrew Johnson and the early phases of the Homestead bill .
Tenn. hist, mag., VI (July) 14-45. [2256
Skinner, Charles R. A memorable senatorial contest; former assemblyman recalls
exciting incidents in the Conkling-Platt deadlock nearly forty years ago. State
service, IV (Jan.) 27-32. [2257
Spooner, Walter W. The Democratic party, a history. New York city: The Liberty
history CO. 124 p. . [2258
Thorpe, Francis Newton. The political ideas of John Adams. Pa. mag. hist.,
XLIV (Jan.) 1-46. [2259
Van Buren, Martin. The autobiography of Martin Van Buren. Ed. by John C.
Fitzpatrick. Washington: Gov. print, off. 808 p. (Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the
year 1918, v. II) [2260
A contribution to the poUtical history of the United States.
Law.
Adams, Randolph C. The legal theories of James Wilson. TJntv. of Penn. law
REV., LXVIII (June) 337-355. [2261
Calls attention to the "legal theories of an American jurist who seems to epitomize the spirit of Amer-
ican legal institutions in the time when they were first emerging as distinct from the institutions of
England."
Anderson, John C . Centennial of the Supreme court of Alabama . In the Proceedings
of the forty-third annual meeting of the Alabama state bar association, held at
Birmingham, Alabama, April 30 and May 1, 1920. Montgomery: Wilson print.
p. 125-145. [2262
Ashcraft, Edwin M. The Illinois bench and bar in 1867. III. law rev., XV (Dec.)
305-309. [2263
Battle, George Gordon. The state of North Carolina v. negro Will, a slave of James S.
Battle; a cause c^l^bre of ante-bellum times. Va. law rev., VI (Apr.) 515-530.
[2264-6
A murder trial in Edgecombe county, North Carolina, in 1834. A negro slave of James S. Battle was
tried for the murder of his overseer.
140 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Carroll, Thomas F. Freedom of the press in the federalist period: the sedition act. j
Mich, law rev., XVIII (May) 615-651. [2266
Grinnell, Frank W. The continuous history of the "Superior court of judicature, '
court of assize and general gaol delivery" and the "Supreme judicial court" of |
Massachusetts, as told by the portraits of the justices from 1692 to 1920; also the I
portraits of the justices of the Supreme court of the United States appointed from i
Massachusetts since 1789. Mass. law quar., VI (Nov.) 1-8. 86 ports. [2267
Keasbey, Edward Q. Jersey justice. In New Jersey state bar association. Year 1
book, 1919-1920. p. 39-61.
Concerned with the development of the judicial system of New Jersey from early days.
McMahon, Edward. Lincoln and civil liberty. Pacific rev., I (June) 6-23.
Maynard, Fred A. Five to four decisions of the Supreme court of the United States . ] i|
Am. law rev., LIV (July) 481-514. [2270 \
An historical review of decisions of the Supreme court which have been fixed by a majority of one ', z
vote only. • ■
New Hampshire. Laws of New Hampshire, including public and private acts, ! -.
resolves, votes, etc. Ed, and pub. under the direction of the Secretary of state. ; '-■
V. VIII. Second constitutional period, 1811-1820. Concord, N. H.: Evans print. : "
CO. iv, 1075 p. [2271 I i-^
Pound, Koscoe. The pioneers and the common law. West Va. law quar., XXVII i
(Nov.) 1-19. [2272 ] ^;
A study of the formative period of American law.
Putnam, Harrington. The early administration of equity in this country. Central
LAW JOUR., XC (June 11) 423-424. [2273
Ruppenthal, J. C. English and other languages under American statutes. Am. law
REV., LIV (Jan.) 39-90. [2274
An historical summary of all enactments of the various states of the union bearing upon the question
of language. This question first came up when Louisiana with its large French-speaking population
was admitted to the union in 1812.
Sheldon, Edward W. The early history of the Association of the bar of the city of |eci
New York. Mass. law quar., V (Aug.) 360-408. [2276
Van der Zee, Jacob. Indexing the compiled code. Ia. jour, hist., XVIII (Oct.)
534-551. [2276
Van der Zee, Jacob. A review of the work of the Iowa code commission. Ia. jour.
HIST., XVIII (Oct.) 477-533. [2277
National Government and Administration.
Becker, Carl Lotus. The United States; an experiment in democracy. N. Y. and
London: Harper. [10], 332 p. [2278
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 337-338; Am. pol. sci. rev., XV (Nov. 1921) 616-617.
Clymer, Ernest Fletcher. Cabinets of the presidents and the speakers of the House of
representatives, presidential electoral votes by states, 1900-1916. Special notes on
the presidents. N. Y., Phila. [etc.] Chandler and co. 38 p. double tab. [2279
Fairlie, John Archibald. The national administration of the United States of Amer-
ica. N. Y. and London: Macmillan. xi, 274 p. [2280
First published in 1905.
Kimball, Everett. The national government of the United States. Boston, N. Y.
[etc.] Ginn and co. v, 629 p. [2281
Rev. in: Pol. sci, quar., XXXV (June) 313-314.
Mills, Lewis Sprague. Citizenship and government in the United States. N. Y.,
Phila. [etc.] Hinds, Hayden and Eldredge. xiii, 204p. illus., ports., maps. [2282
Moley, Raymond. A handbook in American citizenship. Issued by the American-
ization committee of Ohio. Columbus, O. 93 p. illus. (incl. ports., forms, music).
Ten
tsti
6r
A
B
ItilB
m
mil
\1
Bod6n, Francisco de A. La estadistica federal de los Estados Unidos. Estudio,
aiio VIII, niim. 94 (Oct.) 3-23. [2284
Rogers, Lindsay. Presidential inability. Review, II (May 8) 481-r483. [2285
Reviews briefly the evolution of the presidential succession law as amended in 1886, and discusses
the constitutional aspects of the method of procedure in case of the disability of the president.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1^. 14 1
State and Local Government and Administration.
[Arranged alphabetically by states]
I Colegrove, Kennetli. New England town mandates; instructions to the deputies in
':. colonial legislatures. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XXI, 411-449. [2286
One of the characteristics of tUe New England town-meeting system in colonial days was the prac-
tice of voting instructions to thi^ deputies in the popular assembUes. This practice continued until the
third decade after the adoption of the Constitution of the United States. The writer notes also the
employment by the towns of the initiative, the referendum, and the recall.
Anderson, John C. Centennial of the Supreme court of Alabama. Annual address
before Alabama state bar association at Birmingham, Alabama. April 30, 1920.
Montgomery: Wilson print. 23 p. [2287
i Marshall, Thomas Maitland. The miners' laws of Colorado. Am. hist, rev., XXV
(Apr.) 426-439. [2288
"The object of this pap^ is to present the salient features of the beginnings of organized governmental
units in what is now the state of Colorado." When the principal mining areas of the Far West were
first developed, the miners, finding themselves beyo^id the long arm of the law, foimd it necessary to
lay off mining districts, to organize governments, and to enact laws.
Horack, Frank Edward. Special municipal legislation in Iowa. Am. pol. sci. rev.,
XIV (Aug.) 423-445. [2289
Robeson, George F. Special municipal charters in Iowa, 1836-1858. Ia. jour.
HIST., XVIII (Apr.) 163-270. [2290
Kansas. Constitutional convention, 1859. Kansas Constitutional convention*. A
reprint of the proceedings and debates of the convention which framed the consti-
tution ot Kansas at Wyandotte in July, 1859. Also, the constitution annotated to
date, historical sketches, etc. By authority of the state Legislature. Topeka:
Printed by Kansas state printing plant, Imri Zumwalt, state printer] 771 p. tables.
[2291
Compiled, under the direction of state librarians James L. King and Winfleld Freeman, by Harry G.
Larimer, bill drafter and chief of Legislative reference library.
Hart, W. O. The constitutions of Louisiana, with some observations on the Consti-
tutional convention of 1921. La. hist, quar.. Ill (Oct.) 570-595. [2292
McClure, C. H. Constitution making in ^lissouri. Miss. Valley hist, assoc.
proc, X, pt. 1, 112-121. [2293
Missouri. Constitutional convention, 1875. Journal Missouri Constitutional con-
si: i vention of 1875 . . . with an historical introduction on constitutions and consti-
tutional conventions in Missouri by Isidor Loeb . . . and a biographical account
of the personnel of the convention by Floyd C. Shoemaker, editors. . _. . [Jefferson
City: The Hugh Stephens co., printers] 2 v. ports., tables. ' [2294
A Missouri centennial pubhcation by the State historical society of Missouri, Columbia, 1920.
Biographical sketches of the delegates by Buel Leopard: v. I, p. 72-112.
Nebraska. Constitution. Nebraska constitutions of 1866, 1871 & 1875 and proposed
amendments submitted to the people September 21, 1920. Arranged in parallel
columns, with critical notes and comparisons with constitutions of other states.
A joint publication of Nebraska legislative reference bureau and Nebraska state
historical society. . . . Lincoln, Nebr.: American print, co. 207, 7 p. ([Nebraska.
Legislative reference bureau] Bulletin no. 13) [2295
Nebraska liistory and political science series.
New Hampshire. Laws of New Hampshire, including public and private acts,
resolves, votes, etc. Ed. and pub. under the direction of the secretary of state.
v. VI-VIII. Concord, N. H.: Evans print, co., 1917-1920. 3 v. [2296
Edwin C. Bean, secretary of state. ^ „ , ..^ x. ,
Contents.— v. VI (1917) Second constitutional period, 1792-1801. v. VII (1918) Second constitutional
period, 1801-1811. v. VIII (1920) Second constitutional period, 1811-1820.
Dawson, Edgar. The first New York state constitution. N. Y. state hist, assoc.
proc, XVII, 65-73. [2297
t'^uaife, MiloM.,€rf. The convention of 1846. Madison [Wis.] Pub. by the Society,
1919. 827 p. plates, ports., facsims. (Publications of the State historical society
of Wisconsin. Collections, v. XXVII. Constitutional series, v. II) [2298
Consists of the journal of proceedings of the Wisconsin constitutional convention of 1846.
uaife, Milo M., ed. The struggle over ratification, 1846-1847. Madison [Wis.]
Pub. bv the Society. 716 p. ports. (Publications of the State liistoncal socierty
of Wisconsin. Collections, v. XXVIII. Constitutional series, v. Ill) [2299
Story of the Wisconsin constitutional convention of 1846 as contemporaneously reported, and pre-
sentation of the discussion over ratification which ended in the decisive rejection of the constitution by
the voters at the election of Apr. 6, 1847.
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC HISTORY.
General.
Arnold, Marguerite. Are women intelligent? Century, C (Dec.) 264-272. [2300 I
A sketch of the woman's rights movement prior to the Centennial celebration of 1876. i
Agriculture; Forestry; Land. i
I
Buck, Solon Justus. The agrarian crusade; a chronicle of the farmer in politics, i
New Haven: Yale university press; [etc., etc.] xi, 215 p. ports. (The chroni- i
cles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XLV) [2301 ;
"This book is an attempt to sketch the com"se and to reproduce the spirit of that crusade from its I
inception with the Granger movement, through the Greenback and Populist phases, to a climax in the i
battle for free silver." i
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 147-148. '
Chevalier, H. Les charrues anciennes de TAm^rique et de I'Oceanie. Soc. ing^- j
NiEURS civiLS France mem., LXXIII (Jan.) 65-92. [2302
Traces the development of the plow in North and South America from the earUest times to the 19th
century.
Fisher, Commodore B. The Farmers' union. Lexington, Ky. 77, [4] p. illus.,
tables, diagrs. (University of Kentucky. Studies in economics and sociology*
no. 2) [2803
"Publications of the University of Kentucky volume 1, number 2."
The origin and development of the Farmers' educational and co-operative union of America, 1902-1920:
p. 5-32.
Schmidt, Louis Bernard. The internal grain trade of the United States, 1850-1860.
Ia. jour, hist., XVIII (Jan.) 94-124. [2304
Schmidt, Louis Bernard. Some significant aspects of the agrarian revolution in the
United States. Ia. jour, hist., XVIII (July) 371-395. [2306
Deals with the history of American agriculture from 1860 to 1890. By the agrarian revolution is
meant the transformation of agriculture from a primitive, pioneer, largely self-sufficing type of industry
into a modem business organized on a scientific, capitaUstic, commercial basis.
Schmidt, Louis Bernard. The westward movement of the wheat growing industry
in the United States. Ia. jour, hist., XVIII (July) 396-412. [2306
Wanlass, William Lawrence. The United States Department of agriculture, a study
in administration. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins press, vii, 9-131 p. (Johns
Hopkins univ. stud., ser. XXXVIII, no. 1) [2307
Published also as thesis (ph. d.) Johns Hopkins urn varsity, 1919.
A brief history of federal agricultural legislation in the United States: p. 9-32.
Commerce and Industry.
Bankers trust company, New York. America's merchant marine; a presentation of
its history and development to date with chapters on related subjects. N. Y.:
Bankers trust company. [6], 257 p. [2308
Baxter, James P. Our first national shipping policy. U. S. N. inst. proc, XLVI
(Aug.) 1251-1264. [2309
A discussion of the measures adopted by the first Congress, through the tariff and tormage acts of
1789, for regulating commerce, so as to foster American shipping.
Bradlee, Francis B. C. The Dreadnought of Newburyport and some account of the
old transatlantic packet ships. Essex inst. hist, coll., LVI (Jan.) 1-23. [2310
The packet-ship "Dreadnought" built in Newburyport in 1853.
142
WRITINGS ON AMEKICAN HISTORY, 1920. 143
Chandler, Charles Lyon. United States shipping in the La Plata region, 1809-1810.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (May) 159-176. [2311
A study of the commercial relations of the United States with the viceroyalty of the Rio de 1% Plata
nnd the South American portions of the kingdom of Portugal.
Du Pont, Bessie Gardner. E. I. Du Pont de Nemours and company, a history, 1802-
1902. Boston and N, Y.: Houghton MiMn co. [8], 196 p., plates, ports., facsims.
[2312
Jenkins, Lawrence Waters. The ship Mount Vernon of Salem. Old-time New-
England, XI (July) 9-11. [2313
The "Moimt Vernon" was built in 1798 for Elias Hasket Derby, Salem merchant. There is here
printed a letter of Captain Derby describing an incident of a voyage of the ship during the "naval war
with France", in 1799.
Jemegan, Marcus W. Slavery and the beginnings of industrialism in the American
colonies. Am. hist, rev., XXV (Jan.) 220-240. [2314
This article is concerned with the emplojrment of slaves in industries other than those purely agricul-
tural, and shows that the slave artisan was an important agency in the rise of plantation manufactures
and in the commercial development of the southern colonies. Emphasis is placed on conditions in two
colonies, South Carolina and Virginia.
Litman, Simon. The past decade of the foreign commerce of the United States.
Am. econ. rev., X (June 1920) 31^-331. [2315
A statistical account.
Lnttig, John C. Journal of a fur-trading expedition on the upper Missouri 1812-1813.
Ed. by Stella M. Drumm. St. Louis: Missouri historical society. 192 p. pi.,
ports., map, facsims. [2316
McRoberts, R. H. The growth of federal control over business since the establish-
ment of the Interstate commerce commission. Va. law reg., n. s. VI (Sept.)
334-349. [2317
Paine, Ralph D. The derelict Polly. Century, C (Sept.) 577-585. (Lost ships
and lonely seas, I) [2318
The story of the Boston merchant ship "Polly" which was wrecked off the Massachusetts coast in
December 1811 and was adrift in the Atlantic until finally picked up off the coast of Africa on June 20th,
1812.
Paine, Ralph D. How the schooner Exertion fell among thieves. Century, C (Oct.)
771-779. (Lost ships and lonely seas, II) [2319
The narrative of the New England sea-captain (Captain Lincoln, of Boston) who fell among pirates
off the Cuban coast, in November 1821.
Persons, Warren M., Pierson M. Tuttle, and Edwin Frichey. Business and financial
conditions following the Civil war in the United States. Rev. econ. statistics,
II, suppl. 2 (July) 55 p. [2320
I. The situation at the close of the Civil war. II. Survey of the period 1866-80. III. Comparison
of the post-Civil war period with the present.
Reed, Edgar P. Rochester and the shoe industry. N. Y. state hist, assoc. jour.,
I (Oct.) 241-243. [2321
Schmidt, Louis Bernard. The internal grain trade of the United States, 1850-1860.
Ia. jour, hist., XVIII (Jan.) 94-124. [2322
Schmidt, Louis Bernard. The westward movement of the wheat growing industry in
the United States. Ia. jour. hist. , XVIII (July) 396-412. [2323
Stocking, William. Detroit commercial organizations. Mich. hist, mag., IV (Apr.)
435-477. [2324
Sturgis, William. The Northwest fur trade, and the Indians of the Oregon country,
1788-1830. [Boston: Old South association] 20 p. (Old South leaflets, no. 219)
[2325
Ed. by S. E. Morison. ^. ,
Reprints parts of two lectures, delivered in 1846 by WiUiam Sturgis, who had been actively engaged
in the Northwest fur trade between Boston, the Pacific coast, and China.
Way, R. B. The commerce of the lower Mississippi in the period 1830-1860. Miss.
Valley hist, assoc. proc, X, pt. 1, 57-68. [2326
A survey of the trade history between the North and the South. "Within these particular thirty
years occurred changes in the character and importance of the river trade as well as struggle with com-
petitors which successfully deflected the northern trade from the South to the East."
Westerfield, Ray Bert. Early history of American auctions. A chapter in com-
mercial history. New Haven, Conn.: Connecticut academy of arts and sciences.
p. 159-210. (Conn. acad. arts and sci. trans., v. XXIII. May, 1920) [2327
144 AMERICAIT HISTORICAL, ASSOCIATIO:!^.
Communication; Transportation; Public Works.
Bradles, Francis B. C. The Boston and Maine railroad; a history of the main road,
wijth its tributary lines. Essex inst. hist, coll., LVI (Oct.) 241-264. [2328
Bradlee, Francis B. C. The Dreadnought of Newburyport, Massachusetts, and
some account of the old transatlantic packet-ships. Salem, Mass.: The Essex
institute. 23 p. plates, plan. [2328a
Reprinted from the Essex institute historical collections, v. LVI, 1920
Bradlee, Francis B. C. Some account of steam navigation in New England. Salem,
Mass. : The Essex institute. [8], 153 p. plates, facsims. [2329
Reprinted from the Essex institute historical collections, v. LV-LVI, 1919-1920.
Bradley, Glenn Danford. The story of the Santa Fe. Boston: R. G. Badger. 288 p.
plates, ports. [Frontiers of America] [2330
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Michigan, 1915.
Pubhshed also without thesis note.
The AtcMson, Topeka and Santa Fe railway company.
Carson, W. Wallace. Transportation and traffic on the Ohio and Mississippi before
the steamboat. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VII (June) 26-38. [2331
Dui-ing the period under review the Ohio river was the controlling factor in the westward movement.
Currie, C. W. Y. First railroad train in America; historic De Witt Clinton locomotive
and coaches which ran between Albany and Schenectady in 1831. State service,
IV (Sept.) 640-645. [2332
Doneh.00, George P. A short sketch of the Indian trails of Pennsylvania. Wy. hist.
AND geol. soc. proc, XVII, 67-94.
Dozier, Howard Douglas. A history of the Atlantic coast line railroad. Boston and
N. Y.: Houghton Mifflin co. xi, 197 p. maps, table. (Hart, Schafner and Marx
prize essays) [2334
" Submitted to and accepted by the Yale faculty as a dissertation for the degree of doctor of philos-
ophy."—Author's pref.
Rev. in: Am. econ. rev., X (Sept.) 593-595; Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 14»-149.
Hulbert, Archer Butler. The paths of inland commerce; a chronicle of trail, road,
and waterway. New Haven: Yale university press; [etc., etc.] xii, 211 p. plates,
fold. map. (The chronicles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXI)
[2335
The theme of this volume is that of transportation as a vital factor in the national development of
the United States.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 145-146.
Johnson, William S. Crossing the Mississippi. Palimpsest, I (Dec.) 169-182. [2336-7
An account of ferrying on the Mississippi from early pioneer days until the coming of bridges in 1855.
Marye, William B. The Old Indian road. Md. hist, mag., XV (June-Dec.) 107-124,
208-229, 345-395. [2338
A highway in northern Maryland known in colonial times as the Old Indian road.
Shippee, Lester B. Steamboating on the upper Mississippi after the Civil war:
a Mississippi magnate. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (Mar.) 470-502. [2339
The magnate referred to is WiUiam F. Davidson, who went from Pittsburgh to St. Paul in 1854.
Shirk, J. A. G. American highways. In Kansas academy of science. Transactions,
V. XXIX. Semi-centennial volume . . . Topeka: Kansas state printing plant,
p. 201-209. [2340
Traces the history and development of American roads from the earUest times.
Skinner, Charles R. How the special delivery stamp began. State service, IV
(Apr.) 321-325. [2341
"Author of the convenient device teUs the story of the exciting struggle he had as a member of Con-
gress in getting the law enacted."
Upham, George B. The Province road. Granite mo., LII (Nov.) 428-442. [2342
A road from Charlestown on the Connecticut river to Boscawen on the Merrimack river, built in 1769
or 1770.
White, Edward J. A century of transportation in Missouri. Mo. hist, rev., XV
(Oct.) 126-162. [2343
Wood, Fred J. The turnpikes of Maryland. D. A. R. mag., LIV (Oct.) 565-574.
[2344
i
WKITINGS ON AMEEICAN HISTORY, 1920. 145
Finance; Money.
Bank of the Manhattan company. Early New- York & the Bank of the Manhattan com-
pany. [N. Y.] Bank of the Manhattan company. [36] p. illus., double plan.
[2346
Dow, George Francis. The coins our fathers used. Topsfield hist. soc. coll., XXV
121-143. [2346
A study of early American currency.
Gulick, Luther Kalsey. Evolution of the budget in Massachusetts. N. Y.: Mac-
millan. x, 240 p. [2347
Thesis (ph. d.)— Columbia university, 1920.
Published also as Special studies in administration by the Bureau of mimicipal research and the Train-
ing school for public service, no. 2.
The first three chapters are historical. I. Before the Constitution. II. First steps under the Con-
stitution, 1780-1849. III. Laying the budget foundations, 1819-1910.
Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., XIV (Nov.) 711-713.
Laughlin, J. Laurence. Banking progress. N. Y.: Scribner. x, 349 p. [2348
Political history of the Federal reserve act: p. 143-159.
Stephens, F. F. Banking and finance in Missouri in the thirties. Miss. Valley
msT. ASSOC. PEOC, X, pt. 1, 122-134. [2349
Labor. *
Beard, Mary. A short history of the American labor movement. N. Y.: Harcourt,
Brace and Howe. [6], 174 p. [2350
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 591-592.
Carlton, Frank Tracy. The history and problems of organized labor. Revised.
Boston, N. Y. [etc.] D. C. Heath, xi, 559 p. [2351
1st edition, pub. in 1911. Without modifying the scope of the volume the writer has aimed to bring
the material up to date In this new edition.
Carlton, Frank Tracy. Organized labor in American historv. N. Y. and London:
Appleton. [10], 313 p. " [2352
Traces briefly the influence of the wage earner in American history. There are included chapters
on "The free school and the wage earner," "Land reform and the wage earner," "Labor legislation
and the wage earner," and "Other reform movements."
Rev. in: Am. econ. rev., X (Dec.) 837-839; Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 369-370.
Howard, Stanley Edwin. The movement of wages in the cotton manufacturing in-
dustry of New England since 1860. Boston [etc.] National council- of American
cotton manufacturers. 99 p. diagrs. [2353
Mengert, H. R. The Ohio workmen's compensation law. Ohio archaeol. and
HIST. QUAR., XXIX (Jan.) 1-48. [2354
An account of the enactment and operation of the workmen's compensation or industrial accident
law In Ohio.
Meriwether, Lee. A century of labor in Missouri. Mo. hist, rev., XV (Oct.)
163-175. [2355
Mittelman, Edward B. Chicago labor in politics 1877-96. Jour. pol. econ.,
XXVIII (May) 407-427. [2356
Robinson, Jesse S. The Amalgamated association of iron, steel and tin workers.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins press. 166 p. (Johns Hopkins univ. stud., ser.
XXXVIII, no. 2) [2357
Opens with a chapter on the history of the Association.
Libraries; Societies; Institutions.
Bowker, R. R. Women in the library profession. Lib. jour., XLV (June 15, July,
Aug.) 545-549, 587-592, 635-640. [2358
Sketches the library experience of a few of the women pioneers and representative women in mod-
em Ubrary work in this country.
A brief sketch of the Public library of the city of Boston. Boston pub. lib. bul.,
4th ser., II (Jan.) 1-9. [2359
Contents.— Part II. Part I, pub. in the Bulletin for July 1919.
146 AMEEICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Graniss, Ruth. The John Carter Brown library and its catalogue. Lib. jour., XLV
(Jan. 15) 67-69. [2360
" One of the most important events in the history of American bibliography is the recent appearance
of the first part of the Catalogue of the John Carter Brown library." It was published by the Library
in 1919.
Keen, W. W. The library of the College of physicians of Philadelphia. Natural
HIST., XX (May) 283-285. [2361
Law, Robert Adger. Two Texas libraries. Texas rev., V (July) 349-357.
The Rosenberg library of Galveston, and the Wrenn library or the Wrenn collection in the Ubrary
of the University of Texas. •
Lydenberg, Harry Miller. A history of the New York public library. N. Y. pub |
LIB. BUL., XXIV (Nov.-Dec.) 587-616, 671-715. [2363 I
Contents.— Chaps. V-XIV. The Harlem library. The "Washington Heights library. Aguilar free '■
library. The Cathedral library. The University settlement library. The "Webster free library. St.
Agnes free library. New York free circulating library for the blind. Tottenville library. Other efforts
toward a public library system.
Chaps. I-IV, pub. in the Bulletin, v. XX-XXI, 1916-1917.
Los Angeles. Public library. Los Angeles public library, 1872-1920; how the
library was established — how it has grown — ^what it is doing to-day for Greater Los
Angeles — why it should have a central building . . . [Los Angeles] 12 p. [2364
Pittsburgh. Carnegie institute. Carnegie institute and Carne§:ie library of Pitts-
burgh. [Pittsburgh: Carnegie library of Pittsburgh press] vii, 60, [2] p. illus., i
port., plans. [2365 •
This handbook is a revision of a preliminary edition issued in July 1918.
Contents. — History. Description of the buildings. "Work of the various departments.
Woodberry, George Edward. The Salem athenaeum. In his The torch, and other
lectures and addresses. N. Y.: Harcourt, Brace and Howe. p. 351-357. [2366
Corning, Charles Robert. The unwritten history of the New Hampshire historical
sooiety building, now first made known. [Concord] The Society. 46 p. illus.
Freemasons. Maine. Grand Lodge. Proceedings at the centennial celebration of
the Grand Lodge of Maine, Ancient free and accepted masons, held at Masonic
temple, Portland, Maine, Wednesday, May 5, 1920, comp. by Charles B. Davis,
grand secretary. [Portland: Tucker print, co.] 194 p. illus., pi., ports. [2368
Hart, W. O. History of the Louisiana historical society. La. hist, quar., Ill
(Jan.) 112-119. [2369
Jackson, Thomas M. The centennial history of St. John's commandery, no. 4,
Knights templar, a. o. 701-801, a. d. 1819-1919, Masonic temple, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. Authorized and printed by the Committee on history. [Phila.?]
1919. 140 p. plates, port., facsims. [2370
Kidd, John Carson, comp. History of Holland Lodge no. 1, Ancient free and ac-
cepted masons from its inception "the winter of 1834-1835" to the winter of 1919-
1920. Brazoria; state of Texas, Mexico 1835-1836; Houston, republic of Texas
1837-1846; Houston, state of Texas 1846-1920, compiled from the records under
order of the lodge. [Houston, Tex.] 66 p. plates (part col.) ports., fold, tab.,
facsims. [2371
Society of Mayflower descendants. District of Columbia. The Society of May-
flower descendants in the District of Columbia. Washington, D. C: Washington
missionary college press. 58 p. plates. [2372
[Stewart, William Rhinelander] Sixty years of the Down town association of the
city of New York, 1860-1920. [N. Y.: R. A. Haag, printer] 24 p. [2373
Signed: "Wm. Rhinelander Stewart.
A history of the Down town business man's club of New York.
Towner, Mrs. Horace M. The Mount Vernon ladies association of the Union. Ann.
Iowa, 3d ser., XII (July) 359-365. [2374
Way, William, corrfp. History of the New England society of Charleston, South
Carolina, for one hundred years, 1819-1919. Charleston: The Society, ix, 307 p.
ports. [2375
WRITIKGS OK AMEHrcAK HISTORY, 1920. 147
Life and Manners.
Coad, Oral Sumner. Stage and players in eighteenth century America. Jour.
Eng. and Ger. philol., XIX (Apr.) 201-223. [2376
Cost of living in Washington's time. State service, IV (Feb.) 145-146. [2377
Goodwin, Katharine Calvert. White House invitations. D. A. R. mag., LIV (June)
335-347. [2378
Historical notes regarding the evolution of the White House invitation.
Owen, Mary Alicia. Social customs and usages in Missouri during the last century.
Mo. HIST. REV., XV (Oct.) 176-190. [2379
Shelton, William H. Our county town. Century, XCIX (Apr.) 777-786. [2380
"A vivid picture of life and manner in a country town in New York state seventy years ago."
Wilstach, Paul. Potomac landings. Country life, XXXIX (Nov.-Dec.) 42-47,
51-55. [2381
I. Early days on the Potomac. II. The early manor houses of Maryland and mansions of Virginia.
Wright, George. Sketch of the national game of baseball. Columbia hist. soc.
EEC, XXIII, 80-85. [2382
Philanthropy and Social Welfare.
Adams, Franc L. The Woman's relief corps as a pioneer, Mich. hist, mag., IV
(Apr.) 575-582. [2383
Canup, Charles E. Temperance movements and legislation in Indiana. Ind. mag.
hist., XVI (Mar. -June) 3-37, 112-151. [2384
Cherrington, Ernest Hurst. The evolution of prohibition in the United States of
America; a chronological history of the liquor problem and the temperance reform
in the United States from the earliest settlements to the consummation of national
prohibition. Westerville, 0. : The American issue press, ix, 10-384 p. [2385
Hansen, Marcus L. Welfare campaigns in Iowa. Iowa City, la. : The State historical
society of Iowa, xiv, 320 p. (Chronicles of the World war, ed. by Benjamin F.
Shambaugh) [2386
Devoted to an account of the campaigns in Iowa for the raising of funds to support welfare work
incident to the World war.
Horack, Frank Edward. Child legislation in Iowa. Iowa City: The University.
35 p. (University of Iowa studies in child welfare ... v. I, no. 6) [2387
Population and Race Elements.
Capek, Thomas. The Cechs (Bohemians) in America; a study of their national,
cultural, political, social, economic and religious life. Boston and N. Y.: Houghton
Mifflin CO. xviii, 293 p. plates, ports., maps. [2388
Rev. in: Am. hist. rev.,'XXVI (Oct.) 142-143.
Clearwater, Alphonso Trumpbour. The Huguenot in America, and his successor.
Hug. soc. S. C. trans., XXV, 81-94. [2389
It is the writer's purpose "briefly to point out the difference between the Huguenot emigrant to
America and the emigrant who succeeded him."
Connor, R. D. W. Race elements in the white population of North Carolina.
[Raleigh, N. C] The College. 115 p. (North Carolina state normal & industrial
college. Historical publications, no. 1) [2390
Concerned with the origins and characteristics of races in North Carolina during the colonial period
Contents.— The English in North Carolina. The Highland Scotch in North Carolina. The Scotch-
Irish in North Carolina. The Germans in North Carolina.
Faust, Albert B. Unpublished documents on emigration from the archives of Switzer-
land. Deutsch-Am. Geschichtsblatter, XVIII-XIX, 9-68. [2391
The documents here presented fm-nish a record of German-Swiss emigration to America, from the
second quarter of the 18th to the second quarter of the 19th century.
Fish, Carl Russell. The Pilgrim and the melting pot. Miss. Valley hist, rev.,
VII (Dec.) 187-205. [2392^
A study of the race elements in America.
148 AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION^.
Foerster, Robert F. The Italian emigration of our times. Cambridge: Harvard
univ. press; London: Humphrey Milford, 1919. xv, 556 p. (Harvard economic
studies, V. XX)
The book is divided into 4 parts; the third, entitled "In foreign lands," discusses the history of Italian
immigration in various countries, and contains four chapters on the United States. i
[Gibson, John William] ed. Progress of a race; or, The remarkable advancement of i
the American negro, from the bondage of slavery, ignorance, and poverty to the :
freedom of citizenship, intelligence, affluence, honor and trust. Rev. and enl. by
J. L. Nichols and William H. Crogman. Naperville, 111.: J. L. Nichols and co.
480 p. ill us., ports. [2394
Who's who in the negro race: p. 329-460.
Published in 1912 by John William' Gibson and William H. Crogman.
HoUiday, Carl. St. Patrick's folk in America. Cath. world, CX (Mar.) 787-795.
[2395
Lyons, Jacques Judah. The Lyons collection . . . [Baltimore] The Society, 1913-20.
2 V. plates, ports., facsims. (Publications of the American Jewish historical '
society, nos. 21, 27) [2396
"The present work . . . contains the material relating to American Je\\ish history, collected by the ;
late Rev. Jacques J. Lyons, who was for many years minister of the Spanish and Portuguese congrega-
tion of New York." i
Contents.— I. The earliest extant minute books of the Spanish and Portuguese congregation of New I
York, a Sketch of the congregation written by Mr. Naphtali Phillips, and the Address of Major Mordecai I
M. Noah delivered in 1825, at the laying of the corner stone of the City of Ararat, a proposed refuge for i
Jews near Buffalo, N. Y. II. Transcripts and summaries of the maiiuscripts embraced in the collec- J
tion, as well as the most important material selected from the note books and scrap books of the late i
Rev. J. J. Lyons. I
Ortli, Samuel P. Our foreigners; a chronicle of Americans in the making. New \
Haven: Yale university press; [etc.] xi, 255 p. plates. (The chronicles of America |
series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXXV) [2397 \
Rossiter, William S. What are Americans? Atlantic, CXXVI (Aug.) 270-280. [
[2398 I
Taylor, Rosser Howard. The free negro in North Carolina. James Sprunt hist, i
PUB., XVII, no. 1, 5-26.
Thompson, Joseph J. The Irish in early Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Jan.)
286-302. [2400
Woodson, Carter G. The relations of negroes and Indians in Massachusetts. Jour.
NEGRO HIST., V (Jan.) 44-57. [2401
Work, Monroe N., comp. Some negro members of reconstruction conventions and
legislatures and of Congress. Jour, negro hist., V (Jan. -Apr.) 63-119, 235-238.
[2402
Printing and Publishing.
Blegen, Theodore C. The early Norwegian press in America. Minn. hist, bul.,
Ill (Nov.) 506-518. [2403
A guide to the files of early Norwegian- American newspapers, with note as to their location. These
constitute source material for the history of the Scandinavian element and its part in the history of the
West.
Folk, Paul J. The beginnings of Irish Catholic journalism in America. Cath. hist.
REV., V (Jan.) 377-381. [2404
FoUett, Frederick. History of the press in western New- York from the beginning to
the middle of the nineteenth century, by Frederick Follett; with a preface by
Wilberforce Eames. N. Y.: Reprinted for C. F. Heartman. xv, 65 p. fold,
facsim. (Heartman's historical series, no. 34) [2405
The frontispiece is a "facsimile reproduction of the earliest newspaper printed in western New York
extant."
Ford, Worthington Chauncey. The Isle of Pines; an essay in bibliography. Boston:
The Club of odd volumes, xi, 116 p. 15 facsims. [2406
Text of the "Isle of Pines," combined parts: p. 51-87.
A bibliographical account of the various editions of the pamphlet entitled " The Isle of Rnes, or a late
Discovery of a fourth Island in Terra AustraUs, Incognita, being a True Relation of certain EngUsh
persons who in the dayes of Queen Elizabeth, making a Voyage to the East Indies, were cast away and
wracked upon the Island," printed in 1668, and usually classed as early Americana. The writer of this
account advances the theory that this classification is erroneous, and that the pamphlet does not relate
to an incident in American history, as has heretofore generally been supposed, but was purely a tale of
adventure written by Henry Neville, an English political writer of the period.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920.
149
Halsey, Francis Whiting. The beginnings of daily journalism in New York city.
N. Y. STATE HIST. ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 1919, 87-99. [2407
Lee, James Melvin. Historia de la prensa periodistica de los Estados Unidos. Arte
TiPOGRAF., XVII (Sept, Dec. 1919) 77-81, 171-175, (Apr. 1920) 303^306; XVIII
[2408
1919.
(Aug.) 11-14.
Cont. from v. XVI,
Morrison, A. J. Presbyterian periodicals of Kichmond, 1815-1860.
Tyler's quar.
HIST. AND GENEAL. MAG.
Plimpton, George Arthur.
LIII, 45-48.
I (Jan.) 174-176.
The first American geography.
Mass. hist. soc. proc.
[2410
A text-book written by Jedidiah Morse and published in 1784 at New Haven, entitled, "Geography
made easy; being a short but comprehensive system of that very useful and agreeable science."
Severance, Frank H. The story of Phinney's western almanack; with notes on other
calendars and weather forcasters of Buffalo. Buffalo hist. soc. pub., XXIV, 343-
358. [2411
A contribution towards a bibliography of the Niagara region.
Gives a sketch of the history of the almanac published in western New York, mainly at Cooperstown
and Buffalo, from 1797 to 1887, originally under the direction of Elihu Phinney and nis sons. It was
called "Phinney's calendar or western almanack."
RELIGIOUS HISTORY,
General.
Buckham, John Wright. The New England theologians. Am. jour, theol., XXIV
(Jan.) 19-29. [2412
The 18th century New England clergy.
Chapman, Edward M. New England theology, old and new. Homiletic rev.,
LXXX (Nov.) 353-357. [2413
Corwin, Charles E. The influence of Luther upon Manhattan Island during its child-
hood days. Presbyterian hist. soc. jour., X (June) 230-236. [2414
Eager, George B. Calvin and Roger Williams in relation to religious liberty. Rev.
AND EXPOSITOR, XVII (July) 341-348. [2416
Matthews, Albert. Early Sunday schools in Boston. Col. soc. Mass. pub., XXI,
259-285. [2416
A summary of the facts known in regard to Sunday schools in Boston before 1819.
Maxson, Charles Hartshorn. The great awakening in the middle colonies. Chicago,
111. : The University of Chicago press, vii, 158 p. [2417
Thesis (ph. d.)— University of Chicago, 1915.
Published also without thesis note.
A study of the religious revival in the middle colonies in 1740 and the period following.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 105-107.
Mead, Nelson P. Growth of religious liberty in New York city. N. Y. state hist.
ASSOC. PROC, XVII, 1919, 141-153. [2418
Mainly concerned with the colonial period.
Robertson, Hugh W. The theology of colonial America. Meth. quar. rev., LXIX
(July) 509-520. [2419
Rothensteiner, John. The Flat-Head and Nez Perce delegation to St. Louis, 1831-
1839. St. Louis Cath. hist, rev., II (Oct.) 183-197. [2420
a delegation of Indians from beyond the Rocky Mountains to obtain missionaries for their people.
Stock, Harry Thomas. A resume of Christian missions among the American Indians.
Am. jour, theol., XXIV (July) 368-385. [2421
Particular Denominations.
[Arranged alphabetically by denominations]
Baptist.
Baptists in the colonies till 1750. Baptist hist. soc. trans., VII, 31-48. [2422
Anonymous.
Rider, Richard Price. Memoirs, life and influence of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Cowgill
Maple, by R. P. Rider; resume of Baptist activities in Missouri during the sixty
years, 1857-1917, of Dr. Maple's influence. The funeral sermon, by H. E. Truex;
appreciations by sympathizing friends; selections from the writings of Dr. and
Mrs. Maple. Jefferson City, Mo. : Pub. for the editors by the Hugh Stephens print.
CO. 187 p. illus., plates, ports. [2423
Catholic.
Ahem, Elizabeth A. A sketch of the Roman Catholic parish in Danvers. Danvers
HIST. soc. COLL., VIII, 71-83. [2424
Barth, Silas. The Franciscans in southern Illinois. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Jan.-
Apr.) 328-338, 447-457; III (July-Oct.) 77-87, 170-175. [2426
150
I
WRITINGS ON AMEEICAN HISTORY, 1920. 151
Corrigan, Owen B. Titular sees of the American hierarchy. Cath. hist, rev., VI
(Oct.) 322-330. [2426
Diary of the journey of the Sisters of St. Joseph to Tucson, Ariz. (1870). St. Louis
Cath. hist, rev., II (Apr.) 101-113. [2427
In April 1870, seven of the Sisters of St. Joseph left the Congregation at Carondolet to join the
missions in Arizona.
Du Bourg, Louis William. Corr^-pondence of Bishop Du Bourg with Propaganda
[1820-1822] St. Louis Oath. hist, rev., II (Jan.-Oct.) 43-52, 130-150, 210-224.
[2428
Correspondence of the Rt. Rev. Du Bourg, bishop of New Orleans, with the Congregation of Propa-
ganda, at Rome.
Epstein, Francis J. The Leopoldine association — the German "propagation of the
faith" society. III. Cath. hist, rev., Ill (July) 87-92. [2429
An association founded in Vienna, Austria, for the propagation of the CathoUc faith in America, prin
cipally among the Indians.
Garraghan, Gilbert Joseph. Catholic beginnings in Kansas City, Missouri; an his-
torical sketch. Chicago, 111.: Loyola university press. 137 p. plates, ports.,
maps, facsims, [2430
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 144-145.
Garraghan, Gilbert Joseph. The mission of central Missouri, 1837-1861. St. Louis
Cath. hist, rev., II (Oct.) 157-182. [2431
Guilday, Peter. The appointment of Father John Carroll as prefect-apostolic of the
church in the new republic (1783-1785). Cath. hist, rev., VI (July) 204-248. [2432
A study of ecclesiastical jurisdiction in America following the separation from England.
Guilday, Peter. Guide to the materials for American church history in the West-
minster diocesan archives (1675-1798). Cath. hist, rev., V (Jan.) 382-401. [2433
Holweck, F. G. The beginnings of the church in Little Rock. Cath. hist, rev.,
VI (July) 156-171. [2434
Holweck, F. G. The language question in the old Cathedral of St. Louis. St. Louis
Cath. hist, rev., II (Jan.) 5-17. [2435
Kelly, John. The mission to Liberia; diary of the Rev. John Kelly. U. S. Cath.
hist, rec, XIV, 120-153. [2436
This mission was undertaken by the American hierarchy in 1840.
McCann, John E. History of Catholicity in Northampton county, Pennsylvania,
from the earliest times to the present, a. d. 1737-1920. Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec,
XXXI (Dec.) 339-348. [2436a
McCormick, Anne O'Hare. St. Agnes church, Cleveland, Ohio. Cleveland: The
Martin print, co. 48 p. [2437
Meehan, Thomas F. A link between East and West; some interesting details con-
cerning several early Illinois clergymen. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Jan.) 339-347.
[2438
Metzger, Charles H. Sebastien Louis Meurin. III. Cath. hist, rev., Ill (Jan.)
241-259. [2439
" The last of the Illinois Jesuit Indian missionaries .'■*
O'Daniel, Victor F. [Letter to the Reverend Peter Guilday] Cath. hist, rev., V
(Jan.) 428-435. [2440
Answers some queries anent the existence of an early ordinance prohibiting the erection of a Catholie
e mnnicinal limits of Cincinnati, and the struggle of the first CathoHcs in the city.
church within the municipal limits of Cincinnati, and the struggle of the first Catholics m the city
'Daniel, Victor F. Fathers Badin and Nerinckx and the Dominicans in Kentucky;
a long misunderstood episode in American church history. Cath. hist, rev., VI
(Apr.) 15-45. [2441
O'Daniel, Victor F., ed. Some letters of Fathers Badin and Nerinckx to Bishop
Carroll [1805-1808] Cath. hist, rev., VI (Apr.) 66-88. [2442
These documents "may be considered in the nature of pieces justicatives to the article [regarding
Fathers Badin and Nerinckxl in the present issue of the Review". See no. 2441.
152 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Our earliest printed church history of the United States. Cath. hist, rev., VI (Oct.)
343-357. [2443
Reprints sections from a rare volume printed in 1822, entitled "The laity's directory to the chm-ch
service, for the year of our Lord MDCCCXXII". I
Parsons, J. Wilfrid. The Catholic church in America in 1819. Cath. hist, rev., V !
(Jan.) 301-310. [2444 |
Phillips, George S. Bishop Duggan and the Chicncro diocese. III. Cath. hist, rev,,
II (Jan.) 365-368, [2445
Reprinted from "Chicago and her churches, by George S. Phillips," 1868.
Phillips, George S. Catholic churches and institutions in Chicago in 1868. III.
Cath, hist, rev,, II (Jan.) 369-370. [2446
Reprinted from "Chicago and her churches, by George S, Phillips," 1868.
Rothensteiner, John. Early missionary efforts among the Indians in the diocese of ]
St, Louis. St, Louis Cath. hist, rev,, II (Apr.) 57-96. [2447 ;
Rothensteiner, John. The northeastern part of the diocese of St. Louis under Bishop i
Rosati. III. Cath. hist, rev., II (Jan.-Apr.) 269-285, 396-416; III (July-Oct.)
61-72, 126-145. [2448
The period covered extends from 1832 to 1839.
Sketch of the life of Mother Cornelia Connelly, foundress of the Sisters of the Holy ]
child Jesus, 1809-1879. Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXI (Mar,) 1-42. [2449
Signed: F. E. T.
A sketch of the work and history of the sisters, Servants of the immaculate heart of
Mary, 1845-1920, By Sister Maria Alma, Villa Maria college, Immaculata, Penn-
sylvania, Am, Cath, hist, soc. rec, XXXI (Dec.) 276-338, [2460
Souvay, Charles L. Du Bourg and the Biblical society. St, Louis Cath, hist.
REV., II (Jan.) 18-25. [2451
An episode of the Rt. Rev. Du Bourg's administration of the diocese of New Orleans, in 1813, in regard
to the request of missionaries of the British and foreign Bible society for permission to distribute French
and Spanish translations of the Bible among the Catholics of the diocese.
Thompson, Joseph J. The double jubilee; a memorable page in history. III. Cath.
HIST. REV,, III (July) 5-42. [2452
The celebrations in Chicago, June 8-10, and in Joliet, June 12, of the 245th anniversary of the estab-
lishment of the Catholic church in the Illinois country,, and of the silver jubilee of Archbishop George
William Mundelein,
Treacy, Gerald C. Father John Bapst, s. J., and the "Ellsworth outrage". U. S.
Cath, hist, rec, XIV, 7-19, [2453
Gives an account of an anti-Catholic outbreak in Ellsworth, Maine, in 1854,
Zwierlein, Frederick J. Know Nothingism in Rochester, New York. U. S. Cath.
HIST. REC, XIV, 20-69. [2454
Concerned with the anti-Catholic phase of Know Nothingism.
Church of the Brethren,
Winger, Otto. History and doctrine of the Church of the Brethren. Elgin, 111.;
Brethren publishing house. 320 p. [2455
Disciples of Christ.
McPherson, Chalmers. Disciples of Christ in Texas; a partial history of Disciples
of Christ in Texas during the past forty-one years, together with personal remem-
brances of both the living and the dead, addresses, forms, etc. Cincinnati, 0.:
Standard publishing co, 319 p, [2456
Church of the New Jerusalem,
Silver, Ednah C. Baltimore, the home of many New-Church beginnings. New-
Church REV., XXVII (Apr.) 206-214. [2457
a chapter from the writer's " Sketches of the New-Church in America", soon to be published by the
Massachusetts New-Church union.
I
WEITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920.
153
Congregational.
Adams, John Quincy, ed. The records of the Middle association of Congregational
churches of the state of New York, 1806-1810. Presbyterian hist. soc. jour.,
X (June-Sept.) 217-229, 258-284. [2468
Cutler, U. Waldo. The first hundred years of the Central church in Worcester, 1820-
1920. Worcester, Mass. : The Church. 70 p. [2469
Friends.
Clarke, Grace Julian. Waj'^ne county and the "inward light". In the Proceedings
of the State history conference under auspices of the Society of Indiana pioneers,
Indianapolis, December 10-11, 1919. Fort Wayne, Ind.: Fort Wayne print, co.
(Indiana historical commission. Bulletin no. 11) p. 94-99. [2460
A study of the history of the Quakers and Quakerism in Indiana.
McGonegal, Esther L. S. Nine Partners boarding school (1796-1863). Friends'
HIST. soc. BUL., X, no. 1 (Nov.) 11-15. [2461
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Astud„
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Gives a brief history of the institution.
Yale college. Sheffield scientific school. Twenty-five year record, Class of ninety-
three, Sheffield scientific school. Comp. for the class bj'- Frederic B. McMullen,
class secretary. New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor co. 371 p. ports.,
plates, facsim. [2678
Biography.
Buckham, John Wright. A group of American idealists. Personalist, I (Apr.)
18-31. [2579
A group of professors of philosophy, namely: Professor G. S. Morris, 1840-1889, of the University
of Michigan; Henry A. P. Torrey, professor of philosophy in the University of Vermont from 1868 to
1902; Professor Charles Edward Garman, 1850-1907, of Amherst college; and Professor Borden Parker
Bowne, 1847-1910, of Boston university.
Harvard. Wright, F. G. John Harvard and South wark cathedral. Landmark,
II (Dec.) 845-847. [2580
A side-chapel of Southwark cathedral in London, has recently been restored by contribution of grad-
uates and undergraduates of Harvard university, in memory of the founder, John Harvard.
Hitchcock. Tuckerman, Frederick. President Edward Hitchcock [1793-1864]
13 p. port., facsim. [2581
Reprinted from the Amherst graduates' quarterly, November 1920.
James. James, William. Familiar letters of William James. Ed. by his son Henry
James. Atlantic, CXXVI (July-Sept.) 1-15, 163-175, 305-316. [2582
Palmer, George Herbert. William James. Harv. grad. mag., XXIX
(Sept.) 29-34. [2583
Johnston. Emerton, Ephraim. Robert Matteson Johnston [1867-1920] Harv.
GRAD. MAG., XXIX (Sept.) 63-66. [2584
Stiles. Bayley, Frank W. Portrait of Ezra Stiles by Nathaniel Smibert. Old-
time New England, XI (Oct.) 55-56. [2585
Painted in 1756.
Yale. Wright, F. G. Elihu Yale. Landmark, II (July) 475-478. [2686
I
FINE ARTS AND LITERATURE.
Fine Arts: General.
Avery, C. Louise. American silver of the xvii & xviii centuries; a study based on
the Clearwater collection. With a preface by R. T. H. Halsey. N. Y. [Metropoli-
tan museum of art?] clix, 216 p. illus., port., facsims. [2587
At head of title: The Metropolitan museum of art.
Brix, Maurice. List of Philadelphia silversmiths and allied artificers from 1682 to
1850. Phila.: Priv. print, vii, 125 p. front. [2588
Cousins, Frank, and Phil M. Riley. The colonial architecture of Philadelphia.
Boston: Little, Brown, and co. xix, 248 p. xcv plates. [2589
Davis, Brinton B. Architecture of the old South. Meth. quar. rev., LXIX (Apr.)
238-243. [2590
Grosvenor, Jewett A. An architectural monograph on The wooden architecture of
the lower Delaware Valley, with text by Jewett A. Grosvenor, prepared for publi-
cation by Russell F. Whitehead. [St. Paul: White pine bureau] 16 p. illus.
(The white pine series of architectural monographs, v. VI, no. 3) [2591
Haddon, Bawson W. An architectural monograph on old Deerfield, Massachusetts;
with text by Rawson W. Haddon. Prepared for publication by Russell F. White-
head. [St. Paul: White pine bureau] 16 p. illus. (The White pine series of
architectural monographs, v. VI, no. 5) [2592
Kelby, William. Notes on American artists. N. Y. hist. soc. bul., Ill (Jan.)
131-135; IV (Apr.-Oct.) 25-28, 58-61, 85-87. [2593
Cont. from v. Ill, no. 3, Oct. 1919.
Extracts from New York newspapers of the period from 1786 to 1795.
Kocher, A. Lawrence. Early architecture of Pennsylvania. Arch, rec, XLVIII
(Dec.) 513-530. [2594
Magonigle, H. Van Buren. An architectural monograph on Essex: a Connecticut
river town, with text by H. Van Buren Magonigle; prepared for publication by
Russell F. Wliitehead. ^ [Saint Paul: White pine bureau]. 16 p. illus. (The
White pine series of architectural monographs, v. VI, no. 6) [2595
Mather, Frank Jewett, jr. The jubilee of the Metropolitan museum. Review, II
(May 15) 510-513. [2596
New York. Metropolitan museum of art. The Metropolitan museum of art; a review
of fifty years' development, printed on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of
the founding of the Museum. N. Y. [Gilliss press] [24] p. [2597
Porter, Frederic Hutchinson. A survey of existing colonial architecture in Maine.
Arch, rev., XI (July-Sept.) 13-15, 45-48, 83-88. [2598
Deals with the architecture of the townships of Kittery and Eliot and the town of York.
Ripley, Hubert George. An architectural monograph on A New England village, with
text by Hubert G. Ripley; prepared for publication by Russell F. Whitehead.
[St. Paul: White pine bureau] 16 p. illus. (The White pine series of architectural
monographs, v. VI, no. 2) [2599
The places and persons mentioned are purely imaginary, and are used simply to represent a typical
New England village.
Schmidt, Anna Seaton. St-Memin and his portraits. Am. mag. art, XI (Oct.)
438-441. [2600
Charles Balthazar Jullen Fevret de Saint-M^min, French artist who came to America in 1797, and
while here made portraits of many notable persons.
Temple, Grace Lincoln. Hunting old-time wall-papers. Am. mag. art, XI (Sept.)
381-390. [2601
Describes a hunt among the old houses of New En<;land for wall papers which are of historic
interest for the part they played in our colonial domestic architecture.
Zogbaum, Rufus Fairchlld. Mural paintings as memorials of American history and
life. Am. mag. art, XI (May) 248-251.
162
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 163
Fine Arts: Biography.
Chapman. Virginia state library. Collection of paintings, drawings, engravings, etc.,
by John Gadsby Chapman and Conrad Wise Chapman in the Virginia state library.
Richmond: Davis Bottom, superintendent public printing. 73-104 p. (Va. state
lib. bul., V. XII, nos. 3, 4, July, Oct. 1919) [2603
Preface signed: H. R. Mcllwaine, state librarian.
Imprint date: 1920.
Hassam. Clark, Eliot. Childe Hassam. Art in America, VIII (June) 172-180.
[2604
Hazlitt. Bolton, Theodore. John Hazlitt — portrait painter [1767-1837] Essex inst.
HIST. COLL., LVI (Oct.) 293-296. [2605
Mills. Hart, W. O. Clark Mills [1815-1883] La. hist, quar., Ill (Oct.) 614-616.
[2606
Robertson. Goddard, Geraldine Winslow (Mrs. J. Warren Goddard). Archibald
Robertson [1765-1834] the founder of the first school of art in America. N. Y.
geneal. and biog. rec, LI (Apr.) 130-137. [2607
Rogers. Eaton, Walter Prichard. Catching up to John Rogers. Am. mag. art, XI
(Sept.) 392-397. [2608
American sculptor, born in Salem in 1829.
Saint-Gaudens. Bell, Hamilton. Un sculpteur am6ricain de descendance frangaise:
Auguste Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907). Gazette des beaux-arts, 5e p6riode, I,
(May) 367-382. [2609
Stuart. Fielding, Mantle. Addenda and corrections to paintings by Gilbert
Stuart, not noted in Mason's Life of Stuart. Pa. mag. hist., XLIV (Jan.) 88-91.
[2610
Wilcox, Marrion. Stuart's helpful infirmity. Internat. stud., LXXI
(Sept.) 1. [2611
Sully. Bolton, Theodore. On a portait of Thomas Sully painted by himself. Art
in America, IX (Dec.) 27-30. [2612
West. Bolton, Theodore. A portait of Benjamin West painted by himself. Art
IN America, VIII (Oct.) 298-301. [2613
• Jones, E. Alfred. The history of a picture. Canad. mag., LVI (Dec.) 106-
112. ■ [2614
Benjamin West's work "The death of Wolfe," presented to the Dominion of Canada by the Duke of
''estminster in appreciation of the noble part taken by t' '"
was exhibited by the artist at the Royal academy in 1771.
Westminster in appreciation of the noble part taken by the Canadians in the great war. The picture
" the ' " ' " ■ '""
Literature; General.
Bradsher, Earl L. The financial rewards of American authors. Sewanee rev.,
XXVIII (Apr.) 186-202. [2615
A consideration of the financial aspects of authorship, beginning with the appearance of Charles
Brockden Brown in the literary field in 1797.
Hornblow, Arthur. The influence of British drama on the American stage. Land-
mark, II (May) 333-336. [2616
A brief historical sketch, beginning with colonial days.
Payne, George Henry. History of journalism in the United States. N. Y. and London:
Appleton. XX, 453 p. [2617
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 107-109; Weekly rev., in (Sept. 15) 232.
Rankin, Thomas Ernest. American writers of the present day, 1890 to 1920. 2d ed.,
rev. and enl. Ann Arbor: G. Wahr. 186 p. [2618
First edition has title: American authorship of the present-day (since 1890), pub. in 1918.
Tappan, Eva March. A short history of England's and America's literature. [Rev.
ed.] Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Houghton Mifflin co. xix, 421 p. illus., ports,, double
map. [2619
164 AMEEICAlNr HISTOEICAL. ASSOCIATION.
True, Bodney Howard. Beainnings of agricultural literature in America. Am. lib.
ASSOC. BUL., XIV (July) 186-194. [2620
A bibliographical survey of our agricultural literary development, beginning with the reports of the
early explorers, in which references are made to food products. The "first considerable native contribu-
tion to constructive agricultural writing" consists of the essays of Jared Eliot, 1748-1761.
Webster, Frank Martindale. Transcendental points of view; a survey of the criticism
of music, art, and letters in "The Dial," 1840-1844. Wash. univ. stud., human-
istic series, VII, no. 2 (Apr.) 187-203. [2621
Williamson, Claude C. H. Writers of three centuries, 1789-1914. London: G.
Richards. 515 p. [2622
Mainly English authors of the 19th century, with leading American and continental authors.
Literature: Regional.
Beers, Henry A. The Connecticut wits, and other essays. New Haven: Yale univ.
press; [etc.] 262 p. [2623
The Connecticut wits: p. 7-29.
Campbell, Mrs. A. A. The renaissance in southern literature. Confed. vet.,
XXVIII (July) 258-259. [2624
The renaissance in southern literature began about 1870.
DeMenil, Alexander Nicolas. A century of Missouri literature. Mo. hist, rev.,
XV (Oct.) 74-125. [2625
Lanza, Clara. Literary New York in the 'eighties. Bookman, LI (Mar.) 11-21.
[2626
Maurice, Arthur B. Literary landmarks of New York. Mentor, VIII, no. 15 (Sept.
15) 1-11. [2627
Snider, Denton J. The St. Louis movement in philosophy, literature, education,
psychology, with chapters of autobiography. St. Louis, Mo.: Sigma pub. co.
608 p. [2628
A history of this movement, which started with the formation of the St. Louis philosophical society
in January 1866.
White, Pliny H. Early poets of Vermont. Vt. hist. see. proc, 95-125.
Wright, Thomas Goddard. Literary culture in early New England, 1620-1730, by
Thomas Goddard Wright . . . ed. by his wife. New Haven: Yale univ. press;
[etc., etc.] 322 p. [2630
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 543-545.
Literature: Biographical and Critical.
Williams, Blanche Colton. Our short story writers. N. Y.: Moffat, Yard and co.
[12], 357 p. (Modern American writers) [2631
Contents. — Alice Brown. James Branch Cabell. Dorothy Canfield. Robert W. Chambers. Irvin
Shrewsbury Cobb. James Brendan Connolly. Richard Harding Davis. Margaret Wade Deland.
Edna Ferber. Mary Wilkins Freeman. Hamlin Garland. William Sidney Porter ("O. Henry").
Joseph Hergesheimer. Fannie Hurst. Jack London. James Brander Matthews. Melville Davis-
son Post. Mary Roberts Rinehart. Booth Tarkington. Edith Wharton.
BoK. Bok, Edward William. The Americanization of Edward Bok; the autobiog-
raphy of a Dutch boy fifty years after. N. Y.: Scribner. xxiii, 461 p. plates,
ports., facsims. [2632
Browne. Maurice, Arthur Bartlett. An historic American humorist. Bookman,
L (Jan.) 433-435. [2633
Artemus Ward (Charles Farrar Browne).
Burroughs. Barrns, Clara. John Burroughs, boy and man [1837-1921] Garden
City, N. Y.: Doubleday, Page and co. ix, 385 p. plates, ports. [2634
Cabell. Gunther, John J. James Branch Cabell: an introduction. Bookman,
LII (Nov.) 200-206. [2635
Walpole, Hugh. The art of James Branch Cabell. Yale rev., IX (July)
684-698. [2636
Clemens. Bradford, Gamaliel. Mark Twain. Atlantic, CXXV (Apr.) 462-473.
(American portraits, 1875-1900, I) [2637
"WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 165
Clemens. Bradford, Gamaliel. Mark Twain. Inter-America, IV (July) 75-85.
[2638
Translation of an article in the Atlantic monthly, April 1920. See no. 2637 above.
Brooks, Van Wyck. Mark Twain's humour. Dial, LXVIII (Mar.) 275-291.
[2639
Brooks, Van Wyck. Mark Twain's satire. Dial, LXVIII (Apr.) 424-443.
[2640
Brooks, Van Wyck. The ordeal of Mark Twain. N. Y.: Dutton. vii,
267 p. [2641
Rev. in: Weekly rev,, III (Aug. 4) 108-109.
Mark Twain under the microscope of the new psychologist. Current opin-
ion, LXVIII (June) 828-830. [2642
A review of the book entitled "The ordeal of Mark Twain, by Van Wyck Brooks." See no. 2641
above.
Matthews, Brander. Mark Twain and the art of writing. Harper's,
CXLI (Oct.) 635-643. [2643
O'Day, E. Clarence. Famous writers who contributed to the Overland
monthly fifty years ago. Overland, LXXV (Apr.-June) 326-328, 407-409, 517-519.
[2644
Contents.— Mark Twain's fii'st draft of The Innocents abroad. Medieval romance Twain wrote for
the Overland in 1869.
Paine, Albert Blgelow. A short life of Mark Twain, N. Y. and London:
Harper. [8], 343 p. illus. (incl. facsims.) plates, ports. [2645
"Abridged from 'Mark Twain— a biography'" (N. Y. and London: Harper. 1912).
Peckham, H. Houston. The literary status of Mark Twain, 1877-1890.
So. Atlan. quar., XIX (Oct.) 332-340. [2646
Crawford. Robertson, Eric S. Marion Crawford in Rome. Chamb. jour., 7th
ser., X (Feb.) 81-84. [2647
Emerson. Beers, Henry A. Emerson's journal. In Ms The Connecticut wits, and
other essays. New Haven: Yale uiiiv. press; [etc.] p. 45-68. [2648
Hill, J. Arthur. Emerson and his philosophy. London: W. Rider and
son [pref. 1919] 116 p. port. [2649
Hudson, Jay William. The religion of Emerson. Sewanee rev., XXVIII
(Apr.) 203-212. . [2660
Fuller. Anthony, Katharine. Margaret Fuller [1810-1850] a psychological biog-
raphy. N. Y.: Harcourt, Brace and Howe, v, 223 p. port. [2661
Margaret Fuller, marchesa d'OssoU.
Hawthorne. Is Hawthorne our greatest writer? Current opinion, LXVIII (Mar.)
391-392. [265S
Matherly, Enid Putnam. Poe and Hawthorne as writers of the short story.
Education, XL (Jan.) 294-306. [2663
Howells. Cooke, Delmar Gross. The humanity of William Dean Howells.
Texas rev., VI (Oct.) 6-25. [2654
• Erskine, John. William Dean Howells. Bookman, LI (June) 385-389.
[2655
Frechette, Annie Howells. William Dean Howells. Canad. bookman,
n. s. II (July) 9-12. [2666
Lappin, Henry A. The passing of W, D. Howells. Cath. world, CXI
(July) 445-453. [2667
Martin, Edward S. W. D. Howells. Harper's, CXLI (July) 265-266.
[2658
Muirhead, James F. W. D. Howells: the American Trollope. Landmark,
II (Dec.) 812-816. [2659
Phelps, William Lyon. An appreciation. No. Am. rev., CCXII (July)
17-20. [2660
166 AMERICAIT HISTOEICAL, ASSOCIATION.
Ho WELLS. Phelps, William Lyon. William Dean Howells. Yale rev., X (Oct.)
99-109. [2661
Quinn, Arthur Hobson. The art of William Dean Howells, Century, C
(Sept.) 675-681. [2662
The safe and sane genius of William Dean Howells. Current opinion,
LXIX (July) 93-96. [2663
Tarkington, Booth. Mr. Howells. Harper's, CXLI (Aug.) 346-350. [2664
William Dean Howells. No. Am. rev., CCXII (July) 1-16.
Irving. Hellman, George S. The Washington Irving collection formed by Isaac
N. Seligman. N. Y. pub. lib. bul., XXIV (May) 275-279. [2666
Describes the collection of manuscripts, books, drawings and engravings relating to Washington
Irving, lent to the New Yorlc public library and at the time of writing on exhibition there.
Ingraham, Charles A. Personal characteristics of Washington Irving.
Americana, XIV (Oct.) 355-368. [2667
Lanier. Bradford, Gamaliel. Portrait of Sidney Lanier. No. Am. rev., CCXI
(June) 805-817. [2668
London. Bowen, Edwin W. Jack London's place in American literature. Re-
formed CH. rev. , 4th ser. , XXIV (July) 306-315. [2669
Connell, Sarah. Stories from the files; Jack London wooed fame through
the Overland monthly. Overland, LXXV (Oct.) 65-71. [2670
Longfellow. Dunn, Esther Cloudman. Longfellow the teacher. No. Am. rev.,
CCXI (Feb.) 259-265. [2671
Toffanin, Giuseppe. Zenella e Longfellow. Riv. d' Italia, XXIII (Apr. 15)
422-429. [2672
Lowell. Thayer, William Roscoe. James Russell Lowell as a teacher. Scrib-
ner's, LXVIII (Oct.) 473-480. [2673
Mabie. Morse, Edwin Wilson. The life and letters of Hamilton W. Mabie [1846-
1916] N. Y.: Dodd, Mead and co. 344 p. plates, ports. [2674
Miller. Bashford, Herbert. Joaquin Miller's poetry. Overland, LXXV (Feb.)
112-115. [2675
Bland, Henry Meade. Joaquin Miller and his books. Overland, LXXV
(Feb.) 93-102. [2676
James, George Wharton. The human side of Joaquin Miller. Overland,
LXXV (Feb.) 123-127. [2677
Thompson, Herbert Cooper. A Sierra poet in the making. Bookman, LI
(July) 553-557. [2678
A sketch of Joaquin Miller.
Wagner, Harr. Personal reminiscence of Joaquin Miller. Overland,
LXXV (Feb.) 118-121. [2679
MuiR. Bade, William Frederic. John Muir in Yosemite. Natural hist., XX
(Mar.) 124-141. [2680
Poe. Barge, Alfred. Edgar Allan Poe, mystic and psychologist. Anglo-French
REV., Ill (May) 344-351. [2681
Matherly, Enid Putnam. Poe and Hawthorne as writers of the short story.
Education, XL (Jan.) 294-306. [2683
Poe not appreciated in his own land; so declares Ibanez, the famous Spanish
author. State service, IV (May) 411-413. [2683
Smith, C. Alphonso. Poe and the Bible. Bib. rev., V (July) 354-365. [2684
Stearns, Theodore Pease. A prohibitionist shakes dice with Poe. Out-
look, LXXVI (Sept. 1) 25-26. [268-5
Recounts an incident of the acquaintanceship of Peter Pindar Pease and Edgar Allan Poe.
Woodberry, George Edward. The Poe centenary. In his The torch, and
other lectures and addresses. N. Y. : Harcourt, Brace and Howe. p. 323-326. [2686
Address before the Bronx society of arts and sciences, N. Y., Jan. 19, 1909, on the centenary of the
birth of Poe.
WRITINGS ON" AMERICAN HISTORY, 19'20. 167
PoE. Yewdale, Merton S. Edgar Allan Poe, pathologically. No. Am. rev..
CCXII (Nov.) 686-697.
Porter. Wood, John Seymour. A new page about 0. Henry. Bookman, L (Jan.)
474-476. [2688
O. Henry (William Sydney Porter).
Riley. Beers, Henry A. The singer of the Old swimmin' hole [James Whitcomb
Riley] In his The Connecticut wits, and other essays. New Haven: Yale univ.
press; [etc.] p. 31-43. [2689
Marsh, Daniel Lash. The faith of the people's poet, James ^Vhitcomb Riley.
Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill co. 254 p. port. [2890
SouTHWORTH. Huddlcson, Sarah M. Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth [1819-1899] and
her cottage. Columbia hist. soc. rec, XXIII, 52-79. [2691
Describes tlie home of Mrs. Southworth at Georgetown, D. C.
Thoreau. Shepard, Odell. The paradox of Thoreau. Scribner's, LXVIII
(Sept.) 335-342. [2692
Watterson. Mitchell, Edward P. A great editor's gallery of portraits; "Marse
Henry's" crowded story. Bookman, LI (Mar.) 48-53. [2693
A sketch of Henry Watterson.
Whitman. Bazalgette, Leon. Walt "Whitman [1819-1892] the man and his work,
by Leon Bazalgette; tr. from the French by Ellen FitzGerald. Garden City, N. Y.:
Doubleday, Page and co. xviii, 355 p. [2694
• Brocklehurst, J. H. Walt Whitman. Manchester quar., XXXIX (Oct.)
318-337. [2695
• Ce, Camille. Le poete-proph^te Walt Whitman (1819-1892). Grande
rev., CI (Feb.) 573-599.
Donoso, Armando. The free spirit of Walt Whitman. Inter-Amertca,
III (Aug.) 340-346. [2697
HoUoway, Emory. Walt Whitman's love affairs. Dial, LXIX (Nov.)
473-483. [2698
Shay, Frank. The bibliography of Walt Whitman. N. Y.: Friedmans'.
46 p. port. [2699
Wilcox. Garrison, Theodosia. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, the woman. Bookman,
L (Jan.) 482-484. . [2700
Music.
Curtis, John. A century of grand opera in Philadelphia. Pa. mag. hist., XLIV
(Apr.) 122-157. [2701
Holmes, Charles Nevers. The oldest organ in the United States. Granite mo.,
LII (July) 293-295. [2702
The oldest church organ in the United States was imported from London about 1711 by Thomas
Brattle of Boston. From 1713 to 1756 it was in use at Eang's Chapel. It is now in service at St. John's
Chapel in Portsmouth, N. H.
Milligan, Harold Vincent. Stephen Collins Foster [1826-1864] a biography of Amer-
ica's folksong composer. N. Y. and Boston: G. Schirmer. viii, 116 p. plates,
ports., facsims. [2703
Musical fund society of Philadelphia. Centenary, Musical fund society of Phila-
delphia, 1820-1920. [Phila.? 1920?] 23 p. illus. (incl. ports., facshns.) [2704
Science.
Harshberger, W. A., and others. Fifty years of scientific development in Kansas.
In Kansas academy of science. Transactions, v. XXIX. Semi-centennial volume
. . . Topeka: Kansas state printing plant, p. 35-61. [2705
Contents.— The Kansas academy of science, by W. A. Harshberger. Botany in Kansas during the
past fifty years, by Lyman C. Wooster. The progress of chemistry in Kansas during the last fifty years,
by E. H. S. Bailey. The early history of medicine, by I. M. McWharf. The early history of pharma-
ceutical and medical chemistry, by L. E. Sayre. The progress of science since the foundation of the
Kansas academy of science, by Samuel W. WilUston.
168 AMERICAN HISTORICAL. ASSOCIATION.
HrdliCka, Ale§. Physical anthropology; its scope and aims; its history and present
status in America. Phila.: Pub. by the Wistar institute of anatomy and biology.
164 p. illus. [2705a
Gives the deflnition, scope and aims of physical anthropology; outlines the work accomplished to
date in these lines in North America; and gives a summary of the present status of the science in North
America.
Leffmann, Henry. A tribute — Samuel Pierpont Langley: pioneer in practical avia-
tion. Smithsonian inst. rep., for 1918, 157-167. [2706
Reprinted from the Journal of the Franklin institute, v. XVIII, no. 1, Jan. 1919.
Merrill, George Perkins, ed. and comp. Contributions to a history of American state
geological and natural historj^ surveys.^ Washington: Gov. print off. xviii, 549 p.
ports. (Smithsonian institution. United States National museum. Bulletin 109)
[2707
Rohdenburg, G. L. Historical notes on the practice of medicine in New York city.
N. Y. MED. JOUR., CXII, 349-353. [2708
Sheard, Charles. Thomas Young, the father of physiological optics [1773-1829]
Am. jour. PHYSIOL, optics, I (Jan.) 9-14. [2709
Smith, Edgar Fahs. Priestley in America, 1794-1804. Phila.: P. Blakiston's sen
and CO. [6], 173 p. [27.10
The writer suggests that "if nothing more, it may be, perhaps, a connecting chapter for any future
history of chemistry in America'!.
BRITISH AMERICA.
General.
Baker, Ray Palmer. A history of English-Canadian literature to the confederation;
its relation to the literature of Great Britain and the United States. Cambridge:
Harvard univ. press; [etc., etc.] xi, 200 p. [2711
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 844; Canad. hist, rev., II (Mar. 1921) 83-85.
Burpee, Lawrence J. A plea for a Canadian national library. Canad. hist, rev.,
I (June) 191-194. [2712
Caldwell, Robert Granville. The settlement of interstate disputes. Am. jour.
INTERNAT. LAW, XIV (Jan.) 38-69. [2713
Reviews the methods and principles involved in the settlement of disputes which have arisen
between the members of the great federations which have sprung from the British Empire of the 17th
century.
Canada: p. 45-48.
Canada. Archives. Report of the Public archives for the year 1918. Arthur G.
Doughty, keeper of the public record. Ottawa: J. de L. Tach6. 559 p.
(George V. Sessional paper no. 29a. A. 1919.) [2714
Appendix a. Reports of the Index, manuscript, and map divisions, b. Ordinances and procla-
mations of the regne miUtaire. c. Proclamations issued by the governor-in-chief, 1764-1791. d. Com-
pletion of the calendar of the Neilson papers.
The Canadian annual review of public affairs. By J. Castell Hopkins. 1919. Nine-
teenth year of issue. Toronto: The Canadian annual review, limited. 906 p.
ports. [2715
Charbonneau, Jean. Des influences frangaisea au Canada. Montreal: Beauchemin.
[1916-1920] 3v. [2716
The first two volumes are concerned for the most part with literature. The third volume is devoted
to the political history of Canada.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (Mar. 1921) 77-79.
Chartier, Emile. Le Canada d'autrefois (1608-1840). Rev. canad.-, n. s. XXV
(Apr.) 255-279. [2717
"Le regime de la tuteUe coloniale."
The first of a series of lectures on French Canada given by the author at the Institut cathoUque, in
Paris .
Chartier, Emile. Le Canada d'hier et d'aujourd'hui (1840-1914). Rev. canad.,
n. 8. XXV (June) 401-426. [2718
"Le regime de la quasi-autonomie."
Second of a series of lectures on French Canada, given by the author at the Institut catholique, in
Paris.
Chartier, Emile. La vitalite frangaise au Canada. Rev. canad., n. s. XXV (Oct.)
589-604. [2719
Coughlin, Richard. St. Lawrence river and the Thousand Islands; history and
legends. Watertown, N. Y.: Santway photo-craft co. 63 p. mounted fold. map.
[2720
Dixon, R. F. Some old books on Canada. Canad. bookman, n. s. II (July) 49-51.
[2721
A description of the collection of Canadiana, published before the year 1860, belonging to Acadia
university, Wolfville, N. S.
Douglas, R. The place-names of Canada. Scottish geog. mag., XXXVI (July 15)
154-157. [2722
Ferrier, W. F. Annotated catalogue of and guide to the publications of the Geological
survey of Canada, 1845-1917, by W. F. Ferrier, assisted by Dorothy J. Ferrier.
• Ottawa: J. de Labroquerie Tache. [4], 544 p. maps. [2723
At head of title: Canada. Dept. of mines . . . Geological survey. William Mclnnes, directing
geologist.
111124°— 23 13 169
170 AMERICAN HISTORICAL. ASSOCIATIOTT.
Fisk, Harvey Edward. The Dominion of Canada; its growth and achievement; its
relation to the British Empire ;_ its form of government; its natural and developed
resources; its home and foreign trade; its national finances; its banking and
currency system; and its railroads and its shipping. N. Y.: Bankers trust co. [8],
174 p. map, tables, diagr. [2724
Franklin, Thomas. Historical geography of Britain and the British Empire. Edin-
burgh: W. and A. K. Johnston; London [etc.] Macmillan. 2 v. maps. [2726
"A selection offsets showing the relation between geographical conditions and historical movements,
and the stages in the gradual development of Britain and her empire."
The second part of v. I extends from the period of maritime discoveries to the end of the 17th century,
and shows how Britain by finally defeating her great rival France and by obtaining supremacy on the
seas, was able to establish her empire. Book II treats of the expansion and consolidation of the Empire
from the 19th century to the present, and contains a chapter (p. 16-30) on the Dominion of Canada.
Gagnon, Phileas. Nos anciennes cours d'appel. Bul. eecherches hist., XXVI
(Nov.-Dec.) 342-350, 364-375. [2726
A study of tribunals of appeal in Canada, beginning with the exercise of this function by the governor
in the earliest French period before the establishment of the Conseil souverain in 1663, down to the
establishment of the Supreme court in 1875.
Garneau, Francois Xavier. Histoire du Canada. Cinquieme edition, revue, annotee,
et publiee avec une introduction et des appendices par son petit-fils, Hector Gar-
neau; preface de M. Gabriel Hanotaux. t. II. Paris: Alcan. xii, 748 p. [2727
Vol. I of the fifth edition was published in 1913 .
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 558-559; Canad. hist, rev., II (Mar. 1921) 79-81.
Garneau, Frangois Xavier. Histoire du Canada. Sixieme edition, revue, annotee et
publiee avec une introduction et des appendices par son petit-fils. Hector Garneau;
preface deM. Gabriel Hanotaux. t. I. Paris: Alcan. Iviii, 608 p. port. [2728
Godfrey, Ernest H. Fifty years of Canadian progress as illustrated by official statis-
tics, 1867 to 1917. Royal statistical soc. jour., LXXXIII (Jan.) 1-77. [2729
Hall, H. Duncan. The British commonwealth of nations; a study of its past and
future development. London: Methuen. xviii, 393 p. chart. [2730
This book is mainly concerned with the problem of international government presented by the rela-
tionships between the Dominions and the United Kingdom.
The old colonial system and the coming of responsible government: p. 14-36. The meaning of respon-
sible government —ideas as to the nature of the colonial relationship, 1840-1900: p. 37-71. The rise of
colonial nationalism and of the colonial idea of alliance: p. 72-93. The imperial conference, 1887-1911,
and the development of dominion nationhood: p. 94-121.
Eev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (June 1921) 192-194.
Hamilton, Louis. German publications relating to Canada, 1914-1920. Canad.
HIST. REV., I (Sept.) 281-282. [2731
Hassard, Albert R. Great Canadian orators. Canad. mag., LIV (Jan. -Apr.) 240-
246, 353-360, 417-422, 522-526; LV (July-Aug.) 247-250, 297-300; LVI (Dec.)
170-172. [2732
Contents. — VI. Edward Blake. VII. Britton Bath Osier. VIII. Sir Joseph Adolphe Chapleau.
IX. Rev. William Morley Pimshon. X. Sir Charles Tupper. XI. Bishop Baldwin. XII. Sir George
Ross.
Cont. from v. LIV, Dec. 1919.
Hughes, Edward A. Britain and Greater Britain in the nineteenth century. Cam-
bridge: The University press, 1919. [8], 295 p. [2733
Canada: p. 180-202.
Hunter, William Howard. The collection of historical coins and medals relating to
American history, the Dominion of Canada and awards to Indian chiefs and British
regal and war medals formed by W. H. Hunter, and described by S. H. Chapman;
and to be sold at auction in his rooms. . . Philadelphia, . . . December 9 and 10,
1920. [Federalsburg, Md.] 92 p. [2734
Jones, E. Alfred. The history of a picture. Canad. mag., LVI (Dec.) 106-112. [2735
Benjamin West's work "The death of Wolfe", presented to the Dominion of Canada by the Duke of
Westminster in appreciation of the noble part taken by the Canadians in the great war.
Le Conte, Rene. L'emigration allemande au Canada. Soc. geog. Quebec bul.,
XIV (Sept.) 224-234. [2735a
Logan, J. D. Teaching Canadian literature in the universities. Canad. bookman,
n. s. II (Dec.) 61-62. [2736
Describes the nature and scope of the work which is being carried on at Acadia university in pro-
moting the study of the literary history of Canada.
WRITINGS ON AMEEICAN HISTORY, 1920. 171
MacMechan, Archibald. Canada as a vassal state. Canad. hist, rev I (Dec )
347-353. [2737
Traces a tendency in Canadian history, which the writer considers a danger "deeply to be dreaded"
It lies in gradual assimilation, in peaceful penetration, and in a spiritual bondage of Canada to the United
States.
McEvoy, Bernard, and A. H. Finlay. History of the 72nd battalion Seaforth High-
landers of Canada. Vancouver: CoAvan, [2738
MacPlierson, Katherine L. Pictures from Canadian history. Montreal: Renouf.
[2739
Merrill, Anne. La tombe du capitaine Vancouver. Soc. geoq. Quebec bul XIV
(Mar.) 84-87. ''[2740
Translation of an article in the United empire, n. s., v. X, Nov. 1919.
Describes the burial place of Captain George Vancouver.
Piatt, Rutherford H., jr. The 250th anniversary of the Hudson's Bay co. World's
WORK, XL (Aug.) 384-392 . [2741
The story of the oldest corporation in America.
Riddell, William Renwick. The constitutions of the United States and Canada; a
comparison. Minn, law rev., IV (Feb.) 165-189. [2742
Riddell, William Renwick. The slave in Canada. Washington, D. C.: The associa-
tion for the study of negro life and history, v, 120 p. [2743
A history of slavery in Canada beginning with the French period.
Reprinted from the Journal of negro history, v. V (July) 261-377.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 402-403.
Rinfret, Fernand. L'effort litteraire du Canada frangais. Royal soc. Canada
PROC, 3d ser., XIII, sec. 1, 101-112. [2744
Ross, Victor. A history of the Canadian bank of commerce, with an account of the
other banks which now form part of its organization, v. I. Toronto: Oxford
univ. press, xviii, 516 p. port., plates. [2745
Contents.— Preface. . . . Early banking in Upper and Lower Canada. The Halifax banking
company. The Merchants bank of Prince Edward Island. The Gore bank. The Bank of British
Columbia. The Eastern Townships bank. Appendix. Index.
The Appendix is largely concerned with the history of the various aspects of Canadian currency.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (Sept. 1921) 290-294.
[schooling, Sir William. The Governor and company of adventurers of England
I trading into Hudson's Bay during two hundred and fifty years, 1670-1920. Lon-
don: The Hudson's Bay company, xvi, 129 p. illus., plates, ports., maps, facsim.
[2746
Half-title: The Hudson's Bay company, 1670-1920, by Sir WilUam Schooling.
Published by the Hudson's Bay company to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the grant of
its charter.
Schuyler, Robert Livingston. The recall of the legions: a phase of the decentraliza-
tion of the British Empire. Am. HIST. REV., XXVI (Oct.) 18-36. [2747
jl A study of military defense in the British colonial svstem, and an outUne of the steps leading up to
the transfer of the burden of mihtary defense to the self-governing colonies.
khortt, Adam. The significance for Canadian history of the work of the Board of his-
I torical publications. Royal soc. Canada proc, 3d ser., XIII, sec. 2, 103-109.
[2748
An outline of the comprehensive programme of the Board of historical publications, recently estab-
lished by the Dominion government.
Jloan, J. M. The Scot in Canada. Landmark, II (July) 441-444. [2749
Imitli, W. G. A study in Canadian immigration. Toronto: Ryerson press. 406 p.
[2760
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 415-416.
Imith, William. The history of the post office in British North America, 1639-1870.
Cambridge [Eng.] The University press, ix, 356 p. ports. [2751
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (June 1921) 201-205.
!lie Times, London. The Times book of Canada. Development since Confedera-
tion; political, agriculture, mining, fisheries, forestry, railways, industries, finance,
education, literature. With map and index. London: The Times, iv, 292 p.
fold. map. [2752
Rev. in: Canad. hist. rev.» I (Dec.) 421-422.
172 AMEEICAN" HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATIOIT.
Toronto. Public library. Books and pamphlets published in Canada, up to tlwj
year eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, copies of which are in the Public refer-
ence library, Toronto, Canada. Supplement no. 1, December 1919. Toronto:
Public library. 8 p. [2753 1
Supplement to the catalogue of early Canadian publications issued by the Toronto pubhc library in
1916.
Viner, Jacob. The self-governing dominions and the British Empire. Pacific
REV., I (Dec.) 235-250. [2754
Reviews briefly the development of the constitutional relationships between Great Britain and the
self-governing dominions, particularly the Dominion of Canada. i
Wallace, W. S. The growth of Canadian national feeling. Canad. hist, rev., li
(June) 136-165. [2755 1
Wells, H. G. The outline of history, being a plain history of life and mankind.
N. Y.: Macmillan. 2 v. illus. (incl. maps). [2756!
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (June 1921) 190-192.
Whence came the common law into Canada?" Canada law jour., LVI (Sept.) 281-
289. [2757
Wrong, George M. Canada and the Imperial war cabinet. Canad. hist, rev., I
(Mar.) 3-25. [2768
Contents.— British protection of Canada [from the days of George III] The growth of national
self-reliance in Canada. Changes in the British cabinet system. The summoning of the Imperial war
cabinet. The future.
Discovery to 1763.
Aries, Henri d*. La tragedie acadienne. Canada franq., IV (Mar.) 184-210. [2759
Atherton, William Henry. A Canadian educationalist of the 17th century. [Mon-
treal: The author] 16 p. [2760
Reprinted from the Montreal Gazette, April 17, 1920.
An account of the work of Marguerite Bourgeois, the founder of the Congregation of Notre Dame,
in Montreal, in 1657.
Also pub. in the Catholic educational review, v. XVIII, Nov. 1920, p. 524-533.
Audet, Frangois-Joseph. Jean-Daniel Dumas, le heros de la Monongahela; esquisse
biographique. Montreal: G. Ducharme. 134 p. ports., plans, facsim. [2761
Appendice. Memoire sur les limites du Canada (par M. Dumas) 5 avril 1761: p. [120]-134.
Officer in the French colonial forces in America during the French and Indian war. He partici-
pated m the battle of the Monongahela and in the defense of Quebec.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (June 1921) 199-200.
Berkley, Henry J. An episode of North American history; the conquest of Canada.-
by the Kirke brothers, 1627-1632. Jour. Am. hist., XIV, no. 3, 133-161. [2762!'
Account of the first EngUsh conquest of Canada, by the expedition under Gervase Kirke and hisi
sons, during the war between France and England, 1627-1632.
Biggar, H. P. The death of Poutrincourt. Canad. hist, rev., I (June) 195-201. }
[2763
Gives a detailed accotmt of the death of the Baron de Poutrincourt at the re-taking of Mery-sur-
Seine, in 1615.
Bourlamaque, Frangois Charles, chevalier de. Un memoire de M. de Bourlamaque
sur le Canada. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (July-Aug.) 193-208, 225-239.
[2764 1 ■
A copy of a hitherto unpubUshed document in the pro\incial archives of Quebec. It consists of a i^
report addressed to the French minister of marine in 1762, by Bourlamaque, one of Montcalm's officers. I j
Canada. Military governments. Ordinances and proclamations of the regne mili-jj
taire. In Canada. Archives. Report of the Public archives for the year 1918.;'
Ottawa: J. de L. Tache. Appendix B. xvii, 208 p. [2765' ^[
The documents here given comprise all the ordinances, proclamations and other public notices, which i
can be found, relating to the military government of Canada dunng the period between the capitulation I ^
of Quebec on Sept. 18, 1759, and the estabhshment of civil government on Aug. 10, 1764.
Printed in French and English. j •-
Caron, Ivanhoe. La famille Gaultier de Varennes. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI;
(Jan., Mar.) 14-21, 78-89. [2766;
1920. 173
Carr€, EzecMel. Echantillon de ia Doctrine que les Jesuites enseignent aus Sauvages
du Nouveau Monde, porles couvertir tiree de leurs propres Manuscrits troiives cea
Jours passes en Albanie, Proche de Nieuyorke. Examinee par Ezechiel Carre,
. . . Imprim^ h Baston [!] par Samuel Green. 1690. [Boston: Massachusetts
historical society, 1920] facsim.: 10 p. 1., 11 numb, leaves [Americana series;
photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 8] [2767
Book-plate of Isaiah Thomas reproduced on 2d prelim, leaf. "Preface du Docte et Reverend
Ministre Monsieur Cotton Mather pour servir d'aprobation au present fecrit." 5th-7th preUm. leaf.
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the original in the American antiquarian society, Jan-
uary 1920.
Duchesneau, Jacques, sieur de la Doiissini^re. Lettre de I'intendant Ducliesneau
au marquis de Seignelay, fils de Colbert (13 novembre 1681). Bul. recherches
HIST., XXVI (Sept.) 275-286. [2768
Taken from the provincial archives of Quebec.
Fauteux, Aegidius. Les Rouer de Villeray. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Oct.)
296-299. [2769
Gosselin, Amedee. Fondeurs de cloches au Canada. Bul. recherches hist.,
[I XXVI (Nov.) 334-336. [2770
Concerned with the French period.
Gosselin, David. Le chanoine Jean-Bap tiste Gosselin. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXVI (July) 212-219. [2771
Hamilton, Louis. Ursprungder franzosischen Bevolkerung Canadas; ein Beitrag zur
Siedelungsgeschichte Nord-Amerikas. Berlin: Neufeld und Henius. 88 p. [2772
Presents an estimate of percentages of the original settlers of New France from the various provinces
of France.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 392-394.
Harris, R. W. The cross-bearers of the Saguenay. Toronto: Dent, 202 p. illus.,
maps. [2773
Researches in the early history of Christian missions among the Montagnais, or the Algonquin tribes
of what is now the province of Quebec.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., 11 (Mar. 1921) 79.
Kenney, James F., ed. A British secret service report on Canada, 1711. Canad.
hist, rev., I (Mar.) 48-54. [2774
Report regarding the fortifications of Quebec and the condition of Canada made by Major John Liv-
ingstone, who, following the expedition against Fort Royal in 1710, was sent from there to Quebec with
despatches to the French governor at that place.
La Ronciere, Charles de. Un grand navigateur parisien (d'apres des documents
inedits). Rev. hebdomadaire, XXIXe ann. (Nov. 20, 27) 335-349, 458-468. [2775
A sketch of Louis- Antoine de Bougainville, who was aide-de-camp to Montcalm in the defense of
Canada, founder of a colony at the Isles Malouines (Falkland Islands), 1764-1767, and later served in
the French navy in the American revolution.
MacMechan, Archibald. The log of a Halifax privateer. Halifax: H. H. Marshall.
21 p. (Nova Scotia chap-books, no. 6) [2776
A revision, with additions, of a paper which originally appeared in Acadieasis, v. 11, July 1902.
Describes an old manuscript in the archives of Halifax, containing the log of the schooner " Lawrence,"
of Halifax, on a voyage from Bermuda to Halifax, in 1757.
Massicotte, E.-Z. L'ancetre de Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXVI (Feb.) 53-55. [2777
Prints a copy of the marriage contract of Frangois Cottineau dit Champlaurie and Magdelaine Mil-
lots, Aug. 24, 1676,
lilassicotte, E.-Z. Claude de Beaulieu, capitaine general des gardes des fermes du
roi en Canada. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Apr.) 127-128. [2778
Copies of two documents of the year 1699.
Iffassicotte, E.-Z. Un document inedit du baron de Lahontan [1684] Bul. re-
cherches HIST., XXVI (Jan.) 11-13. [2779
Massicotte, E.-Z. Dollard des Ormeaux et ses compagnons; notes^et documents.
Avec une introduction par Aegidius Fauteux. Montreal: Le Comite du monument
Dollard des Ormeaux. 93 p. [2780
Reprint, with an appendix, of two articles published in the Canadian antiquarian and nunaismatic
journal. 3d ser., v. IX, April 1912, and v, X, January 1913.
Brief biographical sketches, with copies of original documents, and other notes, regarding the asso-
ciates of Dollard des Ormeaux on his expedition against the Iroquois Indians above Montreal in 1660.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 394-395.
174 AMERICAN" HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION^.
Massicotte, E.-Z. L ' engagement d'un chirurgien pourrouestaudix-huiti^mesi^cle.
BuL. RECHERCHES HIST., XXVI (May) 157-159. [2781 1
Prints a copy of an engagement contract of Charles Doullon Desmarest, to serve as surgeon at Pointc
Claire, in 1753.
Massicotte, E.-Z. Pierre-Jacques Druillon, seigneur de Mac^. Bul. recherches
HIST., XXVI (Apr.) 125-126. [2782 I
An officer in the French army in Canada during the French and Indian war. j
Massicotte, E.-Z. Le pretendu testament de I'abbe Jorian. Bul. recherches t
HIST., XXVI (Apr.) 118-120. [2783 I
Prints a copy of the "testament" or deposition of the Abh6 Andr6 Jorian, cur^ of Laprairie, in i
1731, protesting against his displacement. i
Massicotte, E.-Z. Un testament du docteur Sarrazin. Bul. recherches hist., i
XXVI (Oct.) 317-320. [2784 |
Michel Sarrazin, a prominent physician in Canada under the French regime. \
Memoire sur la partie occidentale du Canada, depuis Michillimackinac jusqu'au fleuve \
du Mississippi. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Jan.-Feb.) 25-32, 56-64. [2785 '
A manuscript of imknown origin, supposed to have been written about 1763. It describes the routes '
from Mackinac to the Mississippi via the Fox river and Wisconsin, and by way of Chicago and the Illi- [
nois river. ;
Pliare, G. Alexander. The early Jesuit missions in Canada. Cath. world, CXI
(June) 343-350. [2786
Potier, Pierre. Manuscripts. In Ontario. Bureau of archives. Fifteenth report
of the Bureau of archives for the Province of Ontario . . . 1918-1919. Toronto:
Printed and published by Clarkson W. James, xiii-xix, 1-782 p. [2787 j
The valuable manuscripts here given in facsimile, date from 1743 to 1744 and were written at Lorette
by the Rev. Pierre Potier, whose name is inseparably associated with the mission to the Huron Indians
in the Sandwich and Detroit district. |
Ms. no. 1. Elementa grammaticae Huronicae. Ms. no. 2. Radices Huronicae. Ms. no. 3. Extraits i
de L'evangele. Ms. no. 4. Account book of the Huron mission at Detroit and Sandwich (1740-1751) \
by Frs. Richardie and Pierre Potier. Translation and notes by Richard R. Elliott. Appendix i. i
Huron glosses. Appendix n. Grammar of the Huron language, by a missionary of the village of Huron [
Indians at Lorette, translated from the Latin, by Mr. John WilMe. i
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (Sept. 1921) 299-305.
Biclimond, Herbert William. The influence of sea-power on the struggle with France
in North America and India. Nation, rev., LXXV (May) 397^11. [2788
Richmond, Herbert William. The navy in the war of 1739-48. Cambridge: The
University press. 3 v. ports., plate, maps. (Cambridge naval and military
series) [2788a
The war in the West Indies and North America, 1744-1745; capture of Louisbourg: v. II, p. 190-233.
Cape Breton and the Western squadron, 1746: v. Ill, p. 1-19. Cape Breton, I'Orient and the Western
squadron (2): v. in, p. 20-50.
Rousseau, Victor. Wolfe's lost Highlanders. Chamb. jour., 7th ser., X (Nov.)
692-694. [2789
Traces the later history of the Highland regiment which participated in the battle of the Plains of
Abraham, in September 1759.
Roy, Pierre-Georges. A-t-on calomnie M. de la Jonqui^re? Bul. recherches hist.,
XXVI (Oct.) 289-295. [2790
Jacques Pierre de Taffanel, marquis de la Jonquiere, governor-general of New France, d. 1753.
Roy, Pierre-Georges. Archives de la Province de Quebec. Lettres de noblesse,
genealogies, erections de comtes et baronnies insinuees par le Conseil souverain
de la Nouvelle-France. Beauceville: L' "Eclaireur," limitee. 2 v. [2791
Roy, Pierre-Georges. Ce que le gouverneur de Callieres pensait de nos officiers mili-
taires en 1701. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Nov.) 321-332. [2792
In October 1701, the governor of New France, M. de Callieres, sent to the minister of war a report
on the officers of the forces in Canada, from which the items here given have been extracted.
Roy, Pierre-Georges. Les deux capitaines de Saint-Martin. Bul. recherches
HIST., XXVI (Dec.) 353-358. [2793
Identifies two captains Saint-Martin in the detachment of marine serving in Canada during the
French regime, the first, Joseph-Alexandre de I'Estringuan de Saint-Martin, 1660-1723, and the second,
whose Christian name is not known, served in the war of 1754-1760.
Roy, Pierre-Georges. Le docteur Lajus etait-il d'origine canadienne? Bul. re-
cherches HIST., XXVI (June) 186-187. [2794
Francois Lajus, who came to Quebec from Acadia immediately after the fall of Louisbourg, in 1758.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 175
Eoy, Pierre-Georges. Edmond de Su5ve, seigneur en partie de Sainte-Anne de la
Perade. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Aug.) 248-250. [2795
A lieutenant in the Carignan reginaent who came to New France in 1665.
Eoy, Pierre-Georges. La famille Rouer de Villeray. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXVI (Feb .-May) 65-77, 97-117, 129-145, 161-175. [2796
16re generation: Louis Rouer de Villeray. 2e g^ndration: Augustin Rouer de la Cordinniere et de
Villeray.
Eoy, Pierre-Georges. Les families de nos gouverneurs frangais. Bul. recherches
hist., XXVI (Sept.) 257-273. [2797
Regarding the governors of New France who brought their families to America.
Roy, Pierre-Georges. XJn hydrographe du roi k Quebec: Jean-Bap tiste-Louis Fran-
quelin. Royal soc. Canada proc, 3d ser., XIII, sec. 1, 47-59. [2798
Includes a list of the twenty maps or charts which are known to have been made by him.
Roy, Pierre-Georges. Jean-Bap tiste Couillard de Lespinay. Bul. recherches
HIST., XXVI (Jan.) 3-10. [2799
Roy, Pierre-Georges. Louis Rouer de Villeray, premier conseiller au Conseil souve-
rain de la Nouvelle-France . Royal soc . Canada proc, 3d ser ., XIII, sec . 1, 13-45 .
[2800
Roy, Pierre-Georges. Les officiers d'^tat-major des gouvernements de Quebec,
Montreal et Trois-Rivi^res, sous le regime fran?ais; notes biographiques . Rev.
CANAD., n. s. XXV (Jan., Mar .-Apr.) 47-59, 212-219, 280-294. [2801
Cont. from v. XXIV, 1919.
Roy, Regis. Les du Plessis. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (May) 150-151. [2802
Roy, R6gis. Le due d'Anville. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Aug.) 255. [2803
Regarding the identity of the due d'Anville, who commanded the expedition sent by the French
government to recapture Louisbourg in 1746.
Roy, Regis. Jacques Cartier, etait-il noble? Royal soc Canada proc, 3d ser.,
XIII, seel, 61-67. [2804
Roy, Regis. Migeon de Bransat. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Oct.) 313-316.
[2805
Jean-Baptiste Migeon, sieur de Bransat.
Roy, Regis. Les secretaires du roi au Canada. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI
(June) 184-185. [2806
Account of the members of the college of royal secretaries who were at different times in New France.
A Spanish account of New France, 1608 . Canad . hist . rev ., I (Sept .) 283-289 . [2807
Copies, with translations, of two documents from the Archive general de Indias, Seville. They
consist of reports of information regarding New France obtained from returning sea captains at Spanish
ports, and throw light on the relations existing between the French and other Euroi)ean ships in North
American waters at that time.
I. Letter from the Council of war to Martin de Aroztegui, harbour-master at San Sebastian, October
22, 1608. II. Letter from Martin de Aroztegui to the Council of war, November 1, 1608.
Suite, Benjamin. Aulac la Pluie, 1731. Soc geog. Quebec bul., XIV (Jan.) 16-20.
[2808
A brief chapter in the history of the western fur trade during the French regime.
Suite, Benjamin. Au lac Winnipeg, 1734. Soc geog. Quebec bul., XIV (May)
140-142. [2809
A chapter in the history of western exploration.
Suite, Benjamin. Au Manitoba, 1738-1843. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIV (Sept.)
213-215. [2809a
Notes on the explorations of La V6rendrye in the Northwest during these years.
Suite, Benjamin. The captains of militia. Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 241-245.
[2810
Describes the militia system organized by Frontenac in New France.
Suite, Benjamin, Melanges historiques; Etudes eparses et inedites de Benjamin
Suite. Compilees, annotees par Gerard Malchelosse. Volume V. Montreal:
G. Ducharme, libraire-editeur. 126 p. [2811
Imprint on cover: 1920. Imprint on title-page: 1919.
Contents. — Les termes Americain et Indien. Les deux Duplessis. M. Le Gauffre et son testament,
le premier eveque du Canada. Le mouUn banal [regulations in force during the French regime regard-
ing the use of grain mills by the people] La semaine sainte en 1646; la Pere Jerome Lalemaiit. Verdun
(in Quebec] Monnaie de carte et valeur de Targent. Un sermon du cygne de Cambrai [Frangois-Armand
F6nelon] Galifet. L'exode de 1760-63. Bear river [in Acadia] Father Marquette.
Rev. in: Canad. hist. rev. I (June) 205.
176 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Suite, Benjamin. Nos origines. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Oct.) 304-306.
[2812 !
A list of marriages in New France, 1638-1656, with designation of the province of France from which
the persons came.
Toronto. Ontario Provincial museum. Thirty-second annual archseological report,
1920. By R. B . Orr. Being part of Appendix to the report of the Minister of edu-
cation, Ontario. Printed by order of the Legislative assembly of Ontario. Toronto:
Printed and published by Clarkson W. James. 102 p. illus., plates. [2813
Contents.— . . . Primitive beliefs and superstitions of the Hurons and Algonquins. Snowshoes.
Etienne Brule, the man who broke the trail to Georgian Bay, by W. R. Harris. Contareia or Kontarea
or Contarea and St. Jean Baptiste mission, by J. Hugh Hammond. . . . Ojibwa myths and tales, by
G. E. Laidlaw. New accessions to Museum.
Tremaudan, A. H. de. Who was the Chevalier de la Verendrye? Can ad. hist, rev.,
I (Sept.) 246-254. [2814
Presents evidence to show that of the four sons of La V6rendrye, it was the third, Frangois, who was
known as "le ChevaUer."
TJzureau, Frangois. Bapt§me d'un Montagnais a la cathedrale d'Angers, le 27 avril
1621. Canada fran^., IV (June) 390-393. [2815
Account of the baptism of an American Indian brought to France by the Recollet priest Jean Dolbeau
when he returned from New France in 1620.
1763-1867.
Canada. General staff. Historical section. A history of the organization, develop-
ment and services of the military and naval forces in Canada from the peace of Paris
in 1763 to the present time. v. II. Ottawa [The Historical section of the General
staff] viii, 271 p. [2816
Contents.— The war of the American revolution: The Province of Quebec under the administration
of Governor Sir Guy Carleton, 1775-1778.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (June 1920) 210-212.
Canada. Governor-in-cliief. Proclamations issued by the governor-in-chief from
the establishment of civil goverimient on August 10,1764, until the partition of the
province of Quebec into the province of Upper and Lower Canada, on December 26,
1791. In Canada. Archives. Report of the Public archives for the year 1918.
Ottawa: J. de L. Tach6. Appendix C. 71 p. [2817
Completion of the calendar of the Neilson papers, begun in the report for 1913. In
Canada. Archives. Report of the Public archives for the year 1918. Ottawa:
J.deL. Tache. Appendix D. 87 p. [2818
Calendar of the pubUc correspondence of John Neilson, Canadian journalist, who was elected to the
provincial assembly of Quebec, in 1818, and to the parliament of Canada in 1840, and became speaker of
the legislative council in 1844. The correspondence here calendared extends from 1824 to 1847.
Doughty, A. G., ed. Notes on the Quebec conference, 1864. Canad. hist, rev., I
(Mar.) 26-47. [2819
A document containing an account of the proceedings of the Conference on the confederation of the
British North American provinces, by Hon. A. A. Macdonald, one of the delegates from Prince Edward
Island.
Fauteux, Aegidius. Jocelyn Waller. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Oct.) 307-
310. [2820
A journalist who came to Canada from England in 1820. He supported the French Canadian cause.
Groulx, Lionel. Lendemains de conquete; cours d'histoire du Canada a I'Universit^
de Montreal, 1919-1920. Montreal: Bibliotheque de T Action frangaise. 235 p.
[2821
Consistsof five chapters devoted to the "Situation of the vanquished"; "Policy of the victor"; "Tri-
bunals of the military occupation"; "The religious question"; and "After six years of conqdest".
A study of the economic, political, and religious condition of the French in Canada immediately after
the conquest.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 397-402.
Howay, F. W. The overland journey of the argonauts of 1862. Royal soc. Canada
PROC, 3d ser., XIII, sec. 2, 37-55. [2822
Describes the journey of the party of emigrants who left Queenston on April 23rd, 1862, to secure
homes in British Columbia. The account is based on the diaries of two brothers, Robert B. McMicldng,
and Thomas R. McMicking.
Landon, Fred. Canadian opinion of southern secession, 1860-61. Canad. hist.
REV., I (Sept.) 246-254. [2823
WRITINGS OIsT AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 177
Lecompte, iSdouard. Les Jesuites au Canada au xixe siecle. 1. 1 (1842-1872). Mon-
treal: Imprimerie du Messager. 334 p. [2824
Concerned with the liistory of the Jesuits in Canada after their return in 1842.
Lenhart, John M. The church of Canada after the British conquest (1760-1775).
Am. Cath. hist. soc. rec, XXI (June) 162-173. [2825
The Catholic church in Canada during the early years of British rule.
Lord Durham. Canada law jour., LVI (July) 245-249. [2826
Concerned with his political mission to Canada in 1838.
McDonald, Herbert S. Memoir of Colonel Joel Stone, a United empire loyalist, and
the founder of Gananoque. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVIII, 59-90. [2827
Massicotte, E.-Z. L'invasion chant^e. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (Aug.)
241-242. [2828
A French-Canadian chanson dealing with the American invasion in 1775.
Massicotte, E.-Z. Leblanc de Marconnay. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI (June)
177-179. [2829
Notes regarding the Sieur Hyacinthe Leblanc de Marconnay, a French journalist who lived in Canada
between 1834 and 1845.
Riddell, William Renwick. A contemporary account of the Navy Island episode,
1837. Royal soc. Canada proc, 3d ser., XIII, sec. 2, 57-76. [2830
Consists mainly of an extract, with annotations, from George Coventry's Concise history of the late
rebellion in Upper Canada, 1837. Describes the destruction of the "Caroline."
Riddell, William Renwick. Extra-territorial criminal jurisdiction in British Canada.
Canad. law times, XL (June) 491-502. [2831
An account of the proceedings in regard to two cases of murder in 1787-88, both of which had taken
place outside the bounds of the old province of Quebec, as defined by the Quebec act.
Riddell, William Renwick. The first Canadian war-time prohibition measure.
Canad. hist, rev., I (June) 187-190. [2832
An act of the provincial parliament of Upper Canada, which was passed in 1813 and expired in 1815.
Riddell, William Renwick. A trial for high treason in 1838. Ont. hist. soc. pap.,
XVIII, 50-58. [2833
The trial of suspected rebels after the rebellion of 1837.
Skelton, Oscar Douglas. The life and times of Sir Alexander Tilloch Gait [1817-
1893] Toronto: Oxford univ. press. [8], 586 p. plates, ports., maps, facsim.
[2834
A biography of one who was foremost in securing Confederation and in political affairs during the
formative period of Canadian national history under the Union. He was also active in-the early railroad
development of Canada.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 815-817; Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 325-328.
Smith, William. The strugs;le over the laws of Canada, 1763-1783. Canad. hist.
REV., I (June) 166-186. ^ [2835
The writer's researches have led him to a conclusion in regard to the struggle between Sir Guy Carleton
and Chief Justice Livius over the interpretation of the policy of the Quebec act, which is quite in opposi-
tion to the traditional version of this afl'air.
Spencer, P. L. Ship and shanty in the early fifties. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVIII,
25-31. [2836
Personal reminiscences of experiences in the Canadian West in the early fifties.
Suite, Benjamin. Pierre Ducalvet. Royal soc. Canada proc, 3d ser., XIII,
sec. 1, 1-11. [2837
A French Canadian supporter of the American Revolutionary cause.
Vaillancourt, iEmile. Une maitrise d'art en Canada (1800-1823). Avec une preface
par E.-Z. Massicotte. Montreal: G. Ducharme. 115 p. plates. [2838
An account of a group of architects and sculptors engaged in the planning and decorating of the
churches in the Province of Quebec, from the school originating in the atelier of Louis- Amable Quevellon,
established at St. Vincent de Paul, in I'isle Jesus.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (Mar. 1921) 82-83.
War of 1812.
Brock, Isaac. Brock's last district general orders. Women's Canad. hist. soc.
Toronto trans., XVIII, 5-46. [2839
District general orders of Maj.-Gen. Sir Isaac Brock from June 27tli, 1812-Oct. 16th, 1812, Niagara
district.
178 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Brock, Isaac. General Brock's last instructions to officers commanding forts. Wo-
men's Canad. hist. soc. Toronto trans., XVIII, 46-48. [2840
Instructions issued shortly before the attack on Queenston, in 1812.
Wood, William, ed. Select British documents of the Canadian war of 1812. In 3 v.
V. I. Toronto: The Champlain society, xvi, 678 p. ports., maps, facsims.
(Champlain soc. pub., XIII) [2841
The Introduction (p. 1-132) consists of a narrative of events and general survey of the war on the
Canadian frontier, divided into chapters corresponding to the groups of documents. The documents
in this first volume are arranged in two large groups as follows.— I. Preparation, 1801-1812. II. Brock.
1812.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Apr. 1922) 588-589; Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 408-411,
1867-1920.
Colquhoun, A. H. TT., ed. An unpublished state paper, 1868. Canad. hist. rev.
I (Mar.) 54-60. [2842
The first official paper to be published in connection with the mission of the Canadian minister of
finaece, John Rose, to Washington in 1869, for the purpose of opening negotiations toward an agreement
for commercial reciprocity between Canada and the United States. It consists of a despatch signed by
John Rose, Sept. 3, 1868.
De Celles, Alfred Duclos. Laurier et son temps. Montreal: Beauchemin. ix,
228 p. port. [2843
a political biography.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 328.
Longley, James Wilberforce. Reminiscences political and otherwise. Canad. mag.,
LV (Oct.) 443-450; LVI (Nov.-Dec.) 61-67, 147-153. [2844
Deals largely with political affairs in the Maritime provinces, from about 1871 to 1896.
Macnaughton, S. My Canadian memories. London: Chapman and Hall. 270 p.
[2845
Describes a visit to Canada before the war.
Morris, Keith. The story of the Canadian Pacific railway. London: William
Stevens. 128 p. [2846
Skelton, Oscar Douglas. life and letters of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. Century, XCIX
(Jan.-Apr.) 409-126, 558-572, 702-714, 853-864; C (June) 275-282. [2847
Contents.— VI. Liberalism and the church ["account of the furious political warfare waged between
sections of Catholic Quebec, which culminated in the attainment of Sir Wilfred Laurier to leadership of
the Liberal party"] VII. The Liberal leadership. VIII. Railways and politics [the planning,
financing, and development of the Canadian Pacific railway] IX. Laurier in office. X. Laurier and
his contemporaries.
The Royal bank of Canada. History of the Royal bank of Canada, 1869-1919. Mon-
treal: The Royal bank of Canada. [2848
Vaughan, Walter. The life and work of Sir William Van Home [1843-1915] N. Y.:
The Century co. xiii, 388 p. plates, ports. [2849
Much of this volume is based on material gathered by Miss Katherine Hughes, cf. Pref .
Builder of the Canadian Pacific railroad.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 843-844; Canad. hist, rev., II (Mar. 1921) 85-86.
European War.
Canada in the great world war; an authentic account of the military history of Canada
from the earliest days to the close of the war of the nations, by various authorities.
V. I-V. Toronto: United publishers of Canada, 1918-1920. 5 v. ports., plates, maps.
[2850
V. IV-V, 1920.
Contents.— v. IV: The turn of the tide. v. V: The triumph of the allies.
V. IV, rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 330-331. v. V, rev. in: Canad. hist, rev,, I (Dec.) 419-421.
Cruikshank, E. A. History of the great war, 1914-1918. In The Canada year book,
1919. Ottawa: Thomas Mulvet, printer to the King. p. 1-65. [2851
At head of title: Canada. Dominion bureau of statistics.
Duthie, William Smith, and Charles Lyons Foster, eds. Letters from the front; being
a record of the part played by officers of the bank in the Great war, 1914-1919. v. I.
[Toronto: Canadian bank of commerce] clix, 344 p.
A memorial volume published by the Canadian bank of commerce.
WHITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1^20. 179
Gunn, J. N., and E. E. Button. Historical records of No. 8 Canadian field ambulance:
Canada, England, France, Belgium, 1915-1919. Toronto: Ryerson press, xiii,
169 p. illus. [2853
The history of a Canadian medical unit during the war.
Kay, Hugh R., George Magee, and F. A. MacLennan. Battery action: The story of
the 43rd Battery, C. F. A. With sketches by James Frise. Toronto: Warwick
bros. and Rutter. 305 p. [2864
Montgomery, Sir Archibald. The story of the fourth army in the battles of the hundrea
days, August 8th to November 11th, 1918. With a foreword by General Lord Raw-
linson. London: Hodder and Stoughton. xxiii, 370p. illus., maps. [2855
Contains an account of the operations of the Canadian corps during August 1918.
Sheldon- Williams, Inglis, and F. L. Ralf . The Canadian front in France and Flanders .
London: A. and C. Black, xiv, 208 p. illus. [2856
Steele, Harwood. The Canadians in France, 1915-1918. London: Unwin [N. Y.:
Button] 364 p. [2857
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 328-330.
Willson, Beckles. Ypres; theholy ground of British arms. London: B.T. Batsford.
xiii, 83 p. illus. [2858
"A guide-book which contains a succinct and accurate account of the Canadian fighting near Ypres
during the war." c/. Canadian hist, rev., II (Mar. 1921) 96.
Regional History.
Labrador.
Cabot, William Brooks. Labrador. Boston: Small, Maynard and cc xiii, 354 p.
plates, ports. [2859
The larger part of the material in this book was issued in the author's "Northern Labrador," and is
here given in revised and amplified form. c/. Pref.
New Brunswick.
Albert, Thomas. Histoire du Madawaska d'apres les recherches historiques de
Patrick Therriault et les notes manuscrites de Prudent L. Mercure. Quebec:
Imprimerie franciscaine missionaire. xxiii, 448 p. [2859a
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (Mar. 1921) 81-82.
Raymond, W. O. A radical and a loyalist; a biographical sketch of Elias Hardy,
barrister-at-law at Saint John, N. B., 1784-1799. Royal soc. Canada proc, 3d
ser., XIII, sec. 2, 91-101. [2860
Rouillard, Eugene. A travers le Nouveau-Brunswick; quelques vocables geo-
graphiques. Soc. geog. Quebec bul., XIV (Nov.) 275-292. [2861
Newfoundland.
Birkenhead, LorcZ. The story of Newfoundland . New and enl. ed . London: Horace
Marshall. 192 p. maps. [2862
Nova Scotia.
Clark, J. Murray. Why the "lawes of Virginia." Va. law reg., n. s. VI (June)
81-100. [2862a
Concerning the reasons which moved the Nova Scotia people to adopt the "lawes of Virginia" as a
basis for their government.
Dixon, R.F. The blue laws of Nova Scotia; some curious old statutes of the assembly
of Nova Scotia . Canad . mag ., LIV (Jan .) 267-270 . [2863
Dubois, Emile. Chez nos frferes les Acadiens; notes d'histoire et impressions de
voyage. Montreal: Bibliotheque de L' Action frangaise. 176 p. [2864
180 AMERICAN- HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION".
Eaton, Artllur Wentvirorth Hamilton. Chapters in the history of Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Americana, XIV (Jan.) 129-142. [2865 !
Contents.— XV. The Cunard steamship line, ocean terminals, the world war.
Cont. from v. XIII, 1919.
Edwards, Joseph Plimsoll. The public records of Nova Scotia; their history and I
present condition. Halifax, N. S.: King's printer. 20 p. [2866 I
Pub. by the Nova Scotia Dept. of public works and mines. i
Froidevaux, Henri. Origine du mot "Acadie." Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII,
267-268. [2867 I
Gildas, N. Acadiana; Monseigneur M.-F. Richard. Can ad. franc., Ill (Jan.) !
353-367. [2868 I
Fourth article in a series. Cont. from v. II, 1919. [
McCulloch, William. Life of Thomas McCulloch, d. d. Ed. and pub. by Isabella '|
Walker McCulloch and Jean Wallace McCulloch. Truro, Nova Scotia. 218 p. 1
[2869
A biography of one who was engaged in the struggle for Uberty of education in the province of Nova |
Scotia during the first half of the 19th century. i
Pubhshed in connection with the centennial of Dalhousie university and the Presbyterian college, 1
Halifax. ;
Rev. in: Am. hist . rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 598-599; Canad. hist, rev., II (Sept. 1921) 29^295. I
Ross, Effiie May. A master of the rolls in Nova Scotia. Canad. bookman, n. s. II I
(July) 52-54. [2870 !
A sketch of Samuel George William Archibald, 1777-1846. i
Slielton, Thomas W. WTiy "the lawes of Virginia." Central law jour., XCI (Oct. j
8) 262-263. [2871 i
Discusses an article by the Hon. J. Murray Clark, of Toronto, printed in the Virginia law register. I
June 1920, concerning the reasons which moved the Nova Scotia people to adopt the "lawes of Virginia'' i
as a basis for their government, instead of those of some other of the colonies. [
Wood, Ruth Kedzie. Nova Scotia. Mentor, VIII, no. 8 (June 1) 1-11. [2872
Province of Quebec,
Auclair, Elie J. Un ^ducateur d'il y a cent ans . Rev . canad ., n . s . XXV (May) 321-
345. [2873
"M. le cur6, Charles-Joseph Ducharme, fondateur du s^minaire de Sainte Th^rfese."
Biron, Dolor. Jubile d' argent et d' or de Mgr Paul Larocque. Montreal: Imprimerie
du Messager. 280 p. [2874
Account of the celebration of the jubilee of the bishop of Sherbrooke, who has been in the priesthood
for 50 years, and in the episcopate for 25 years.
Chapais, Thomas. Le comity des griefs de 1828. Canada fran^., Ill (Jan.) 325-338;
IV (Feb.) 5-18. [2876
study of the committees on grievances formed in Quebec and Montreal in 1828.
Chapais, Thomas. Les quatre-vingt-douze resolutions. Canada pranjj., V (Dec.)
220-239. [2876
An account of the political disturbances in Quebec in 1832-1833 incident to the struggle between the
executive power and the legislative assembly of Lower Canada.
Desrosiers, Adelard. Notes historiques sur Lanoraie. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXVI (Nov.) 337-341. [2877
Grou, Armand. Les origines de la paroisse de Saint-Laurent dans Tile de Montreal.
Rev. canad., n. s. XXV (Dec.) 721-737. [2878
L'h6pital general des Sceurs de la charite (Soeurs Grises) depuis sa fondation jusqu' h,
nos jours. Tome premier (1692-1821). Montreal [1920?] iii, 664 p [2879
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 311.
Lecompte, Edouard. Nos voyageurs. Quebec: Garneau. 212 p. [2880
History of the "Association catholique des voyageurs de commerce."
Leduc, P^re. Beauharnois. Ottawa: Imprimerie d' Ottawa. 340 p. illus. [2881
Commemorates the centenary of the founding of the parish of Beauharnois.
Levasseur, N. Honorable Ph.-Aug. Choquette, ancien senateur, juge de la Cour
des sessions de la paix, Quebec. Quebec [The author] 16 p. [2882
WRITINGS ON AMEBICAN HISTORY, 1920. 181
Lindsay, Lionel. La mission des pretres Savoyards au Canada. Canada franc., IV
(May- June;) 225-234, 321-335. [2883
Regarding the attempt made by Governor General Haldimand to bring out to Canada, in 1781, Roman
Catholic priests from Savoy to fill up the ranks of the French Canadian clergy.
Marault, Olivier. Notre-Dame de Montreal. Rev. tmmestrielle canad., VI
(Sept.) 240-252. [2884
Massicotte, E.-Z. Comment Liidger Duvernay acquit la "Minerve" en 1827. Bul.
RECHERCHES HIST., XXVI (Jan.) 22-24. [2885
Record of the sale of the French newspaper, the "Minerve," to Ludger Duvernay by A. N. Morin,
Jan. 18, 1827.
Massicotte, E.-Z. Les Francs-Freres, soci6t6 politique secrete de Montreal. Bul.
RECHERCHES HIST., XXVI (July) 210-211. [2886
The society was founded in 1856.
Massicotte, E.-Z. La plantation du mai dans le bon vieux temps. Bul. recherches
HIST., XXVI (May) 154-156. [2887
Prints a note from the archives regarding an old French-Canadian custom.
Massicotte, E.-Z. Le theatre k Montreal en 1816. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI
(Aug.) 256. [2888
Massicotte, E.-Z. Les tribunaux de police de Montreal. Bul. recherches hist.,
XXVI (June) 180-183. [2889
Notes regarding the history of the poUce administration in Montreal.
Pelland, Leo. Notre droit civil. Canada franc, V (Sept.-Oct.) 5-22, 73-80. [2890
Historical account of the civil law of the Province of Quebec.
Perrault, Antonio. Les lois fran^aises au Canada. France-Amerique, n. s. Xle
ann. (June) 197-201. [2891
Becensements des 6coks de Montreal en 1828. Bul. recherches hist., XXVI
(Nov.) 351. [2892
Suite, Benjamin. Les forges Saint-Maurice. Annotees et publiees par Gerard Mal-
cbelosse. Montreal: G. Ducharme. 216 p. illus., plates, plans. (Melanges his-
toriques, v. VI) [2893
Concerned with the iron industry of Quebec.
Rev. In: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 310.
Survey er, Edouard-Fabre. Un ecole de droit k Montreal avant le code civil. Rev.
trimestrielle canad., VI (June) 140-150. [2894
An account of the first law school established in Lower Canada, in 1851.
Vincent, I. O. The right track: compulsory education in the Province of Quebec.
With an introduction by J. A. Dale. Toronto: J. M. Dent and sons, 223 p. [2895-6
"An interesting contribution to the history of education in Canada." Rev. in: Canad. liist. rev.,
II (Mar. 1921) 88.
Province of Ontario.
Biggar, E. B. Hydro-electric development in Ontario; a history of water-power
administration under the Hydro-electric power commission of Ontario. Toronto:
The Biggar press. 202 p. [2897
Butler, Walter. Walter Butler's journal of an expedition along the north shore of Lake
Ontario, 1779. Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 381-391. [2898
Ed. by James F. Kenney.
The writer of this journal was a captain of Butler's rangers, the loyaUst corps which was so active in
the frontier struggle during the Revolution.
" The journal here pubUshed has interest because it is one of the few descriptions of the Canadian shore
of Lake Ontario in the era just preceding the beginning of settlement in Upper Canada. "
Cadot, J. C. Bruce county and work among the Indians. Ont. hist. soc. pap.,
XVIII, 21-24. [2899
The writer is a Jesuit missionary working among the Indians of Bruce county, Ont.
Clark, J. Murray. The municipal loan fund in Upper Canada. Ont. hist. soc. pap.,
XVIII, 44^9. [2900
An experiment tn public finance in Ontario in 1852.
Coyne, James H. David Kamsay and Long Point in legend and history. Royal soc.
Canada proc, 8d ser., XIII, sec. 2, 111-126. [2901
Crichton, Bobeit. Impressions of Owen Sound in 1851. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVIII,
10-11. [2901a
182 AMERICAN HISTOEICAL ASSOCIATION.
Denison, George T. Recollections of a police magistrate. With an introduction by
A. H. U. Colquhoun. Toronto: Musson bk. co. 263 p. port. [2902
Describes his forty-three years' experience as Police magistrate of Toronto.
Pub. serially in the Canadian magazine, LIV, 1919-1920.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 416-418.
Eames, Frank. Pioneer schools of Upper Canada. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVIII,
91-103. [2903
Gordon, R. K. John Gait. Toronto: University of Toronto library [published by
the librarian] Oxford university press, Canadian branch. 121 p. plate, port.
(University of Toronto studies. Philological series, no. 5) [2904
Contains several chapters dealing with Gait's connection with Canada and the Canada company.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 324-325.
GriiRn, Justus A. A pioneer family — the ancestry and descendants of Richard Griffin,
of Smith ville, Ont. Wentworth hist. soc. pap., IX, 22-55. [2905
Hammill, J. D. Early history of Meaford and its district. Ont. hist. soc. pap
XVIII, 42-43. [2906
Hartman, C. W. Early history of the Beaver Valley. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVIII,
37-41. [2907
Herrington, W. S. Some notes on the minutes of the town meetings of the township
of Sidney. Royal soc. Canada proc, 3d ser., XIII, sec. 2, 77-90. [2908
Abstracts from a volume containing the records of the town meetings of Sidney, from 1790 to 1849,
inclusive.
Kennedy, W. P. M. The "Complete emigrant." Canad. mag., LV (July) 225-230.
[2909
Gives an outline of the contents of a rare pamphlet entitled "A catechism of information for intending
emigrants of all classes to Upper Canada," by Frederick Widder, commissioner of the Canada land
company , dated July 20, 1848. The pamphlet throws valuable contemporary light on the social, educa-
tional and economic condition in Upper Canada.
Kernighan, R. K. The Dundas and Waterloo road. Waterloo hist. soc. rep.,
VIII, 111-114. [2910
Kerr, James E. Early days in Gait. Waterloo hist. soc. rep., VIII, 115-122.
[2911
Kilboum, J. M. Reminiscences of the first settlers of Owen Sound. Ont. hist. soc.
PAP., XVIII, 7-9. [2912
Kirkconnell, Watson. Fort Henry, 1812-1914. Queen's quar., XXVIII (July) 78-
88. [2913
Fort Henry, at Kingston, built during the War of 1812.
McDonald, Herbert S. Memoir of Colonel Joel Stone, a United Empire loyalist and
the founder of Gananoque. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVIII, 59-90. [2913a
McKenzie, N. M. W. J. Half-breed rebellion of 1885. Thunder Bay hist. soc. rep.,
XI, 25-30. [2914
The Riel rebellion.
McKeracher, D. W. Extracts from Rev. D. W. McKeracher's diary of 1873. By
Belle Dobie. Thunder Bay hist. soc. rep., XI, 13-18. [2915
The writer of the diary was a Presbyterian minister who officiated at Port Arthur and Fort William
in the early '70's.
McLauchlan, James. Reminiscences of Owen Sound and its district. Ont. hist.
soc. PAP., XVIII, 12-13. [2915a
Mills, Stanley. The Gage family. Wentworth hist. soc. pap., IX, 15-21. [2916
Mills, Stanley. Genealogical record of the Mills family. Wentworth hist. soc.
PAP., IX, 9-14. [2917
Notes on Niagara, 1759-1860. Niagara, Ont. [Niagara historical society] 73 p.
(Niagara hist. soc. pub. [no. 32]) [2918
Ontario. Bureau of archives. Fifteenth report of the Bureau of archives for the
Province of Ontario. By Alexander Eraser, provincial archivist. Toronto:
Printed and published by Clarkson W. James, xix, 782 p. plates. [2919
Contents.— Letters of transmission. Prefatory note. Introduction. Manuscripts, by Rev. Fr.
Pierre Potier. See no. 2787.
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., II (Sept. 1921) 299-305.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 183
Pierce, Lome A. The German loyalist in Upper Canada. Canad. mag., LV (Aug:.)
290-296. [2920
Deals with the German element among the U. E. loyalist settlers In Upi)er Canada.
Eeville, F. Douglas. History of the county of Brant. Published under the auspices
of the Brant historical society. Brantford: Hurley print, co. 2 v. plates, ports.,
facsims. [2921
Eiddell, William Renwick. A criminal circuit in Upper Canada a century aj^o.
Canad. law times, XL (Sept.) 711-727. [2922
Reviews the cases which came before the Eastern circuit of Upper Canada in 1820, presided over
by Chief Justice Powell.
Riddell, William Renwick. Criminal law in Upper Canada a century ago. Am.
INST, criminal law JOUR., X (Feb.) 516-532. [2923
Riddell, William Renwick. The first and futile attempt to create a King's counsel
in Upper Canada. Canad. law times, XL (Feb.) 92-100. [2924
The story of the nomination of Christopher A. Haggerman as the first King's counsel in Upper Canada,
in 1815.
Riddell, William Renwick. The "green goods game" in 1815. Canad. law times,
XL (Mar.) 184-188. . [2926
Tells of a confidence swindle in Upper Canada in 1815.
Riddell, William Renwick. How the King's bench came to Toronto. Canad. law
times, XL (Apr.) 280-291. [2926
An account of the opposition of Chief Justice Elmsley to the removal o Ithe Court of King's bench
from Newark to York (Toronto) in 1797.
Riddell, William Renwick. Mr. Justice Thorpe: the leader of the first opposition in
Upper Canada. Canad. law times, XL (Nov.) 907-924. [2927
Thomas Thorpe, appointed justice of the Court of King's bench of Upper Canada In 1805, who became
the leader of the "opposition''^ in that province.
Riddell, William Renwick. Old province tales, Upper Canada. Toronto: Glasgow,
Brook and co. v, 280 p. [2928
Historical and bibhographical notes at end of each chapter.
Partial contents.— The captive loyaUsts. The fir^t attorney-general [John Whito]. The Canadian
"pirate" [Jeremiah Powell) DueUing. Brock's aide-de-camp [J olm Macdonnell] The Earl of Selkirk.
The "patriot" generals. The bad luck of Esther Phelps. The banished Briton [Robert Fleming
Gourlay] The early life of one Canadian pioneer [Edward George O'Brien].
Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 406-408.
Riddell, William Renwick. Sad tale of an Indian wife. Canad. law times, XL
(Dec.) 983-992. , [2929
Account of the seizure by the Crown of lands belonging to one Epaphrus Lord Phelps, of the district
of Niagara, accused of high treason against King George III., by joining the American invader. The
lands in question had been granted him in 1804 by the Mohawk chief, Joseph Brant, to provide for his
wife who was a Mohawk woman.
Riddell, William Renwick. The slave in Upper Canada. Canad. mag., LIV (Mar.)
377-381. [2930
Riddell, William Renwick. The solicitor general tried for murder. Canad. law
times, XL (Aug.) 633-644. [2931
Relates to the indictment for murder brought against Henry John Boulton, the solicitor general of
Upper Canada, in 1817, in consequence of his participation in the duel between John Ridout and Samuel
Peters Jarvis.
Riddell, William Renwick. A trial for high treason in 1838. Ont. hist. soc. pap.,
XVIII, 50-58. [2931a
The trial of seven citizens of Eramosa, Ontario, in April, 1838, accused of high treason in connection
with Mackenzie's rebellion in 1837.
Riddell, William Renwick. When the courts of Queen's bench and Chancery strove
for supremacy. Canad. law times, XL (Oct.) 802-808. [2932
Describes an incident in the legal history of Ontario in 1844.
Riddell, William Renwick. When the King's bench broke the law. Canad. law
times, XL (July) 549-559. [2933
Refers to the illegal act of the Court of King's bench of Upper Canada, in 1812-1813, in admitting six
lawyers to the bar.
Robin, Eugenie. The founding of Fort William mission and the Jesuit missionaries.
TdUNDBR Bay hist. soc. rep., X, 13-18. [2934
The mission was founded in 1848.
184 AMERICAN HISTORICAL. ASSOCIATION.
Robinson, J. Othmar. Ontario's farmer government. National municipal rev.,
IX (Oct.) 636-642. [2935
A brief account of the history of the Farmers' movement in Ontario.
Rutherford, James H. Early navigation on the Georgian Bay. Ont. hist. soc. pap.,
XVIII, 14-20. [2936
Shortt, Adam. Random recollections of Queen's. Queen's quae., XXVII (Apr.)
352-363; XXVIII (Oct.) 131-137. [2937
Reminiscences of Queen's university, Kingston, about the year 1880.
Shortt, Adam, ed. The memorial of J. M. Cawdell, 1818. Canad. hist, rev., I
(Sept.) 289-301. [2938
Copy of a memorial of James Martin Cawdell, to Sir Peregrine Maitland, lieutenant-governor of Upper
Canada, Dec. 3, 1818.
The memorial is autobiographical in character, but affo^-ds some glimpses of colonial life and historic
incidents.
Spencer, P. L. Ship and shanty in the early fifties. Ont. hist. soc. pap., XVIII,
25-31. 2939
The writer describes his journey from England to Canada in 1853, and early days at Owen Sound.
Sqiialr, John. John Seath and the school system of Ontario. Toronto: Printed for
the author by the University of Toronto press. 124 p. [2940
"In the main, a condensed account of changes, incidents, and persons connected with education in
Ontario since the year 1862." Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (June) 223-224.
Weaver, Emily P. Upper Canada college. Canad. mag., LIV (Mar.) 407-416. [2941-3
Situated at York, Ont.
Western Provinces and Territories.
Alcock, Frederick J. Past and present trade routes to the Canadian Northwest.
Geog. rev., X (Aug.) 57-83. [2943
Concerned with the development of the methods of transportation since the time of the early fur
trade.
Chicanot, E. L. The passing of the scarlet riders. Unit, emp., n. s. XI (Aug.) 415-
418. [2944
A sketch of the Royal North- West mounted police.
Long, Morden H. Knights errant of the wilderness; tales of the explorers of the
great North- West. Toronto: Macmillan co. 223 p. illus., maps. [2945
Contents. — Henry Hudson. Radisson and GrosseiUiers. Henry Kelsey. La Verendrye and his
sons. Anthony Hendry. Samuel Hearne. Sir Alexander Mackenzie.
Mac Beth, R. G. Famous Canadian forts. Canad. mag., LV (Sept.) 391-398. [2946
Description of some of the old fur-trading forts in the Canadian west, among them Fort WiUiam,
Fort Garry, Fort Cumberland, Fort Carlton, Fort Pitt, and Fort Vancouver.
Sands, Harold. Cossacks and Canada. Canad. mag., LV (May) 55-58. [2947
An account of Russian exploration in Alaska, their fur trade along the coast, and relations with the
Hudson's Bay company traders.
Skinner, Constance L. Adventurers of Oregon; a chronicle of the fur trade. New
Haven: Yale university press; [etc.] x, 289 p. plates, ports., map. (The chroni-
cles of America series, Allen Johnson, editor ... v. XXII) [2948
Contents.— The river of the west. Lewis and Clark. The reign of the trapper. The Tonquin.
Astor's overlanders. Astoria under the Nor 'westers. The king of old Oregon fJohn McLoughlin].
The fall of the fur kingdom.
The story of the early explorations and fur trade in the Oregon country. Although devoted primarily
to American enterprises, the activities of the British fur trading companies, the North "West company
and the Hudson's Bay company, have been included in the narrative.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 117-118; Canad. hist, rev., I (Sept.) 318-319.
Manitoba.
Martin, Chester. The first "new province" of the dominion. Canad. hist, rev.,
I (Dec.) 354-378. [2949
The story of the "purchase" of the Hudson's Bay territories in 1869, and the creation of the province
of Manitoba in 1870.
Martin, Chester. "The natural resources question"; the historical basis of provincial
claims. Winnipeg: The King's printer for the Province of Manitoba. 148 p. [2950
"The proposition sought to be established is that the Province of Manitoba should have final owner-
ship of 'natural resources' within its boundaries." Rev. in: Canad. hist, rev., I (Dec.) 413-il5.
185
O'Connor, R. F. A great churchman, Monsignor Tache, first archbishop of Saint
Boniface. Am. Cath. quar. rev., XLV (Jan.) 134-171. [2961
Alexander-Antpnin Tache, 1823-1894.
Alberta.
Breton, A. C. The Stoney Indians. Man, XX (May) 65-67. [2962
A branch of the Sioux Indians dwelling on a reservation near Morley, about halfway between Cal-
gary and Banff.
British Columbia.
McKenna, J. A. J. Indian title in British Columbia. Canad. mag., LIV (Apr.)
471-474. [2963
Concerned with the legal aspects of Indian land rights in British Columbia.
111124°— 23 14
LATIN AMERICA.
General.
Alcazar, Cayetano. Historia del correo en America, (notas y documentos para su
estudio). Prologo de D. Jose Ortega Munilla. Madrid: Rivadeneyra. 346 p.
coat of arms. (Biblioteca de historia hispano-americana) [2954
Mainly confined to the postal service during the Spanish regime. Pages 119-347 consist of documents
from the Archivo hist(5rico nacional, Madrid, and other sources, and include copies of the laws of the
Indies regarding the postal service.
Altamira, S-afael. La intervenci6n de Dn. Juan de Solorzano en la Recopilacion de
Indias. Rev. ciencias jur. y soc, III, no. 9. [2955
Andara, J. L. The Bolivar doctrine. Inter-America, IV (Oct.) 40-46. [2956
"This doctrine of Bolivar's consisted in the union, the solidarity, of all the republics of Spanish
origin against European absorption and against interference by the United States.'"'
Beltran y RSzpide, S,icardo. La Espana americana. Madrid: Impr. del Patronato
de huerfanos de Intendencia e intervencion militares. 15 p. [2957
Also published in the Revista de geografia colonial y mercantil, XVII (Jan.) 5-19.
Contreras, Francisco. Lea ^crivains contemporains de I'Amerique eapagnole. Paris:
La Renaissance du livre. 188 p. (Bibliotheque intern ationale de critique) [2958
Cowper, Mary O. The education of women in Latin America. So. Atlan. quar.,
XIX (Oct.) 330-359. [2969
Enock, C. Reginald. Spanish America, its romance, reality and future. N. Y.:
Scribner. 2 v. 50 plates, port., map. [2960
Garcia Carraffa, Alberto, and Arturo Garcia Carraffa. Enciclopedia herdldica y genea-
logica hispano-americano. [Madrid: Impr. de A. Marzo, 1919-20] 3 v. illus.,
col. coats of arms. [2961
Contents.— t. I. Ciencia her.41dica o del blas(5n . . . 1919. t. II. Diccionario de los t(5rminos del
blason, m6todos de blasonar, Indice de lemas heraldicos . . . 1920. t. III. Diccionario hcraldico y
genealogico de appellidos cspaiioles y americanos.
Goldberg, Isaac. Studies in Spanish- American literature. N. Y.: Brentano. 377 p.
[2962
Consists of six essays. The first is concerned with the " modernist renovation" in Hispanic America,
taking the year 1888 as the starting point of the modernist movement. The remaining five essays
consist of studies of Ruben Dario, Jose Enrique Rodo, Jos6 Santos Chocano, Jose Maria Egurenand
Rufino Blanco- Fombona.
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev.. Ill (May) 199-201.
Jones, C. K. Hispanic American bibliographies. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill
(Aug.-Nov.) 414-442, 603-633. [2963
In this list are included bibliographies, collective biographies, histories of literature, and some general
and miscellaneous works found of frequent use for reference purposes.
Jones, C. K. Hispanic American publications in European centers. Hispanic Am,
HIST. REV., Ill (May) 234-235. [2964
Keniston, Hayward.. List of works for the study of Hispanic- American history.
N. Y.: Hispanic society of America, xviii, 451 p. (Hispanic notes and mono-
graphs; essays, studies, and brief biographies issued by the Hispanic society of
America, V) [2965
Koebel, W. H. The inner meaning of Spanish- American revolutions. New world,
II (Feb.) 219-226. [2966
Latane, John Holladay. The United States and Latin America. Garden City,
N. Y.: Doubleday, Page and co. 346 p. map. [2967
" Based on a smaller volume issued by the Johns Hopkins press in 1900 under the title ' The diplo-
matic relations of the United States and Spanish America.'"— Pre f.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Jan. 1921) 351-352; Am. jour, internat. law, XV (Apr. 1921) 323-325;
Hisp. Am. hist, rev., Ill (Nov.) 571-574.
186
WRITINGS OK AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 187
Latorre, German. Intervencion tutelar de Espaiia en los problemas de limites de
Hispano- America. Centro estud. Am. Sevilla bol., afio VII, num. 38, 1-9.
[2968
Contents. — II. Indeterminacidn de fronteras geograficas. III. Las fronteras hist6ricas y naturales
de los estados de Hispano-Am^rica (Mexico). Agrupacion ideal de 6stos en futuras confederaciones.
Lockey, Joseph Byrne. Pan- Americanism: its beginnings. N. Y.: Macmillan.
PO], 503 p. [2969
Thesis (ph. d.)— Columbia university, 1920.
Published also without thesis note.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 559-561; Hispanic Am. hist, rev., IV (Nov. 1921) 754-755.
Martin Caballero, F. El "Segundo congreso de historia y geografla hispano-ameri-
canas" y un "Congreso cultural hispano-americano." Centro estud. Am. Sevilla
BOL., alio VII, num. 38, 10-15. [2970
The second congress of Spanish American history and geography was held at Madrid, in May 1921.
Montero, Juan. Guia historica y descriptiva del Archive general de Simancas.
Madrid: Revista de archives. 245 p. [2971
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVII (Jan. 1922) 359.
Pereyra, Carlos. La obra de Espana en America. Madrid: Biblioteca nueva [pref.
1920] 292 p. [2972
Pierson, William Whatley, jr. Alberdi's views on the Monroe doctrine. Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., Ill (Aug.) 362-374. [2973
Robertson, James Alexander. The Oliveira Lima collection of Hispanoamericana.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (Feb.) 78-83. [2974
Torres Lanzas, Pedro. Catdlogo de legajos del Archive general de Indias. Centro
estud. Am. Sevilla bol., aiio VII, num. 32 y 33, 40-72; num. 34 y 35, 40-72;
num. 38 y 39, 16-56. [2976
Cont. from the volume for 1919. Also published separately in 1919.
TJrquieta, Felipe. Breve reseila hi8t6rica de la miisica americana. Estudio, ano
VIII, num. 92 (Aug.) 188-192. [2976
Mainly concerned with the music of Spanish America.
TJrrutia, Francisco Jose. La evolucion del principio de arbitraje en America. La
Sociedad de naciones. Madrid : Editorial- America. 298 p. (Biblioteca Ayacu-
cho . . . [XLVII]) [2977
Vinas, Carmelo. La libertad de los indios y la esclavitud de los negros problemas
historicos que suscitan. Ciudad de dios, CXXII (Aug. 20) 273-287. [2978
Yanes, Francisco Javier. The contribution of Spanish America to civilization.
. George Washington univ. bul., XVIII, No. 7 (Feb.) 69-83. [3979
[Aboriginal period. See America in general— Aboriginal America: Mexico, etc.]
Discovery and Conquest (1492-1550).
[See also America in general — Discovery and exploration]
[Cortes, Hernando] De Contreyen vanden Eylanden ende Lantdouwen: gheuonde
ende Ghecon questeert by den Capiteyn vande alder Doo luchtichsten Aldermog-
hensten ende Onuerwinlijcsten Kaerle Gheco en Roomsch Keysere. [Antwerp,
1523. Boston, 1920] facsim.: 59 leaves. [Americana series; photostat reproduc-
tions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 28] [2979a
"This is not a translation of the 'Cartas de relacion/ but an account made out of the first two ' Cartas,'
probably after a Spanish origmal yet to be found." Harrisse Bibl. amer. vetus., p. 86
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the origmal m the Bibhotheque nationale, October, 1920.
Dark, Bicliard. The quest of the Indies. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. xii, 241 p.
illus. (maps), plates, ports. [2980
Palma, Ricardo. The kiiights of the cloak; chronicle of a civil war. Inter-America,
III (Feb.) 135-143. [2981
Translation of an extract from the Tradiciones peruanas, by "Ricardo Palma (Barcelona, Spam, 1893).
Deals with the civil war that followed the execution of Diego de Almagro by Francisco Pi^arro, and
the conspiracy of the followers of Diego de Almagro the younger and their assassination of Francisco
Pizarro.
188 AMERICAlSr HISTOEICAL ASSOCTATIO:^'.
Proyinciae sive || regiones in India \\ occidentali novi || ter repertae in I| vltima na- D
vigatio- II ne: || [n. p., 1520. Boston, 1920] facsim.: 27 leaves. [Americana series;
photostat reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 20] [2982
At head of second leaf: Reverendissimo Domino fiHeroqs suo obsemadissimo D. R. Episcopo Ostien:
I Cardinali sancti Georgij vS.R.E Camerario, Fer- || dinandus Flores || eius a Fimbria CapellanusS. P.D.|
Contains an account of the conquest of Cuba by Diej^o Velasquez, from a Spanish relation as yet
unknown, cf. Catalogue of the John Carter Brown library. 1919. v. I.
One of 10 photostat copies from the original in the John Carter Brown library, June 1920.
Colonial Period (1550-1810).
[See also under separate countries of Latin America]
Astrain, Antonio. Historia de la Compania de Jesus en la asistencia de Espana.
t. V. Vitelleschi, Carafa, Piccolomini, 1615-1652. Madrid: Administraci6n de
Razon y Fe, 1916. xi, 734 p. [2983
Libro segundo: Provincias de ultramar (p. 301-734). Contents.— La provincia de M^jico desde 1615
hasta 1652. Misiones septentrionale^ de la provincia de M^jico desde 1615 hasta 1652. Controversia con
Palafox. La provincia del Peru de 1615 a 1652. La viceprovincia de Quito de 1615 a 1652. La provincia
del Nuevo Reino de Granada de 1615 a 1652. San Pedro Claver. Provincia del Paraguay— fundacion
delas reducciones. Condicion social de las misiones del Paraguay. Irrupciones de los Paulistas. Perse-
cuciones de D . Bernardino de Cardenas, 1641-1651 . El P . Valdivia y la guerra defensiva. La Compania
de Jesus en Chile desde 1615 hasta 1652. La Compania de Jesus en Filipinas de 1615 a 1652.
Astrain, Antonio. Historia de la Compania de Jesus en la asistencia de Espana.
t. VI. Nickel, Oliva, Noyelle, Gonzalez, 1652-1705. Madrid: Imp. "Razon y Fe"!
[2984
Becker, Jer6nimo. Diario de la primera partida de la demarcacion de limites entre
Espaiia y Portugal en America, precedido de un estudio sobre las cuestiones de
limites entre Espaiia y Portugal en America. Real soc. geog. bol., LXII, nos. 1-A,
supplement, 80 p. [2985
Becker, Jeronimo. La politica espanola en las Indias. (Rectificaciones hist6ricas).
Madrid: Real academia de la historia. 452 p. [2986
Parte I. Regimen y cultura de las Indias espanolas. II. Los indios bajo el dominio espanol. III.
La esclavitud en las Indias.
Edmundson, George. The voyage of Pedro Teixeira on the Amazon from Para to
Quito and back, 1637-39. Royal hist. soc. trans., 4th ser., Ill, 52-71. [2987
Exquemelin, Alexandre Olivier. Histoire des aventuriers, des boucaniers, et des
fiibustiers d'Amerique, par A. CExmelin. [Paris: Editions de La Sirene] 254 p.
illus. (incl. double map, double plan) . (Collection des belles aventures. [I]) [2988
"Traduite du hoUandais."
Originally vrritten in Dutch and first published in Amsterdam in 1678, under the title of "De Ameri-
caensche zee-roovers."
Gonzalez Palencia, Angel. Extracto del catalogo de los documentos del Consejo de
Indias conservado en la seccion de consejos del Archive historico nacional. Rev.
ARCHivos, XXIV (July) 417^48. [2989
Contents.— Escribauia de Camara del Consejo de Indias. Secretaria del Consejo de Indias.
Ispiztia, Segundo de. El gobierno de Espaiia en Indias; revision de la historia de
America. Cultura hispano-americana, ano IX (Jan.) 42-46; (June) 12-15; (July)
11-14; (Aug.) 8-11. [2990
Cont. from the 1919 volume.
Levene, Bicardo. El derecho consuetudinario y la doctrina de los juristas en la
formacion del derecho indiano. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (May) 144-158. [2991
Points out the influence exercised by the law and customs of the Indians in the formation of the
Spaaish legal system for the Indies.
The article is given in Spanish and in English translation.
Levlllier, Roberto. Santo Toribio Alfonso Mogrovejo, arzobispo de Los Reyes (1581-
1606), organizador de la iglesia en el Virreinato del Peru. Madrid: Sucesores de
Rivadeneyra. 34 p. [2992
Saint Turibius, Archbishop of Lima, 1.538-1608.
Montesinos, Fernando. Memorias antiguas historiales del Peru. Tr. and ed. by
Philip Ainsworth Means, with an introduction by the late Sir Clements R. Mark-
ham. London: Printed for the Hakluyt society, x, 15, [xi]-li, [1], 132 p. plates.
(Works issued by the Hakluyt society ... 2d ser., no. XL VIII) [2993
The translation is from the Spanish edition of Marcos Jimenez de la Espada, published Madrid, 1882.
cf. p. xxvii.
Eight chronological tables . . . comp. by P. A. Means: p. [xxxij-xlvii.
Montesinos was a Spanish Jesuit who was in Peru probably from 1628 to 1642.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 189
Muriel, Domingo. Historia del Paraguay; obra latina del P. Domingo Muriel . . .
traducida al castellano por el P.Pablo Hernandez. 1. 1. Madrid* Sudrez. G59 p.
(Coleccion de libros y documentos referentes a la historia de America, t. XIX) [2994
The first of four volumes which cover the period from 1747 to 17G6. They form the second part of a
projected work entitled "Los jesuitas en el Rio de la Plata." The first part consists of Charlevoix's
Historia del Paraguay ... 6 v. Madrid, 1910-1916.
The original was published with title: " Historia Paraguaiensis Petri Fraucisci Xaverii de Charlevoix,
ex Galileo Latina, cum animadversionibus et supplemento." Venice, 1779.
O'Hara, Jolin F. The Jesuits in South America. U. S. Cath. hist, rec, XIV,
154-159. [2995
Contributes a translation of a passage in the "Noticias secretas de America," by Don Jorge Juan y
Santicilia and Don Antonio de Ulloa, pub. in London in 1826, edited by David Uarry, giving the editor's
observations regarding the political effect of the expulsion of the Jesuits.
Ots Capdequi, Jose Maria. D. Manuel Josef de Ayala y la historia de nuestra legis-
lacion de Indias. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (Aug.) 281-332. [2996
I. Valor de la recopilaci(5n de 1680. II. La obra de Ayala y los intentos de reforma legislativa del
siglo xvm.
The appendix consists of a Spanish-English dictionary of government and legislation of the Indies.
Bevello de Torre, Jos6. Las veladas literarias del virrey del Peru, marques de Castell-
dosrius, 1709-1711. Sevilla: Tip. Zarzuela. 20 p. ([Publicaciones del Centro
oficial de estudios americanistas de Sevilla, cuaderno IV]) [2997
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Oct.) 153.
Also pub. in the Boletin del Centro de estudios americanistas de Sevilla, aflo VII, ntim. 34 y 35, p. 5-16.
Sanclio, Hip61ito. Los Dominicos espanoles y la fundacion de las universidades
coloniales. Real acad. hisp.-am. ciencia, II, no. 3, 100; no. 5, 196-204. [2998
Silva, J. Francisco V. Los reinos espanoles de las Indias a principios del siglo xviii.
Rev. geog. col. y merc, XVII (Apr.) 146-176. [2999
Prints for the first time a document in the BibUoteca nacional, Madrid, summarizing the adminis-
trative organization of the Spanish- American possessions.
Torres Lanzas, Pedro. Escudos de armas, titulos de ciudades y villas, fundaciones
de pueblos, erecci6n de obispados, etc. Centro estud. Am. Sevilla bol., ano
VII, num. 38, 57-61. [3000
Cont. from niim, 22 Jan. 1919.
Documents from the Archive general de Indias. This installment is concerned with the province of
Tucuman.
Ugarte de Ercilla, E. Tercer centenario del P. Diego Alvarez de Paz. Razon y pe,
LVIII (Dec.) 465-473. [3001
Jesuit missionary who died at Potosi, Bolivia, in 1620.
Vifias Mey, Carmelo. La legislaci6n social en la Recopilacion de Indias. Rev.
archivos, XXIV (July) 355-371. [3002
Revolutionary Period (1810-1830).
[See also under separate countries]
Bolivar, Simon. Sim6n Bolivar; papeles de Bolivar publicados por Vicente Lecuna.
Madrid: Editorial America. 2 v. (Biblioteca Ayacucho . . . [XLVIII-XLIX])
[3003
Bonilla y San Martin, Adolfo. El libertador Bolivar y el De4n Funes. Real acad.
HIST, bol., LXXVII (Aug.) 107-114. [3004
A review of the book entitled "El libertador Bolivar y el Dean Funes en la politica argentina." By
J. Francisco V. Silva. Pub. at Madrid, in 1918.
El congreso de Panama de 1826. Cultura hispano-americana, aiio IX (July) 5-10.
[3005
Goenaga, Jos6 M. La entrevista de Guayaquil (San Alartin y Bolivar). Rome,
1915. 57 p. [3006
La Selva, Salomon de. On the character of Francisco de Miranda. Pan. Am. union
BUL., LI (Dec.) 567-575. [3007
O'Leary, Daniel Florencio. El Congreso internacional de Panama ea 1826; desgo-
bierno y anarqula de la Gran Colombia. Notas de R. Blanco- Fombona. Madrid:
Editorial America. 240 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud hispano-americana . . .
[XX]) [3008
190 AMEEICAl^ HISTOEICAL. ASSOCIATION.
O'Leary, Daniel Florencio. Correspondencia de extranjeros notables con el Liber-
tador. Madrid: Editorial America. 2 v. (Biblioteca Ayacucho . . . [L-LI])
[3009-7
Originally published officially by the Venezuelan government in 1880.
Parra Perez, C. Bolivar and his friends abroad. Inter-America, III (June) 259-
264. [3010
Posada Gutierrez, Joaquin. Memorias historico-polfticas. Ultimos dias de la Gran
Colombia y del Libertador. Tomo I-II. Madrid: Editorial America. 2 v. (Bib-
lioteca Ayacucho . . . [LVI-LVII]) [3011
Bevolo, Pedro Maria. The religiousness of Bolivar. Inter-America, III (Feb.)
163-170. [3012
Eodrlgiiez Navas, Manuel. Documentos diplomaticos, 1811-1820. Cultura his-
PANO-AMERicANA, afio IX (May) 9-12; (June) 8-11; (July) 15-18; (Sept.) 10-15;
(Oct.) 10-14; (Nov.) 9-14; (Dec.) 12-20. [3013
South American diplomatic documents of the period, with explanatory material.
Rodriguez Navas, Manuel. Los ideales de Bolivar (1810-1830). Cultura hispano-
americana, ano IX (Apr.) 3-9; (May) 5-9; (June) ^8. [3014
Bubio, Julian Maria. La infanta Carlota Joaquina y la poHtica de Espana en
America (1808-1812). Madrid: Impr. de E. Maestre. xii, 304 p. port. (Biblio-
teca de historia hispano-americana) [3015
Apendiee documental: p. [185]-295.
1830-1920.
Martin, Percy Alvin. The second Pan American financial conference. Hispanic
Am. hist, rev., Ill (May) 202-213. [3016
The second Pan American financial conference was held at Washington in January, 1920.
Mexico.
Baja California; its history and its wealth. Inter- America, IV (Dec.) 124-129.
[3017
Reprinted from the Revista de revistas, Mexico, Aug. 8, 1920.
Blakeslee, George Hubbard, ed. Mexico and the Caribbean. N. Y.: Stechert. x,
363 p. (Clark university addresses) [3018
Contents.— Introduction, by G. H. Blakeslee. Mexico: Are the Mexican people capable of gov-
erning themselves? by T. Esquivel Obregon. The Mexican people, by F. Starr. Upon the Indian
depends Mexico's future, by J. Carson. The factor of health in Mexican character, by )L. Huntington
world from the new I>iberal constitutional party in Mexico, by M. de la Pena. How to restore peace in
Mexico, by H. L. Wilson. A constructive policy for Mexico, by R. W. Babson. The United States
and Latin America, by J. F. Moors. Common sense in foreign policy, by E. M. Borchard. The
Caribbean, [etc.]
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 817-819; Pol. sci. quar., XXVII (Mar. 1922) 160-162.
Blasco Ibanez, Vicente. Mexico in revolution. Tr. by Arthur Livingston and Jos^
Padin. N. Y.: E. P. Button and co. vii, 245 p. [3019
"The various articles in this volume were written, on ray return from Mexico, for the New York
Times, the Chicago Tribune and other important newspapers in the United States."
Breceda, Alfredo. Mexico revolucionario, 1913-1917. Tomo I. Madrid [Tipo-
grafia artlstica Cervantes] 406 p. port. [3020
Calero, Manuel. Un decenio de politica mexicana. [N. Y.: Printed by L. Middle-
ditch CO.] 242 p. [3021
Chapman, Charles E. The Jesuits in Baja CaUfornia, 1697-1768. Cath. hist, rev.,
VI (Apr.) 46-58. [3022
Corryn, John Hubert. Nation builders of Mexico. Pan-American mag., XXXI
(Nov.) 309-315. [3023
Fox, P. M. Rulers come and rulers go. Pan-American mag., XXXI (Oct.) 246-252.
[3024
Mainly concerned with the empire of Maximilian in Mexico.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 191
Koebel, W. H. The United States and Mexico in the forties. New world, III
(Aug.) 231-235.
A review of "The war with Mexico, 1846-1848, by Justin H. Smith (N, Y.: Macmillan, 1919)'
Latorre, German. Relaciones geograficas de Indias (contenidas en el Archivo gen-
eral de Indias de Sevilla). La Hispano- America del siglo xvi: Virreinato de Nueva
Espana. (Mexico. Censo de poblacion) Sevilla: Tip. Zarzuela. 119 p. maps.
(Publicaciones del Centro oficial de estudios americanistas de Sevilla. Biblioteca
colonial americana. t. IV) [3026-7
Also pub. in the Boletin del Centro oficial de estudios americanistas de Sevilla, ano VII, 1920.
Lutrell, Sstelle. Mexican writers; a catalogue of books in the University of Arizona
library with synopses and biographical notes. Tucson [University of Arizona]
83 p. ports. (Univ. of Arizona rec, v. XIII, no. 5. Library bibliography, no. 5)
[3028
McCaleb, Walter Flavins. Present and past banking in Mexico. N. Y. and London:
Harper, xxi, 268 p. [3029
A history of banking institutions in Mexico from the time of independence in 1810 until the present.
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (Aug.) 381-383.
McCaleb, Walter Flavius. The press of Mexico. Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill
(Aug.) 443-450. [3030
Mecham, J. Lloyd. The martyrdom of Father Juan de Santa Maria. Cath. hist.
REV., VI (Oct.) 308-321. [3031
Discusses an interesting and much debated point in the history of Spanish exploration in New Mex-
ico, referring in general to the Rodriguez-Chamuscado expedition, 1581-1582, but more particularly to
the circumstances surrounding the martyrdom of Father Juan de Santa Maria in 1581.
O'Sliauglmessy, Edith Louise (Coues). Intimate pages of Mexican history, by
Edith O'Shaughnessy (Mrs. Nelson O'Shaughnessy) N. Y.: George H. Doran co.
351 p. [3032
Contents.— Porfirio Diaz. Francisco Leon dela Barra. Francisco I. Madero. Victoriano Huerta.
Ponciano Nieto, Asensio. Historia de la Congregacion de la Mision en M^jico (1844-
1884). Madrid: Imp. del Asilo de huerfanos. xii, 420 p. [3033
Priestley, Herbert Ingram. Modern Mexican history. [N. Y. : Institute of interna-
tional education] 36 p. (Institute of international education. International
relations clubs. Syllabus no. VI) [3034
A syllabus of the liistory of Mexico from the Spanish colonial regime to the present.
Priestley, Herbert Ingram. The relations of the United States and Mexico since
1910. [Berkeley, Calif.] 16 p. • [3035
Reprinted from the University of California chronicle, v. XXII, no. 1, p. 47-60.
Eamon Melida, Jose. La arquitectura espaiiola en Mejico. Real acad. hist, bol.,
LXXVI (Mar.) 195-201. [3036
Kippy, J. Fred. Diplomacy of the United States and Mexico regarding the Isthmus
of Tehuantepec, 1848-1860. Miss. Valley hist, rev., VI (Mar.) 503-531. [3037
Saner, R. E. L. When President Diaz sought recognition; similarity of conditions
imperiling Mexican-American relations in Hayes administration and international
difficulties preceding Obregon's election. Am. bar assoc. jour., VI (Dec.) 195-197.
[3038
Santa Anna, Antonio Lopez de. Letters of General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
relating to the war between the United States and Mexico, 1846-1848. Ed. by
Justin H. Smith. Am. hist, assoc. rep., for the year 1917, 355-431. (Thirteenth
report of the Historical manuscripts commission) [3038a
The letters are mostly written to the Minister of war.
Serrano, Luciano. El primer obispo de Mejico y la corte de Castilla. Real acad.
HIST. BOL., LXXVII (July) 24-50. [3039
Fr. Juan de Zum^xraga (1468-1548), first bishop of Mexico.
Smith, Harry A. Four interventions in Mexico; a study in military government
Infantry jour., XVII (July-Aug., Oct.) 30-34, 125-131, 372-380. [3040
Smith, Justin H. La Republica de Rio Grande. Am. hist, rev., XXV (July)
660-675. [3041
Describes a movement for independence in the northeastern provinces of Mexico, resulting m the
organization, in 1810, of the Republica de Rio Grande. The present article is mainly concerned with
the relations between the United States and the republic during the period of the Mexican war.
Terreros, Manuel Eomero de. Colonial residences of Mexico. Pan Am. union
BUL., L (June) 644-656. [3042
192 AMEEICAN HISTORICAL. ASSOCIATION.
Central America.
Great Britain, Foreign office. Historical section. British Honduras. London:
H. M. Stationery off. [8], 57 p. (Handbooks ... no. 133) [3042a
Peace handbooks, v. XXI [no. 3].
G. W. Prothero, general editor.
One of a series of handbooks prepared under the direction of the British Foreign office to provide
the British delegates to the Peace conference with information — geographical, economic, historical,
social, religious, and political — respecting the different countries with which they might have to deal.
Hirtzel, J. S. Harry, Le canal de Nicaragua et les grands traces interoceaniquea,
Soc. ROY, BELGE G^OG. BUL., XLIV aun., 242-245, [3043
Lehm^inn, Walter, Zentral-Amerika. Teil I. Die Sprachen Zentral-Amerikas in
ihren Beziehungen zueinander sowie zu Sud-Amerika und Mexiko, Berlin:
D, Reimer, 59^ p, [3044
Eodrlguez Beteta, Virgilio, La imprenta y los impresores en Centre America durante
la colonia; primera parte que sirve de introduccion a la Historia del periodismo
en el antiguo reino de Guatemala. Arte tipograf., XVII (May-June) 337-339,
370-371; XVIII (Sept., Nov., Dec.) 50-52, 113-115, 153-155. [3045
Williams, Mary Wilhelmine. The ecclesiastical policy of Francisco Morazdn and the
other Central American liberals. Hispanic Am. hist, rev,, III (May) 119-143.
[3046
A study of the relation between church and state in Central America during the period of the republic
of the " United Provinces of Central America", from its separation from Mexico in 1823 to the downfall
of Morazan in 1840.
Panama.
Gray, Beryl. The city of old Panama. Pan Am. union bul., LI (July) 37-49.
[3047
Laztirtegui, Julio de. Enlaces de Bilbao con Panama y el Pacifico. Estados Unidos,
num. 12 (July.) 17-19. [3048
Brief review of the relations existing between Bilbao, Spain, and Panama from the days of discovery.
Susto, Juan Antonio. The foundation of new Panama, January 21, 1673. Inter-
America, III (June) 275-279. [3049
Panama Canal.
Bunau-Varilla, Philippe. The great adventure of Panama; wherein are exposed ita
relation to the great war and also the luminous traces of the German conspiracies
against France and the United States. Garden City, N. Y. [etc.] Doubleday, Page
and CO. xv, 267 p. port. [3050
Rev. in.: Weekly rev., Ill (Dec. 29) 649-650.
Historia del canal dePanamd. Estados Unidos, num. 12 (July) 2-6. [3061
West Indies.
Blakeslee, George Hubbard, ed. Mexico and the Caribbean. N. Y.: Stechert.
X, 363 p. (Clark university addresses) [3062
Contents.— Introduction, by G. H. Blakeslee. Mexico: . . . The Caribbean: The Caribbean policy
of the United States, by W. R. Shepherd. The present American intervention in Santo Domingo,
and Haiti, by O. Schoenrich. American achievements in Santo Domingo, Haiti, and Virgin Islands,
by G. C. Thorpe. The present situation in the Caribbean, by S. G. Inman. The Central American
republics and their problems, by W. E. Browning. The United States and the nations of the Carib-
bean, bjj^J. Lopez. America's "Mare nostrum", by K. Thomas. Porto Rico as a national problem,
by P. Capo Rodriguez.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (July 1921) 817-819; Pol. sci. quar., XXXVII (Mar. 1922) 160-162.
Bolton, Herbert Eugene, and Thomas Maitland Marshall. The colonization of North
America, 1492-1783. N. Y.: Macmillan. xvi, 609 p. maps. [3053
Designed as a text-book.
Written from the standpoint of North America as a whole, being a study of the Spanish and French
colonies and of the English colonies including the Bermudas, the West Indies, Canada and the Floridas,
as well as the 13 colonies which formed the nucleus of the United States.
Rev. in: Am. hist, rev., XXVI (Apr. 1921) 640-542; Canad. hist, rev., II (Dec. 1921) 371-372; Hisp.
Am. hist, rev., IV (Aug. 1921) 486-488.
WEITINGS 01^ AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 193
Riclimond, Herbert William. The navy in the war of 1739^8. Cambridge: The
University press. 3 v. ports., plate, maps. (Cambridge naval and military
series) [3054
The opening operations in the West Indies [the attack on Porto Bello by the squadron under Admiral
Vernon, reconnaissance of Cartagena] v. I, p. 39-58. The expedition to Cartagena, Santiago and Panama:
V. I, p. 101-137. The West Indies; end of colonial offensive, October 1742 to February 1744: v. I, p.
241-260. Trade protection and attack in the West Indies, 1746-7: v. Ill, p. 51-77. Concluding opera-
tions in the West Indies, 1744-48: v. Ill, p. 178-235. Colonial defence during the war, 1739-1748: v.
Ill, p. 268-278.
Salas, Julio C. Los Indies caribes, estudio sobre el origen del mito de la antropofagia.
Madrid: Editorial- America. 235 p. (Biblioteca de cienciaa politicas y sociales.
[XXIX] ) [3056
At head of title: . . . Etnografiaamericana.
British West Indies.
Cundall, Frank. Richard Hill. Jour, negro hist., V (Jan.) 37-44. [3066
A prominent citizen of Jamaica, 1795-1872.
Great Britain. Commissioners for trade and plantations. Journal of the Commission-
ers for trade and plantations from April 1704, to February 1708-9, preserved in the
Public record office. . . . London: Pub. by his Majesty's stationery office, vi,
641 p. [3057
Tlie journals of the Commissioners for trade and plantations are usually known as Board of trade
journals. Previous journals are included in the volumes of Calendar of state papers, Colonial. Gt. Brit.
Public record office.
MacDermot, T. H. How Britain got her West Indies. Canad. mag., LV (Sept.)
355-359. [3058
Benaut, F. P. L'odyss6e d'un colonial sous I'ancien regime: Philippe-Rose Roume
de Saint-Laurent 1776-1796. Rev. hist, colonies pran^., VIII® ann., 2® trimestre
(Apr.) 327-348. [3059
An account of the career of a French colonial, born in the island of Grenada, who devoted several
years from about 1777 to 1783, to a survey of the island of Trinidad, then in the possession of Spain, and
to the preparation of a plan for the colonization of the island (charte constitutionelle de I'lle de la Trinity),
to obtain the adoption of which by the Spanish government he made a journey to Madrid in 1783, with
out success however.
Cuba.
Hebia, Aurelio, General Leonard Wood and public instruction in Cuba. Inter-
America, IV (Oct.) 3-16. . [3060
An account of the development of public instruction in Cuba during the occupation by the military
forces of the United States.
Heliodoro Valle, Rafael. Cuban authors and thinkers. Hispanic Am. hist, rev,,
III (Nov.) 634-638. [3061
Hergesheimer, Joseph. San Crist6bal de la Habana. N. Y.: A. A. Knopf. 255 p.
[3062
Iraizoz, Antonio. Marti's ideas upon education. Inter-America, III (Aug.) 350-363.
Johnson, Willis Fletcher. The history of Cuba. N. Y.: B. F. Buck and co. 5 v.
illus., plates, ports. [3064
Lettered on back of v. IV: Historical index; of v. V: Resources.
Marti, Carlos. Los catalanes en America. Cuba. Madrid: Editorial "Minerva".
265 p. [3065
Park-, Roswell, ed. A journal of the expedition against Cuba, 1762. [Buffalo, N. Y.:
The University of Buffalo] pamphlet. (University of Buffalo studies, v. I, no. 4.
Monographs in history, no. 1) [3066
Relates to the capture of Havana by the British in 1762.
La question cubaine en 1825. Nouv. rev., 4e ser., L (Nov. 15) 115-133. [3067
Signed: Transtamare. ... . , .
Concerned with the Cuban question in 1825 from the vle\vpomt of mternational law, in particular the
application of the Monroe doctrine thereto.
Verrill, Alpheus Hyatt. Cuba past and present. Rev. ed. , with 1919 facts and figures.
N. Y.: Dodd, Mead and co. [16], 240 p. plates, fold. map.
194 - AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION.
Wright, I. A. Rescates: with special reference to Cuba, 1599-1610. Hispanic Am.
HIST. REV., Ill (Aug.) 333-361. [3069
Au account of the'Tietriinental effect wrought upon the Spanish, the present article being concerned
mainly with Cuba, by "rescates", illegitimate trade in the Indies, durmg the war between England
and Spain, in the>reign of Queen Elizabeth.
French West Indies.
La Ronciere, Charles de. Histoire de la marine fran^aise. [t.] V. La guerre de trente
ans. Colbert. Paris: Plon-Nourrit et cie. [6], 748 p. port. [3070
Of value for the study of the history of the French colonial empire, 1635-1683. The sections dealing
specifically with the empire in America, particularly in the Antilles, are as follows: Effondrementde
notre empire colonial: Tableau de notre d&arroi colonial- (p. 227-233); Engouement des Parisiens
pour les colonies (p. 233-236). Guerre entre la Hollaiui et I'Angleterre, 1665-1667: La Compagnie
des Indes occidentales et la defense des .Antilles (p. 459-465); Combat naval de Tile Nevis, 20 mai 1667
(p. 465-468); Combat naval de Saint-Pierre de la Martinique, 29 juin-7 jnillet 1667 (p. 468-471).
Guerre des droits de la reine, 1667-1668: Les Ireres de la cote (p. 476-491) [dealing with the buccaneers
and filibusters in the West Indies] La France eontre I'Europe continentale: La defaite de Ruyter au
Fort Royal de la Martinique, 20 juillet 1674 (p. 587-597); Les compagnes dn vice-amiral d'Estrees aux
Antilles (p. 647-651); Bataille navale de Tabago, 3 mars 1677 (p. 652-659); Prise de Goree et de
Tabago, outobre-decembre 1677 (p. 659-662); Le naufrage des iles Aves, 11 mai 1678 (p. 662-667).
Mattern, Johannes, The employment of the plebiscite in the determination of
sovereignty. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins press. 214 p. (Johns Hopkins univ.
stud., ser. XXXVIII, no. 3) [3071
Includes a brief account (p. 115-116) of the emplojrment of the plebiscite in St. Bartholomew, French
West Indies, in 1877.
Wambaugh, Sarah. A monograph on plebiscites, with a collection of official docu-
ments. Prepared under the supervision of James Brown Scott. N. Y. [etc.] Oxford
univ. press, xxxv, 1088 p. maps. (Publications of the Carnegie endowment
for international peace, Division of international law) * [3072
The plebiscite on the island of St. Bartholomew, West Indies, in 1877: p. 155-156.
Haiti.
Dominican Bepublic. Santo Domingo, its past and its present condition. Santo
Domingo city, D. R. 67 p. incl. tables. [3073
"This pamphlet has been prepared by the members of the Military government of Santo Domingo."—
verso of t.-p.
Froidevaux, Henri. La fin de la domination frangaise a Saint-Domingue (1803-1809).
Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 262-265. [3074
Inman, Samuel Guy. Santo Domin^go and Haiti; a cruise with the marines. N. Y.:'
Committee on co-operation in Latin America. 96 p. map. [3075
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., IV (Aug. 1921) 499-500.
Osterhout, G. H., jr. A little-known marvel of the western hemisphere; Christophe's
citadel, a monument to the tyranny and genius of Haiti's king of slaves. Nation.
GEOG. MAG., XXVIII (Dec.) 469-482. [3076
Describes a citadel of solid masonry built by the black King Christophe (born 1769).
Pauleus Sannon, H. Histoire de Toussaint-Louverture. Tome premier, Port-au-
Prince (Haiti) Impr. A. A. H^raux. 247 p. port. [3077
Petiteau, A. Les Angevins k Haiti; Bertrand d'Ogeron, de Pouansey, Dupetit-
Thouars, de Las-Cases. Rev. d'Anjou (May) 287-320. [3078
Porto Rico.
Cap6 Rodriguez, Pedro. Aspectos juridicos de las relaciones entre los Estados Unidoa
y Puerto Rico. Washington, D. C. vi, 73 p. [3079
Originally published in English in the American journal of international law, v. IX, 1915, v. X, 1916,
and v. XIII, 1919, and later in Spanish in the Revista amerieana de derecho internacional (Washington).
Williamson, G. C. George, third earl of Cumberland (1558-1605) his life and his
voyages; a study from original documents. Cambridge: At the University press.
xix, 334 p. plates, ports., facsims., map. [3079a
"The twelfth voyage, 1598," the expedition to and capture of Porto Rico during the war with Spain,
is the subject of chapter XVI, p. 174-218. A hitherto unpublished letter by the Earl of Cumberland
himself, in which he describes the capture of Porto Rico, is given on p. 220-225.
WRITINGS ON AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 195
Virgin Islands.
Wambaugh, Sarah. A monograph on plebiscites, with a collection of official docu-
ments. Prepared under the supervision of James Brown Scott. N. Y. [etc.]
Oxford university press, xxxv, 1088 p. maps. (Publications of the Carnegie
endowment for international peace, Division of international law) [3080
Contains several pages (149-155) dealing with tho first plebiscite regarding a cession ol sovereignty
ever held in the western hemisphere, that which was held in the islands of St. Thomas and St. John, in
January, 1868, on the question of their cession by Denmark to the United States.
South America.
General.
Bland, John Otway Percy. Men, manners & morals in South America. London:
W. Heinemann. viii, 319 p. plates. [3081
Descriptive of Brazil, Argentine Republic, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
Chevalier, H. Les charrues anciennes de I'Amerique et de I'Oc^anie. Soc. ingeni-
EURS civiLS France mem., LXXIII (Jan.) 65-92. [3082
Traces the development of the plow in North and South America from the earliest times to the 19th
century.
La Selva, SalomSn de. Busts of Sucre and O'Higgins in the Pan American Union.
Pan Am. union bul., LI (Nov.) 499-504. [3083
Gifts to the Pan j^ merican Union at Washington, by the governments of Bolivia and Chile, of busts
of the Marshal of Ayacucho and the founder of the Republic of Chile, respectively.
Also published in Spanish in the Boletin de la Union panamericana, LI (Nov.) 504-509
Maltrot, Charles. La France et les republiques sudamericaines. Paris: Berger-
Levrault. xvi, 392 p. [3084
Zeballos, E. S. La diplomatie des Etats-Unis dans I'Amerique du Sud. Rev, pol.
ET PARL., CIV (Sept.) 328-346. [3085
Argentine Republic.
Antecedents of Argentine history. Inter- America, IV (Oct.) 25-33. [3086
Barcos, Julio R. Our professors of idealism in America. Inter- America, III (Feb.-
Apr.) 173-175, 241-243. " [3087
Contents.— XI. Sarmiento, a t3T)e of the complete man. XII. Agustin Aivares, the moralist and
psychologist of our Creole customs.
Cont. from v. Ill, No. 2, Dec. 1919.
British society in the Argentine Eepublic. Activities of the British community in
Argentina during the Great war 1914-1919. Pub. by the British society in the
Argentine Republic. Ed. and comp. by Arthur L. Holder. Buenos Aires: Printed
by the "Buenos Aires herald". 487 p. illus., ports., plate, facsims. [3088
Chandler, Charles Lyon. United States shipping in the La Plata region, 1809-1810.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (May) 159-176.
A study of the commercial relations of the United States with the viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata
and the South American portions of the Kingdom of Portugal at the time of the outbreak of the revolu-
tion against Spain.
Foerster, Robert F. The Italian emigration of our times, Cambridge: Harvard univ.
press; London: Humphrey Milford, 1919. xv, 556 p. (Harvard economic studies,
V. XX) [3090
Contains sections relating to the history of Italian immigration in various countries, including
Argentina and Brazil.
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., IV (Nov. 1921) 764-767.
Levillier, Roberto, ed. Gobernaci6n del Tucuman. Papeles de gobernadores en el
siglo xvi (1553-1600). Madrid: Rivadeneyra. 2 v. (Coleccion de publicaciones
historicas de la Biblioteca del Congreso argentine) [3091
Posadas, Gervasio Antonio de. Memorias de Gervasio Antonio Posadas . . .
Madrid: Editorial America. 409 p. [3092
Ed. by G. Posadas and J. M. Espinosa.
A contribution to the history of the Argentine war of independence.
I
196 AMERICAN HISTOBICAI. ASSOCIATION.
Probanzas de meritos y servicios de los conquistadores del Tucumdn. Madrid:
Rivadeneyra, 1919-1920. 2 v. (Coleccion de publicaciones historicas de la Bib- i
lioteca del Congreso argentine) [3093 I
1. 1 (1548-1583). Prolog© deR.Blanco-Fombona. 1919. 600p. t. II (1583-1600). Pr61ogo de Roberto i
Levillier. 1920. 601 p. i
Rodriguez del Busto, A. Fray Fernando de Trejo no iu6 fundador del Colegio de la
Compania de Jesus ni de la Universidad de Cordoba (Argentina). Segunda parte. 1
Madrid: Sucesores de Hernando. 310 p. ^ [3094
Rufino, Ricardo. Don Juan de Garay. Cultura hispano-americana, ano IX !
(Mar.) 13-15. [3095 }
Spanisli soldier, 1528-1583, founder of the city of Buenos Aii-es, in 1580. !
The semi-centennial of a great daily. Inter-America, III (Aug.) 374-376. [3096 f
Regarding the semi-centennial of "La Naci6n" of Buenos Aires. \
Tricoche, George Nestler. Les Anglais a Buenos Ayres, 5-6 juillet 1807 . Rev . hist., '
CXXXIV (July) 229-248. (Batailles oubii6es) [3097 i
WMttemore, C. W. The history of Argentine independence. So. American, VIII '
(May) 21-23, (June) 11-13 [3098 i
Williams, John H. Argentine international trade under inconvertible paper money, \
1880-1900. Cambridge: Harvard university press; [etc., etc.] xiv, 282 p. diagra.
Harvard economic studies ... v. XXII)
Rev. in: Am. econ. rev., XI (June 1921) 308-313: Hisp. Am. hist, rev., IV (Aug. 1921) 489-491: Jour,
pol. econ. XXXVII (June, 1922) 336-337.
Bolivia.
The Bolivian revolution and Tacna-Arica. Nation, CXI (July 24) 96-97. [3100
Memoire sur Tacna et Arica presents au secretariat de la Societe des nations par le
delegu^ de la Bolivie h la Conference de la Paix. (Memorandum regarding Tacna
and Arica presented to the secretariat of the League of nations by the delegate from
Bolivia to the Peace conference). London: Edward Stanford, ltd. 21, 21 p.
map. [3101
Brazil.
Andrade, Maria Guilhermina Loureiro de. Resume da historia do Brazil, para uao
das escolas prunarias brazileiras. Ed. ampliada. Boston, N. Y. [etc.] Gmn. [6],
308 p. plates, ports., map. [3102
Bieler, Adolf. Brasilien. Hamburg: L. Friederichsen. 142 p. map. (Bd. IV der
Auslandswegweiser, hrsg. von dem Hamburgischen Weltwirtschaits Archiv, Zen-
tralstelle des Hamburgisclien Kolonial-instituts und dem Iberoamerikanischen
Institut) [3103
Chandler, Charles Lyon. United States shipping in the La Plata region, 1809-1810.
Hispanic Am. hist, rev., Ill (May) 159-176. [3104
A study of the commercial relations of the United States with the viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata
and the Portuguese possessions in the La Plata region at the time of the outbreak of the revolution
against Spain.
Foerster, Robert F. The Italian emigration of our times. Cambridge: Harvard
univ. press; London: Humphrey Milford, 1919. xv, 556 p. (Harvard economic
studies, V. XX) [3105
Contains sections relating to the history of Italian immigration in various countries, including Argen-
tina and Brazil.
Rev. in: Hispanic Am. hist, rev., IV (Nov. 1921) 764-767.
Graham, R. B. Cunninghame. A Brazilian mystic, being the life and miracles of
Antonio Conselheiro. N. Y.: Dodd, Mead and co. xii, 238 p. map. [3106
Le Conte, Rene. L'emigration allemande en Am^rique; les AUemands au Bresil.
Fkance-Amerique, n. s. Xle ann. (Apr.) 141-145. [3107
Paranhos, U. Le metissage au Bresil. Psychologie appliquee (Paris) I, 48-49.
[3108
Tastevin, C. Quelques considerations eur les Indiens du Jurud. Soc anthrop.
Paris bul. et mem., 6e s^r., X, 144-154. [3109
Taunay, Alfonso d'EscragnoUe. S. Paulo em sens primeiros annos (1554 k 1601).
Ensaio de reconstituigao social. Tours [The author?] [3109a
WRITIInFGS on AMERICAN HISTORY, 1920. 197
Chile.
The Bolivian revolution and Tacna-Arica. Nation, CXI (July 24) 96-97. [3110
Craz, Ernesto de la, ed. Epistolario de Don Bernardo O'Higgins, capitan general y
director supremo de Chile. Madrid: Editorial America. 2 v. (Biblioteca Ayaca-
cho [LIV-LV]) [3110a
t. I. 1798-1819. t. II. 1819-1823.
James, Herman G. The controversy over Tacna and Arica. South w. pol. sci.
QUAR., I (Sept.) 155-169. [3111
Mathieu, Beltran. The neutrality of Chile during the European war. Am. jour.
INTERNAT. LAW, XIV (July) 319-342. [3112
M€moire sur Tacna et Arica presents au secretariat de la Soci^te des nations par le
delegu^ de la Bolivie a la Conference de la Paix. (Memorandum regarding Tacna
and Arica presented to the secretariat of the League of nations by the delegate from
Bolivia to the Peace conference). London: Edward Stanford, ltd. 21, 21 p.
map. [3113
Bamos, Julian. Reseiia hist6rica de la imprenta en Chile. Arte tipograp., XVI
(Sept., Nov. 1919) 71-74, 136-138, (Jan., Apr. 1920) 213-214, 306-307. [3114
Wambaugh, Sarah. A monograph on plebiscites, with a collection of official docu-
ments. Prepared under the supervision of James Brown Scott. N. Y. [etc.]
Oxford university press, xxxv, 1088 j). maps. (Publications of the Carnegie
endowment for international peace, Division of international law) [3115
The Tacna-Arica question, 1883- : p. 156-165.
Colombia.
Estgnger, Rafael A. Jos^ Asuncion Silva, the man and his literary influence. Inter-
America, IV (Dec.) 108-116. [3116
Colombian jMjet, born in 1860.
Hole, Myra C. The founding of Santander, Colombia. Hispanic Am. hist, rev,,
III (May) 225-227. [3117
Humbert, Jules. L' evolution intellectuelle en Nouvelle-Grenade a la fin du xviiie
siecle. Bulletin de l'Amerique latine (Paris) IXe ami., 97-103. [3118
Humbert, Jules. Histoire de la Colombie et du Venezuela des origines jusqu'a nos
jours. Paris: Alcan. 219" p. [3119
Rodriguez Villa, Antonio. El teniente general Don Pablo Morillo, primer conde de
Cartagena, marques de La Puerta (1778-1837). Madrid: J. Pueyo. 2 v. (Biblioteca
Ayacucho [LII-LIII]) [3120
Published at Madrid (Fortanet) 1908-1910, in 4 v.
Ulrick, Laura F. Morillo's attempt to pacify Venezuela. Hispanic Am. hist, rev..
Ill (Nov.) 535-565. [3121
Describes the attempt of Don Pablo Morillo, general-in-chief of an expeditionary army sent from
Spain in 1815, to put down the revolution in Venezuela.
Ecuador.
Amecourt, d'. Historia de la revolucion de octubre y campaiia libertadora de
1820-22. Primera parte: Guayaquil. Barcelona: Imprenta Elzeviriana Borras,
Maestres y comp. 407 p. [3123
Pan American Union. The centenary of the independence of Guayaquil. Pan
Am. union bul., LI (Nov.) 476-485. [3123
Account of the celebration held at the Pan American Union building at Washington, Oct. 9, 1920.
Also published in Spanish in the Boletin de la Uni<3n panamericana, LI (Nov.) 478-487.
The Guianas.
Governor and company of noblemen and gentlemen of England for the plantation of
Guiana. Breefe notes of the Riuer Amazones, and of the coaste of || Guiana, con-
tayned in the new grant from his most excellent || Maiestie, vnto a Corporation. ||
[London, 1627. Boston, 1920] facsim.: broadside. [Americana series; photostat
reproductions by the Massachusetts historical society, no. 19] [3124
Bound with this are two broadsides issued by the same company. [1st] The Coppie of the Preamble,
for the Subscriptions, 1 intimating the conditions of Aduenture, |1 [n.p., 1627] ^d] A breefe Relation of
the present state of business of Guiana, |1 Concerning the preceding therein. || [Dated at end] June the
One of 10 photostat copies reproduced from the originals in the PubUc record office, London, June 1920.
198 AMEEICAK HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIOK.
Great Britain. Foreign office. Historical section. British Guiana. London: H. M.
Stationery off. [10], 97 p. (Handbooks ... no. 135) [31243
Peace handbooks, v. XXI [no. 5].
G. W. Prothero, general editor.
One of the scries of handbooks prepared under the direction of the British Foreign office to provide
the British delegates to the Peace conference with information — geographical, economic, historical,
social, religious, and political— respecting the different countries with which they might have to deal!
Inventaris en naamregister van HoUandsche grafzerken in Britisch-Guyana. Navor-
SCHER, LXX, no. 9, 283-288. |3126
Bijlsma, R. Alexander de Lavaux en zijne general kaart van Suriname 1737.
West-Ind. Gids, II, no. 8 (Dec.) 397-406. [3126
Bijlsma, R. De annotatien van Gouverneur Jan Nepveu op Herlein's beachrijving
van Suriname. West-Ind. Gids, II, no. 6 (Oct.). 311-314. [i326a
Bijlsma, R. Immigratie van Duitschers in Suriname 1733-1740. West-Ind. Gids,
I, no. 11 (Mar.). [3127
Bijlsma, R. De kaarteering van Suriname ten tijde van Gouverneur Van Aerssen van
Sommelsdijck. West-Ind. Gids, II, no. 7 (Nov.) 351-354. [3127a
Bijlsma, R. Het mijnwerk der Societeit van Suriname op den Vanden Bempdenberg
in 1729-1741. West-Ind. Gids, I, no. 10 (Feb.) 335-338. [3128
DeVilliers, J. A. J. Storm van 's Gravensande, zijn werk en zijn leven uit zijn
brieven opgebouwd. 's Gravenhage. 416 p. [3129
Laurens Storm van 's Gravensande, secretary and director-general in Essequibo and Demerara, of the
Dutch West India company, 173S-1772.
Great Britain. Foreign office. Historical section. Dutch Guiana. London: H. M.
Stationery off. [8], 79 p. (Handbooks ... no. 136). [3129a
Peace handbooks, v. XXI [no. 6].
G. W. Prothero, general editor.
HuUu, J. de. De algemeene toestand onzer West-Indische bezittingen in 1806.
West-Ind. Gids, 11, no. 8 (Dec.) 407-421. [3129b
Koebel, W. H. The influence of the Dutch in South America. New world, III
(Nov.) 532-534. [3130
Concerned mainly with the Dutch in Guiana.
Oudschans Dentz, Fr. De geschiedenis der Joden in Suriname. Neerlandia,
XXIVste Jg., no. 11 (Nov.) [3131
Panliuys, Jonkheer L. C. van. Invloeden, die rassen op elkander uitoefen, waargeno-
men aan de Marowyne rivier. Bijblad der nederlandsche anthropologische
Vereeniging, 1918, 3-6. [3132
Weiss, H. De zonding der Ilerrnhutters onder de Indianen in Berbice en Suriname,
1738-1816. West-Ind. Gids, II, no. 5 (Sept.) 36-44, 109-121, 187-197, 249-264.
[3133
The Herrnhutters were a denomination of Moravians or United Brethem, so-called from the vil-
lage built by them in Saxony, named Herrnhut.
Chassaigne, Marc. Un maitre des requites lieutenant-general des armees du roi M.
de la Barre aux Antilles. Rev. etudes hist., LXXXVIe ann. (July) 321-352.
[3134
In 1663 M. Lefebvre de la Barre organized the Compagnie de la France dquinoctiale, for the purpose of
establishing a colony at Cayenne, then occupied by the Dutch, and to capture the commerce of the
Antilles, also mainly in the control of the Dutch. The island of Cayenne was settled by the French in
May 1664, but in October 1666, was captured by the English, during the Anglo-French war of 1666-1667.
Great Britain. Foreign office. Historical section. French Guiana. London: H. M.
Stationery off. [8], 61 p. (Handbooks ... no. 137). [3134a
Peace handbooks, v. XXI [no. 7].
G. W. Prothero, general editor.
Villiers, haron Marc de, ed. Journal inedit du voyage du sergent La Haye de Cay-
enne aux chutes du Yari, 1728-1729. Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s. XII, 115-126.
[3135
The original journal is preserved in the Archives hydrographiques, Paris.
A narrative of one of the early exploring expeditions in French Guiana, during which the Faiis oi the
Jar^ were discovered.
199
Peru.
The Bolivian revolution and Tacna-Arica. Nation, CXI (July 24) 96-97. [3136
James, Herman G. The controversy over Tacna and Arica. Southw. pol. sci.
QUAK., I (Sept.) 155-169. [3137
Means, Philip Ainsworth. Indian legislation in Peru. Hispanic Am, hist, rev.,
Ill (Nov.) 509-534. [3138
An analysis of legislative measures for the weKare of the Indians of Peru, from the Spanish colonial
period to the present, with the object of showing what measures are being contemplated and carried out
to relieve the inter-racial problems of Peru.
Stahl, F. A. In the land of the Incas. Mountain View, Calif., Kansas City, Mo. [etc.]
Pacific press pub. assoc. 301 p. illus. (incl. port.). [3139
Wambaugh, Sarah. A monograph on plebiscites, with a collection of official docu-
ments. Prepared under the supervision of James Brown Scott. N. Y. [etc].
Oxford university press, xxxv, 1088 p. maps. (Publications of the Carnegie
endowment for international peace, Division of international law) [3140
The Tacna-Arica question, 1883- : p. 156-165.
Uruguay.
Bermejo de la Rica, Antonio. La colonia del Sacramento; su origen, desenvolvimi-
ento y vicisitudes de su historia. (^ladrid — 1920). Toledo: Imp. de la Editorial
catolica toledana. viii, 308, [4] p. (Biblioteca de historia hispano-americana) [3141
Apendice documental: p. 75-298. Fuentes documentales: p. 303-308.
Concerned with the founding of Colonia de! Sacramento by the Portuguese in 1679, in territory claimed
by the Spanish, and with the controversy between Spain and Portugal over the boundary in the La
Plata region between their respective posscssio s.
BoTirgin, G. Garibaldi et la France en Uruguay. Nouv. rev. d'Italie, XVII
(Mar. 1). [3142
Cordier, Henri. Maspero en Amerique. Soc. Amer. Paris jour., n. s, XII, 91-
113. [3143
In 1867 the French Egyptologist, Maspero, want to South America for the purpose of collaborating
with Senor Vicente Fidel Lopez, of Montevideo, on a study of the Quiche language. He spent a year in
South America, and his letters, several of which are here given, contain descriptions of the country and
accounts of events there, and include one describing the revolution of 1868 in Uruguay.
Venezuela.
Corporaal, K. H. De internationaalrechtelijke betrekkingen tusschen Nederland en
Venezuela, 1816-1920. Leiden: Eduard Ijdo. 672 p. [3144
"The relations between the Netherlands and Venezuela are determined by the existence of a Dutch
colony, the Isla; d of Curasao, close to the Venezuelan coast."
Rev. in: Am. jour, intemat. law, XV (July 1921) 486-488.
Humbert, Jules. Histoire de la Colombie et du V^n^zuela des origines jusqu'^ nos
jours. Paris: Alcan. 219 p. [3145
Kulp, C. A. Venezuela and the Monroe doctrine. Pan-American mag., XXX (Jan.)
131-140. [3146
Concerned with the Venezuela-British Guiana boundary arbitration.
Bodrlgnez Villa, Antonio. El teniente general Don Pablo Morillo, primer conde de
Cartagena, marques de La Puerta (1778-1837). Madrid: J. Pueyo. 2 v. (Biblio-
teca Ayacucho [LII-LIII]) [3147
Published at Madrid (Fortanet) 1908-1910, in 4 v.
Ro as, Aristides. Capitulos de la historia colonial de Venezuela. Madrid: Editorial
America, 1919. 237 p. (Biblioteca de la juventud hispano-americana, XIX) [3148
UUrick, Laura F. Morillo's attempt to pacify Venezuela. Hispanic Am. hist, rev.,
Ill (Nov.) 535-565. [3149
Describes the attempt of Don Pablo Morillo, general-tn-chief of an expeditionary army sent from
Spain in 1815, to put down the revolution in Venezuela.
PACIFIC ISLANDS.
Hawaiian Islands.
Ashford, Clarence W. Last days of the Hawaiian monarchy. Hawahan hist. soc.
REP., XXVII, 1919, 19-30. [3149a
Castle, W. R. Centennial reminiscences. Hawaiian hist. soc. rep., XXVIII,
21-29. [3149b
Centennial of the coming of the first American missionaries to Hawaii, in 1820.
The common origin of Maoris and tiawaiians. Utah geneal, and hist, mag., XI
(July) 135-140. [3150
Dole, Sanf Old B. The Hawaiian body politic. Hawaiian hist. soc. rep., XXVIII,
29-38. [3150a
Hawaiian mission centennial. The centennial book, one hundred years of Christian
civilization in Hawaii, 1820-1920; a symposium, pub. by the Central committee of
the Hawaiian mission centennial. Honolulu. 90 p. plates, ports. [3151
Restarick, H. B. The Pilgrims of 1820. Hawahan hist. soc. rep., XXVIII,
16-20. [3151a
Regarding the missionaries who went to Hawaii from Boston, in 1820.
Stewart, C. S. The Hawaiian Islands in 1822. [Boston: Old South association] 18 p.
(Old South leaflets, no. 221) [3152
Ed. by S. E. Morison.
Extracts from the journal of Charles S. Stewart, who was sent as a missionary to Honolulu, in 1822.
Thrum, Thomas G. Centennial chronology of the Hawaiian mission. Hawahan
hist. soc. rep., XXVIII, 39-46. [3152a
Regarding the American mission to Hawaii in 1820.
Philippine Islands.
Astrain, Antonio. Historia de la Compania de Testis en la asiatencia de Espaiia. t.
V. Vitelleschi, Carafa, Piccolomini, 1615-1652. Madrid: Administraci6n de Razon
y fe, 1916. xi, 734 p. [3153
Contains a section entitled: La Compania de Jesus en Filipinas de 1615 a 1752.
Compania general de tabacos de Filipinas. Coleccion general de documentos relati-
ves a las Islas Filipinas existentes en el Archivo de Indias de Sevilla. Tomo III
(1519-1522). Barcelona [Imprenta de la viuda de Luis Tasso] vi, 383 p. [3154
The documents liere given relate in general to Magellan's voyage of circumnavigation.
Diamonon, Victoriano D. The development of self-government in the Philippine
Islands. Iowa City, la. vii, [2], 11-162 p. [3156
Thesis (PH. D.) — University of Iowa, 1920.
A review of the progress toward self-government during the American administration.
Fehlinger, H. Die Bevolkerung der PhilipDinen. jAHRBtJCH. Nationalokonomie,
CXV. Bd. (Aug.) 162-164. [3156
Gibbens, Lex) T. Law courts in the Philippines. In Bar association of the state of
Kansas. Proceedings, thirty-seventh annual meeting, held in the city of Topeka,
Jan. 30-31, 1920. p. 71-81. [3157
McGovney, Dudley Odell. Stories of long ago in the Philippines. Rev. ed.
Yonkers-on-Hudson, N. Y. and Manila: World book co. 128 p. illus. (incl. maps).
(Philippine education series) [3168
Malcolm, George A. Constitutional history of the Philippines. Am. bar assoc.
JOUR., VI (Oct.) 109-112. [3159
This study is made under three heads: Spanish influence, American influence, and PhiiipptQe
influence.
Betana, W. E. Indice de personas nobles y otras de calidad que han estado en Fili-
pinas (1521-1898). Real acad. hist, bol., LXXVI (June) 485-502; LXXVII
(July-Aug.) 60-67, 245-272. [3160
Contents. — A to O.
Schurz, William Lytle. The royal Philippine company. Hispanic Am. hist, rev.,
Ill (Nov.) 491-508. [3161
A study of the beginning of direct trade between Spain and the Philippines under the control of the
Eeal compania de Filipinas, chartered in March 1785. The company had a monopoly of trade between
Spain and the Philippines whether direct or via the ports of South America.
200
INDEX.
Abbott, J. S. C, 1671.
Lyman, 568, 1788.
Abemethy, Alonzo, 942.
Abolition, cause, 1899; party, 1290.
Aboriginal America, antiquities, 170-235; Indians,
236-296; Mexico, Central America, West Indies,
and South America, 297-363; recent publica-
tions relating to, 34.
Aborigines, dogs of, 170a; facial characteristics of,
259; of Colombia, 341; of Ecuador, 324. -See
also Indians, and Man, prehistoric.
Abrams, A. W., 685.
Academy, at Keosauqua, la., 1299; movement in
the South, 2534.
Acadia, 2759, 2811.
Acadia university, Wolfville, N. S., 2721, 2735.
Acadiana, 2868.
Acadians, 2864.
"Acadie," origin of the name, 2867.
Acker, J. C, 1140.
Ackerman family, 1970.
Actors, 18th century, in America, 538.
Adams, Arthur, 1941.
C. F., ST., 967.
C. F.,jr., 967.
F. L., 2383.
Henry, 967, 1673-1679.
J. Q., 2458.
J. T., 1932.
John, political ideas of, 2259; treaties of the
administration of, 2216.
R. C, 2261.
R. M., 1681.
Adams family, 1933, 1941; of Massachusetts, 967,
1680.
Adcock, A. S., 569.
Adirondack regiment in the Civil war, 1000a.
Adornment, Indian. See Necklace.
Adventurers, English, 684.
"Adventurers of Oregon," 1213.
Aerssen, Comelis van, heer van Sommelsdij-k,
3127a.
"Africa and the discovery of America," 431.
Agassiz, Louis, 1665.
Agent, colonial, 537; of Conne<;ticut, 848.
Agrarian, crusade, 2301; revolution, 2305.
Agricultural aristocracy. See Landed gentry.
Agriculture, 2301-2307; among the Indians of Ecua-
dor, 328; development of Illinois since the Civil
war, 1267a; in ancient Mexico, 358a; Indian,
182, 267; interests in Massachusetts, Revolu-
tionary period, 851; Uterature, beginnings of,
2620; Mississippi Valley, sources for the history
of, 155! See also Farmers' movement, Farming,
Harvest festival (Indian), and Plants.
Agriculture, United States department of, 2307.
111124°— 23 15
Ahern, G. A., 2424.
Air service, European war, 1028, 1050; 50th aero
squadron, 1171; 639th aero squadron, 1181. -See
also Lafayette flying corps.
Aircraft invention during the World war, 1060.
Aisne defensive, marines in, 1065.
Akin, James, 439.
Alabama, aboriginal towns in, 170; history stories
of, 1220; Indian artifacts from, 231; Supreme
court of, 2262; U. S. senator from, 1907-1920, 1683.
Alabama anthropological society, 170.
Alamo, 526.
Alaska, Indians of, 267; Presbyterian mission work
in, 2475; public documents relating to, 38; pur-
chase of, 2170.
Albany traders, first push westward of, 734.
Alberdi, J. B., 2200.
Albert, Thomas, 2859a.
Alberta, Can., 2952.
Albright, Samuel, 1593.
Alcazar, Cayetano, 2954.
Alcock, F. J., 2943.
Alcoholic drinks of the Indians, 327.
Alcola, Pa., 2507.
Alcott, L. M., 1668.
Alden, C. S., 1016.
, Isaac, 1942.
John, 602, 670a.
Alexander, H. B., 297.
William, Earl of Stirling, 838.
Alexandria, Va., 2084, 2102; memorial to Washing-
ton the mason, 1915.
Alfonce, Jean, 364.
Algiers, treaty with, 1795, 2216.
Algonquin Indians, 2813; artifacts, 176; missions,
2773.
AUan, William, 943.
Allegheny co.. Pa., 2085.
Allegheny river, expedition down, I749, 433.
Allen, Charles, 1671.
G. B., 2504.
G. M., 170a.
Ira, 1682.
John, 698.
Allsopp, F. W., 1857,
Ahnack, J. C, 76, 2528,
Almagro, Diego de, 2981.
Almanacs, New York, 1694-1850, 53; Phinney's
western^ 2411; published in western New York,
2411.
Alston, Theodosia Burr, 1693.
Altamira, Rafael, 77, 826, 2953.
Altorfler, J. C, 1807.
Alvarez, Augustin, 3087.
Francisco, 826.
I Alvarez de Paz, Diego, 3001.
201
202
INDEX.
Alvord, C. W., 365, 790, 1261, 1262, 1265, 1266.
S. M., 1245.
Amalgamated association of iron, steel, and tin
workers, 2357.
Amazon river, 2987, 3124.
Ambrosetti, J. B., 89.
Ambulance service, European war, 1052, 1059, 1148;
Canadian, 2853; unit with the French army,
1177.
Amecourt, d', 3122.
America, discovery of, 412, 415, 429, 430.
America in general, antiquities, 170-235, 297-363;
discovery and exploration, 364-431; early ac-
counts to 1600, 382, 383, 404, 407, 411, 425-428;
Indians, 236-296.
See also Pre-Columbian discovery of America.
"American," the term, 2811.
American Catholic historical association, 118.
American Catholic historical society of Philadel-
phia, 22.
American character, 513. See also National char-
acteristics and ideals.
American council of learned societies, 126.
American expeditiomary force, European war, 1015,
1029, 1039, 1066, 1076, 1092a: aero squadrons, 1171,
1176, 1181; artillery regiments, 1144, 1153; cam-
paign of 1918, 1107; S2nd division, 1180; 89th divi-
sion, 1155; engineers, 1083; first division, 1169;
Gen. Pershing's final report, 1085; history of,
1095; hospitals, 1028, 1053; intelUgence worlc,
1082; marines, 1064, 1065; operations in the
Somme offensive, 1918, 1099; regimental his-
tories, 1140-1187; 32nd division, 1187; 20th divi-
sion, 1178. See also Selective service.
American historical association, 78-84; conference
of historical societies, 79, 80; conference of teach-
ers of history, 81; conference on the report of the
committee on history and education for citizen-
ship, 82, 83; historical manuscripts commission,
reports, 931, 935; meeting at Cleveland, Decem-
ber, 1919, 106, 128; Pacific coast branch, 84;
public archives commission, 59.
"American historical re\iew," 1896-1920, 127.
American historical society, 1554, 1579.
American legion, 1294.
American museum of natural history, N. Y,, 207,
357.
American party in the election of 1852, 2252.
American shrines on English soil, 547.
Americana, early, 2406; early Catholic, 22; in English
newspapers, I64&-I66O, 23; Rhode Island, 31.
See also First editions.
Americanism, educational ideals and, 519; of the
Constitution of the U. S., 2225; 100 years ago,
128-3; what it is, 517. See ah-o National charac-
teristics and ideals, and Tradition, the Ameri-
can.
Amherst, JefTrey, at Crown Point, 1769, 553.
Ammunition trains, A. E. F., 1140, 1165.
Amsterdam, Holland, archives, 653; Pilgrim mar-
riage records at, 578.
Amsterfield, Eng., 685.
Amulet, Indian, 190; prehistoric, 350,
Anacostia, D. C, 1264.
Andara, J. L., 2956.
Anderson, Gunnar, 1841.
Isabel, 1253.
Anderson, J. C, 2262.
R.B., 171,1848.
R. O., 1868.
Andrade, M. G. L. de, 3102.
Andrew, A. P., 1052.
J. A., 988.
Andrews, C. M., 85.
F. D., 1928.
M. P., 86, 531, 532, 914.
N. P., 2232.
Andros, Sir Edmvmd, 714, 715.
Andrus family, 1933.
Angellotti, Mrs. F. M., 1977.
Angevins in Haiti, 3078.
Angler, A. E., 1042.
Anglican church. See English church.
Anglo-Saxon, civilization, 488; origin of American
institutions, 2208.
"Anglo-Saxon saint," an, 2523.
Animals, in early New England, 557; of the aborig-
ines, 170a, 267, 296.
Annapolis, Md., 1856.
"Anne," ship, passengers in, 16S8, 679.
Anniversary celebrations. See Celebrations, his-
torical.
"Annual magazine subject-index, 1919," 1.
Anthony, Katharine, 2651.
Anthropology, American, recent publications in, 34;
Californian, bibliography of, 9; of the Indians,
329; of the Puget Sound Indians, 20; sourcebook
in, 267.
Anti-Catholic outbreak, in Ellsworth, Me., 24.53.
Seealso Convent at Charlesto-wn, burning of, /85^.
Anti-CathoUc phase of Know Nothingism in New
York, 2454.
Anti-slavery movement, 2222; growth of. 937;
triumph in Iowa in 1854, 2238. See also Aboli-
tion.
Antietam, battle of, 1862, 970.
Antilles, Antillia and, 356; French colonial empire
in, 3070. See also West Indies.
Antiquities, 170-235. See also Archaeology.
Antler, figurine, Indian, 223; spoons, Indian, 225.
Anvilie, due d', 2803.
Appomattox, Va., Lee's surrender at, 994.
Arawak Indians, 337, 347.
Arbitration, international. See International arbi-
tration.
Archaeology, American, recent publications in, 34;
Arizona, 174; Aruba, Curaijao, and Bonaire,
325, 326; discoveries in Teotihuacan, 315; Iowa,
201; Latin American, 89; Mexico, 300; Michigan,
187; New Mexico, 213a, 229, 1494, 1495; New
York city, 221; Ohio, 219; the Southwest, 207;
Tennessee, 215; Wisconsin, 188. See also Abo-
riginal America, antiquities, Kensington rune
stone, and Ruins, prehistoric.
Archer, J. J., 971.
Archibald, S. G. W., 2870.
Architect, an early Massachusetts, 1378.
Architecture, ancient Maya, 267; colonial, 1559, 2589,
2591, 2592, 2594, 2598, 2599, 2601; colonial meetmg
house, 1522; ecclesiastical, 2838; Long Island,
N. Y., 1509; Lower Delaware valley, 2591; old
South, 2590; Pennsylvania, 1559, 2594, Philadel-
phia, 2589; Spanish, in Mexico, 3036. See also
Houses, historic
II^DEX.
203
Archives, Canada, 2714; Dutch, relating to the Pil-
grims, 653; English, transcripts from, 73; Ger-
man, relating to the World war, 1105; in the
Connecticut state library, care of, 62; of the
Departmente do la Marine, Paris, 433; of the
French and Spanish periods of Louisiana
history, 794; Ontario, 2787; relating to the Cath-
olic church in America, 2433; Spanish, 68, 70,
72, 1209, 2971, 2975, 3154; Spanish , relating to
Louisiana, 1340; Spanish, relating to New Spain,
3026; Spanish, relating to the activities of the
French in the Southwest, 795; Venetian, de-
spatches relating to Franklin's mission to
France, 833; World war, 61, 68-70. See also
Public records, and Sources and documents.
Archives and manuscript collections, 59-75.
Archivo general de Indias, Seville, 72, 1340; catar
logue of, 2975; documents regarding the Philip-
pines in, 381; documents relating to New Spain,
3026; research in Louisiana history in, 75.
Archivo general de Simancas, Spain, 70.
Archivo histdrico nacional, Madrid, 66.
Arctic exploration, Peary's, 1844, 1845.
Arctic geography, 295.
Arden, Juliette, 1969.
Argentine Republic, 3086-3099; British community
in, during the Great war, 3088; colonial period,
3093; conquistadores of, 3093; descriptive ac-
count of, 3081; government of, colonial period,
3091; independence, 3098; Indians of, 337; inter-
national trade under inconvertible paper money
3099; Italian emigration to, 3090; prehistoric
culture of, 322; United States shipping in, 1809-
1810, 3089. See also La Plata region.
Argonne, battle of the, 1918, 1050.
Arica. See Tacna-Arica controversy.
Arikara Indians in the Dakota Indian war, 1876,
1005.
Aristocracy. See Landed gentry.
Arizona, antiquities, 216, 234; archaeology of, 174,
175, 179; cliff dwellers of, 178; early exploration
in the Grand Canyon, 1189; Indians of, 234.
Arizona, University of, library, 3028.
Arkansas, Caddo sites in, 191; Catholic church in,
^434; early explorations and settlemsuts, 1222;
Italian city located in, 1223; local history, 1222,
1223.
"Arkansas," the ram, 969.
Aries, Henri d', 2759.
Arlington, Va., 1612.
Armbruster, E. L., 831.
Armistice, 1918, 1073, 1080, 1081, 1091.
Army, Confederate. See Confederate army.
Army, U. S., biographical register of graduates of
West Point, 1661a; during the Civil war, 1000,
1000a, 1001; during the Revolution, medical
dept. of, 869; life in the Civil war, 995. See also
American expeditionary force, Continental
army, and European war, regimental histories.
Arnold, Benedict, treason of, 879.
E. H., 945.
F. A., 724.
H. v., 1529.
Marguerite, 2300.
Aroztegui, Martin de, 2807.
Art, ancient American gold work, 311; destruc-
tion of works of, during the Revolution, 857;
Indian, 190, 220, 234, 267, 276, 276, 283, 288, 329;
Maya, 357; prehistoric, 319; prehistoric Mexican,
301, 340. See also Fine arts, Ornament, pre-
historic. Pottery, Silver plate, and Silver-
smiths.
Art school, first in America, 2607.
Artifacts, aboriginal, 217; Algonkian, 176; Indian,
193, 198, 225, 231; prehistoric, 173. See also
Pipes.
Artillery. See Field artillery.
Artists, American, 18th century, 2593; Indians as,
283; South Carolina, 1766-1774, 1586.
Aruba. See Oruba.
Ashburn, T. Q,., 1141.
Ashcraft, E. M., 2263.
Ashford, C. W., 3149a.
Ashley, William, 570.
Ashmead, H. G., 1543.
Ashurst, Henry, 689.
Asiatic origin of the American Indian, 292.
Association, 1774, 855. See also Committee of asso
ciation, 1775.
Association cathoUque des voyageurs de commerce,
2880.
Association of the bar of the city of New York, 2275.
Astor, J. J., 1667.
Astor's overlanders, 1213.
Astoria under the Nor' westers, 1213.
Astrain, Antonio, 2983, 2984.
Astronomy, Aztec knowledge of, 332.
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railway company,
2330.
Atherton, W. H., 2760.
Atkinson, Minnie, 1343.
Atlantic coast line railroad, 2334.
Atlantis, American descendants of inhabitants of,
419; identification of, 419; present status of the
problem of, 387a.
Atlas of American history, 48-1.
Atlases in the Library of Congress, 26, 27.
Atterbury, A. P., 2474.
Attiwandaron Indians, 224, 225.
Attorney general of the United States, in 1819, 902.
Aubin, J. H., 1861.
Auclair, E. J., 2873.
Auctions, history of, 2327.
Audet, F. J., 554.
Augsburg seminary, Minneapolis, Minn., 2466.
Aurner, C. R., 2529.
Austerfield, Eng., 632.
Austin, F. R., 1042.
Austin, Tex., 1604.
Authors, Cuban, 3061; financial rewards of, 2615;
Spanish American, 2958. See also Literature,
biography.
Avery, C. L., 2587.
S. P., 1943, 2031.
Avery family, 1943, 1944.
Aves, Islands of, naval battle, 1678, 3070.
Aviation, pioneer in, 1783. See also Air service.
Ayacucho, Marshall of, 3083.
Ayala, Manuel Josef de, 2996.
Ayapel, Colombia, 311.
Aylett, William, 808.
Aztalan, ancient Indian city of, 203, 228.
Aztecs, ancient laws of, 313; calendar, 356; Codex
Borbonicus, 332; hieroglj^phics, 316; prehis-
toric ruins, 339.
Aztekan Unguistic group, 250.
204
INDEX.
Babb, J. E., 1837.
Babcock, Yi. H., 366, 367.
W. M., 1438.
Babson, H. C, 1360.
Bach, C. A., 1143.
Baclrman, W. E., 1144.
Bacon, C. W., 2205.
W. J., 1145.
Bad Axe, battle of the, 183^, 1654.
Bade, W. F., 2680.
Badin, S. T., 2441, 2442.
Bahret, J. L., 1497.
Bagley, W. C, 473-475.
Bailey, E. A., 832.
• E. H. S., 2705.
Bain, Read, 2530.
Baker, A. C, 1933.
L. S., 1146.
R. P., 2711.
Baker family, 1933.
Bakersfield, Vt., 2086.
Bakewell, C. M., 1020.
Balch, T. W., 2158.
Baldensperger, Fernand, 1675.
Baldwin, M. S., 2732.
Marian, 1021.
T. W., 2101, 2118.
Baldwin family, 2043.
BaUentine, C. F., 1731.
Baltimore, Md., Church of the New Jerusalem,
2457; first Presbyterian services in the presby-
tery of, 1714, 761; Presbyterian beginnings,
2481.
"Baltimore," U. S. ship, 1008.
Bancroft, Aaron, 1671.
George, 1671.
M. R., 1361.
Banister, John, 804.
Bankhead, J. H., 1683.
Banking, in Canada, 2745; in Mexico, 3029; in Mis-
souri in the thirties, 2349; progress, 2348.
Banks, in Seattle, Wash., 1626; Bank of the Man-
hattan company, 2345; Canadian bank of com-
merce, 2745; Royal bank of Canada, 2848.
Banning, P. W., 1929.
Bannon, H. T., 1531.
Bapst, John, 2453.
Baptists, activities in Missouri, 1857-1917, 2423;
church in Boone co., Missouri, 1465; first church
in Maine, 1347; in the colonies, 2422; of Fau-
quier CO., Va., 1614; of Will co., 111., 1267.
Bar association of the city of New York, 2275.
Barboe, John, 757.
Barce, Elmore, 236.
Barcos, J. R., 3087.
Bardin, James, 1778.
Barge, Alfred, 2681.
Barker, E. C, 1604.
E. F., 1987.
R. L., 298.
Barnard, H. C, 460.
Barnes, Everett, 472.
Barnett, L. S. M., 2148.
Barnhardt, J. D., 1263.
. J. D., jr., 2470.
Bamouw, A. J., 572.
Barnstable co., Mass., 2087, 2088.
Baroway, Aaron, 1732.
Barr, R. J., 1472.
Barrett, S. A., 203.
Barrington, Daines, 437.
Barrows, D. P., 267.
Barrus, Clara, 2634.
Barth, Silas, 2425.
Barton, Bruce, 1717.
Clara, 1668, 1671.
J. L., 573.
W. E., 1786, 1789-1792, 1804, 1808, 1913.
Baseball, national game, 2382.
Bashford, Herbert, 2675.
Basket weaves, Indian, 267.
Basketry, Cherokee Indian, 288.
Baskett, Mark, 710.
Bass, W. W., 1189.
Bassett, N. L., 1344.
Bateman, Newton, 1268.
Bates, A. C, 732.
E. W., 574.
H. L., 2545.
Battle, G. G., 2264.
J. S.. 2264.
Battle of the Little Big Horn, 1876, 1005.
Battlefields, American, in France, 1019, 1045, 1076.
Battles, Civil war, 946-949, 953-956, 965, 970, 971, 975,
982, 983, 987, 990; European war, 1019, 1048, 10.50,
1064, 1065, 1076, 1099; forgotten, 3097; Revolu-
tionary, 859, 878, 881.
Baudoin, Marcel, 172.
Bauer, Ignacio, 60.
Bauslin, D. H., 2465.
Baxter, J. P., 1190, 2309.
Richard, 689.
Bayes, W. R., 2523.
Bayle, Constantino, 368, 405.
Bayley, E. A., 1684.
F. W., 2585.
Jacob, 1684.
Bazalgette, Leon, 2694.
Beach, E. L., 1008.
John, 1308.
Bean, E. C, 2296.
Bear river, Acadia, 2811.
Beard, C. A., 473-475.
Mary, 2350.
W.A., 923.
Beattie, J. A., 1473.
Beatty, J. M., 1712.
J. M., jr., 805.
W. W.,87.
Beatty family, 805.
Beaubien, F. G., 1264.
Beaubien family, 1264.
Beauharnois, parish of, Que., 2881.
Beaulieu, Claude de, 2778.
Beaver Valley, Ont., 2907.
Becker, C. L., 2278.
E. v., 2065.
Jerdnimo, 369, 2985, 2986.
Bedel, Col. Timothy, 884.
Bedel's rangers, 884.
Bedwell, C. E. A., 534, 535.
Beecher family, 1934.
Beer, William, 1111.
Beers, H. A., 2623, 2648, 2689.
INDEX.
205
Bek, W. G., 1451.
Belalc4zar, Sebastian de, 418.
Belcher, Jonathan, 716.
Belgian participation in the first voyage of circum-
navigation, 391.
Belgium, American army in, 1918, 1048; American
battlefields in, 1076; American fighting in,
European war, 1034.
Beliefs, primitive Indians, 249, 281.
Belknap, H. W,, 1956.
R.R., 1022.
Bell, Hamilton, 2609.
Bellamy, John, 559.
Belleau Wood, battle of, 1064.
Bellessort, Andre, 439a.
Belote, T. T., 88.
Belpre, O., 1533.
Beltrami, G.C., 1310.
Beltran y Rozpide, Ricardo, 370, 2957.
Benalcdzar. See Belalc4zar.
Bench and bar, Illinois, 2263, See also Courts, and
Judiciary.
Benedict, W. H., 1481.
Benjamin, J. P., 1685.
Benners, E.E., 299.
Bennett, H. B., 476.
Bennington, battle of, 1777, 626.
Benson, A. B., 1748.
^A.E., 1112.
F. H., 1945.
Benson family, 1945.
Bentley, Blanche, 1594.
Benton, E. J., 2191.
T. H.,1686.
Bepler, D. W., 1224.
Berbice, British Guiana, 3133.
Berkley, H. J., 2762.
Bermejo de la Rica, Antonio, 3141.
Bermudas, colonization of, 3053.
Bernardy, A. A., 833.
Bernstorff, J. H. A. H. A., graf von, 1023-1025; cor-
respondence with Berlin, 1914-1917, 1105;
mission in America, 1038.
Berrien, J. M., 1687.
Berry, C. W., 1498.
W. B., 1946.
Berry family, 1946.
Berwick, Me., 2089.
Beveridge, A. J.,911, 1826.
Beverly, Mass., 711.
Beyer, Hermann, 300.
Bibb, Henry, 940.
Bible, printed in Boston in 1752, 710; request for
distribution among the Catholics in Louisiana,
in 1813, 2451.
Bibliogi-aphy, 1-55; agi-icultural literature, 2620;
Alabama anthropology, 170; Canadian, 2753;
conquest of Mexico, 420; Hispanic American,
2963-2965; Latin American archaeology and
ethnology, 89; Lincoln, 1790; Mexican litera-
ture, 3028; Niagara region, 2411; Plymouth
church, 1620-1859, 655; Theodore Roosevelt,
1890.
Bicentennial celebration, Bolton, Conn., 1245;
Litchfield, Conn., 1248.
Bickerdyke, M. A., "Mother," 1688.
Bicknell, T. W., 1579.
Biddle, E.W., 2548.
Bieler, Adolf, 3103.
Bigelow, Timothy, 1671.
Biggar, E. B., 2897.
H. P., 371,2763.
Bijlsma,R., 3126-3128.
Bilbao, Spain, 3048.
Biloxi, Miss., 1449, 1450.
Bingham, B. F., 1886.
Hiram, 1026.
Binldey, W. C, 924.
Biography, American, public documents relating
to, 39; American, syllabus of, 501; American
Catholic hierarchy, 16; as a help in teaching
history and geography, 103; comprehensive,
1661-1672; educational, 2579-2586; fine arts,
2603-2614; Illinois political, 1262; individual
1673-1928; literary, 2631-2700; Maine, 1351;
Maryland colonial, 757, 760; Massachusetts,
Civil war period, 988; religious, 2491-2523;
South Carolina, 1591.
Bird-quill belt, Indian, 190.
Birkenhead, Lord, 2862.
Birket, James, 725.
Birket-Smith, Kaj, 173.
Biron, Dolor, 2874.
Birth customs and ideas, Indian, 328.
Bisbee, F. A., 2490.
Bishop, J. B., 1869.
Bissell, Daniel, 877.
Mrs. W. H., 1274.
Black Hawk war, 1832, 1654.
Black Prairie, Tex., 1606.
Blaine, J. E., 1947.
J. G., 1667, 1689; mansion, Augusta, Me.,
1344; phrase that beat, 2237.
Blaine family, 1947.
Blake, Edward, 2732.
T. B., 946.
Blakeslee, G. H., 3018, 3052.
Blanc Mont, battle of, 1918, 1048.
Blanco-Fombona, Rufino, 2962, 3008, 3093.
Bland, H. M., 2676.
J. O. P., 3081.
Blasco IbMez, Vicente, 3019.
Blazquez y Delgado, Antonio, 379, 372, 373.
Blegen, T. C, 1755, 2403.
BUnd, Iowa state college for, 2529.
Block Island, first settlement of, 727.
"Blockade," privateer, 1812, 918.
Blockade runners, 1861-1866, 993.
Bloom, L. B., 174, 175.
Blow, George, 925.
Blue laws of Nova Scotia, 2863.
Bluffton movement in South CaroUna, 2232a.
Boas, Franz, 237, 238, 267.
Bodega, Juan Francisco de la, 437.
Bodfish, A. D., 1362.
Bogardus, F. S., 82, 492.
Bogart, E. L., 1265, 1266.
Boggs, Mary, 1283.
Bohemians in America, 2388.
Boit, John, 440.
Bok, E.D., 2632.
Bolivar, Simon, 3003, 3004, 3008, 3009-3012, 3014.
Bolivar doctrine, 2956.
Bolivia, 3100, 3101; antiquities of, 309; Indian
languages of, 305; Indians of, 337.
206
INDEX.
Bolton, C. K., 687.
H. E., 536.
Herbert, 797.
R. P., 239, 733.
Theodore, 2005, 2612, 2613.
Bolton, Conn., 1245.
Boman, Eric, 89.
Bonaire, aboriginal population of, 320; archaeology
of, 325, 326.
Bond, B.D.,jr., 537.
Bone carving, Indian. See Antler figurine.
Bone work, Hawikuh, 198.
Bonham, M. L., jr., 82, 90.
Bonier, M. L., 1580.
Bonilla y San Martin, Adolfo, 3004.
Bonito, Pueblo, 213a.
Bonnccamps, J. P. de, 432.
Bonney, W. P., 1023.
Boone, Daniel, 1200.
Borbonicus, Codex, 332.
Borchard, E. M., 3018.
Borja, Francisco de, 384.
Boston, Eng., 632.
Boston, Mass., Bible printed in, in 1752, 710; church
organ imported from London, 1711, 2702; Cot-
ton Hill and adjacent estates, 1060-1750, 690;
crooked and narrow streets, 1416; description,
1404; early trading voyages to the Northwest
coast of ships from, 1202, 1203; Liberty Tree
chapter, D. A. R., 895; maritime trade of, 1207,
1216; New South church, 1408; Paul Revere
house, 1367; petition for a bridge, 1720, 721; siege
of, 1775-1776, 811; Spunker club, 1772-1775, 1400;
Sunday schools in, before 1819, 708; topography,
1648, 691.
Boston and Maine railroad, 2328.
Boston public library, 2359; books on New Englaad
in, 3; books on the Pilgrims in, 4.
Botany, in Kansas, 2705. See also Plants.
Boucher, C. S., 22;J2a.
Bouchor, J. F., 1027.
Bougainville, L. A. de, 861.
Boughton, G. H., 686.
Boulton, H. J., 2931.
Boundary, Maryland-Virginia, settled, 17S6, 771;
New Hampsliire, about 1680, 567; North Caro-
lina-Tennessee, survey, 1799, 1528; Northern
Neck of Virginia, settled, 17S6, 771; Pennsyl-
vania-Virginia, settled, 1736, 771 ; Pennsylvania's
southern, 1560; Tennessee-Kentucky, 1599; Vir-
ginia, ifl 1736, 771.
Boundary controversies, between states, 1440;
Connecticut and Permsylvania, in 1782, 753;
Minnesota- Wisconsin, 1440; New Mexico-Texas,
924; Spanish America, 2960; Spanish-Portu-
guese, in the La Plata region, 3141; Venezuela-
British Guiana arbitration, 2196.
Bouquet, Henry, 750, 1690.
Bouresches, France, capture of, 1918, 1064.
Bourgeois, Marguerite, 2700.
Bourgin, G., 3142.
Bourlamaque, T. C, chevalier de, 2764.
Bourtroux, Emile, 471.
Bowen, E. W., 2669.
Mrs. J. T., 1113.
Bowers, T. S., 1691.
Bowersox, C. A., 1531a.
Bowker, R. R., 2358.
Bowling family, 1938.
Bowman, G. E., 576-579, 1942, 1944, 1959, 1964, 1965,
1967, 1991, 1998, 2008, 2023, 2024, 2029, 2038-2040,
2051, 2052, 2032, 2071, 2077, 2087, 2088, 2131.
W. W., 972.
Bowne, B. P., 2579.
Boyco, Joseph, 9-17.
Boycr, C. S., 1482.
Boynton, John, 1671.
Brackett, A. G., 1655.
F. P., 1225.
Braddock, Oen. Edward, 750.
Braddock's campaign. See Monongahela, battle of.
Bradford, GamaUel, 1676, 1689, 1710, 2637, 2638,
Gershom, 1363.
William, 104, 580, 584, 600, 606, 632, 654, 655;
marriage certificate of, 619.
Bradford's history of the Plymouth church, 655.
Bradford's history of the Plymouth settlement, 580.
Bradford, Pa., 1499.
Bradlee, F. B. C, 2310, 2328-2329.
Bradley, G.D., 2330.
K. E., 1499.
Bradsher, E.L., 2615.
Bradstreet, John, 553.
BradweU, I. G., 948-956.
Brady, W. Y., 1948.
Brady family, 1948.
Brandon, E.E., 461, 462.
Brandywine-Manor, Pa., 2128.
Brauom, M. E., 91.
Brausat, sieur dc, 2805.
Brant, Joseph, 2929.
Brant co., Ont., 2921.
Braut liistorical society. 2921.
Brattle, Thomas, 2702.
Braxton co., W. Va., 1634.
Bray, Daniel, 1692.
Braal, 3102-3109a; account of, written in 1583, 382;
antiquities of, 323, 352; commercial relations
with the United States, 1809-1810, 3104; de-
scriptive account of, 3081; Indians of, 336a;
Italian emigration to, 3105.
Breceda, Alfredo, 3020.
Breckinridge bill for the government of Louisiana,
1803, 2208.
Bremer, Fredrika, 1310.
Brennan, M. K., 1419.
Breton, A. C, 301, 302, 2952.
Bretons, and the American revolution, 885.
Brewster, William, 104, 575, 576, 630, 632, 656.
Bridgers, J. L., 1527.
Bridgman, E. P., 1315.
H. A., 1191.
H. L., 1842, 1843.
"A briefe declaration of the present state of things
in Virginia," 16 16, 778.
Briggs, Herbert, 1294.
Brigham, A. P., 1364.
C.S., 5,688.
Bright, John, 991.
Brinkmann, Edith, 1903.
Brinley, Edward, 1585.
Bristol, T. H., 1934, 1949, 2144.
Bristol, R. I., 918, 919.
INDEX.
207
British, army, in the War of 1812, 915; discoveries
and acqulsitioas in the Pacific, 390a; documents
of tlie Canadian war of 1812, 922; drama, in-
fluence on tlie American stage, 261G; invasion
of southeastern Peimsylvania, 1777-177S, 87o;
naval forces at the capture of Louisbourg, ^7^5,
543; occupation of Philadelphia, Revolutionary
war, 876; occupation of the Illinois country,
790; officer in the American revolution, journal
of, 811; point of view in regard to American
revolution, 864, 872; secret service report on
Canada, 1711, 2774; society in the Argentine
Republic, 3088; writers, attitude towards
America, 909. See also English, and Great
Britain.
British America, 2711-2953; 1763 to 1867, 2816; 1867
to 1920, 2842-2858; American revolution, French
Canadian supporter of; 2837, Confederation,
2819, 2834; discovery to 1763, 2759-2815; Euro-
pean war, 2850-2858; French period, 2759-2815;
general, 2711-2758; politics and government,
2817-2821, 2825, 2834, 2835, 2843, 2844, 2847, 2875,
2876, 2908; proclamations issued by the gover-
nor, 1765-1791, 2714; rebellion of 1837, 2830;
regional history, 2859-2953; War of 1812, 2839-
2841; western provinces and territories, 2943-
2953. See also Canada.
British Columbia, Bank of, 2745; emigration to,
18G2, 2822; Indian land titles in, 2953; Indians
of Vancouver Island, 267.
British Empire, American colonies as part of, 460,
541, 542, 546, 547a, 549, 873; builders of, 393;
decentralization of, 873; historical geography,
641; history, to 1763, 546; overseas expansion,
460; relation of Canada to, 2724, 2730, 2733,2747,
2754, 2758. See also Great Britain.
British Guiana, 3124, 3125; Venezuela boundary
arbitration, 2198.
British Honduras, 30i2a.
British North America, post office in, 1639-1870,
549; since 1713, 460.
British West Indies, 3053-3059.
British zone, European war, the Yankee in, 1069.
Britton, R. J., 1452.
Brix, Maurice, 1544, 2588.
Broad Bay, Me., 1353.
Broadus, J. A., 2491.
Brock, Isaac, campaign of 1812, 2839-2841.
Brocklehurst, J. H., 2695.
Broderick, D.C., 1231.
Bronze, prehistoric ceremorxial axe of, 322.
BrookKne, Mass., 2090.
Brooklyn, N. Y., 859.
Brooks, D.S., 1914.
J. P., 1850.
T. J., 1296.
Van Wyck, 2639-264L
Broom, Jacob, 2252.
Broshar, Helen, 734.
Brown, A. H., 92.
C. B., 2615.
C.E., 176, 233.
E. S., 61, 903, 2206.
Gertrude, 93.
J. I., 581.
J. S., 1267.
Jacob, 2148.
Brown, Jeremiah, 1766.
■ John, 582.
■ Col. John, expedition against Ticonderoga,
1777, 807.
L. D., 1069.
— M. C, lG55a.
— P.M., 2192.
R. S., 1028.
W. C, 1950.
Brown family, 1949-1951.
Brown university. Civil war record of, 958; library,
2380.
Browne, C. F. (Artemus Yv''ard), 2G33.
— G. I., 834.
G. W., 1191a.
W. B., 1365.
Browning, W. E ., 3052.
William, 1704.
Browning family, 1952.
Bruce, P. A., 2547. \
Bruce co., Ont., 2899. \
Brule, Etienne, 392, 2813. j
Brmn, Baltasar, 2161. V,
Brumbaugh, G. M., 540, 886.
Brunet, Meade, 1168.
Brunswick co., Va., 2091.
Brute, Simon, 2492.
Bryan, G. S., 1192.
Bryn Mawr, Pa., 1555.
Bucareli expedition, 1775, 437.
Buccaneers, 387, 2988, 3070.
Buchanan, James. See Presidential campaign of
1856.
Buck, S. J., 94, 1445, 2301.
Backham, J. W., 2412, 2579.
Buckingham, B. R., 95, 96.
G. T., 1953, 1954.
Buckingham family, 1953, 1954.
Bucyrus, O., 108.
Budget in Massachusetts, 2347.
Buechler, A. F., 1472.
Buell, M. H., 1420.
Buena Vista campaign, Mexican war, 933.
Buena Vista co., la., 1119.
Buenos Aires, Argentina, battle between the En-
glish and Spanish, 1807, 3079; daily newspaper
of, 3096; founder of, 3095.
Buffalo, N. Y., 1496, 1506, 1516, 2249, 2411.
"Buffalo Bill," 1715.
Buffalo Creek reservation, 1508.
Buffalo historical society, 2522.
Buford, M. M., 957.
Buildings, historic. New Orleans, 1330, 1332, 1334;
Wisconsin, first capitol, 1649. See also Houses,
historic.
Buley, R. C, 933.
BuU, Ole, 1567.
— S. A., 1366.
Bullington family, 1955.
BuUock, A. H., 1671.
Bunau-VariUa, Phihppe, 3050.
Bungi Ojibwa Indians, 286.
Bunker HiU, battle of, 811.
BunneU, A. H., 5S3.
Bunt, C. G. E., 303.
Burbank, A. S., 584
Bureau co.. 111., 1137.
208
INDEX.
Burford, Thomas, 757.
Burgess, W. H., 5S5, 586.
Burial, aboriginal forms of, 177; Indian, 349. See
ako Cemeteries.
Burke, Edmund, 872.
Burlington, N. 1, 819, 1492.
Burnap family, 1956.
Bmnes, David, 1256..
Burnett family, 1956.
Burnham, Smith, 477.
Burpee, L. J., 28,12.
Burr, Aaron, papers of, 809; prosecution of, 1693.
C. R., 1254.
— C. S., 1831.
. Theodosk. See Alston, Theodosia Burr.
Burr family, 1957.
Burrage, Champlin, 587, 588,
— H. S., 958.
W. L., 1666.
Burntt, Elihu, 1671.
Burroughs, John, 2634.
Burtoft, L. A_^J., 1761.
Burton family, 1958.
BushneU, D. I.,jr., 177.
Bushy Run, battle of, 1763, 1690.
Business, conditions following the Civil war, 2320;
federal control over, 2317. See also Commerce
and industry.
Business man's club, N. Y., 2373.
Butler, B. F., 1807.
Sir Geoffrey, 589.
N. M., 1824, 2163, 2207.
Walter, 2898.
Butler's rajUgors, 2898,
" Butternut," origm of the term, 981.
Byars, W. V., 1453.
Byington, E. H., 97.
Byrd, William, 763.
Byrne, L. L., 1702.
Cabell, J. B., 2631, 2635, 2636.
M.C. (A.), 37.
Cabez-a de Vaca, Alvar Niinez. See Nunez Cabeza
djO Vaca.
Cabil'do, at New Orleans, 1330; archives of, 794.
Cabinets of the presidents, 2279.
Cabot, W. B., 2859.
Caddo sites in Arkansas, 191.
Cadman family, 1959.
Cadot, J. C, 2899.
Cadzon, D. A., 240.
CahuiUa Indians, 260, 267.
Caldwell, G. F., 32.
James, 1694.
R. G., 2207a, 2713.
Calendar, ancient, 329a; Central American prehis-
toric, 356; Maya, day-signs and month signs in,
336. See also Almanacs.
Calero, Manuel, 3021.
California, 1224-1242; acquisition of, 1230; anthro-
pology of, bibliography, 9; Franciscan missions
in; 437; in 1846-1848, 1827; in 1849-50, 1214; in the
European war, 1114; Indians of, 209, 264, 265,
267, 273, 274, 291a; journey to, 1850, 453; 1851, 447;
pioneer J.esuit missionary and explorer in, 2506;
Spanish exploration and settlement, 378, 379
437; state library, 1234; state normal school, San
Jose, 98; transition from Mexican to American
rule. 1227.
California, Historical survey commission, War his-
tory dept., 1114.
Calkins, Matthew, 871.
CaUahan, C. H., 1915.
CaJlender, Geoffrey, 375.
Callieres, chevalkr de, 2792.
Calver, W. L., 835.
Calvert, Cecil, 550.
H. M., 959.
Calzada, Rafael, 376,
Cambridge, Eng., 632.
Cambridge, Mass., 687, 1377, 1378; letter from, 18U,
1413; public library, 6; scenes in, about 1780,
1387.
Camden, N, J., 1482.
Camp Devens, story of, 1086.
Camp Merritt, N. J., 1030.
Campaigns, presidential. See Presidential cam-
paigns.
Campbell, Mrs. A. A., 1612, 1613, 1721, 1768, 2624.
A. D., 590, 591.
J. A., 1695.
T. J., 791, 2506.
Camps, European war, community service in, 1104;
Revolutionary war, 835.
Canaan, N. Y., 2092.
Canada, American invasion of, in 1775, French-
Canadian chanson dealing with, 2829; and the
Imperial war cabinet, 2758; archives, 2714;
banks and banking, 2745: bondage to the
United States, 2737; British protection of,
2758; common law, 2757; conquest by the
EngUsh, 541, 2702, 2821; conquest of, relation to
the War of 1812, 914; constitution, 2742; devel-
opment since Confederation, 2752; discovery
and exploration, La Salle's, 410; during the
Revolutionary war, 2816; exodus of French
from, 1760-1763, 2811; fine arts, 2838; first
Enghsh conquest of, 1627-1632, 2762; first "new
province" of the Dominion, 2949; French
Canadian literature, 2744; French inQuences
in, 2716; German emigration to, 2735a; German
pubUeatiens relating to, 1914-1920, 2731; German
submarine activities on the coast, 1101; great
orators of, 2732; growth and achievement of the
Dominion, 2724; historical coins and medals,
2734; historical pictures, 2739; historical publi-
cations relating to, 2748; immigration, 2750;
in the Great war, 2735; Indians, 2787; interstate
disputes, 2713; Jesuit missions, 2786; judiciary,
2726; literature, 2711, 2735; migration of fugitive
slaves to, 940, 941; military defense of, 2747;
militar-y governments, 1759-1764, 2765; mihtary
history, 2758; national feeling, growth of, 2755;
national self-reliance in, 2758; opinion of
Southern secession, 1860-1861, 973; picture of
"The death of Wolfe" presented to, 2735; place-
names of, 2722; polities and government, 2716,
2730, 2935; post office, 2751; proclamations
issued by the governor-in-chief, 1764-1791,
2817; rebellion of 1837, 28:33; relation to the
British empire, 2724, 2725, 2730, 2733, 2747, 2754,
2758; religious history, 2821, 2824, 2825, 2874,
2883; Scot in, 2749; slavery in, 2743; War of 1812,
922. See also British America.
Canada, Board of historical publications, pro-
gramme of, 2748.
INDEX.
209
Canada, Geological survey of, publications, 1845-
1917, 2723.
Cainada company, 2904.
Canada land company, 2909.
"Canadian annual review of public affairs," 2715.
Canadian bank of commerce, 2745 ,2852.
Canadian Pacific railway, 2846, 2847, 2849.
Canadiana, early, 2731, 2753.
Canadians in the Great war, 2614.
Canal, Medford, Mass., 1392. See also Interoceanic
canal, Nicaragua canal, and Panama canal.
Canby, H. S.,512.
Canelos Indians, 328.
Canfield, C. de L., 1226.
Cannibalism, among the ancient Mexicans, 304;
prehistoric, 227.
Cannon,!. G., 2233.
• P. H., 478.
Cannon foundry, Fort Pitt, 1571.
Cano, Juan Sebastian del, 396, 413.
Canoes, Indian, 232.
Canteening overseas, 1917-1919, 1021.
Cantigny, France, A. E . F . in, 1048; American
operations at, 1918, 1107.
Canup,C. E.,1285.
Cape Cod, Mass., 1381, 1364.
Capek, Thomas, 2388.
Capen, Joseph, 1401.
Capitan, Louis, 304.
Cap6 Rodriguez, Pedro, 2162, 3052, 3079.
Capron, T. H., 960.
Cardenas, Bernardino de, 2983.
Carib Indians, 344, 347, 3055.
Caribbean policy of the United States, 3052.
Carignan regiment, 2795.
Carlton, Sir Guy, 2816, 2835.
Carlisle, Mass., 1366.
CarUsle, Pa., 2546.
Carlota Joaqxiina, the Infanta, 3015.
Carlton, F. T., 2351, 2352.
Carnegie, Andrew, 1605, 1696-1699.
Carnegie endowment for international peace, Wash-
ington, 1035, 1062, 2163, 2218, 2229.
Carnegie institute, Pittsburgh, 2365.
Carnegie institution of Washington, Dept. of his-
torical research, 99.
Carnegie library, Pittsburgh, 7, 29, 2385.
Carolina, frontier and pioneer life in, 1740-1790, 798;
proprietors of, 784; Swiss emigrants to, 17S4-
1744, 540.
"Caroline" steamboat, destruction of, 2830.
Caroline CO., Md., 1355.
Caron, Ivanhoij, 2766.
Carpenter, Emanuel, 1700, 1701.
Carpenter family, 1960.
Carpetbagger, the original, 1904.
Carre, Ezechiel, 2767.
Carrick,A.V.,1367.
Carroll, Charles, 1702, 1703.
. John, 2432.
. Mitchell, 523.
T. F., 904, 2266.
Carson, H. L., 749, 2208.
J., 3018.
■ J. F., 2493.
J. P., 1862.
W. W., 2331.
Carta de privilegio delos catolicos reyes . . . 1497,
422.
Cartagena, conde de, 3120.
Cartagena, English naval expedition against,
1740, 3054.
Carter, C. S., 592.
EUas, 1378.
L. A., 2030.
WilUam, 593.
Cartier, Jacques, 389, 2804.
Cartographer, an early, 696; French, in New France,
2798.
Carver, Jonathan, 1196, 1210; early history of,
1704.
Carver grant, 1210.
Carvings, prehistoric rock, on the Upper Paraguay
river, 317. See also Petroglyphs, and Hocks,
inscribed.
Gary, Alice, 1668.
Miles, 767.
Phoebe, 166S.
Gary family, 767, 1951.
Case, C. B., 1870.
Castclldosrius, marques de, 2997.
Castle, W. R., 3149 b.
Casualties, European war, 1017.
Catalans in Cuba, 3065.
Gate, E.M.ten, 593a.
Catholic Americana, early, 22.
Catholic church, 2424-2454; biographical sources of
the American hierarchy, 16; in Central America,
1823-1840, 3046; in Mexico, 3033, 3039; in Spanish
America, 2983, 2984, 2992, 2994, 2995, 2998, 3001,
3022; material in the Westminister diocesan
archives relating to, 1675 to 1798, 67; Wash-
ington, D. C, first, 1255. See aZso Knights of
Columbus, Convent in Charlestown, burning of,
Franciscan missions, and Jesuits.
Catholic church in Canada, archbishop of, 2951,
during the early years of British rule, 2821;
2825; fii'st bishop in Canada, 2811; liberalism
and, 2847; Montreal, 2878, 2884, 2879; priests
from Savoy to fill the ranks of, 1781, 2883;
Province of Quebec, 2S74, 2881, 2883.
Catholic journalism in America, 2404.
Catholics, founding of Maryland, 758; Irish, in Lowell,
Mass., 1406; literary society in Chicago, first,
1271; of St. Louis, 1457; statesmen of Illinois,
1280.
CatonsviUe, Md., 2093.
Catron, John, 1705.
Catskill, N. Y., 2112, 2115.
Cavahy regiments. Civil war, 959, 1000, 1002.
Cavestany, Genaro, 401.
GawdeU, J. M., 2938.
Cayenne, French colony of, 3134.
Ce, CamiUe, 2696.
Celebrations, historical, Bolton (Conn.) bicenten-
nial, 1245; establishment of the Catholic church
in the Illinois country, 2452; 400th anniversary
of the discovery of the Strait of Magellan, 368,
405; Litchfield (Conn.) bicentennial, 1248; "May-
flower," in England, 647, 648; Suffield (Conn.)
250th amilversary, 1249; WaHingford (Conn.)
250th aimiversary, 1250; Wolfeboro, N. H.,
1476. See also Centenaries, Pageants, Pilgrim
tercentenary celebration, and Tercentenary.
210
INDEX.
Celoron de Blainville, P. J., expedition of 1749,
432, 433, 435, 436.
Celt, Indian copper, 224 .
Cemeteries, aboriginal, 177; Indian, near Madison-
ville, O., 198; Montauk Indian, 217; Pequea, Pa.,
1577; Philadelphia Jewish, 1545; Pittsburgh,
Pa., 1568; Sleepy Hollow, 1498.
Cemetery inscriptions. See Regional genealogy,
vital records, etc.
Census of population. New Spain, 3026.
Centenary, Dublin, N. H., 1475; Hawaiian missions,
3149b, 3151, 3152a; Illiuois, 1282, 1273; Missouri,
1460; of the battle of Yorktown, in 1881, 868.
See also Bicentennial celebration, and Pilgrim
tercentenary celebration.
♦'Centennial history of Illinois," 790, 1261, 1265,
1266.
Central America, 3042a, 3052; antiquities, 298, 306,
307, 310, 311, 319, 330, 353, 356, 357, 302; hiero-
glyphs, 353; Indian language, 73; Indian myths,
297; Indians, 345, 347, 351; United provinces of,
3046.
Central Park, N. Y., 1514.
Century association, N. Y., 1115.
Ceremonial axe, prehistoric, 322.
Ceremonial games of the South American Indians,
327.
Ceremonies, Indian, 243, 256, 267, 268, 273, 274, 277,
286, 293. See also Dances, Religion (Indian),
and Rites.
Cermenho, Sebastian Rodriguez, 378.
Cermeno. See Cermenho.
Cervera y Topete, Pascual, admiral, 1009.
Chamberlain, G. W., 1368.
H. M., 1500.
Champe, John, 1706.
Champlain, Samuel de, portrait of, 371.
Champlain society, 2841.
Champlain valley, soldiers of, 1513.
Chamuscado. See Sanchez Chamuscado.
ChancellorsviUe, Va., battle of, 1863, 987, 971.
Chandler, C. L., 2311.
Chane Indians, 337.
Chanson, French-Canadian, 2829.
Chapais, Thomas, 2875, 2876.
Chapin, H. M., 557, 726, 729.
Chapleau, Sir J. A., 2732.
Chaplin, W. E., 1656.
Chapman, C. E., 378, 379, 795, 3023.
C. W., 2603.
E. M., 2413.
J. G., 2603.
J. W., 2493.
Chapman family, 1986.
Chappie, J. M., 1749.
Charbonneau, Jean, 2716.
Charity. See Philanthropy, and Sisters of charity.
Chamwood, Lord, 594, 1793, 1794.
Charleston, S. C, 1589, 2375; bill of complaint in
chancery, 1700, 787; Friends in, 1819, 2407;
genealogical records, 2094-2096; New England
society of, 1592.
Charlestown, Mass., 721, 1396; burning of the con-
vent in, 18S4, 1410.
Chart, showing Spanish discoveries on the north-
west coast, the de la Bodega, 437. See also
Atlases, Cartography, and Maps.
Charter party, Boston, 1659, 698.
Chartier, :femile, 2717-2719.
Charters, colonial, 1606 to 1681, 749; Iowa municipal,
2290; Pennsylvania, genesis of, 749; Virginia,
of 1676, 775.
Chartres, fort, Illinois, 802a.
Chase, F. H., 8.
J. C, 1029.
L. A., 1421.
Chassaigne, Marc, 3134.
Chastaine, B. H., 1148.
ChMeau-Thierry, battle of, 1019, 1048, 1050, 1107.
Chateaubriand, F, A. R., vicomte de, 439a.
Chatham, Mass., 1412.
Chatham, N. Y., 2121.
Chautauqua Lake, discovery of, 410.
Chavez, A. N., 9.
Chechs in America, 2388.
Chemistry, history of, 2710; in the secondary schools.
2526; progress, in Kansas, 1870-1920, 2705.
Cheney, J. W., 1299.
Cherokee Indians, 288.
Cherrington, E. H., 2385.
Cherry Valley, N. Y., 2097.
Chester, Pa., 1543.
Chevalier, H., 2302.
Cheyenne-Deadwood treasure coach hold-up, 1878,
1656a.
Chibchan Indians, 351. See also Guaymi Indians.
Chicago, m.. Catholic church in, 2445, 2446, 2514;
descriptive account of, 1278; high schools, his-
tory in, 159; Irish in, 1281; labor in politics, 2246;
Lincoln's visits to, 1796; reminiscences of
early, 1272.
Chicago Catholic institute, 1271.
Chicago convention of 1860, 2239,
Chicago lyceum, 1271.
Chicanot,E.L,, 2944.
Chilam Balam, book of, 342.
Child, Eobert, 705.
Child legislation in Iowa, 2387.
Childs,H. T., 961.
Chile, 3110-3115; founder of the republic, 3083; So-
ciety of Jesuits in, 1015-1652, 29^3.
China, capture of forts in, by U. S. navy and ma-
rines, 1856, 2151; trade with, from Boston, 1216.
Chipman, B. L., 1962.
Chipman family, 1962.
Chippewa Indians, 1424, 1446.
Chiriguano Indians, 337.
Chitarera, 341.
Choate,J.H., 1707, 1708.
Choate bridge, Ipswich, Mass., 1369.
Chocano, Jos6 Santos, 2962.
Choquette, P. A., 2882.
Chow, S. R., 2209.
Christian, A. K., 1605.
Christophe, king of Haiti, 3076.
Christophers family, 1963.
"Chronicles of America," 1213, 2301, 2335, 2397.
Chronology, Christian, correlation of Maya and,
336; prehistoric, 336. See also Calendar, and
Time reckoning.
Church family, 1964-1966.
Church and state, in Central America, 18gS-18j^,
3046.
Church attendance in 1639, 630.
INDEX.
211
Church of the New Jerusalem, 2457.
Church of the Brethren, 2455.
Church records, Plymouth, 1620-1859, 655.
Churches, Boone co.. Mo., 1465; Boston, Mass., 1408;
Brimsvvick co., N.C., 1522; Chatham, Mass., 1412;
first Baptist church in Maine, 1347; historic, 1252,
VMi, 1383, 1408, 1412, 1465, 1509, 1522, 1578; Long
8l !.nd, N. Y., 1509; Maiden, Mass., 1371, 1383;
New York state, 1519; Strasburg, Pa., 1578;
war-time agencies of, in the European war,
1043; Wasliington, D. C, 1255; Wilmington,
Del., Presbyterian, 1252. See also Keligious
history, particular denominations.
Churchill, A. L., 1085a.
G. M., 479.
Cibola, Seven cities of, 195.
Cicadas, in the Plymouth colony, 1GS3, 680.
Cincinnati, O,, 1863; Catholic archbishop of, 2513a;
Catholics in, in early days, 2440; first Catholic
bishop of, 2497; Lincoln at, 1807.
Circumnavigation, first voyage of, 391. See also
Magellan.
Citizenship, American, 516, 2282, 2283; education
for, 82, 83, 151.
Civics, teaching of, 131. See also Citizenship.
Civil liberty, Lincoln and, 1802.
Civil officers. See Public officials.
Civil war, 942-1002; army nurse, 1688; Brown uni-
versity record in, 958; capture of New Orleans,
18G2, 2150; governor of Massachusetts, 988; John
Bright and, 991; Kentucky union troops in, 989;
letters written during, 967, 996; Missouri's en-
trance in, 979; Northern opponents of, 981;
Pacific Northwest during, 1837; regimental
histories, 1000-1002. See also Union cause.
Civilization, American, 465; evolution of, 488. See
also National characteristics and ideals.
Civilization, contribution of Spanish America to,
2979; Spanish, in the Indies, 2986.
Civilization, Indian. See Culture.
Claiborne, W. C. C, 1709.
Claims against the United States, 2182.
Clamorgan, James (Jacques), 908.
Clapp, C. B., 689.
Clapp family, 1967.
Clark, A. C, 1738, 1886.
Champ, 2234.
D. D., 2499.
E.M., 101.
Eliot, 2604.
G. R., 526, 806, 854.
G. W., 1148.
J. G., 1671.
J. M., 764, 765, 774.
J. S., 1286.
John, of the Mayflower, 552, 683.
M. M., 2900.
Rosamond, 781.
W. G., 1030.
William, 1687.
Clark family, 1933.
Clark's campaign in the Northwest, 1780-1782, 854.
Clark's "Memoir" of the conquest of the Illinois
country, 806.
Clarke, A. B., 1955.
€. F., 1871.
— — G. J., 1287.
Clarke, Jeremiah, 1937.
W. B., 807.
Clarke family, 1937.
Claver, San Pedro, 2983.
Clay, Henry, 1667.
Clay CO., Mo., 1471.
Clearwater, A. T., 2389.
Clemens, Samuel Langhorne, 520, 2637-2646.
Clergymen, American, letters of, 1719-1873, 73;
early Illinois Catholic, 2438; of colonial New
England, 2412. See also Religious liistory,
biography.
Cleveland, Grover, 1710, 1711; career in Buffalo,
1&55-1S82, 2219; nomination and election as
president, 2250; papers of, 73.
Cleveland, O., 2437; First Presbyterian church,
2479.
Cliff dwellers, 178, 261.
Clinton, De Witt, 2332.
George, 1712, 1718.
Clough, S. C, 690, 691.
Club, at Boston, 1772-1775, 1400; New York city
business man's, 2373. See also Indiana federa-
tion of clubs, and Women's clubs.
Clymer, E. F., 2235, 2279.
Coad, O. S., 2376.
Coahuilla Indians, 257.
Coalter, John, 902.
Coates, Reynell, 2252.
Cobb, W. W., 1116.
Coburn, F. W., 1370.
Coburn family, 1935.
Cochran, W. C, 937.
" Cock-fighter," poem entitled, 852.
Code, Iowa, 2273, 2277.
Codex Borbonicus, 332.
Codex Magliabecchi, 267, 346a.
Codman, C. R., 1714.
Cody, W. F., "Buffalo Bill," 1715.
Coe family, 19G8.
Coffin, Geraldine, 232.
Coggeshall, E. W., 1795.
Cohen, M. M., 1545.
Coins, American historical, 527; designs of, by Saint-
Gaudens, 1881; early, 2346.
Cold Harbor, battle of, 1864, 949.
Cold-Spring-on-the-Hudson, N. Y., 2483.
Colden, Cadwallader, 743a.
Cole, A. C, 102.
Cole family, 1969.
Colegrove, Kenneth, 558.
Coleman, C. B., 914.
E. T., 1624.
H. T. J., 1677.
M. B., 865.
Coles, Edward, 1262.
Coles family, 1970.
Colie, E. M., 1838.
College of physicians of Philadelphia, 2361.
Colleges, American, history and present tendencies,
2525; history study and teaching in, 110, 148,
167; Nova Scotia, 2869; Ontario, 2937, 2941.
See also Educational institutions, and Land
grant coUege plan.
Colleges, war records of. Civil war, see Brown uni-
versity; the World war, 19U-1919, 1096, 1420.
See also Universities in the World war.
212
INDEX.
CoUins, I. F., 972.
Colman, Benjamin, 551.
Colombia, 3110-3121; aboriginal inhabitants, 341;
ancient pottery, 308; Indians, 339a; preliistoric
gold objects from, 311. See also Gran Colom-
bia, and New Granada.
Colonia del Sacramento, 3141.
Colonial administration and organization, English,
850; English, development of, 160G to 1681,
749; in Canada, British, 2730.
Colonial agent, as popular representative, 537; Con-
necticut, 848.
Colonial architecture, lower Delaware valley, 2591;
Maine, 2598; New England, 2599; Pennsylvania,
1559; Philadelphia, 2589.
Colonial charters. See Charters, cojonial.
Colonial companies. See Canada company, Com-
pagnie de la France equinoctiale, Compagnie
des Indes occidentales, Dutch West India com-
pany, and Susquehanna company.
Colonial dames. See National society of the colonial
dames.
Colonial defence, during the British war with Spain
and France, 1739-1748, 547a; protection of Mar-
blehead harbor, 1727, 713.
Colonial empire, French, in America, 1635-1683,
3070.
Colonial forts, French, 793; North Carolina, 781;
Pennsylvania, 750.
Colonial governor, Connecticut, 1764-1766, 732; Mas-
sachusetts, 1741-1756, 723; New York, 741, 743a,
744.
Colonial liistory to 1763, 531-803; bibliography, 23;
French and Indian war, 553-556; general, 531-
552; how it should be written, 85; new inter-
pretation of, 86; regional, 557-803; topical outline
of, 479, 511. See also English colonies, and
Massachusetts Bay colony.
Colonial period. Baptists in, 2422; controversies of
legislatures with the governor and council, 537;
emergence of democratic principles, 2222;
heroes of, 504; houses and manors, 739, 746,
135G (see also Houses, historic); inn in New
Jersey, 1484; instructions to deputies in legisla-
tures, 558; Marylanders, 757,760; meetinghouses,
typical, 1522; post-office, 549; Reformed church,
2488; religious liberty, in New York city, 2418;
settlement of disputes between the colonies,
2207a; silverware, 2587; theology of, 2419; wall-
papers, 2601.
Colonial policy. See Colonial administration and
organization.
Colonial regime. See Colonial administration and
organization.
Colonial system. See Colonial administration and
organization.
Colonial societies. See National society of colonial
dames, and Society of MayHower descendants.
Colonial wars, Rhode Island in, 726; soldiers of the
Champlain valley in, 1513. See also French
and Indian war, and King George's war.
Colonies, French, manuscripts relating to, 65; Nor-
wegian, in Pennsylvania, 1567. See also Eng-
lish colonies, and Popham's colony.
Colonization, attempt made by pilgrims from
Ulster, in 1636, 544; English, 460, 531; EngUsh,
influence on England, 542; English, Spain's
attitude regarding, 552; German, in Louisiana,
799; German, in Maine, 1353; German, in North
Carolina, 785; Huguenot, at New Paltz, 740;
in Upper Canada, in 1848, 2909; Irish, in Illi-
nois, 1276; Italian, in Arkansas, 1223; negro,
939, 1906; of North America, 1492 to 1783, 536;
Portuguese, in South America, 3141; Ribaut's
expedition to Florida, 1665, 789; Swedish, in
Maine, 1353; Swiss, in North Carolina, 785. See
also Colonial companies, Popham's colony, and
Susquehanna company.
Colonization schemes. See Law, John.
Colonizing companies. See Colonial companies.
Colorado, antiquities, 194; early government, 2288;
early records of Gilpin county, 1243; history of,
1244; Indian legends, 284; miners' laws, 2288;
mining settlements, 1243; Yuman tribes of, 266.
Colorado river, early exploration of canyons of,
1189.
Colquhoun, A. H. U., 2184, 2842, 2902.
Colrain, Mass., 2098.
Colton, H. S., 178.
Walter, 1227.
"Columbia," ship, log of, 1790-1792 , i40; voyage to
the Pacific coast, 1787-1790, 1203.
Columbia, Pa., 895.
Columbia college, 2566.
Columbia river, 1196 {see also River of the west);
discovery of, 440.
"Columbian tradition on the discovery of
America . . . ," 429, 430.
Columbus, Christopher, 390, 421, 429, 430; biog-
raphy of, 103; birthplace, 376, 408; discovery
of America, 388, 415; letter confirming the
"privileges" of, 422; letter of, 380; memorials
of, 403.
Colyer, C. M.,1149.
Comenius, J. A., 2562.
Comite France- Am6rique, 2171.
Commerce, 2308-2327; in the colonies, 770; marl-
time, 843, 846; Province of Quebec, 2880, 2893;
inland, paths of, 2335; neutral, during the
European war, 1097; Revolutionary war period,
73, 843, 846. See also Corporations, rights of.
Emergency fleet. Fur trade , Mercantile inter-
ests. Merchant marine, Prices, Reciprocity
Ships and shipping. Tariff, and Trade.
Commerce, Canadian bank of, 2745.
Commercial charter party, 1659, 698.
Commercial companies. See Hudson's Bay com-
pany, Northwest company of Canada, and
Real compania de Filipinas.
Commercial organizations, Detroit, 2324.
Conamercial relations between the United States
and Argentina, 1809-1810, 3089.
Commercial travelers, Canadian association of,
2880.
Commissary general of Virginia, correspondence of,
1777, 808.
Commissioners for trade and plantations, journals
of, 1704-1708, 542a.
Commissions, royal, 788.
Committee of association for the city and county
ofNewYork, /775, 822.
Committee of vigilance , Roxbury, Mass., 18S4-1836,
1410.
Committee on grievances, Canada, 1828, 2875.
INDEX.
213
Committee on public information, European war,
1032.
Common law, Canadian, 2757; English, adopted in
Virginia, 765; formative period of, 2272.
Communication and transportation, 2328-2341;
early trafiic on tlie Ohio river, 1198; Maryland,
759; trans-Atlantic, 2865. See also Canals,
Interoceanic routes, Navigation, Post office.
Postal service, Roads, Ships, Stage coaches,
Steamboats, Streets, Trails, and Turnpikes.
Communism, the Pilgrim experiment in, 607; Vir-
ginia colony as an experiment in, 764. See also
Socialism.
Compania general de tabacos de Filipinas, 3154.
Compagnie de la France 6quinoc1 iale, 3134.
Compagnie des Indes occidentales, 3070.
Comprehensive histories, 460-471.
Compulsory education, colony of Virginia, 2532;
Province of Quebec, 2896; southern colonies, 769.
Compulsory military servce. See Selective service.
Condict, Lewis, 888.
Conestoga Creek, Pa., 1573.
Confederate army, Archer's brigade, 971; army of
northern Virginia, 992; in winter quarters at
Dalton, Ga., 1863-1864, 978; Ross's brigade of
cavalry, 1002; surrender of Johnston's army,
1866, 957.
Confederate navy, 984; cruiser "Petrel," 983; ram
"Arkansas," 969.
Confederate states of America, diplomatic mission
to Spain, 60; first capital, 985; leaders of, 945;
raid into Pennsylvania, 999; services of the
women of Maryland to, 9J4; Supreme court,
968, 998.
Confederation, Articles of. Interstate controversies
under, 2207a.
Confederation of the British North American prov-
inces, 2819, 28.34.
Conference of historical societies, 79, 80.
Conference on the report of the committee on his-
tory and education for citizenship, 82, 83.
Conference of teachers of history, Dec. 29, 1917, 81.
Confidence game in Upper Canada, 1815, 2925.
Congregaci(5n de la Misi<5n, in Mexico, 1SU~}884,
3033.
Congregational church, 2458, 2459; Chatham, Mass.,
1412.
Congregationalism in New England, 612.
Congreso cultural hispano-americano, 2970.
Congress, U. S,, affairs before, in 1816 and 1819,
901-902; Champ Clark's reminiscences, 2234;
committee on the Pilgrim tercentenary cele-
bration, 677, 678; control of foreign policj'-, 22C9;
debates and proceedings in, 47; dramatic scenes
in, 2233; members of, born in Kentucky, 1322;
negro members, 2402; power to declare peace,
2211; proceedings, in 1836, 928; Reed's speak-
ership, 2233. See also House of representatives.
Congress of history and geography, Spanish Amer-
ican, 2970.
Congressional globe, 47.
Congressional record, 47.
Conklin-Platt senatorial contest, 1881, 2257.
Comiecticut, 1245-1251; architecture, 2595; colonial
preacher of, 2513; genealogical records, 2100,
2114; governorship of the colony, 1754-1766, 732;
grenadier company in. Revolutionary period,
862; history stories, 1247; Pilgrim tercentenary
celebration, 59^>; politics and government, colo-
nial period, 848; position taken in the Revo-
lutionary movement, 832; radicalism in, 1764-
1775, 832; Revolutionary history, 848; Revo-
lutionary troops, 835, 802; settlers in t'lo
Wyoming valley of Pennsylvania, 1558.
Connecticut claims in Pennsylvania, 753. See also
Susquehanna dispute.
Connecticut state library, 10; archives in, 62,63.
"Connecticut village" located, 835.
Connecticut "wits," 2023.
Connell, Sarah, 2670.
Connelley, W. E., 1193.
Connelly, Cornelia, 2419.
Connor, H. G., 1G95.
R. D. W., 2390.
Conquest. See Spanish conquest.
Conquistadores,3G93. See also Pizarro, and VelAz-
quez de Cnellar, D.
Conrotte, Manuel, 836.
Conselhciro, Antonio, 3106.
Conservation, Indiana State commission, 1294.
Constitution Island, N. Y., 1515.
Constitution of the Iroquois league of peace, 258.
Constitution of the United States, 2205, 2208, 2217,
2222; Americanism of, 2225; "author" of, 1746;
comparison Mdth that of Canada, 2227; first
amendment, 2210; in the light of history, 2219;
John Marshall and, 1826; limitations of the
kind of amendments provided by article V,
2214; origin of the 10th amendment, 2214;
worship of, 2212.
Constitutional convention, Kansas, 1859, 2291;
Louisiana, 1921, 2292; Missouri, 1876, 2294;
Wisconsin, I846, 2298, 2299.
Constitutional convention of 1787, 2218; and the
settlement of iatei-state disputes, 2207a.
Constitutional government, development of, 510.
Constitutional history and law, 468, 2205-2231; of
the Louisiana purchase, 903; of the Fhilippines,
3159; questions of the Federalist period, 913.
See also Treaty-making power.
Constitutional liberty, the Pilgrims and, 593.
Constitutions, state, formation of, 2222; Kansas,
2291; Louisiana, 2292; Missouri, 2293, 2294;
Nebraska, 2295; New York state, 2297; Wis-
consin, 1848, 2299; Wyoming, 1655a.
Contareia, 2813.
Continental army, letters of soldiers of, 805; officers
and soldiers of, 889; uniforms, 842.
Continental congress, delegate to, journal of, 1778-
1780, 814.
Contracts, government, European Avar, 1035.
Contreras, Francisco, 2958.
Controversies, between colonial legislatures and
the governors, 537. See also Boundary con-
troversies, and Interstate controversies.
Convent, at Charlesto.wn, Mass., buriung of, 1834,
1410.
Cooke, C. H., 962.
D. G., 2654.
Coolidge, Calvin, 1811, 1717.
J. L., 1031.
Coombs family, 1971.
Cooper, E. H., 1156.
F. H., 783.
G. W., 1150.
214
INDEX.
Cooper, L. G., 1422.
Leonard, 317.
Thomas, 1718.
Cooperstown, N. Y., 2099.
Copan, Honduras, 330.
Cope, Alexis, 2564.
Gilbert, 1557, 1972.
Cope family, 1972.
Copper, Indian celt, 224; objects of the copper
Eskimo, 240.
Copper Harbor, Mich., 1421.
"Copperhead," origin of the term, 981.
"A copy of an excellent letter," by Rev. Joseph
Eliot, 1664, 706.
Copyright, Ehode Island books entered for, 1790-
1S16, 31.
Corbin, Austin, 1223.
. M. L., 103, 104.
Corbin family, 1973.
Corcoran, W. W., 73.
Cordier, Henri, 105, 3143.
Cdrdoba, Argentina, University of, 3094.
Corey, D. P., 1371.
Corliss, G. H., 1719.
Corn-hills, Indian, 182.
Coming, C. R., 2367.
Coronado Heights, Ivans., 1318.
Corporaal, K. H., 3144.
Corporation for the propagation of the gospel in New
England, 692.
Corporations, Medford saltmarsh, 1393; Medford
turnpike, 1384; oldest in America, 2741; rights
of, 2224. See also Hudson's Bay company.
Corpus Christi college, 632.
Corrigan, O. B., 2426.
Corryn, J. H., 3023.
Corsairs. See Buccaneers, and Illegitimate trade
with the Indies.
"Corsair," yacht, 1079.
Cort('s, Hernando, 420, 2979a.
Corwin, C. E., 735, 736, 1501, 2414, 2485.
E.S., 2210-2212.
Cory family, 1974.
Cost of living during the Revolution, 851; in Wash-
ington's time, 2377. See also Prices.
Costa Rica, antiquities, 350: Bribri of, 351.
Costumes, of the Plains Indians, 267; prehistoric,
see Poncho.
Cottineau, Francois, 2777.
Cottman,G.S., 1117, 1294.
Cotton, John, 602, 630, 703; papers of, 704.
Cotton Hill, Boston, 690.
Cotton manufacturing industry, 2353.
Coughlin, Richard, 2720.
Couillard de Lespinay, J. B., 2799.
Coulomb, C. A. ,106.
Council of defense, Maryland, European war, 1129.
Council of national defense, women's committee,
report, 1018.
Court records, Essex co., Mass., 1669-1672, 695;
Rhode Island, 1647-1662, 729.
Courts, in Massachusetts, 2267; in the Philippines,
3157; ofappeal,in Canada, 2726; Ontario, 2926,
2932, 2933; Supreme court of Alabama, 2262.
See also Judiciary, and Supreme court, U. S.
Cousins, Frank, 2589.
Cowper, M. O., 2959.
Cox, W. R., 1720.
Coy, O. C, 1228, 1229.
Coyne,J. H., 2901.
Coytmore, Martha, 1389.
Coytmore Lea, Maiden, Mass., 1389.
Cradles, Indian, 245.
Craven, A. J., 1624.
Craven co., N. C, 783.
Crawford, F. Marion, 2647.
G. H., 1151.
M. C, 597.
Creager, J. A., 1002.
Creation, Indian idea of, 267; Maya account of, 342.
Creek Indians, Oglethorpe's treaty with, 1729, 788a;
treaty of 1796, 2216.
Creel, George, 1032, 1033.
Crenshaw, Daniel, 1601 .
Creoles of German descent, 799.
Crequi-Montfort, Georges, comte de, 305.
Cresson, W. P., 1034.
Crichton, Robert, 2901a.
Crime. See Murder, and Trials.
Criminal circuit in Upper Canada, in 1820, 2922.
Criminal jurisdiction in Canada, 2831.
Criminal law, ancient Mexican, 332b; in Upper
Canada a century ago, 2923.
Criminal trials in Louisiana, 1720-1766, 794.
Crippen,T.G.,598.
Crockett, David, 1721.
W. H.,1682.
Croghan, George, 750.
Crogman,W.H.,2394.
Crompton, George, 1671.
Cromwell, J. W., 938.
Cross, A. L., 1118.
C.R., 2548.
Cross Village, Mich., 1426.
Crothers, S. M., 599.
Crow Indians, 267.
Crowell, J. F., 1035.
T. I., 1152.
Crown Point, British camp at, 1759, 553.
Crozier, William, 1036.
Cruikshank, E. A., 2851.
Cruz, Ernesto de la, 3110a.
Cruzat, H. H., 794, 1327, 1328.
Cuba, 3060-30G9; conquest by Diego Veldsquez, 411;
English attack on, 1741-1742, 3054; expedition
against, 1762, 3066; military occupation by the
United States, 3060.
Cuban international question, in 1825, 2181.
Cubberley, E. P., 2524.
Cuellar, D. Velazquez de. See Velazquez de Cu-
^llar, D.
Cuerro, Mdrquez, Carlos, 306.
CuUum, G. W., 1661a.
Culpeper, Lord Thomas, 779.
Culture, American, 465, 468; early New England,
561; Eskimo, 295; Indian, 219, 241, 250, 264,
267, 285, 314, 337, 351, 358; literary, in early New
England, 2630; mound builder, 212; prehistoric,
311, 314, 319; Spanish American, 2970. Su also
Ceremonies, Indian.
Culver family, 1975.
Cumberland, Md., 2471.
Gumming, C.K., 2166.
Cummings, Byron, 179.
INDEX.
215
Cummings, H. A., 2090.
"Cumulative book index," 1919-1920, 11.
Cumulative voting in Illinois, 2247.
Cunard steamship line, 2865.
Cundall, Frank, 3056.
Cuniga, Pedro de, 552.
Cimningham, H. W., 1927.
J. L. ,1000a.
Curasao, aboriginal population of, 326; archaeology
of, 325, 326; Dutch colonj' of, 3144.
Currency, Canadian, 2745.
Currency, U. S., during the period of Confedera-
tion, 897; early, 2346; problems, 1840-18^7, 929;
Revolutionary, 841. See also Free silver, aud
Money.
Current events, teaching of, 152.
Current history. See Recent history.
Currey, J. S., 1796.
Curriculum, history, since 1850, 101; the new, 82.
Currie, C. W. Y., 2332.
Currier, F. W., 100.
Curry, C. C, 2141.
Curtis, G. T., 2214.
N. C, 1522.
Curtiss, E. H., 1037.
Cusachs, Caspar, 1780.
Cushing, C. S., 1230.
. F. H., 242.
William, 1722.
Custer's campaign and massacre, 1876, 1005.
Custom, an old French Canadian, 2887. See also
Life and manners.
Cutler, F. M., 1153.
H. G., 1591.
• W. W., 2459.
Czaplewski, Eugen, 307.
Daggett, Windsor, 1832.
Dahhnger, C. W., 1194, 1797.
Daines, F. D., 1609.
Dakota Indian war, 1862-1865, 1447; 1876, 1005. See
also Sioux war.
Dakota Indians, 286; elk ceremony, 267.
Dale, E. E., 439.
— H. C, 453a.
J. A., 2895.
Dalhousie university, Halifax, N. S., 2869.
Dalton, Ga., Confederate army at, 978.
Dame, W. M., 963.
Dana, Mrs. R. H., 1723.
Dances, Indian, 244; Navajo war, 253. See also
Ceremonies.
Daniel family, 1938, 1976.
Daniels, Josephus, 1039.
Daniels family, 1976.
Danish American achievement in Philadelphia,
1858.
Danish West Indies, vote on annexation to the
United States, 1866, 980. See also Virgin
Islands.
Danvers, Mass., 712, 1379, 1388, 1414, 1415, 2424.
Danversport, Mass., 1417.
Darien, Conn., 2100.
Darlo, Ruben, 2962.
Dark, Richard, 383.
Darlington, M. C, 750.
Dart, H. P., 794.
Dartmouth college, literary or debating societies,
2573; trustee of, 1704-178/,, 2513.
Dates in Illinois history, 1279.
Daughters of the American revolution, chapters
named for celebrated trees, 895; historical and
genealogical works in library of, 12; Indiana,
1294; M>jhigan, war work, 1916-1919, 1138;
Michigan society, 893.
Davenport, Eugene, 1267a.
Davidson, C. M. N., 1288.
H. M., 1662.
L. L., 904.
W. F., 2339.
Davies, J. V., 1697.
Davis, B. B., 2590.
C. B., 2368.
997.
243.
1724.
2213.
Jefferson, 1725, 1726.
Jolm, 1671.
M. L., 809.
Scott, 1656a.
V. M., 1595.
C. H.,
E. H.
H. G.
J. W.
Dawson, Edgar, 2297.
George, 927.
Warrington, 803.
Day-signs in the Copan inscriptions, 336.
Deaf, Iowa state school for, 2529.
Dearborn, H. A. S., 1413.
Death notices. See Regional genealogy, vital rec-
ords, etc.
Debating societies, Dartmouth college, 2573.
Debt, municipal, 1336.
DeCeUes,A. D., 2843.
Declaration of independence, 849.
Decorative art, Indian, 267, 288. See also Mural
paintings, Ornament, and Wall papers.
Deerfield, Mass., 2101, 2-592.
Defense, colonial, 547a, 873.
Defense, Maryland council of, European war, 1129.
Defenses of West Point during the Revolution, 845.
Delabarre, E. B., 180-182.
De la Bodega, Juan Francisco, 437.
Delachaux, Theodore, 308.
De la Hunt, T. J., 1289.
Delamater, C. H., 1502.
Delatiiater iron works, 1502.
De Lancy, James, 852.
Deland, Margaret, 2631.
Delaney, M. J. S., 1195, 1626.
Delaplaine, E. S., 1774.
De Laporte, H. R., 837.
Delaware, Presbyterian church at Wilmington,1252.
Delaware coUege, 2575.
Delaware county historical society, 1543.
Delaware river, 444.
Delfsha-i en, Holland, 632.
Dellenbaugh, F. S., 13.
Delta CO., Mich., 1419.
Demarcation line of Alexander VI, 369, 377.
De Meissner, S. R., 2152.
De Menil, A. N., 1454.
Deming, W. C, 1657.
216
INDEX.
Democracy, American, 465, 513, 514; contributions
of the West to, 522; development of, 2222;
English background of, 532; middle western
pioneer, 1217; United States an experiment in,
227S. See also Representative idea.
Democratic government, development of, 510.
Democratic party, 2258, 2553; dissatisfaction of the
Germans with, in 1854, 2238; member of Coa-
gress and senator of, 1860-1897, 2243; presiden-
tial campaign of 1853, 1290.
Denio, H. W., 2083.
Denison, G. T., 2902.
Denny, H. L. L., 751.
William, 751.
Densmore, Frances, 244.
Dentz. See Oudschans Dent?.
Department of agriculture, United States, 2307.
De Puy, H. F., 384.
Derby, E. H., 2313
Derelicts, 993, 2318.
Description and travel, 439-459; Canada, in 1862,
2822; Canadian shore of Lake Ontario, 177^,
2898; Chicago, 111., 1278; from 1846 to 1900, books
regarding, 13; in the far West, 1800 to 1865,
bibliography of, 52; inspection tour of posts on
the Great Lakes in 1819, 2148; Iowa, 1310;
Massachusetts, 1375; Massachusetts Bay colony,
694; New Jersey, 1481; New Mexico, 1495;
Oregon country, 1190; Pennsylvania, 1574;
Philadelphia, Pa., lc*2; Rhode Island in 1750,
725; to Mississippi, in 1804-1807, 1867; unknown
expedition from St. Louis to Santa Fe, in 1807,
908. See also European travelers in America,
and Lafayette's visit to Ohio valley states.
Desmarest, C. D., 2781.
De Soto. See Soto.
Desprez, M. C, 600.
Desrosiers, Adelard, 2878.
Detroit, Mich., commercial organizations, 2324;
George Rogers Clarke's expedition against,
1780, 854; Huron mission at, 279; influence of
French inhabitants on its early political life,
1422.
Devens, Charles, 1671.
Devcreux family, 1977.
De Villiers, J. A. J., 3129.
Devils Lake country. No. Dak., 1529.
Devitt, E. I., 2494.
De Ward, Sable, 309.
Dewey's squadron at Manila Bay, 1898, 1008.
De Witt, J. H., 1602.
Dexter Horton national bank, Seattle, 1626.
"Dial," magazine, 2621.
Diamond Island, expedition against, /777, 807.
Diamonon, V. D., 3155.
Diaries, early Massachusetts, 1377.
Diaz, Porfirio, 2185, 3032, 3038.
Dickinson, Austin, 2495.
Baxter, 2495.
O. E.,1533.
John, 1728.
Dickinson college, 2546.
Dickson, D. M., 1807.
Diego Fernandez, Salvador, 1038.
Dighton rock, 181.
Dimitry, C. P., 1329, 1330.
Dinsmore, C. A., 601.
Dinwiddle, Robert, 550.
Diplomacy, American, 2169; of the United States,
in South America, 3085; pre-European war,
1087. See also Foreign policy.
Diplomatic history and foreign relations, 2158, 2204;
Caribbean policy of the United States, 3052;
Civil war period, 977; European war, 1023-
1025, 1038, 1058; first French minister to the
United States, correspondence of, 1778-1779,8,15;
French mission in America, 1779-1792, 896; mis-
sion of the Canadian minister of finance to
Washmgton, 1869, 28-12; relations with Russia in
1824, 905; Revolutionary period, 836, 883; South
American, 1811-1820, 3013; Spain's attitude in
regard to the American revolution, 836; sub-
marine controversy with Germany, 1097; treaty
with Spain for the cession of Florida, 1819, 902;
United States and Latin America, 3018; Vene-
zuelan, 3144. See also Foreign relations, Genet
mission. International law. Neutrality in the
European war. Treaties, and Treaty-making
power.
Diplomatists, American, European war books by,
1013.
Disciples of Christ, 2456.
Discovery and exploration, 364-438; California,
1239; Canadian Northwest, 2945; English, 541,
542; Florida coast, 1565, 789; French, 364, 789;
Icelandic, 397; Illinois country, 790; later
period, 432-438; Northwest coast, Spanish, to
1791, 437; Oregon country, 1540; Spanish, 368,
370, 372, 373, 380, 437, 1239; topical outline of,
479; voyages to the Northwest coast, 1780-1790,
1202, 1203. See also Indies, search for, Lewis
and Clark expedition. Maritime supremacy,
British, and Norombega.
DiscoYcry of America, 387b. See also Columbus,
Christopher.
Diseases of ancient Peruvians, 335.
District of Columbia, 1253-1258; Marriage licenses,
1801-1820, 2102; first normal school for negro
women, 2544; Society of Mayflower descendants,
2372.
Ditmas, C. A., 838.
Dix, D. L., 1668.
-^ Dorothea L., 1671.
Dixon, R. B., 267.
R. F., 2721, 2863.
Documents, German, of the World war, 1105. See
also Archives, and Public documents.
Dodd, W. E., 107, 524, 1003.
Dodge, G. M., 2239.
Dogs, in early New England, 557; of the American
aborigines, 170a,
Dolbeau, Jean, 2815.
Dole, S. B., 3150a.
Dolfin, Daniel, 833.
DoUard des Ormeaux, Adam, 2780.
Domesday book, Wisconsin, 1653.
Dominicans, and the foundation of universities in
the Spanish colonies, 2998; in Kentucky, 2441;
in the United States, founder of, 2497.
Donehoo, G. P., 1547, 2333.
Donoho, M. B., 310.
Donoso, Arma.ndo, 2697.
Dorland, A. G., 460.
Dorrance, Ethel, 183.
INDEX.
217
Dorrance, James, 183.
Dorsey, E. L., 839.
J. O., 267.
Doty, Edward, 649.
Doublet, E. L., 385.
Doudna, E. G., 1635.
"Doughboys," 1037; in France, 1054.
Dougherty, Fred, 1423.
Doughty, A. G., 2714, 2819.
Joshua, 840.
Thomas, 375.
Douglas, R., 2722.
• S. A., 1729.
Dover, Me., 1345.
Dow, G. F., 694, 695, 1372, 2346.
H. E. B., 1503.
Dowell,E. S., 108.
Down town association of the city of New York,
2373.
Downing, M. B. ,64.
Downs, W. S., 2549.
Doyle, A. C, 1093.
Dozier, H. D., 2334.
Draft, military. See Selective service.
Drake, Sir Francis, 375, 393.
Dramatic stage. See Stage.
"Dreadnought," packet-ship, 2310.
Dreer collection of manuscripts, 550.
Dress. See Costumes, Poncho, and Wigs.
Dreyer, Andreas, 1730.
Drinks, of the Indians, 327.
Drinkwater, John, 1798.
Droitwich, Eng., 632.
DruiUon, P. J., 2782.
Drumm, S. M., 449.
Dry farming in Wyoming, 1657.
Dublin, N. H., 1475.
Dubois, Emile, 2864.
Du Bose, W. P., 2493.
Du Bourg, L. W., 2428, 2451.
Dubuque, la., 1306.
"Dubuque Visitor," Iowa newspaper, 1305.
Ducalvet, Pierre, 2837.
Ducharme, C. J., 2873.
Duchesneau, Jacques, 2768.
Duell, H. S., 1154.
Duelling in Upper Canada, 2928, 2931.
Duggan, James, 2445.
S. P., 2525.
Dumas, J. D., 554.
Duncan, Joseph, 1268, 1276a.
Duncan-Clark, S. J., 1039.
Dundas and Waterloo road, Ont., 2910.
Dunlap, Bout well, 1705.
L.D., 1523.
Dunlop family, 1940.
Dunn, E. C, 2671.
J. P., 1294.
Milton, 1331.
Dunning, W. A., 109.
Dunning family, 1978.
Dunton, John, 702.
Dupetit-Thouars, A. A., 3078.
Du Plessis, Charles, sieur du Plessis, 2802.
. J. S., 1672.
Du Plessis-Bochart, Guillaume Guillemot, 2802,
2811.
111124°— 23 16
Du Plessis-Kerbodot, Guillaume, 2802, 2811.
Du Plessis family, 2802.
Du Pont, B. G.,2312.
Du Pont de Nemours, E. I., and company, 2312.
Dupriez, L., 2230.
Du Quesnc, Fort, 750.
Durham, J. G. L., Lord, 2826.
Durham, N. Y., 2103-2105.
Dustin, Fred, 1424.
Dutch, church of New York city, introduction of
English language in services of, 730; churches in
New York state, 1519; expansion in the Ameri-
cas prior to 1652, 539; fleet in the West Indies,
defeat of, 167/,, 3070; immigration in Surinam,
1753-1740, 3127; influence in South America,
3130; influence on the Pilgrims, 613; settlement
in New Jersey, see Old Fort Nassau settlement;
settlement of New Netherland, 738; tombstone
records in British Guiana, 3125; trading post at
Trenton, 748.
Dutch Guiana, 3126-3133.
Dutch West India company, 3129.
Dutch West Indies, antiquities of, 325, 326.
Dutchess CO., N. Y., 837.
Duthie, W. S., 2852.
Dutton, E. E., 2853.
Duval, capitaine, 965.
Duvernay, Ludger, 2885.
Duxbury, Mass., G02, 1363.
Dwellings, Indian, 178.
Dwight, Wilder, 988.
Dye, E. V., 841.
Dyer, W. A., 603.
Eager, G. B., 2415.
"Eaglewing," the ship, 544.
Eames, Frank, 2903.
Wilberforce, 2405.
Earle, A. M., 1C71.
Early, R. H., 1979.
Early family, 1979.
Early accounts of America to 1600, 382, 425-428.
Early's march to Washington, 1864, 950.
Early's Valley campaign, 1864, 951.
Eastern Township bank, 2745.
Easthampton, Ivong Island, 217.
Easton, Pa., 444.
Eaton, A. W. H., 2865.
W. P., 2608.
Eberle, Louise, 1872a.
Ebmeyer, G. E., 1131.
Ecclesiaitical architecture, 2838.
Ecclestical history of New England, 655. See also
Religious history.
Ecija, Francisco Fernandez de, 552.
Economic history, Argentina, 3099; agriculture,
forestry and land, 2301-2307; commerce and
industry, 2308-2327; communication, transpor-
tation, and public works, 2328-2344; conditions
in Massachusetts during the Revolution, 851,
866; development of Oregon, 1542; European
war, 1062, 1106; finance and money, 2345-2349;
IlUnois, 1265; labor, 2350-2357; of thg United
States since 1800, references on, 21; printing and
publishing, 2403-2411; unrest in the early days
of the republic, 898. See also Social history,
and water-power administration.
218
INDEX,
"Economic studies of the European war," 1035,
1062.
Economics. See Social economics.
Ecuador, 3122, 3123; aborigines of, 324; antiquities,
359; Indian tribes, 328; Jesuits in, 1615-1652,
2983.
Edes, H. H., 1373.
Edgecombe co., N. C, 1527.
Edison, T. A., 1731.
Editorial function in United States history, 113.
Editors, of Philadelphia newspapers, 1789-1801, 913.
Edmonds, J. H., 693, 1374.
Edmundson, George, 2986.
Education, aid to, by the national government,
2527; Canada, in law, 2S94; Canada, 17th cen-
tury, 2760; compulsory, in tlie southern colonies,
769; historical pageants as forces in, 87; in his-
tory, 76, 82, 83, 87, 91, 93, 95, 96, 98, 100, 101, 103,
108, 110, 111, 120, 121, 123, 129, 131, 142, 148
(see also Conference of teachers of history); New
England, in history and citizenship, 83; Nova
Scotia, 2869; of women in Latin America, 2950;
Ontario, 2940; Pennsylvania, 142; pioneer Illi-
nois, 1268; public documents relating to, 40;
Quebec, 2873, 2891, 2895; the South, in history
and citizenship, 82; southern colonies, co:a-
pulsory, 769; St. Louis movement in, 2628;
Spanish America, 2959, 2998, 3060, 3063; of the
West, 522. See also Sunday schools.
Educational history, biography, 2579-2586; general,
2524-2527; particular institutions, 2545-2578;
regional, 2528-2544.
Educationali deals, American, 519.
Educational institutions, 2545-2578; Argentina,
3094; Canada, 2937, 2941; early Iowa, 1299; Nova
Scotia, 2869; service in the European war, 1096,
1112, 1118, 1125, 1130, 1131, 1134. See also Theo-
logical seminary, and under name of individual
institutions.
Educational system. See Elective system.
Edwards, Agnes, 1375.
J. N., 966.
J. P., 2866.
Eekhof, A., 604-606, 651.
Effigy pipe, Indian, 214.
Egan, M. F., 1040.
Eggleston, Edward, 480.
Eguren, J. M., 2962.
Eilers, T. D., 1119.
Elcano, J. S. de. SeeCano.
Eldridge, S. W., 1316.
Elections. See Presidential elections.
Elective system at Harvard, 2569.
Electoral system, Illinois. See Cumulative voting.
Electress Sophia of Hannover, portrait of, 716.
EUas, E. L., 1799.
J. E., 539.
S. P., 1231, 1232.
Eliot, C. W., 1756.
Ephraim, 1387.
Jared, 2620.
John, 692, 722.
Joseph, 706.
Ehot, Me., 2598.
Elizabethtown, N. J., 1484.
Ellett, T. H., 1151.
Ellinwood, R. E., lOO.
Elliott, P. B., 1042.
T. C, 454, 1196, 1260L
Ellis, A. S., 1935.
Chesselden, 930.
H. M., 1718.
H. W., 1935, 1980.
O. O., 1045.
WiUiam, 457.
Ellis family, 1935, 1980.
Ellsworth, Me., 2453.
Ellwanger, E. H., 1197.
Elmsley, John, Chief Justice, 2928.
Elser, F. B., 2147.
Elson, H. W., 110.
Embroideries, ancient Peruvian, 303. See also
Samplers.
Emens, E. A., 1966.
Emergency fleet, European war, 1072.
Emerson, R. W., 520, 2648-2650.
Emerton, Ephraim, 2584.
Emigration, of Ulster pilgrims to America in 1636,
attempted, 544; soutliward and westward, I74O-
1790, 1199; to the American colonies, Swiss, 540;
to Upper Canada in 1848, 2909; western, 439, 441,
443, 445, 447, 453.
Endicott, Gov. John, 697, 718.
Vf . C, 697.
Engelhardt, C. A., in religion Zephyrin, 1233.
Engineers, army, in the European war, 1083, 1142,
1151, 1168, 1182-1184; Minnesota, 1128.
England, American shrines in, 547; celebrations of
the Pilgrim tercentenary, 682; colonial policy,
developm^ent of, 1606 to 1681, 749; conflict with
the French over lands in Maine, 565; connect-
ing links with New England, 1215; genealogical
research in, 1937; influence of oversea expan-
sion on, to 1700, 542; Mayflower celebrations in,
647, 648; Pilgrims in, 645; quarrel with Spain
over the Oregon country, 1219; relations with
the colonies, 542a, 546, 547a, 549: statue of
Lincoln in, 1809, 1810, 1812; students from
America at the Middle Temple, 1681 to 1836,
535; trade with the colonies, 1704 to 1708, 542a;
Virginia genealogical gleanings in, 2142; war
with France, 1739 to 1748, in North America,
2788a; war with Spain, expedition against Porto
Rico, 1598, 3079a; war with Spain in the reign
of Queen' Elizabeth, effect in America, 3069.
See also English- French struggle for control in
America, and Great Britain.
English, G. H., 1155.
EngUsh, attack on Buenos Aires, 1807, 3097; cham-
pion of American union during the Civil war,
991; church, relations with the American colo-
nies, 535; colonial beginnings in America, in-
terpretation of, 86, discovery and exploration,
375 ,393, 407, 541, 542; discovery and exploration
in the Pacific, 390a; educational institutions,
American students in, 535; expansion overseas,
460, 542; expedition against Porto Rico, 1598,
3079a; foundations of American political in-
stitutions, 532; historical m^anuscripts relating
to America, 73; homes and haunts of the Pil-
grims, 632, 638, 650, 671, 682, 685; homes of the
early settlers of New England, 1215; influence
on American law, 765; landmarks of American
history, 547, 1849, 2580; language, iutroductioD
INDEX.
219
into services of Dutch church in New York
city, 736; newspapers, Americana in, I648-I66O,
23; race in colonial North Carolina, 2390; stu-
dents, bibliography of American history com-
piled for, 14.
EngUsh colonies, as part of the British Emjxire, 546;
defense of, during the British war with Spain
and France, 1739-1748, 547a; liistory of, 536;
inQnence on England, to 1700, 542; relations of
England with, 1704 to 1708, 542a; relationsliip
with the home government, pre-Revolutionary
period, 848; revolt of, 536; social character of,
546; topical outline of history of, 479; transfer of
military defense from England to, 873. See also
England, colonial pohcy of, and Popham's
colony.
EngUsh colonization in North America, 460; begin-
nings of, 531; influence on England, 542; Spanish
attitude regarding, 552.
EngUsh- French struggle for control in America,
2672, 2774, 2788, 2788a; topical outUne of, 479.
See also International conflict in the American
colonies.
Enlistment, European war. See Selective service.
Eno, H. L., 1981.
J. N., 607.
Eno family, 1981.
Enock, C. R., 2960.
Epidemics in old New York, 1501.
Epstein, F. J., 2429.
Equity, early administration of, 2273.
Ericsson, John, 1502, 1665.
Erie co., N. Y., 1136.
Erlandson,E. v., 1688.
Errara, Carlo, 429, 430.
Erskine, John, 513, 2655.
Erskine family, 1982.
Eschatology of the Indians, 249.
Escobar Lara, Rafael, 2193.
EscragnoUe Taunay, AfTonso d', 3109a.
Escutcheons, prehistoric, 352.
Eshleman, H. F., 1548, 1700.
Eskimos, copper objects of, 240; culture of, 295;
society, 267.
Espinosa, J. M., 3092.
Esquivel Obregon, T., 3018.
Essex, Conn., 2595.
Essex CO., Eng., and the Pilgrim movement, 634.
Essex CO., Mass., 694, 2103; quarterly court records,
1869-1672, 695.
Estenger, R. A., 3116.
Esteves Pereira, F. M., 386.
Estrees, vice-amiral, 3070.
Ethnography, American, 345; recent pubUr^ations
in, 34.
Ethnology, American, publications in, 1914 to 1920,
35; early CaUfornia, 1239; Latin American, 89;
North American, 285.
Etting, Solomon, 1732.
Europe, prehistoric connection between America
and, 213.
European background of American history, 511.
European expansion in North America, 536. See
also Expansion, British overseas.
European travellers in America, 1310. See also
Lafayette, and Prince of Wales.
European war, 1917-1918, America in, 480; America's
part in, teaching of, 132; archives of, 61, 68-70;
bibliography, 1010-1014; British community in
Argentina, activities during, 3088; campaign of
1918, 1019, 1048, 1056, 1064, 1065, 1067, 1085, 1088,
1089,1099;Canadaand,2735,2850-2&58;effectupon
the teaching of history and civics, 131; Food
administration, archives of, 61; histories of,
1011; Michigan soldiers awarded the m,edal of
honor, 1433; Michigan war legislation, 1427;
misceUaneous, 1015-1110; Monroe doctrine and,
2194; neutraUty of Chile, 3112; North Carolina's
records of, 68, 69; part taken by Canadians in,
2735; preservation of records Of, 1121; record ol
Hillsdale coUege, 1420; records of, in the Library
of Congress, 73; regimental histories, 1140 1187;
state and local participation, 1111-1139, 1572;
welfare campaign in Iowa, 2386.
European wars, engagements in the western hem-
isphere, 2788a, 3079a.
Evans, G. H., 1376.
L. B.,463, 481.
Examinations in American history. See Tests.
"Exertion," schooner, 2319.
Exeter, R. I., 2133.
Expansion, British overseas, 541, 542; European, in
North America, 536; westward, 1199, 1200. See
also Territorialexpansion.
Exploration, Amazon river, 1637-1639, 2987; Cana-
dian west, during the French regime, 2809,
2809a; canyons of the Colorado, 1189; far North-
west in 1809, 1260; far western, 1809-1812, 454;
French Guiana, 1728-1729, 3135; Missouri and
Arkansas, early, 1222; Spanish, in New Mexico,
1581-1682, 3031; Spanish, of the Virginia coast,
1611, 552; upper Mississippi vaUey region, 1766-
1767, 1210. See also Discovery and exploration.
Explorers, French, 389; notes regarding, 390; of the
Great Basin, 434; of the New world, 402; Span-
ish, 399.
ExquemeUn, A. O., 387.
Extra-territorial criminal jurisdiction in Canada,
2831.
Ezekiel, H. T., 1120. '
Fabrics, Indian, 210. See also Textiles.
Facial characteristics, Indian, 259.
Fagg's Manor, Pa., 2476.
Fain, J. T., 1596.
Fairhe, J. A., 2280.
Falconer family, 1988.
Falkland Islands, 2775; French colony in, 1764r-1767,
831.
Falmouth, Me., 701.
Family history, Mayflower families, 635; study of,
122. See also Genealogy, individual fanuUes.
Fannin, J. W., jr., 1607.
Farabee, W. C, 184, 245. 311.
Paris, J. T., 441.
Farmer in politics, 2301.
Farmers' educational and co-operative umon of
America, 2303.
Farmers^movement in Ontario, 2935.
Farming, dry, in Wyoming, 1657. See also Agri-
culture.
Farrand, Max, 1006.
220
INDEX.
Farrar, V. J., 905. 1627, 1628, 2168.
Farriss, C. S., 1663.
Farwell, J. W., 698, 699.
Fashion. See Wigs.
Faunce, S. E., 889.
Fauquier co., Va., 766, 1614.
Faust, A. B., 540, 2391.
Fauteux, Aegidius, 2769, 2780, 2820.
Favor tavern, Dover, Me. 1345.
Favrot,C.A. 1332.
Faxon. F. W., 1.
Feasey, J. E., 608.
Federal control over business, 2317.
Federal convention of 1787. See Constitutional
convention of 1787.
Federal council of the churches of Christ in Amer-
ica, 1043.
Federal reserve act, 2348.
Federalist period, freedom of speech and the press
in, 904, 2266; public opinion on questions of the
day, 913.
Federalists, New York state, 1504.
Feeble-minded Iowa state institution for, 2529.
FehUnger,H., 246,3156.
Felch family, 1983.
Fellows, L. H., 2105.
Female charitable society of Wiscasset, Me., 1350.
Fenn,W.W.,609.
Fenwick, E.D., 2497.
Feron, L., 1737.
Fernandez de Ecija, Francisco, 552.
Fernandez Navarro, Lucas, 387a.
Terrier, D.J. ,2723.
W. F.,2723.
Ferris, J. L.G., 477.
"Ferry Bee," early California newspaper, 1232.
Ferrying on the Mississippi, 2336.
Fessenden, F. G., 2550.
Festival, Indian harvest, 273. See also Celebra-
tions.
Fewkes, J. W., 185, 247, 248.
Field, Robert, 1672.
Field artillery, regiments in the European war,
1141, 1144, 1145, 1147, 1149, 1152, 1154, 1160, 1164,
1166, 1170, 1172, 1175.
Field service, American, in France, 1052.
Fielding, Mantle, 2610.
Filibusters, 387, 2988; in the West Indies, 3070.
Fillmore, Millard, 1733; correspondence of, 1850-
1855, 926.
Finance, 2345-2349; Argentine, 1880-1900, 3099; Cana-
da, 2745, 2848, 2900; conditions following the
Civil war, 2320; during the period of the Con-
federation, 897; from 1840 to 1847, 929; inflation
during the Revolution, 851; New Orleans, La.,
1336; Revolutionary currency, 841; system of the
Federalist period, 913. See also Mississippi
bubble, and Money.
Financial conference, second Pan American, 1920,
2178.
Financial rewards of American authors, 2615.
Fine arts, biography, 2603-2614; Canada, 2838; gen-
eral, 2587-2602. See also Art, Paintings, Por-
traits, and Sculpture.
Finlay, A. H., 2738.
Finley, J. H., 1697.
Finney, R. L., 111.
Finns in Lanes\'ille, Mass., 1360.
Fiore, L.B.,.387b.
Fire house, prehistoric, at Mesa Verdo national
park, 185.
First editions, leaflet by Joseph Eliot, 1664, 706;
work by John Cotton, 1647, 703.
Fish, C. R., 14, 514, 2169, 2392.
Fisher, C.B., 2303.
Lydia, 717.
Fishing among the Indians, 328.
Fisk, H.E., 2724.
Fismes, battle of, 1019.
Fitch, Thomas, 732.
Fitton, James, 1671.
Fitzpatrick, J. C, 525, 842-844, 923, 931.
Flag, American, first sent to France by the U S.
government, in the European war, 1058.
Flagg,C.A., 890, 1984.
Flagg family, 1984.
Flat-Head Indians, 2420.
Fleming, William, 1709.
Fletcher, A. C, 186,267.
F. N., 434.
Fling, F. M., 112.
Floods, in the rivers at Pittsburgh, 1762-1915, 750;
in the Allegheny river, 188^, 1550.
Florence co.. Wis., 1635.
Florida, colonial history, 789; colonization, 536;
description of, in 1583, 382; Huguenot colony,
1562-1565, 789; Jesuit missions in the 16th cen-
tury, 384; Ribaut's expedition to, 1565, 789; shell
implements from, 206; treaty for the cession of
902.
Florida purchase, 1819, 909a.
Flowerdew Hundred, Va., 776.
Floyd-Jones, Elbert, 2483.
Foerster, R. F., 2393, 3090.
Foik, P. J., 2404.
Folger, Walter, 1734.
Follett, Frederick, 2405.
Folsom, J. F., 1692.
Fon du Lac, Wis., 1654.
Fonteneau, Jean, 364.
Food administration, U. S., archives of, 61; in Perm-
sylvania during the World war, 1127.
Food, of the Indians, 242, {see also Maize); plants of
the Indians, 267; prehistoric, 431; products,
origin of, 431; rations, European war, in Penn-
sylvania, 1127.
Foote, A. H., 997.
Forbes, H. M., 1377, 1378.
Forbes family, 1939.
Ford, H. J., 1747.
Mrs. Thomas, 1274.
W. C, 113, 700, 707, 738, 809, 967, 2408.
Foreign born Americans, biographies, 1665.
Foreign commerce, 2311; past decade of, 2315; Revo-
lutionary period, 843, 846.
Foreign country, attack on American naval forces
in, 2151; hostile expeditions against, 2151; inter-
vention in, (Haiti and Santo Domingo) 3052;
intervention in, (Mexico) 2154, 3040; protection
of American citizens and interests in, 2151; revo-
lutions in, American position on, 2177.
Foreign policy, American, 2163; Congressional
control of, 2209; Monroe doctrine as an adventure
in, 2191. See also Diplomacy.
INDEX.
221
Foreign relations, commercial, with the vice-
royalty of the Rio de La Plata, 2311; during the
Revolutionary war, 833; FederaUst period,
public opinion regarding, 913; power of Con-
gress to declare peace, 2211; Senate committee
on, 2216. See also Diplomatic history and for-
eign relations.
Foreign travellers in America. See Chateaubriand,
Lafayette, Lesueur, and Prince of Wales.
Foreigners, American history for. See French, and
Italians, American history for.
Forman, A., 1807.
S. E., 482, 483.
Forsyth family, 1985, 2073.
Fort, J. H., 1487a.
Fort Armstrong, Missouri territory, 1212.
Fort Atkinson, Wis., 233.
Fort Bridger, Wy., 1655.
Fort Carlton, Saskatchewan, 2946.
Fort Chartres, in the Illinois country, 793, 802a.
Fort Cumberland, Ont., 2946,
Fort Dobbs, N. C, 781.
Fort Du Quesne, Pa., 750.
Fort Edwards, Missouri territory, 1212.
Fort Fisher, N. C, capture of, 1866, 975.
Fort Garry, Manitoba, 2946.
Fort Gratiot, Mich., 1744.
Fort Henry, Kingston, Ont., 2913.
Fort Mackinac, Mich., 1425.
Fort Massachusetts, 1365.
Fort Maurepas, Miss., 1450.
Fort Nassau, N. Y., 1730.
Fort Nassau settlement, N. J., 1487a.
Fort Nizqually, Wash., 1628.
Fort Pitt, Pa., 750.
Fort Pitt, Saskatchewan, 2946.
Fort Royal, Martinique, Dutch attack on, 1674, 3070.
Fort Sheridan officers' training camps, 1155a.
Fort SneUing, Minn., 1441.
Fort Stanwix, Washington at, 1757, 556.
Fort Vancouver, B. C, 2946.
Fort Wilkins, Copper Harbor, Mich., 1421.
Fort WiUiam, Ont., 2946; mission at, 2934.
Fortescue, J. W., 915.
Forts, built by the Popham colony, 1607, 564;
colonial, 781; famous Canadian, 2946; western,
in 1819, 1212.
"Fortune", ship, passengers in, 1621, 679.
Forty-niner, diary of a, 1226.
Foss, L. O., 1439.
Foster, A. K., 1671.
C. L., 2852.
Dwight, 1671.
E. S., 1735.
G. B., 476.
H. D., 83.
S. C, 2703.
Foster family, 1986,
Founders, of the republic, 61G, 1662; towns of Eng-
land and Scotland associated with, 1215.
Founders of New England, 1190. See also Pilgrim
fathers.
"Fourteen points", 1080, 1081.
Fowler, R. F., 845.
S. P„ 1379.
Fox, D. R., 484, 810, 1504.
G. R., 187.
Fox, G. v.,
P, M,
3024,
Fox Indians, beaded garters of, 192; bird-quill belt
of, 190. See also Sac and Fox Indian council.
Frachtenberg, L, J,, 249.
Frame, Richard, 752.
France, American battlefields in, 1019, 1045, 1078;
and the South American republics, 3084; claim
to lands in Maine, colonial period, 565; claims
to the Ohio country, 435; first minister plenipo-
tentiary to the United States, correspondence
of, 815; Frankhn's mission to, 1776-1786, 833;
intervention in Mexico, see Maximilian's
empire; naval battles in the West Indies, 3070;
naval war with, 1799, 2313; struggle with Eng-
land for control in America, 479, 546, 555, 2762,
2774, 2788, 2788a; supplies from, during the
Revolutionary war, 846; war with England,
17S9-1748, in North America, 2788a; war with
Holland, operations in the West Indies, 1674,
3070. See also French.
Franciscans, exploration of California, 1239; in
southern Ilhnois, 2425; missions, 401, 437.
Franco-British rivalry in America, 546. See also
French-EngUsh struggle for control in America.
" Francs- Fr^res", poUtical society, 2886.
Frankford, Pa., 2480.
Franklin, Benjamin, 520, 1667; early life of, 2536;
mission to France, 1776-1786, 833; papers, 73;
portrait, 1672.
Thomas, 541, 2725.
Franklin, state of, 1199.
Franquelin, J. B. L., 2798.
Frechette, A. H., 2656.
Free negro in North Carolina, 2399.
Free silver, battle for, 2301.
Free schools, American battle for, 2524; in pioneer
Illinois, 1268, See also Public schools.
Freedom of speech and press, 2210; in the federalist
period, 2266. See also Liberty.
Freedom of the seas, 2179a; during the American
revolution, 870a.
Freeman, Mary Wilkins, 2031.
Freemasons, 2368, 2370, 2371; Washington as a, 1915.
Freestone family, 1937.
Fremont, J. C, 1667. See also Presidential cam-
paign of 1856.
French, activities in the Southwest, to the 18th
century, 795; alliance in the American revolu-
tion, 883; archives of Louisiana, 71; artist in
America, in 1797, 2600; colonial empire in
America, 1635-1683, 3070; colonial officer in
Louisiana, 800; delegation to the centenary
celebration of the battle of Yorktown, 1881,
868; diplomat in 'America, 1779-1793, 896; dip-
lomatic mission to America, Genet's, 907;
discovery and exploration, 364, 382, 385, 389,
392, 432, 433, 438, 438a, 789; exiles in America,
in 1812, 921; exodus from Canada, 1760-176S,
2811; exploring expedition in Guiana, 1728-
1729, 3135; fort in the Illinois country, 793;
general, offer of command in the American
army, rumored, 1812, 921; in Canada, imme-
diately after the conquest, 2821; in Haiti, 3078:
in New Orleans, 1334,1335; in the Illinois
country, 802a; in Woonsocket, R. 1., 1580;
influence in Uruguay, 3142; influences in
222
INDEX.
Canada, ^ 2716, 2719; inhabitants of Detroit,
early days, 1122; language in Louisiana, 2274;
laws of Canada, 2891; memoir regarding the
Great Lakes and Mississippi region, about
1763, 450; merchant in Missouri, in 1807, 908;
military officer in America during the French
and Indian war, 554; military officers in New-
France, 2761, 2778, 2779, 2782, 2792, 2793, 2795,
2801; minister to the United States, first, 860;
mission in Michigan, Jesuit, 1426; naval olScer
in the American revolution, 861; officials in
New France, 2763, 2768, 2779, 2790, 2797, 2800,
2^1, 2S(B; opera house in New Orleans, 1334;
participation in the Amtrican revolution, 815,
846, 861, 865, 86S, 883, 885; r6gime in Louisiana,
794, 800, 801, 803; r(§gim8 in the Illinois country,
790, 793; regime in the Old Northwest, 435, 436;
rule in Santo Domingo, 1803-1809, 3074; settlers
in New France, origin of, 2772, 2812; soldiers
and sailors in the American revolution, 865;
travelers in America, 18th century, 2462 {see
also Chateaubriand, and Lesueur, C. A.);
western New York state under, 745. See also
France, and Huguenots.
French-Ai^erican relations. See Comite France-
Am6riciue.
French-English struggle for control in America,
479, 546, 555, 2762, 2774, 2788, 2788a. See also
International conflict in the American colonies.
French and Indian war, 646, 553-556; exodus of
French from Canada following, 2811; French
officers in, 2775, 2782; in western Pennsylvania,
750; military government established in
Canada, 2765; official correspondence regarding,
732.
French Canada, history of, 2717-2719. See also New
France.
French Canadian, chanson dealing with the Ameri-
can in\^sion, 1775, 2829; clergy, in 1781, 2883;
custom, 'an old, 2887; literature, 2744; news-
paper,"in 1827, 2885.
French colonies in America, from 1635 to 1683, 3070;
in North America, history of, 536; manuscripts
relating to, 65; of Cayenne, 1663-1666, 3134. See
also French regime In America, and Louisiana,
province of.
French Creek, Pa., 2128.
French Guiana, 3134, 3135; antiquities, 321.
French readers, American history for, 461, 471.
French West Indies, 3070-3072.
Frichey, Edwin, 2320.
Frick, H. C., 1736.
Friederici, George, 609a.
Friends, Society of, 2460-2464; in Indiana, 1287;
relief work in Europe, 1917-1919, 1057.
"Friends review," magazine, 1214.
Friis, Aage, 465.
Froidevalix, Henri, 65, 3-12, 388, 846, 2867, 3074.
Frontenac, Louis de Buade, comte de, 2810.
Frontiep, in American history, 522; Permsylvania,
7 So, 1552.
Frontier lighter, Virginia, papers of, 1781-1782, 824.
Frontier Hfe. See Pioneer life.
Frost, i.e., 2046.
Frothingham, P. R., 2500.
Fry, Elizabeth, 1668.
Frye, V. K., 1255.
Frye family, 1987.
Fuentos y GuzmAn, F. A., 338.
Fugitive slave law, &37, 941 .
Fugitive slaves, migration to Canada, 940, 941; "
slave rescue cases, 937.
Fuller, E.D., 1380.
M.B., 2551.
Margaret, 2651.
Timothy, 1380.
Fulton, Kobert, 1737.
Fultonco., O., 1537.
Fv(n«s, Gregorio, 3O04.
Funke, Loretta, 2531.
Fur trade, early maritime, 1202; expedition on tha
upper Missouri in 1812-1813, 449; forts in the
Canadian west, 2946; in New France, 2808; in
the Canadian Northwest, 2943; in the Oregon
country, 1213; maritime, with the Pacific
Northwest, 1207; Northwest coast region, early,
1202, 1216, 2947. See also Trappers.
Fur trader in the Oregon country, 1828-1838, 1631.
Furr, Arthur, 1071.
Fyfe, Hamilton, 610.
Gage family, 2916.
Gagnon, Phileas, 2726.
Gainsborough, Eng., 632.
Gaither,M.E.,1269.
H. B.,313.
Galatti, S., 1052.
Galbally, E. J., 1044.
Galbreath, C. B., 435, 906, 1270, 1862.
Gales, Joseph, 1738.
Galesburg, Mich., 1431.
Gali, Francisco de, 378.
Galieia, Spain, 376.
Galifet, Francois de, seigneur de Caffm, 2811.
GaUndo, Juan, 338.
Gallaher, R. A., 1866.
Gallery, J. I., 1271.
Galligan, Eugene, 1042.
Galt,<S'ir A.T.,2834.
John, 2904.
Gait, Ont., 2911.
Galvani,W. H., 1540.
Gal'.ez, Bernardo de, expeditions against the
British, 1779-1780, 1339; governorship of Louisi-
ana, 1779-1781, 1340; officers and soldiers m the
armies under, 1779-1780, 1327, 1339.
Jose de, expedition for establishing missions
in California, 1768-1769, 437.
Gamble, H. R., 611.
Games, Indian ceremonial, 327; of the California In-
dians, 265. See also Baseball.
Gamio, Manuel, 314, 315.
Gananoque, Ont., 2827.
Gano, J. S., papers of, 916.
Garay, Juan de, 3095.
Garcia Carraffa, Alberto, 2961.
Arturo, 2961.
Garcia de Palacio, Liego, 336.
Gardens, old Nantucket, 1402.
Gardner, A. P., 1739.
Constance, 1739.
M. M., 847.
Theodore, 972.
Garibaldi, Giuseppe, in Uruguay, 3142.
INDEX.
223
Garneau, F. X., 2727, 2728.
• Hector, 2727, 2728.
Garey, E. B., 1045.
Garfield, J. A., 1740.
Garland, Hamlin, 1743, 2631.
Garman, C. E., 2579.
Garner, J. W., 1046.
Garouette, Eudora, 1234.
Garraghan, B. K., 1272.
G. J., 2430, 2431, 2552.
Garrison, Theodosia, 2700.
W. L., 1667.
Gates,A. I., 114.
S. Y., 1936, 2083.
*- W. F., 1670.
William, 336.
Gatke, R. M., 1211.
Gaultier de Varennes family, 2766.
Genealogy, collected, 1932-19-10; French-Canadian,
2791; general, 1929-1931; individual families,
1941-2083; Long Island, N. Y., 1521; Mayflower
family connections, 635; New France, 2812;
Ontario, 2905, 2916, 2917; records of the Pil-
grims, 578; records of the Plymouth church,
1620-1799, 655; regional, 2084-2145;" relation to
history, 1929, 1930; relation to the study of local
history, 122; sources, 1931; Spanish American,
2961.
Generalities, 1-169.
Genet mission, 907; Isaac Shelby and, 912.
Gens, the Iroquois, 267.
Gentile system of the Omaha, 267.
Gentlemen of the olden time, 1357.
Geographic influences, in the settlement of Texas,
1608; upon history, in the Ozark region, l'i63.
Geographical names. See Names, geographical.
Geographical atlases in the Library of Congress,
26, 27.
Geography, first American text-book, 2410; histori-
cal, of the British Empire, 541; of the United
States, 484.
Geological survey of Canada, 2723.
Geological surveys, 2707.
George, A. E., 1156.
C. E., 967.
Henderson, 1551.
Georgetown, D. C, 1257, 2691.
Georgia, colonial history, 788, 788a; colony of, 546;
Dept.of archives and history, 891; Revolution-
ary officers, soldiers and sailors, 891; royal
commissions to governor, 1764, 788; to-day and
half a century ago, 1259.
Georgian Bay, Ont., 2936; exploration of, 2813.
Gerard, C. A., 815, 860.
Gerend, Alphonse, 188.
Gerigk, Alfred, 316.
German coast of Louisiana, 799.
German conspiracies against the United States and
France, 3050.
German Flatts, N. Y., 1519.
German pubhcations relatmg to Canada, 1914-1920,
2731.
German-Swiss emigration, 2391.
Germans, Creoles of German descent, 799; dis-
satisfaction with the Democratic party in
1854, 2238; emigration to Canada, 2735a; emigra-
tion to Louis.ana, early 18th century, 799; emi-
gration to South Carolina in 1730, 780; immi'^'ra-
tion into Missouri, 18SH-1834, 1451; in iJruxil,
3107; in colonial North Carohna, 785, 2390; in
Iowa politics, 2238; in Louisiana, settlement in
the early 18th century, 799; loyaUsts in Upper
Canada, 2920; settlement at Broad Bay, Me.,
175S, 1353.
German town, N. Y., 2107.
Germantown, Pa., 1557.
Germany, American position on the revolution of
1848 in, 2177; archives of the World war, 1105;
documents regarding the armistice and the
"fourteen points," 1081; relations with, from
1914 to 1917, 1023-1025, 1038; submarine activities
on the American coast, 1101; submarine contro-
versy with, 1097; peace proposal of 1916, 1105;
Yankee prisoner in, 1070. See also Bernstorff,
mission of.
Ghent, N. Y., 2108.
Gibbens, L. T., 3157.
Gibbs, George, 1629.
Sir Philip, 515.
Gibson, Herbert, 317.
J. W., 2394.
Col. John, 887.
Richard, 2498.
Gifford, E. W. 267.
Gifford family, 1937.
Gil])ert, E. H., 1988.
Sir Humphrey, 407.
Gilbert family, 1988.
Gildas, N., 2868.
Gillespie, J. E., 542.
Gilley, William, 1349.
GiUiam, J. S., 442.
Gilpin CO., Col., 1243.
Gipson, L. H,, 460, 848.
Girard, Stephen, 1665.
Giraud, Victor, 1047.
Givauden family, 2080.
"Glasgow-weekly-history," 1743, 551
Glassberger, Nicholas, 404.
Glencross, R. M., 2142.
Glenn, R. A., 1455.
Gloucester, Mass., 2490.
Gloucester, N. J. See Old Fort Nassau settlement.
Gnichtel, F.W., 753.
Godard, G. S., 10.
Godcharles, F. A., 1552.
Goddard, Edward, 701.
G.W., 2607.
P.E., 250, 267.
Goddin family, 1989.
Godfrey, C.E., 748.
E.H., 2729.
Gods, prehistoric Mexican, 341a.
Godsell, P. H., 251.
Godwin, A. C, 1741.
Goebel, Julius, 785, 849.
Goenaga, J. M., 3006.
Goffe, John, 709, 717.
Gold, ancient American, 311; discoveries In Cali-
fornia, 1226; mining in Colorado, 1243; prehis-
toric use of, 311.
Goldberg, Isaac, 2962.
Goldenweiser, A. A., 115.
Colder, F. A., 2170.
224
INDEX.
Goldsmith, M. O., 116.
Goldsmith's art in ancient Mexico, 346.
Gombault, lieut. -colonel, 898.
Gonggrijp, J.W., 318.
Gonzalez Palencia, Angel, 66.
Gooch, William, 771.
^Tood Luck, N. J., 2490.
Goodhue press, 1438.
Goodpasture, A. V., 784, 1597.
Goodrich, C. F., 997.
Goodrich family, 1990.
Goodwin, C. L., 1222.
Cardinal, 796.
H.D., 15.
J. A., 612.
K. C, 2378.
— Martha, 969.
Goodwyn, D.H., 1754.
Goodyear, E. B., 892.
• Stephen, 892.
GooMn, Daniel, 1671.
Daniel, jr., 688.
Gordon, A. C., 1726.
G. B., 319.
— R. K., 2904.
Gordon's brigade, Confederate army, 952.
Gorges, Sir Ferdinando, 563.
Gorhara, Stephen, 1991.
Goshenhoppen Reformed charge, Montgomery CO.,
Pa., 2486.
Gosselin, Amedee, 2770.
■ David, 2771.
J. B., 2771.
Gould, A. B.de, 390.
Gourlay, R. F., 2928.
Gove CO., Kans., 1317.
Government, American plan of, 2205; American
principle of, 2207; American war, 1917-1918,
1084; ancient Mexican, 313; Dakota, first organ-
ized, 1593; military, during interventions in
Mexico, 2154; national, 2278-2285; of the United
States, naming the seat of, 1258; representative
constitutional, evolution of, 2208; state and local,
2286-2299; study and teaching of, in Smith col-
lege, 2551. See also Federal control over busi-
ness, and Politics and government.
Government publications. See Public documents.
Government war contracts, 1035
Governors, colonial, 723, 732, 741, 743a, 744; IlUnois,
1834 to 1838, 1276a; New York state, 1518.
Gozzaldi,M.I.,1723.
Graffenried, Christoph von, 785.
Graham, Joseph, 1742.
R. B.C., 3103.
• Stephen, 1259.
Grain mills in New France, use of, 2811.
Grain trade, internal, 1850-1860, 2304.
Grammar of the Huron language, 2787.
Gran Colombia, disruption of, 3008; last days of,
3011.
Grand army of the republic, 1294, 2244.
Grand Lake Stream plantation, Me., 1343.
Grand river, Mo., 1452.
Granger movement, 2301.
Graniss, Ruth, 2360.
Grant, U.S., 1743.
Granville, O., 1535.
Granville co., N. C, 1124.
Gratiot, Charles, 1744.
Gratiot, Fort, Mich., 1744.
Gratz, Rebecca, 1545.
Simon, 1867.
s'Gravensande. See Storm van s'Gravensande.
Gray, Beryl, 3047.
David, 1027.
Edward, 1992.
Robert, 1203.
Gray family, 1992.
Great awakening in the middle colonies, 2417.
Great Basin, trappers and explorers of, 434.
Great Britain, acquisitions in the Pacific, 390a; ad-
ministration of the colonies, 542a, 549, 723, 744,
873; American ambassador to (Choate), 1708;
and the American colonies, pre-R evolutionary
period, 873; arbitration of claims of its subjects in
the United States under Jay's treaty, 2182; ar-
chives, transcripts of American documents from,
73; attitude of the American people toward,
2188; colonial government in America, loyahsm
in relation to, 848; colonial supremacy in Amer-
ica, 546; colonial system, in America, 850; colo-
nial system in Canada, 2730; Commissioners
for trade and plantation, journals, 1704-1708,
542a; diplomatic relations with, bearing on the
return of negro slaves, 1783-18.28, 2175; docu-
ments relating to trade and plantations in the
West Indies, 1704-1708, 3057; how Britain got
her West Indies, 3058; ministers at Washington,
2164; naval operations against Spain in the
West Indies, 1739-1748, 3054; oversea expan-
sion, 541, 542; peace commissioners to America,
1778, 858; PubUc record office, transcripts in the
Library of Congress, 73; relations with, in re-
gard to neutral trade at the beginning of the
French wars, 2179a; relations with, review of,
2179, 2188; relations with the American colonies
pre-Revolutionary period, 848; rivalry with
France for control in America, 546, 555. See
also British, England, English, and Jay treaty.
Great Colombia, disruption of, 3008; last days of,
3011.
Great Lakes region, description and travel, 1779,
2898; early travel on, 456; military inspection
tour in, 1819, 2148; routes of travel in, 1763,
450; trade with Indians in, 1684-1692, 734
Greatest Americans, the four, 1663.
Greeley, Horace, 1667.
Green, A. H., 1671.
John, 3d, 1671.
S. A., 1745.
" Green goods game," 2925.
Greenback party, 2301.
Greene, F. H., 1137.
Nathanael, army of, 887.
R. H., 1483.
Greenleaf, Stephen, 1381.
Greenough, C. N., 702, 703.
QreenviUe, N. Y., 2109.
Greenwich, Ind., 1296.
Greenwich, N. Y., 2123.
Grenada, French colomst of, 3059.
Grenville, George, 864.
Griffin, G. G., 55.
J. A.. 2905.
INDEX.
225
Griffin, Richard, 2905.
Samuel, 1387.
Griffin family, 2905.
Griffis, W. E., 613-615.
Griffith, G. L., 117, 485.
Grimes, Eliah, 1207.
J. W., 1307, 2238.
John, 1777.
GrmneU, F. W., 2214, 2215, 2267.
G. B., 252, 267.
Grist mill, early Massachusetts, 1385; Medford,
Mass., 1394.
Groome, H. C, 766.
Grosseilliers, M. C, sieur des, 2943.
Grosvenor, Gilbert, 1844.
J. A., 2591.
Grou, Armand, 2878.
Groulx, Lionel, 2821.
Grover, G. S., 1735.
Gruber, M. A., 2110.
Grymes family, 1993.
Guadeloupe, petroglyphs from, 312.
Guaimi Indians. See Guaymi Indians.
Guarani Indians, 337.
Guatemala, preliistoric city in, 298; press in, 3045.
Guayaquil, Ecuador, 3122, 3123; meeting between
San Martin and Bolivar at, July 1822, 3006.
Guaymi Indians, 358.
Guernsey, S. J., 253.
Guiana, 3124-3135; antiquities, 321; prehistoric in-
habitants, 318.
Guilday, Peter, 16, 67, 118, 2432, 2433.
Guilford, N. C, 1525, 1769.
Guion family, 1934.
Guitteau, W. B., 486.
Gulick, L. H., 2347.
Gumma y Marti, Alfred, 391.
Gummere, A. M., 254.
Gunn, J. N., 2853.
Gxinnell famUy, 1938.
Gunther, J. J., 2635.
Guthrie, W. A., 1294.
Gutierrez, Joaquin Posada, 3011.
Gutsch, M. R., 1010, 1121.
Haas, J. A. W., 2515.
Hacke, N. P., 2482.
Hackett, C. W., 118a.
Haddock, John, 1506.
Haddon, R. W., 2592.
Hadley, Mass., regicides Goffe and Whalley at, 717.
Hagedorn, Hermann, 1923.
Haggerman, C. A., 2924.
Haight, G. I., 526.
Haiti, 3073-3078; American achievements in, 3052;
American intervention in, 3052.
Haldimand, Sir Frederick, 2883.
Hale, Edward Everett, 1671.
Nathan, 526.
Half-breed Indian, type of, 267.
Halford, E. W., 516.
Halifax, N. S., 2776, 2865.
Halifax banking company, 2745.
Hall, A. B., 2194, 2195.
A. H., 1994.
C. J., 1122.
E. H., 119, 739.
H. D., 850, 2730.
Hall, H. N., 1143.
J. N., 1157.
R. E., 1346.
R. G., 487.
Trowbridge, 1235.
Hall family, 1994.
HaU CO., Neb., 1472.
Hall of fame for great Americans, 1850; New York's,
1511.
Halsey, F. W., 1507, 2407.
R. T. H., 2587.
Hamilton, Alexander, 1667, 1746, 1747; statue of,
Hamilton library association, Carlisle, Pa., 2546.
Hamlin, L. B., 916.
Hammill, J. D., 2906.
Hammond, J. H., 2813.
John, 755.
Hampton normal and agricultural institute, 2549.
Hampton Roads, battle of, 1862, 2155.
Hamrick family, 1995.
Hancock, Dorothy Quincy, 1859.
Hanford, J. H., 488.
Haniphy, J. A., 476.
Hanks, C. S., 616.
Nancy, 1791, 1801.
Hanna, C. T., 1294.
Hannon, W. B., 2492.
Hanotaux, Gabriel, 2171, 2727, 2728.
Hansen, M. L., 2386.
Hanson, J. M., 1048.
John, 1748.
Harcourt, Marguerite d', 320.
Raoul d', 320.
Hardie, Martin, 1049.
Harding, W. G., 1749.
Harding family, 1996.
Hardy, Elias, 2S60.
Harlan, R. D., 2237.
Harlan's American history test, 117, 485.
Harlow, R. V., 851.
Harmon, A. C, 1997.
Harmon family, 1997.
Harper's atlas of American history, 484.
Harrington, J. P., 1494.
M. R., 189-193.
W. P., 1317.
Harris, J. Rendel, 617-619, 647, 653, 684.
R. W., 2773.
S.D., 917.
W. R., 392, 2813.
Harris family, 1940.
Harrison, Christopher, 1750.
Fairfax, 767, 1938, 1990.
M. H., 797.
W. H., 1269.
Harrodsburg, Ky., 1325.
Harshberger, W. A., 2705.
Hart,A.B., 489, 620, 1198.
W. O., 2292, 2369, 2606.
Harte, Bret, 520.
W. J., 393.
226
INDEX.
Harter, E. P., 1290,
Hartford, Conn., 596.
Harthorn family, 1968.
Hartley, Marsden, 256.
Hartinan, C. W., 2907.
Hartnng, Mrs. M. H., 1658.
Harvard, John, 2580; library of, 30.
Harvard college, charter of 1672, 2563; class of 1870,
2553; class of 1894, 2554; class of 1913, 2555; draw-
ing of the college yard, about 1780, 1387; elective
system, in the 18th century, 2569; gifts to, 17th
century, 689; in need of help, 1672, 704; John
Harvard's library, 30; mathematical note books
by students in, 1780-1784, 1387; men killed in
the war against Germany, 1125; presidency
offered to Comenius, in 1654, 2562; president of
(Joseph Willard), 1418; undergraduate in, 1798-
1801, 1380; undergraduates killed in the Euro-
pean war, 1042; water-color view of, in 1795, 2559;
water-color view of, in 1807, 2560.
Harvard law school, 2550.
Harvest festival, Indian, 273.
Harvey, George, 1736.
Hasbrouck, G. D. B., 1713.
Haslett, Elmer, 1050.
Haslewood, William, 811.
Hassam, Childe, 2604.
J. T., 1751.
Hassard, A. R., 2732.
Hastings, G. E., 852.
Hatch, Ezekiel, 1998.
R. W., 120, 121.
Hatfield, Abraham, 1957, 2070.
Hats. See Straw bonnet.
Hatton, C. B., 1741.
Hauppauge, Long Island, 1521.
Hauslee, W. M., 1093.
Havana, Cuba, 3062; capture by the British, 1762,
3066.
Haven, Gilbert, 1383.
Havre, France, supplies sent to America during
the Revolutionary war, 846.
Hawaiian Islands, 3149a-3152a.
Hawaiian mission centennial, 3151.
Hawes, R. L., 1671.
Hawes family, 1999.
Hawikuh bonework, 196.
Hawkes, E. W., 257.
Hawkins, Philemon, 1752.
W. W., 1189.
Hawley, W. A., 1236.
Haworth, C. V., 1123.
P. L., 1004.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 2652, 2653.
Hay, John, 1667.
T. R., 970a.
Hayden, Ralston, 2216.
Hayes, C. J. H., 1051.
Ellen, 1535.
Hayes administration, Mexican- American relations
during, 2174, 2185.
Hayne, A. P., 1212.
Hayward, M. C, 853.
Hazard house, Newport, R. I., 1583.
Hazlitt, John, 2605.
Headwear. See Straw bonnet.
Health. See Diseases.
Healy, G. P. A., 1672.
Heaman, Roger, 755, 756.
Heard family, 2007.
Hearne, Samuel, 2945.
Heath, WilUam, 1753.
Hebia, Aurelio, 3060.
Hebron, Conn., 2513.
Hedges, Silas, 1754.
Heg, H. C, 1755.
Heger, Franz, 321, 322.
Heidelberg, Pa., 2110.
Heiskell, S. G., 1598.
Heliodoro Valle, Rafael, 3061.
Holland, A. A., 2466.
Heller, W. J., 1554.
Helhnan, G. S., 2666.
Hemans, L. T., 1828.
Hembree, A. J., 1623.
Hempstead, Joshua, 2000.
Hempstead family, 2000.
Henderson, Archibald, 798, 812, 907, 912, 1199, 1200.
D. M., 1873.
W. A., 394.
Hendrick, B. J., 1092.
Hendry, Anthony, 2945.
Henrico co., Va., 780.
"Henry, O." See Porter, William Sydney.
Patrick, 1667.
Heraldry, Spanish American, 2961.
Hergesheimer, Joseph, 3062.
Hernhutters, 3133.
Herkimer, N. Y., 1519.
Heriein, J. D., 3126a.
Herman, Augustine, 760.
Hernandez, Pablo, 2994.
Hern4ndez-Pinz(5n y Ganzinotti, Jos(5, 395.
Heroes of American history, 480, 504; revolution-
ary, 834.
Heron, Francis, 1631.
Isaac, 856.
Herr, C. R., 1158.
Herrick, C. A., 122.
Herrington, W. S., 2908.
Herriott, F. I., 2238, 2239.
Hewes, Elihu, 813.
Joseph, 813.
Hewett, E. L., 194.
Hewitt, J. N. B., 258.
Hibbard, Ruth, 1555.
Hicks family, 2001.
Hieroglyphs, of Central America, 353; of the
Aztecs, 316; of Xochicalco, 338. See also Rock
writing, and Stone inscriptions.
Higgins, L. P., 1859.
Higginson, H. L., 988, 1756-1760.
J. J., 988.
High schools, history in, 76, 108, 123, 129, 132, 144,
156, 159; Ohio, prior to 1850, 2538.
Highland regiment, in the battle of the Plains Oi
Abraham, 2789; of Canada, 2738.
Highways, American, 2340. See also Roads.
HUdreth, S. P., 1533.
Hill, D. B., 2241.
D. J., 2217.
E. A., 2037.
H. C, 490.
J. A., 2649.
INDEX.
227
Hill, J. J., 908, 1665.
— J. W., 1800.
Richard, 3056.
Hillsdale college, 1420.
Hinchman, F. K., 123.
Hiuddey township. Me., 1343. •
HindenUirg line, breaking the, 1918, 1048.
Hiudcstan, Ind., 1296.
Hinke, W. J., 2486, 2487.
Hirtzel, J. S. H., 3043.
Hispanic American appreciations of the Monroe
doctrine, 2202a.
Hispanic American bibliography, 2963, 2965.
Hispanic American publications in European
centers, 2964.
Hispanic society of America, 19.
Hispanoamericana, 2974. Set also Hispanic Amer-
ican publications in European centers.
Historians, modern, method and aims of, 124.
Historic landmarks, sites, etc., American, on
English soil, 547; English, associated with the
Pilgrims, 632; Indiana, 1294; Lexington, Mass.,
1407; Michigan, 1429; New York, Revolutionary
period, 878; New York state, 1500; preservation
of, 119; Wisconsin, 1654; Roxbury Mass., 1411.
See also Houses, historic.
Historic trees, D. A. R. chapters named for, 895.
Historical activities, in the Old Northwest, 1919-
1920, 102; in the trans-Mississippi northwest,
1919-1920, 141.
Historical agencies, cooperation among, 1294.
Historical associations, patriotic duty of, 92. See
also Historical societies, and under name of
individual association.
Historical geography, of the British Empire, 541;
of the United States, 484.
Historical interpretation of American colonial
history, 85, 86.
Historical manuscripts commission, 13th report,
935; 14th report, 931.
Historical museums. See Museums.
Historical pageants. Set Pageants.
Historical pictures, 90, 477, 2614.
Historical research, American archaeology and
ethnology, 163; Carnegie institution Depart-
ment of, 99; in the Archivo general de Indias,
Seville, in Louisiana history, 75; plans of the
Ohio VaUey historical association for, 150a.
Historical societies, 2367, 2369; Conference of, pro-
ceedings of the 14th annual meeting, 79; co-
operation between state and local, in Wiscon-
sin, 1651; federating of, 153; reports of, 1917, 80;
state of Washington, 1627. See also Local-
historical societies, and under name of individ-
ual society.
Historiography, 76-169; a generation of American,
109; after the World war, 1294; Canada, 2748;
functions of the Minnesota historical society,
1445; in Wisconsin, 1651. See also Local history.
History, bias of, 160; correlation of literature and,
168; course of study in, 82, 101, 111, 159, 167;
debt to secince, 125; editorial function in, 113;
fallacies in, 157; in newspapers, 150; in the inter-
mediate grades, 93; laboratory method in teach-
ing, 123; method of instruction in, 108, 114, 129,
165; museum of, at the Northern Illinois btate
normal school, 140; nationalism in, 107; project
problem method in, 91, 120, 121; propaganda in,
162; recent, problem of teaching, 149; Regents'
questions and answers, 503; relation of geneal-
ogy to, 1929, 1930; socialization of, 143, 144;
Spanish American congress of, 2970; student-
authorship in, 97; study and teaching, 76-169,
490; study of Spanish American, 2965; teachers'
manual, 486; teaching of, in Smith college,
2551; topical method in, 100; writing of, 85, 109,
112, 113, 154. See also Historiography, and
State history.
Hitchcock, Edward, 2581.
Ilite family, 2002.
Hitt, J. M., 54.
Hoar, G. F., 1671.
Hobbs, W. H., 1924.
Hockett, H. C, 124.
Hodge, F. W., 195, 196.
Hodges, George, 2499, 2500.
Horschelmann, Werner von, 323.
Hoffman, Howard, 1556.
Hogans, 178.
Holand, H. R., 197.
Holcomb, R. C, 2003.
Holcomb family, 2003.
Hold-up in Wyoming, 1878, 1656a.
Holder, A. L., 3088.
Hole, M. C, 3117.
Holiday, act to declare Lincoln's birthday a legal,
1814.
Holland, book printed by William Brewster in,
576; our controversy with, during the European
war, 1097; Pilgrim marriage records in, 578;
Pilgrims in, 572, 581, 606, 613, 619, 626, 632, 645,
653. See also Dutch, and Netherlands.
HoUiday, Carl, 1201, 2395.
J. H., 1294.
HoUingsworth, D. A., 1761.
Ilolloway, Emory, 2698.
Holman, M. L., 2074.
Holme, J. G., 1925.
Holmes, C. N., 2240, 2702.
W.H., 259, 267.
Holt, Hamilton, 620a, 621.
John, 1762.
W. S., 1221.
Holten, Samuel, 814.
Holweck, F. G., 799, 2434, 2435, 2512.
Homestead bill, 2256.
Honduras, antiquities, 319, 336.
Honduras, British, 3042a.
Honeyman, A. V., 56, 1834.
Hood, J. F., 1256.
Hooper, J. H., 1384-1386.
Lucile, 260.
Hoosac Mountain, 1365,
Hooton, E. A., 198.
Hoover, Herbert, 1763-1765.
"Hope," voyage of the, 1790-1792, 1202.
Hope college, Holland, Mich., 2576.
Hopi Indians, 247, 270.
Hopldns, J. C, 2715.
Hopkins family, 2028.
Hopkinson, Francis, 852.
Hoppin,C. A., 1614, 2081.
228
INDEX.
See Nurses, Civil war.
1028, 1053; Montreal,
Horack, F. E., 2289, 2387.
Horler family, 1932.
Horley family, 1932,
Hornblow, Arthur, 2616.
Horoscope of Dr. Joseph Warren, ?7-f5, 699.
Horrocks, J. W., 670a.
Horse, origin of, in America, 296; use of, by the
Indians, 267, 296.
Horseback journey in tlie White Mountains in 1819,
455.
Horton, H. E., 2004.
Horton family, 2004,
Hoshour, Harvey, 1440.
Hosldns, J. A., 1525, 1769,
Hospital service, Civil war.
Hospitals, European war.
Can., 2879.
Hostetter, A. K., 1960.
Hotel. See Monongahela house.
Hotun, 336.
Hough, Walter, 199, 261.
Houghton, Frederick, 262, 263, 1508.
House, R. B., 68, 69.
House of representatives, passage of resolution
admitting Texas into the Union, 927; speakers
of, 2279.
Housekeeper, the cliff-dweller, 261.
Houses, historic, at Annapolis, Md., 1356; Augusta,
Me., 1344; Boston, 1367; Camden, N. J., 1482
Dover, Me., 1345; Georgetown, D. C, 2691
Kentucky, 1326; Long Island, N. Y., 1509
Maryland, 2381; Medford, Mass., 1390, 1398
Mexico City, 3042; New Jersey, 1482, 1484
New York city, 739; Newport, R. I., 1583
Pittsburgh, Pa., 1561; Topsfield, Mass., 1401
Virginia, 1612, 1613, 2381; Washington, D. C.
1256. See also Buildings, Landmarks, Man-
ors, and Washington's headquarters.
Houston, Sam, 526, 1667.
Houston, Tex., 2371.
Hovde, B. J., 2172.
Hovey, Nathan, 1766.
Howard, Daniel, 1247.
McHenry, 757.
S. E., 2353.
Howard co., Ind., 1123.
Howay, F. W., 1202, 1203, 2822.
Howchin, Jeremiah, 697.
Howe, Elias, 1671.
F. G., 1093.
H. B., 2005.
J, W., 1668.
M. A. D., 1125, 1757.
Howe family, 1936, 2005, 2005.
Howells, W. D., 2654-2665.
Howland, Louis, 1729.
Hoyt, A. E., 2241.
Hrdlidka, Ale§, 2705a.
Hubbard, Elbert, 1801.
Huddleson, S. M., 2691.
Hudson, Henry, 2945.
J. W., 2650.
Hudson Highlands, Revolutionary camp in, 835.
Hudson river. Revolutionary campaign on, 811.
Hudson's Bay company, activities in the Oregon
country, 1628, 1631, 2947, 2948; history of, 2746;
in the Northwest, relations with the Russian
traders, 2947; purchase of territories of, 1869,
2949; 250th anniversary, 2741,
Hue, Edmond, 200.
Huerta, Victoriano, 3032.
Huffman, J. A., 2468.
Hughes, E. A., 273.3.
Katherine, 2849.
Huguenot society of America, 17.
Huguenots in America, 2389; colony in Florida,
Ribaut's, 1666, 789; emigrations and settlements
in America, 17; of New Paltz, 740.
Hulbert, A. B., 125, 2335.
HuUu, J. de, 3129 b.
Human sacrifice among the ancient Mexicans, 304.
Humbert, Jules, 3118, 3119.
Humorists, American, 520, 2633. See also Connec-
ticut wits.
Hungerford, Edward, 1054.
Hunt, Gaillard, 939, 1852, 1906, 2218.
T. P., 2501.
Washington, 927.
Hunter, W. H., 527.
Hunting, among the Indians, 328; in pioneer
Indiana, 1295.
Huntington, Ellsworth, 3018.
W. R., 1071.
Huntington (N. Y.) historical society, 1509.
Hupa Indians, 267.
Hurd family, 2007.
Huron Indians, 2787, 2813.
Hurst, John, 971.
Hurst famUy, 1938.
Husband, Joseph, 1665.
Huse, H. A., 1864.
Hutchmson, E. T., 1484.
Hyland, J. J., 1151.
Hynson, Thomas, 760.
Ibdnez, Vicente Blasco, 3019.
Icelandic discovery of America, 397.
Idaho, David Thompson's journeys in, 1809-1812,
454; exploring expedition into the region of,
1809, 1200; first court withm the limits of the
present state, 1837; public archives of, 59.
Ideals, American, evolution of, 488; the AVest and,
522. See also National characteristics and
ideals.
Idol. See Image, prehistoric.
Illegitimate trade with the Indies, 1599-1610, 3069.
IlUnois, 1261-1282; bench and bar in 1867, 2263;
Bureau county in the European war, 1137; Cath-
olic church in, 2425, 2438, 2439, 24-15, 2446, 2448,
2452, 2514; Centennial commission, 790, 1261, 1265,
1266, 1273; centennial history of, 790; cumulative
voting and minority representation in, ?(S70-^579,
2247; education in, in pioneer days, 1268; early
CathoUc clergymen, 2438; Franciscans in, 2425;
governor of, 1834 to 1838, 1276a; infantry regi-
ments in the Civil war, 960,995; Irish in, 2400;
Jesuit missionary in, 2439; Methodist Episcopal
church in, to 1832, 2470; Scots in, 1274a; war
work of the women, European war, 1113.
Illinois college, 1268.
Illinois country, Catholic church in, 2452; conquest
of, by George Rogers Clark, 806; French forts
in, 793, 802a; French in, 802a; in 1673-1818, 790;
trader and land speculator in, 1274b.
INDEX.
229
Illinois Indians, quilled necklace of, 222.
Image, prehistoric, 350.
Imbabura, province of, Ecuador, 324.
Immigration, foreign, 786, 1353, 1451, 1640, 2393; Ger-
man, 1353; German,into Missouri, 1451;. German-
Swiss, to South Carolina in 1736, 786; into
Canada, 2750; into Maine, 1353; into Wiscon-
sin in territorial days, 1640; Italian, 1223, 2393;
Norwegian, 1848; public documents relating to,
41; Swedish, 1353.
Implements, Indian, 173, 189, 193, 206; of the
Eskimo, 240; prehistoric, 350; prehistoric cere-
monial, 322. See also Artifacts, Celts, and
Slings.
Imprints, early American, 703, 708; early Massachu-
setts, 703, 706, 710; William Brewster, 575, 576.
Incas, " In the land of," 3139.
Independence, of Argentina, 3098. See also Decla-
ration of independence, Spanish America— revo-
lutionary period, and Spanish American wars
of independence.
Indexes (cumulative) to serial publications, 56-58.
India, discovery of America by ancient men of, 409.
"Indian," the name, 2811.
Indian geographical names, in New Mexico, 1494;
of states and rivers, 1193.
"Indian Knoll," Kentucky, 230.
"Indian notes and monographs," 189-193, 195, 196,
209, 210, 214, 217, 220-226, 232, 239, 240, 242, 243,
286, 346, 350, 351, 420.
Indian question in connection with the Louisiana
purchase, 2206.
Indian roads and trails, Maryland, 759; Pennsyl-
vania, 1547; Wisconsm, 1642, 1645, 1646.
Indian trading-house system, federal, 910.
Indian treaties, at Saginaw, 1819, 1424; from 1789
to 1795, 2216; in Maine, 1352; Oglethorpe's
treaty with the Creek Indians, 1739, 788a; with
Sac and Fox Indians, I84I, 1307.
Indian villages, in Kentucky, 230; in Wisconsin,
203, 228.
Indian wars, Minnesota, 1862-1865, 1447; Missouri,
1837, 1455; Oregon country, 1847-18^9, 1211;
Washington, 1866, 1623; Black Hawk war,
1654; Dakota Indian war, 1876, 1005; Sioux war
of 1862, 1639.
Indiana, 1283-1297; formation of the Republican
party in, 2255; history text-book, 492; Howard
county in the European war, 1123; m the Mexi-
can war, 933; Jefferson county in the World
war, 1117; member of Congress and Senator
from, 1860-1897, 2243; Progressive party in,
2248; temperance movements and legislation,
2384; tour through, in 1840, 451.
Indiana federation of clubs, 1294.
Indiana historical commission, 1294.
Indiana historical society, 1294.
"Indiana magazine of history," 1294.
Indiana state conservation commission, 1294.
Indiana state library, 1294.
Indiana state normal school, Terre Haute, 2557.
Indianapolis, Ind., 1288, 1291.
Indians, 236-295; artifacts, 231; baptized in France,
in 1621, 2815; barrier against, in New Hamp-
shire, 1767, 563; burial customs, 177, 349; bury-
ing ground near Pittsburgh, 1568; Canada, 279,
2813, 2899, 2952, 2953; Canada, expedition
against, 1660, 2780; canoes, 232; ceremonies, 24.3,
256, 267, 268, 273, 274, 277, 286, 293; chief, 254;
corn-hills in Massachusetts, 182; costume and
adornment, 192; councils in Iowa, in 1S41 and
1842, 1307, 1308; cradles, 245; craneology, 209;
fabrics of, 210; facial characteristics, 259; far
West, delegation to St. Louis, 1831-1839, 2420;
George Rogers Clark's campaign against, 1782,
854; Guiana, 3133; housekeeping of the cUff
dwellers, 261; in and around what is now New
York city, 733; in literature, 263a; landrightsin
British Columbia, 2953; lands, sale of, I842, 1308;
languages, 73, 3143; law and customs, 2991;
legends, 410: legislation in Peru, 3138; linguistic
groups, 250; Maine, peace commission to, in
1726, 701; Massachusetts, relations of negroes
and, 2401; massacre, in Minnesota, 1862, 1443
(See also Custer massacre and Whitman mas-
sacre); missions, 279, 692, 1194, 2421, 2429, 2447,
2899; Missouri's eflort to expel, 1455; music, 320;
Ohio valley, Moravian missions among, 1194;
names, 733, 1193, 1494; New England, 1666-1686,
692; Oregon,country,1216; physical appearance,
250, 259; Plymouth's debt to, 625; pottery in-
dustry, 234; Puget Sound, 20; quilled neck-
laces, 222; race history of, 259; religion, 233; re-
ligious ceremony, 243; reservation in New York
state, 1508; in Sandwich and Detroit district,
1743 to 1744, 279; Spanish- America, 297, 304, 305,
313, 314, 316, 320, 324, 327-329, 336a, 337, 339a,
341, 344, 345, 347, 349, 351, 358, 2991, 3109, 3143;
Spanish policy in regard to, 2978; tract on I^ake
Erie, purchase of, 1784, 876; under the Spanish
regime, 2986; uprising in Minnesota, in 189>i,
1446; uprising in the United States, last, 1446;
utensils, 225; war dance, 253; weapons, 189, 193,
224; western Pennsylvania, Trent's journal of
proceedings with, 1763, 750; Wisconsin, fear of
an uprising of, in 1 862, 1647. See also Aboriginal
America, antiquities. Cliff dwellers, Ethnology,
and under name of particular tribe.
Indies, administrative organization, 2999; Council
of, archives, 66, 72; geographical "relations" of,
3026; government in, 2990; laws, 2996, 3002;
laws, "recopilacion" of, 2955; laws, regarding
the postal service, 2954; political regime, 2986;
quest of, 383, 511; Spanish legal system, 2991;
trade in, 3069. See also Archive general de
Indias, and Spanish- America, colonial period.
Industrial schools, Iowa, 2529.
Industrialism, in the colonies, 2314. See also Com-
merce and industry.
Industry, 2308-2327; agricultural, 2304-2306; cotton
manufacturing, 2353; employment of slaves in,
770; history of Illinois, 1265; Indian, 234, -288,
303 (see also Weaving); movement of wages,
2353; Rochester, N. Y., 1517; shoe industry,
1517; straw hat, in Massachusetts, 1409. -See
also Cannon foundry. Commerce, Corporations,
and Labor.
Infantry, Civil war, 960, 1000a, 1001; European war,
1150, 1158, 1159, 1161-1163, 1167, 1173, 1174, 1179,
1185, 1186.
Ingalls,W. R., 1142.
Ingalsbe, J. L., 1303.
IngersoU, Jared, 848.
Ingraham, C. A., 2667.
230
INDEX.
Ingrahara, Joseph, 1202.
Initiative, in early New England, 558.
Inman, S. G., 3052, 3075.
Inn, New Jersey colonial, 1484.
Innholdersin Daavcrs, Mass., 1694-1845, 1388.
Inscribed rocks, prehistoric, 180, 181. See also Ken-
sington rune stone.
Inscriptions, Maya, at Copan, 336; prehistoric
stone, 352. See also Hieroglyphs, Kensington
rune stone, and PetrogLyphs.
Insects. See Cicadas.
Insignia of A. E. F. aero squadrons, 1176.
Institutions, American, English background of, 532.
See also Americanism, and Democracy.
Institutions, educational, 2545-2578.
Intellectual culture, early New England, 2630; de-
velopment in New Granada, 3118; St. Louis
Mo., 2628.
Intelligence work in the European war, 10S2.
Intercolonial dispute. See Pennamite war.
International arbitration, 2182, 2187; evolution of
the principle, 2977; Venezuela-British Guiana
boundary, 1899, 2196.
International conflict in the American colonies, 536.
See also English- French struggle for control in
America.
International congress. See Panama congress.
International law, and the Cuban question of 1825,
2181; and theWorld war, 104S, 1097; beginnngs
in the United States, 2158; Cuban question in
1825 from the viewpoint of, 3067; growth of, 510.
See also Neutrality.
International organization, the United States as a
study in, 2229.
International relations, growth of, 510. See also
Diplomatic history and foreign relations.
International trade, Argentine, 3099. See also
Foreign commerce.
International tribunal, Supreme court as an, 2231.
Internationalism, American, 2161.
Interoceanic canal, Tehuantepec route, diplomacy
regarding, 2183; routes, 3043.
Interstate commerce commission, 2317.
Interstate controversies, 2220, 2231; settlement of,
2207a,
Interstate problems solved by the framers of the
Union, 2229.
Invention, aircraft, 1080.
Inventor. See Langley, S. P.
"Inward light," doctrine of, 1287.
Iowa, 1298-1314; anti-slavery triumph in, 1864, 2238;
archaeology, 201; Buena Vista county in the
World war, 1119; child legislation in, 2387;
delegates to the presidential convention of 1860,
2239; education in, 2529; election of governor, in
1854, 2238; Indian tomahawk from, 189; infantry
in the Civil war, 986; laws of, 2276, 2277; medical
college of the State university, 2558; militia,
1865-1916, 2156, 2157; municipal charters, 1838-
1858, 2290; mimicipal legislation, 2289; origin of
name, 1193; pioneer priest in, 2511; politics, in
UB54 and 1860, 2238, 2239; soldiers in the Civil
war, 942; soldier vote in election of 1888, 2244;
trip to, in 1849, 458.
"Iowa chronicles of the World war," 1300.
Iowa code commi^ion, 2277.
Iowa Indians. 286.
Ipswich, Mass., 1369.
Iraizoz, Antonio, 3063.
Iredell, James, 1767.
Ireland, part in the American revolution, 829;
towns of, associated -with early settlers of New
England, 1215. See also Irish.
Iri h, J. P., 2558.
Irish in America, 2395; Catholic journalism, 2404;
colonization in Illinois, 1276; emigration to
America in 1636, attemptod, 644; in Chicago,
1281; in early Illinois, 1282; in Lowell, Mass.,
1406; in the American revolution, 829.
Iron, Indian artifacts of, 231; industry of Quebec,
2893; ships, invention of, 1502. See also Cannon
foundry.
Iroquois Indians, 258, 267; antler figurine of, 223;
expedition against, 1660, 2780; gens, 267;
league of, 258; migration west of Lake Erie, 262;
tobacco-pouch of, 220.
Irvine, L. H., 517.
Irv'ing, Washington, 2666, 2667.
"Isle of Pines," 2406.
Ispizua, Segundo de, 396, 2990.
ItaUans, American history reader for, 502; colony in
Arkansas, 1223; emigration to South America,
3090; immigration, 2393.
Italy, documents in archives relating to Franklin's
mission to France, 1776-1786, 833.
Izard, Ralph, 1589.
Jacobs, H. E., 2516.
Jacobson, G. F., 1161.
Jackson, A. T., 1226.
Andrew, 1768, 1769; and early Tennessee
history, 1598; portrait of, 1672.
H. H., 1668.
John, 098.
T. J., "Stonewall," 943, 1770, 1771; and the
army of northern Virginia, 992; last battle of,
987.
T. M., 2370.
Jacksonian democracy, 2222.
Jahr, Torstein,1730.
Jamaica , prominent citizen of, 3056.
James, B. R., 1055.
G. W., 1495, 2677.
Henry, 2582.
J. A., 854.
O. M., 1772.
WilUam, 2582, 2583.
Jameson, J. F., 99, 126-128, 622, 855.
Jamestown colony, 532, 552.
Jarvis, S. P., 2931.
Jary, FaHs of the, 3135.
Jay treaty, 2182, 2216.
Jealousies in American politics, 2251.
Jefferson, Thomas, 1667; and the law of nations,
2186; and the University of Virginia, 2547;
treaties of, 2216, See also Monticello.
Jefferson co., Ind., 1117.
Jefferson county (Ind.) historical society, 1117.
Jefferson co., N. Y., 1133.
Jeffersonian democracy, 2222.
Jeffries, J. F., 1985.
JeUett, E. C, 1557.
Jenkins, L. W., 2313.
Steuben, 1558.
INDEX.
231
Jenkins family, 2008.
fenkins' ear, war of. See War between England
and Spain, 1739-1748.
lenks, C. L., 443.
Caleb, 443.
H. F., 2502.
Livingston, 443.
W. L., 1744, 1828.
Jennings, Kathleen, 2117.
Jenson, Andrew, 1204.
Jeoffrey, Robert, 730.
Jemegan, M. W., 769, 770.
Jerrold, Walter, 623.
Jersey City, N. J., Roosevelt association of, 1884,
1885.
Jesuit missions and missionaries, 384, 791, 797, 1426,
2439, 2506, 2767, 2786, 2899, 2934, 3001. See also
Lorette, mission at.
Jesuits, as an aid to Spain in America, 2983, 2984;
expulsion from South America, 2995; in Argen-
tina, 3094; Baja CaUfornia, 1697-1768, 3022;
Canada, 1842-1872, 2824; Mississippi Valley,
1205; Paraguay, 2994; Peru, 2993; Philippines,
3153; South America, 3094; Spanish America,
1615-1707, 2983, 2984.
Jewish cemetery and cpngregation in Philadelphia,
1545.
Jews, 2396; in Surinam, 3131; of Richmond in the
World war, 1120; proposed refuge for, near
Buffalo, 2396.
Jibaros, 328.
Jijdn y Caamafio, Jacinto, 324.
John Carter Brown Ubrary, 2360.
Johns Hopkins medical unit, European war, 1053.
Johnson, AUen, 129, 920, 1213, 2301, 2335, 2397.
Andrew, 2256.
Capt. Edward, 1376.
R. W., 1441.
Reverdy, 1773.
Thomas, governor of Maryland, 1774.
Col. Thomas, 1775.
W. F., 2242, 3064.
W. S., 2336.
Johnston, R. M., 1056, 2584.
Johnston's army, surrender of, 1866, 957.
Johnston's campaign for the relief of Vicksburg,
1863, 977.
Jones, C. K., 18, 2963, 2964.
E. A., 543, 856-858, 2614.
H. Bedford-, 1426.
John Paul, 526, 1776.
M. A., 1876.
N. W., 1777.
O. R., 130, 491.
R. M., 1057.
Roger, 2148.
S. P., 2503.
T. R., 1237.
William Cary, 1305.
Jordan, H. D., 1910, 2243.
Jordans, Eng., 1849.
Jorian, Andr6, 2783.
JosseUn de Jong, J. P. B. de, 325, 326.
Journalism, daily, New York city, 2407; in Mis-
souri, 1453; in the United States, 2617. See
also Newspapers.
Jourolman^ Leon, 1784.
.ludicial control, over legislation, 2215, 2221; over
legislatures as to constitutional questions, 2220
Judicial system of New Jersey, 2268.
Judiciary, Canada, from early French period to
1875, 2726; in colonial Virginia, 765. See also
Bench and bar, Courts, and Supreme court of
the United States.
Judkins, C. II., 1761.
Jurisprudence, ancient Mexican, 313.
Juma, Brazil, 3109.
Justice, A. R., 1937.
Justice, in colonial Viriginia, 765. See also Judi-
ciary and Law.
Juvenile histories, 389, 463, 469, 473, 476, 504; Ala-
bama history stories, l..'-2D i-iographjos ■}(
American heroes, 1669; biography of Roosevelt,
1873; Connecticut history stories, 1247; life of
Lafayette, 867; Pilgrim fathers, 676; Virginia
history, 1622. See also Primary histories.
Kagaba Indians, 339a.
Kane, E. K., 1778.
Kankanay Indians, 274.
Kankakee river, Ind., 1295.
Kansas, 1315-1318; anti-slavery struggle in, 1315;
constitutional convention, 18S9, 2291; early
days in, 1316; scientific development in, 2705;
Vicksburg national park memorial com-
mission, 972.
Kansas academy of science, 270S.
Kansas City, Mo., 2430.
Karsten, Rafael, 327-329.
Kasson, J. A., 1779.
Kate, H. F. C. ten, 263a.
Kawai Indians. See Cahuilla Indians.
Kay, H. R., 2854.
Kayenta national monuments, ruins at, 216.
Keasbey, E. Q., 2268.
Keating, C. A., 1939.
Keating family, 1939.
Kechipauan, Zuni pueblo of, 195'.
Keen, W. W., 2361.
Keep, A. B., 2495. ,
Keesecker, Andrew, 1305.
Keidel, G. C, 2093.
Kelby, WiUiam, 2593.
KeUen, W. V., 1714.
Kelley, F. E., 2533.
Kellogg, F. R., 3018.
L. P., 811, 1638-1641.
Vernon, 1763, 1764.
KeUy, H. A., 1666.
John, 2436.
Kelsey, Henry, 2945.
R. W., 444.
Kemper, C. E., 771.
Kenamore, Clair, 1162.
Kendall, C. N., 509.
KendaU family, 2009.
Kendrick, John, 1203.
Keniston, Hayward, 2965.
Kennedy, J. B., 1040.
W. P. M., 2909.
Kenney, J. F., 2774, 2898.
Kenny, L. J., 1205, 1274.
— Laurence, 1457.
Kenrick, F. P., 2504, 2505.
232
INDEX.
Kensington rune stone, 171, 197, 218; bibliography
of, 36.
Kentucky, 1319-1326; antiquities, 210, 230; attitude
in regard to Genet's projected expedition against
Louisiana, 1793, 907; cavalry in the Civil war,
1000; Dominicans in, 2441; frontier and pioneer
life in, 1740-1790, 798; genealogy, 2117; loyalist
proprietors of, 875; origin of name, 1193; pioneer
missionary in, 2497; soldier in the war with
Tripoli, 1835; stone effigy pipe from, 214;
T3aaess3e boundary line established, 1599;
union troops in the Civil war, 989.
Keosauqua academy, 1299.
Kerby family, 2010.
Kernighan, R. K., 2910.
Kernohan, J. W., 544.
i.err, J. E., 29J I
Keyes, C. R., 201.
F. P., 1775, 1839.
Willard, 445.
Kiche Indians, 347.
Kidd, J. C, 2371.
Kidder, A. V., 202.
Kilbourn, J. M., 2912.
Kilpatrick, W. H., 131.
Kimball, B. A., 1780.
Everett, 2281.
Kimber, A. C, 1058.
C. E., 1058.
Kimmel, S. P., 1039.
Kinderhook, N. Y., 2111.
King, John, 1305.
King Chris tophe, of Haiti, 3076.
King George II, 788; accession of, 724.
King George III, statute of, 1620.
King George's war, British naval activities in
North America and the West Indies, 2788a,
3054; colonial defense during, 547a; in New
Hampshire, 566; Rhode Island in, 726.
King's bench, court of, 2926, 2933.
King's Chapel, Boston, 2702.
King's college, 2566.
King's counsel in Upper Canada, 2924.
Kings county historical society, 838, 859.
Kingsbury, M. H., 1477.
Kingsley, D. P., 624.
Kingston, Ont., 2913, 2937.
Kingstown, R. I., 2133.
Kinley, David, 1035, 1062.
Kinnicutt, Lincoln, 625.
Kino, Eusebio, 791; lost manuscript of, 797.
"Kino's Historical memoir of Pimeria Alta," 797.
Kirby family, 2010.
Kirkconnell, Watson, 2913.
Kirke, Gervase, and sons, 2762.
Kiskatom, N. Y.,2112.
Kite, E. S., 815, 860.
Kittery, Me., 2598.
Kittredge, G. L., 705.
Klapper, Paul, 110, 2525.
Klausner, Julius, 1163.
Klein, H. M. J., 1874.
Kjiapp, H. E., 1642.
Knappen, T. M., 1060.
Knight, E. W., 1588, 2534, 2535.
L. L., 891.
M. A., 33.
Knight, S. K., 446.
Knights of Columbus, 1040; war activities in Phila-
delphia, 1044.
Knights Templar, Philadelphia, 2370.
Eaiow-nothing party, 2252.
Isjiow nothingism, in Rochester, N. Y., 2454.
Knowlton, D. C, 82.
Knox CO., Tenn., 2113.
Knoxville, Tenn., 1595.
Knubel, F. H., 2517.
Koch, Henry, 2507.
Kocher, A. L., 1559, 2594.
Koebel, W. H., 934, 2966, 3025, 3130.
Kohl, C. C, 132.
Koht, Halvdan, 465, 466.
Kontarea, 2813.
Koscuisko, Thaddeus, 847.
Krafft, H. F., 2149.
Kreichgauer, P. D., 329a-332.
Kroeber, A. L., 264^267.
Kuhlmann, J. H., 2471.
Kulp, C. A., 2196. \
Kujrper, H. S. S., 626.
Kwakiutl Indians, 238, 267.
La Barra, Francisco Leon de, 3032.
La Barre, Lefebvre de, 3134.
Labor, 2350-2357; Chicago, in politics, 1877-1896,
2246; problems and administration in the
United States during the World war, 1106;
slave, in the colonies, 770.
Labrador, 2859.
La Cruz, Ernesto de, 3110a.
La Doussimere, sieur de, 2768.
La Farge, Mabel, 1673, 1678.
Laf argue, Andre, 1324, 1449.
La Fayette, marquis de, boy's life of, 867; in Illmois,
1270; in New Brunswick, N. J., in 1824, 1485;
visit to Ohio valley states, 906.
Lafayette flying corps, 1157.
Lafitte, Jean, 1780.
La Flesche, Francis, 268.
Laguna, N. Mex., 277.
La Haye, sergent, 3135.
Lahontan, baron de, 2779.
Laidlaw, G. E., 2813.
La Jonquiere, marquis de, 2790.
Lajus, Frangois, 2794.
Lake Erie, early travel on, 456; Indian tract on,
purchase of, 1784, 876.
Lake Ontario, expedition along north shore, 1779,
2898.
Lalemant, Jerome, 2811.
Lamar, M. B., 58, 1605.
LambertviUe, N. J., 2477.
Lambiag, A. A., 433.
Lancaster, Pa., 825.
Lancaster co.. Pa., 1548, 1552, 1559, 1569, 1700.
Land, cessions, Indian, 1424; grants, Indian, to
Jonathan Carver, 1210; grants, Massachusetts,
1687-1688, 715; grants, Revolutionary, in Geor-
gia, 891; in New York city, Indian deeds of,
733; Indian, sale to the government, 1842,
1308; Indian rights in British Columbia, 2953;
question, connection mth the Louisiana pur-
chase, 1803-1812, 2206; reform, 2352; Virginia,
certificates, 1640, 772; warrants issued under
Andros, 1687-1688, 715. See also Homestead
bUl, and Public lands.
imDEX.
233
Land claims. See Connecticut claims in Pennsyl-
vania.
Land company. See Susquehanna company.
Land grant college plan, originator of, 1268.
Land o^ioiers, Virginia, 1704, 780.
Land speculator, in the Illinois country, 1274b,
See also Law, John.
Land tenure. «See Quit rents.
Landed gentry in New York state, a hundred
years ago, 1504.
Landis, C. I., 825.
■ C. K., 1486.
Landmarks, literary, of New York city, 2627.
See also Historic landmarks, and Houses,
historic.
Landon, Fred, 940, 941, 973.
Landrum, C. H., 1126, 1427.
Lane, Daniel, 1299.
H. S., 2255.
Harry, 1782.
— ■ — R. W., 1765.
— '— W. C, 1387, 2559, 2560.
Lanesville, Mass., 1360.
Langdell, C. C, 2550.
Langley, S. P., 1783, 2706.
Language, American statutes bearing upon the
question, 2274; English, introduction into the
services of the Dutch church in New York city,
2485; question in the old Cathedral of St. Louis,
2435.
Languages, Indian, 305, 339a; classification of, 237;
Huron Indian, 2787; of Mexico, 73; Quiche,
3143; recent pubUcations regarding, 35. See
also Linguistic stock.
Lanier, H. W., 1061.
Sidney, 2668.
Lannoy, C. de, 2197.
Lanoraie, Que., 2878.
Lansing, Mich., 1437.
Lanza, Clara, 2626.
Lanzas, Pedro Torres. See Torres Lanzas, Pedro.
Lap6rouse, J. F. de Galaup, comte de, 389.
Lapham, J. A., 1443.
La Plata region, controversy between Spain and
Portugal over botmdaries in, 3141; United
States shipping in, 1809-1810, 3089.
La Pluie, Lake, 2808.
Lappin, H. A., 2657.
Laprade, W. T., 133.
La Puerta, marques de, 3120.
La Richardie, A. de, 2787.
Larimer, H. G., 2291.
Lamer, J. B., 1257.
Larocque, Paul, 2874.
La Roncifere, Charles de, 2775, 3070.
La Salle, Robert Cavelier, sieur de, 389; discovery
of Chautauqua Lake and Niagara Falls, 410.
Las Cases, E. P. D., comte de, 3078.
La Selva, Salomdn de, 3007, 3083.
Latan6, J. H., 2173, 2967.
Latham family, 2011.
Latin America, aboriginal period, 297-363; archae-
ology and ethnology, 89; colonial period, 1550-
1810, 2983, 3002, 3109a, 3141; diplomatic relations
of the United States with, 2173; discovery and
exploration, 364-431 ;general, 2954-2979; myth-
111124°— 23 17
ology, 297; United States and, 3018. See also
Spanish America.
Latorre, GermAn, 2968, 3026.
Latourette, K. S., 134.
Laughlin, J. L., 2348.
Laurier, Sir Wilfrid, 2777, 2843, 2847.
Laux, J. B., 1902.
Ivava, prehistoric statuettes of, 362.
Lavaux, Alexander de, 3126.
La Verendrye, chevalier de, 43Sa.
P. G. de Varennes, siezir de, and sons, 2945;
explorations of, 438, 438a, 2809a.
Law, F. H., 627, 628.
John, and the Mississippi bubble, 802.
R. A., 2362.
Law, American, formative period of, 2272; ancient
Aztec, 313; ancient Mexican, 332b; Canada,
2757, 2831, 2833, 2891, 2922-2933; civil. Province
of Quebec, 2890; constitutional, 2205-2231;
criminal, in ancient Mexico, 332b; criminal,
Ontario, 2923; French, in Quebec, 2891; fugitive
slave, 937, 941; in Upper Canada, 2922-2933;
Indian, 2991; of the Indies, 2991; of the sea,
and the European war, 1097; public documents
relating to, 42. See also Courts, International
law. Laws, and Legislation.
Law courts in the Philippines, 3157.
Law school, first in Quebec, 2894; Harvard, 2550.
Lawrence, A. A., 928.
F. W., 528.
J. S., 2219.
Laws, Colorado miners', 2288; federal and state,
public documents relating to, 42; Iowa, code
of, 2276, 2277; New Hampshire, 1811-1820, 2296;
Nova Scotia, 2862a, 2863, 2871; of Canada,
struggle over, 1763-1783, 2835; of the Aztecs,
ancient, 313; of the Indies, 2954, 2955, 2996,
3002; Ohio workm-cn's compensation, 2354;
Virginia, colonial, 765, 774; Peruvian, relating
to the Indians, 3138; regarding the Navy in the
World war, 1100. See also Law, Legislation,
and Sedition act.
Lawson, P. V., 203, 239.
Lawton, Mrs. J. M., 746.
Lawyers, Kentucky, 1321.
Lay, G. C, 2220.
Lazurtegui, Juho de, 3048.
Lea, Richard, 2508.
Leach, E. W., 1643.
J. G., 2012.
M. A., 1858.
League of nations, 2187, 2192, 2193, 2197, 2977.
League of peace, Indian, 258.
Learned societies, American council of, 126.
Leary, J. J.,;r., 1875.
Lebanon, Conn., 2114.
Leblanc de Marconnay, Hyacinthe, 2829.
Le Challeux, Nicolas, 789.
Leclercq, Jules, 397.
Lecompte, Edouard, 2824, 2880.
Le Conte, Ren^, 2735a, 3107.
Lecima, Vicente, 3003.
Leduc, Phe, 2881.
Lee, E. R., 629.
Henry, of Boston, 929.
J. M., 1164, 2408.
234
LN-DEX.
Lee, R. E., 1663, 1784, 1785; at Appomattox, 994;
home of, 1612.
S. P., 997.
Leechman, J. D., 20.
Leeds, N. Y., 2115.
L'Enfant papers, 64; in the Library of Congress, 73.
Lefavour, Henry, 706.
Le Favre, Ralph, 740.
Lellerts, C. M., 862.
Walter, 1560.
LefTmann, Henry, 2706.
Legal history, of Ontario, 2932; Utah, 1609a. See
also Courts, and Law.
Legal institutions, American, 2261.
Le Gauflre, Thomas, 2811.
Legends, Indian, 284.
Legislation, congressional, power of President to
sign after adjournment of Congress, 2228; duty
of courts in dealing with unconstitutional, 2215;
federal agricultural, 2307; Iowa, child, 2387;
Indiana temperance, 2384; Iowa municipal,
2289; judicial control over, 2221; Michigan,
regarding the European war, 1427. See also
Laws.
Legislatures, colonial, see Colonial legislatures;
judicial control over, 2226.
Lehmann, Walter, 3044.
Lehn, J. P., 1122.
Leisler, Jacob, 741.
Leland, W. G., 69.
Leland, Mich., 1428.
Le Mans region, Y. M. C. A. in, 1109.
Lenape Indians, stone masks of, 226.
Lenhart, J. M., 2825.
Leon de la Barra, Francisco, 3032.
Leonard, L. A., 1900.
L. W., 1475.
Leonia, N. J., 1483.
Leopard, Buel, 2294.
Leopoldine association, 2429.
Lesh, W. S., 2536.
Lespinay. See Couillard de Lespinay.
Lesueur, C. A., 448.
Leuvenigh family, 2012.
LeVasseur,N., 270, 2882.
Levene, Ricardo, 2991.
LeviUier, Roberto, 2992, 3091, 3093.
Lewis, E. F., 1644.
F. F., 1644.
H. E.,632.
Meriwether, 1667.
W.R., 2174.
W. S., 459, 1630, 1631.
Lewis and Clark expedition, 1213.
Lewis CO., W. Va., 1633.
Lexington, Mass., 1407.
Lexington historical society, 1407.
Leyden, Holland, book printed by Brewster at, 576;
documents relating to the Pilgrims, 606, 653;
Pilgrim fathers in, 572, 581, 653; Pilgrim mar-
riage records at, 578; refusal of authorities to
expel the Pilgrims, 619.
Liaison ofhcer, European war, 1031.
Libbey family, 2013.
Libby, O. G., 1005.
Liberalism, Canadian, 2847.
Liberia, American Catholic mission to, I840, 2436.
Liberty, America's contribution to, 2207; civil,
Lincoln and, 1802; constitutional, the Pilgrims
and, 593; religious, in New York city, 742.
See also Democracy, Freedom, and Political
liberty.
Liberty pole. Revolutionary, 863.
Librarian of Congress, report of, 73.
Libraries, 2358-2366; women in, 2358; Canadian
national library, 2712; Connecticut state
library, archives in, 62, 63; Indiana state
library, 1294; John Harvard's library, 30;
Library of the American Catholic historical society
of Philadelphia, 22; of the Daughters of the
American revolution, 12; of the Huguenot so-
ciety of America, catalogue of, 17; Washington
state library, 54. See also Boston public li-
brary, Carnegie library of Pittsburgh, Reading
room (Danversport, Mass.), and Virginia state
library.
Library of Congress, 24, 26, 27; division of docu-
ments, 1014; manuscripts in, 73; Reverdy John-
son papers in, 1773.
Lichtenstein, Gaston, 1120.
Life and manners, 2376-2382; colonial days, 700;
Eskimo, 267; Indian, 261, 267, 327, 328; New
Hampshire, early days, 1477; of the Southern
people during the Civil war, 944; old time
Maryland and Virginia, 1357; pioneer Wis-
consin, 445; Washington, D. C, 1897-1919, 1263;
Western, dominant forces in, 522. See also
Ceremonies (Indian), Civilization, Culture,
Dances, Games, National characteristics,
Pioneer life, Social character, and Social or-
ganization.
Lima, Peru, 2992.
Lincoln, Abraham, 520, 526, 1663, 1667, 1786-1815;
and civil Uberty, 2269; convention which nomi-
nated for the presidency, 2239; greatness of, 162.
Oen. Benjamin, 807, 816.
E.E., 21.
Levi, 1671.
Levi, jr., 1671.
William, 1671.
Lincoln's birthday, act to declare a legal holiday,
1814.
Lindley, Harlow, 1294.
Lindsay, A. G., 2175.
Lionel, 2883.
Lindsley, A. L., 2475.
Lingley, C. R., 1006.
Linguistic relationship of the Kiche and Arawak
Indians, 347.
Linguistic stock, Mayance, 336.
Lispenard family, 2014.
Litchfield, Conn., 1248, 1251.
Litchfield historical society, 1251.
Literary culture in early New England, 561.
Literary landmarks of New York city, 2627.
Literary societies, Dartmouth collegte, 2573; in
Chicago, first Catholic, 1271; Tennessee, to 1836,
2565.
Literature, American, 512, 520; American, syllabus
of, 488; American Indian in, 263a; attitude of
British writers towards American books, in
1820,909; biographical and critical, 2631-2700;
Canada, 2711, 2736; Colombia, 3116, 3118; corre-
lation with history, 168; Cuban, 3061; early Amer-
INDEX.
235
ican, 688; French Canadian, 2744; general, 2615-
2622; Mexican, 3028; Missouri, 1454; Pilgrim and
Puritan in, 661; Pilgrims' contribution to, 601;
regional, 2623-2630; Spanish America, 2958,
2962; Wyoming, 1658. -See also Poems, South-
ern literary messenger, and Writers.
Litman, Simon, 1062, 2315.
Littell, Joseph, 1428.
Little Big Horn, battle of, 1876, 1005,
Little Rock, Ark., 2434.
Livermore, T. L., 974.
W.R., 1816.
Livingston, Edward, 1818.
Livingstone, John, 2774.
Livius, Peter, Chief Justice, 2835.
Lloyd, Mary, 398,
W. H., 2221.
Loan fund, Ontario municipal, 2900.
Lobenstine, B. W., 447.
W. C, 447.
Local government and administration, 2286-2299.
Local historical societies, 153; co-operation with the
state society in Wisconsin, 1651; problems of,
1294.
Local history, importance of collecting and preserv-
ing, 1294; study of, 122.
Lockey, J. B., 2176, 2969.
Locomotive, first, 2332.
Lodge, H. C, 1085a, 1876, 1916.
Loeb, Isidor, 2294.
Loetscher, F. W., 2478.
Loewenthal, John, 271, 272, 332a, 332b.
Loftin, F. T., 1291.
Logan, L. D., 2736.
Logstown, 750.
Loir, Adrian, 448.
Lombard, L. H., 1347.
London, Jack, 2631, 2669, 2670.
London, Eng., part taken in the Pilgrim movement,
634.
Long, J. D., 1819.
M. H., 2945.
Long Island, N. Y., 1521; antiquities of , 217; battleof,
1776, 859; domestic architecture, 1509.
Long Point, Ont., 2901.
Longfellow, Edith, 1723.
H. W., 2671, 2672.
Longley, J. W., 2844.
Loomis, E. L., 1165.
Lopez, J., 3052.
Lord, Arthur, 631, 1819,
Joseph, 1587.
W.H., 1820.
Lorette, Quebec, Huron Indian mission at, 2787.
Los Angeles public hbrary, 236^.
Los Reyes, archbishop of, 2992.
Lothrop, T. K., 1758.
Loudoun CO., Va., 2116.
Louisbourg, capture of, 1745, 543, 2788a; French ex-
pedition to recapture, 1746, 2795.
Louisiana, 1327-1342; constitutions of, 2292; language
question in, 2274; pirate of, 1781; war activities,
1917-1918, nil.
Louisiana (province), archives of, 1725-1770, 7M;
Cathohc church history, 2451; foundation of New
Orleans, 1717-1722, 803; French colonial oflTicer
in, 800; French period, archives of, 794; from
1682 to 1803, 796; Genet's projected expedition
against, in 1793, 907; "German coast" of, 799;
German immigration into, 799; John Law and
the Mississippi babble, 802; material in
Spanish archives regarding, 75; records of the
Superior council, 1726-1727, 71, 801; Spanish
archiA^es relating to the activities of the/rench
in, 17th and 18th centuries, 795; Supreme coim-
cil of, Spanish period, 1330; under the Spanish,
75, 794, 1327, 1328, 1330, 1333, 1340.
Louisiana historical society, 2369.
Louisiana purchase, constitutional history of, 2206.
Louisville, Ky., genealogy, 2117.
Lovelace, Francis, 1821.
Lovelace family, 2015.
Lovctt, H. M., 1905.
Lowell, A. L., 1816, 1817.
C. R., 988.
D. O. S., 2028.
J. J., 988.
J. R., 2673.
John, 816.
Lowell, Mass., 1370, 1406.
Lower California, history and wealth, 3017; Jesuits
in, 1697-1768, 3022.
Lower Canada, early banking in, 2745. See also
Quebec, province of.
Lower Creek Indians, Z88a.
Lower Merion Township, Pa., 1555.
Lowie, R. H., 267.
Loyalism in the American revolution, 848.
Loyalists, 2827; Boston, 1851; Connecticut, 848;
German, who settled in Upper Canada, 2920;
New Brunswick, Canada, 853, 2860; New York,
858; Newport, R. I., 1585; Pennsylvania, 876;
proprietors of Kentucky, 875; Upper Canada,
2928; Virginia, 818; who lived near Fort Pitt,
750. Ste also Butler's rangers.
Luckwaldt, Friedrich, 467.
Ludlow, A. C, 2479.
Ltmabering. See Rafting.
Limimis, C. F., 399.
Lima, N. Mex., 199.
Luquiens, F. B., 1674.
Lutheran church, 2517; at Strasbu'-s;, Pa., 1578;
in Pennsylvania, 2519; Swedish, in Minnesota,
1444.
Lutheranism, American, 2465; in early New York
city, 2414: influence upon New York city,
colonial period, 735.
Lutherans, 2465-2467.
Lutrell, Estelle, 3028.
Luttig, J. C, 449.
Lydenberg, H. M., 1012, 2363.
Lynch, F. H., 1898.
Lynchburg, Va., 57; in 1864, 949.
Lyon, D. G., 2520.
~ Mary, 1668.
Lyons, E. H., 817.
J. J,, 2396.
Lyons family, 817.
Mabie, H. W., 2674.
McBee, Silas, 2496.
MacBeth, R. G., 2946.
McCabe, J. H.. 1238.
W. G., 1822, 1823.
236
INDEX.
McCain, G. N., 1127.
McCaleb, W. F., 3029, 3030.
McCandless, Mrs. S. C, 1549.
McCann, J. E.,2436a.
■ M. A., 2513a.
McCarthy, W. E., 1166.
McCleary, John, 1277.
McCleary's Bhifl monument, 1277.
MeClellan, E. N., 975, 1063-1065, 2150, 2151.
McClure, C. H., 1458, 2293.
McClusky, F. D., 2537.
McCorraick, A. O., 2137.
— R. R., 1066.
McCree, G. W., 1128.
McCulloch, I. W., 2869.
J. W., 2869.
William, 2869.
McCutchcon, R. P., 23.
MacDermot, T. H., 3058.
Macdonald, A. A., 2819.
McDonald, H. S., 2827.
Macdonnell, John, 2928.
Mace, W. H., 492.
McElroy, R. M., 828.
McElwee, W. E., 204.
McEvoy, Bernard, 2738.
McGonegal, E. L. S., 2461.
McGorney, D. O., 3158.
McGrane, R. C, 2177.
McGrath, J. F., 1167.
Mcllwaine, H. R., 2603.
Mclntire, R. E., 135.
Mackall, L. L., 818.
McKcnna, J. A. J., 2953.
Mackennal, Alexander, 632.
McKenzie, N. M. J.W , 2914.
Mackenzie, Sir Alexander, 2945.
Mackenzie's rebellion, 1837, 2931a.
McKeracher, D. W., 2915.
Mackinac, Mich., 1425, 1430.
McKinley, William, 1824.
McLauchlan, James, 2915a.
McLaughUn, A. C, 2222.
MacLennan, F. A., 2851.
McLoughlin, Aloysia, 1429.
John, 1213.
McMahon, Edward, 1802, 2269.
McManus, J. H., 1645.
MacMaster, Donald, 2223.
McMaster, J. B., 493, 1067.
MacMechan, Archibald, 2737, 2776.
McMicklng, R. B., 2822.
T. R., 2822.
MacMillan, D. B., 1845.
T. C, 1274a.
McMullen, F. B., 2578.
McMurry, D. L., 2244.
Macnaughton, S., 2845.
M'NeiUy, J. H., 976-978, 1007, 1206, 1600.
McNitt, E. U., 1288.
Macomber, Alexander, 1168.
McPherson, Chalmers, 2456.
MacPherson, K. L., 2739.
Macpherson, L. C , 1561.
McPherson, W. L., 1068.
Macput, Jacobus, 365.
McQuaid, B. J., 2509.
McRoberts, R. H., 2317.
MacVcagh, E. C, 1069.
Mc Wharf, I. M., 2705.
McWiDiaras family, 2016.
Macy, W. F., 1734.
Madawaska, N. B., 28o9a.
Madero, F. T., 3032.
Madison, James, 2218.
Madison, Ind., 1297.
Madisonville, O., Indian village site near, 198.
Mafra, Gines de, 372.
Magazines, old Quaker, 1214; use in history teach-
ing, 139. See also Overland monthly, and
Periodicals.
Magee, D. F., 1581a, 1701.
George, 2851.
Magellan, Ferdinand, 372, 414; centenary of, 368;
description of the west coast of America by,
372; monument to, in Seville, Spain, 401;
voyage of circumnavigation, 381, 401.
Magellan, Strait of, discovery of, 372, 401, 405.
Magic, of the Indians, 267, 272, 329. See also Amu-
let.
Magliabecchi, codex, 267, 346a.
Magofnn, R. V. D., 1045.
Magonigle, H. V., 2595.
Maidu Indians, 267.
Mails, seizure of our, during the European war,
1097.
Maine, 1343-1354; admission to the Union, 1346;
anti-Catholic outbreak in Ellsworth, 1854, 2453;
century of statehood, 1348; colonial architecture
in, 2598; colonial history, 562-565, 701; free-
masons, 2368; French and EngUsh claims to
land in, 565; genealogical records, 2089; Indians
of, Massachusetts peace commission to, 1726,
701; land grants issued by Gov. Andros, 1687-
1688, 715; members of the first senate, 1351;
pioneer clergyman, 2498; Protestant Episcopal
church in, 1820-1920, 2484; Revolutionary pen-
sioners living in, 890.
Maitrot, Charles, 3084.
Maize, Indian use of, 182.
Makah Indians, 294.
Makemie, Francis, 2510.
Malaga road, N. J., 1491.
Malchelosse, Gerard, 2811, 2893.
Malcolm, G. A., 3159.
Maiden, Mass., 1388, 1371, 1383, 1389.
Mallison, A. G., 2224.
Malloy, W. E., 1776.
Malm, G. N., 1318.
Malouines, Isles, 861.
Man, antiquity of, 172; fossil, found at Vero,
Florida, 200; prehistoric, 23af prehistoric, origin
of, 292; prehistoric, philosophical and religious
thoughts of, 249.
Manassas, Va., second battle of, 961.
Mandates, New England town, colonial period, 558.
Mangold, G. B., 1459.
Manhattan Island, 735; archaeological investiga-
tions on, 221.
Manigault, Ann, 1589.
Peter, 1825.
Manila Bay, Dewey's squadron in, 1898, 1008.
Manila galleon, of 1584 and of 1595, 378.
Manitoba, Can., 294»-2951.
i.
INDEX.
237
Manitoba, Lake, 2809a.
Mann, C. E., 1389.
M. W., 1390-1398.
Manning, W. T., 1058.
Manor houses, Maryland, 2381; of Philipsborough,
739; the Van Cortlandt, 746.
Manufactures, in the southern colonies, 2314. See
also Cotton manufacturing industry, and Shoe
industry.
Manuscripts, collections, 59-75; Dreer collection, 550;
Fitch papers, 1754-766, 732; historical manu-
scripts commission, 14th report of, 931; in the
Connecticut state library, list of, 10; of Aaron
Burr, 1772 to 1818, 809; of Mirabeau Buonaparte
Lamar, 58; of the Rev. Pierre Potier relating to
the Huron Indians, 2787; Preston papers in the
Virginia state library, 824; regarding the Pil-
grims, 1609, 588; Reverdy Johnson papers in
the Library of Congress, 1773. See also Ar-
chives, Codex, and Sources and documents.
Manwaring family, 2017.
Maoris, 3150.
Maple, J. C, 2423.
Maps, ancient Mexican picture-, 301, 302; illustrative
of American history, 484; of New England,
1691, 696; of New Hampshire, about 1680, 567;
public documents relating to, 43.
Marault, Olivier, 2884.
Marble, A. R., 633.
Marble vase, prehistoric, 319.
Marblehead, Mass., 693, 713; protection of the har-
bor, 1727, 713.
"Marching through Georgia," author of, 1928.
Marengo, la., 1309.
Marines, at the battle of Belleau Wood, 1918, 1034;
in the Aisne defensive, 1065; in the capture of
New Orleans, 1862, 2150; in Siberia during the
European war, 1063.
Marique, M. T., 758.
Maritime history, early trading voyages of Boston
ships to the Northwest coast, 1202, 1203, 1207;
Newburyport, Mass., 2310; Revolutionary war
period, 843, 846; trade between Boston, the
Pacific coast and China, 1216. See also Freedom
of the seas, Merchant marine. Sea-power, and
Ships and shipping.
Maritime law, and the World war, 1097.
Maritime provinces, of Canada, political affairs in,
1871-1896, 2Mi.
Maritime supremacy, British, 541, 546.
Markham, Sir C. R., 2993.
Markle, C. M., 1070.
Marks, A. E., 1274b.
Marne river, American army along, 1048; second
battle of, 1019, 1107.
Maroni river, 3132.
Marquette, Phe, 2811; letter of, 365.
Marquette, Mich., 1423.
Marquette university, 2552.
Marriage, among the Crow Indians, 267.
Marriage records, Pilgrim, 578. See also Regional
genealogy, vital records, etc.
Marsh, D. L., 2690.
S. L. C, 1460.
Marshall, John, 1826-1827; "Life" of, 911.
O. II., 436.
Park, 1601.
Marshall, R. A., 979.
T. M., 59, 536, 1243, 2288.
Martelacr's Rock, 1515.
Marten, C. H. K., 864.
Marti, Carlos, 3065.
Jose, 30G3.
Martin, Chester, 2949, 2950.
E. S., 1707, 1708, 2658.
P. A., 2178, 3016.
Martin Caballero, F., 2970.
Martin co., Minn., 1132.
Martinez, E. J., 1209.
Martinique, Island of, Dutch attack on, 1674, 3070;
naval battle, 1667, 3070.
Martz, C. E., 494.
Marye, W. B., 759.
Maryland, 1355-1358; colonial history, 755-762;
council of defense, in the European war, 1129;
early manor houses, 2381; Evangelical Luth-
eran synod of, 2467; first governor of the state
of, 1774: genealogical records, 2093: Methodist
Episcopal church. South, in, 2471 ; Presbyterian
beginnings in, 2481; services of women to the
Confederacy, 964; Virginia boundary dispute,
1756, 771.
Marylanders, colonial, 757, 760.
Masks, Indian, 226.
Mason, Charles, 1475.
J. A., 273.
Monroe, 1071.
O. T., 267.
S. T., 1828.
T. W., 634, 635.
Mason and Dixon line, 1560.
Mason patent of 1629, 1479.
Mason's Curve, 1479.
Masons. See Freemasons.
Maspero, G. C. C, 3143.
Massachusetts, 1359-1418; architecture, 2592; biog-
raphy, 1671; budget in, 2347; CivQ war governor
of, 988; Civil war period, biographies of, 988;
colonial period, 551, 557-561, 568-723; colonial
probate records, 1675-1681, 2106; Congregational
church in Worcester, 2459; Dept. of education,
636; economic conditions in, during the Revo-
lution, 851, 866; first Universalist church in,
2490; genealogical records, 2087, 2088, 2090,
2098, 2101, 2106, 2118, 2119, 2124, 2125, 2130-2132;
governor of, 1741-1756, 723; Indian com hills in,
182; land holders in, 1687-1688, 715; maritime
history, 2310, 2313, 2318, 2319; member of Con-
gress, in 1816, 901; Pilgrim tercentenary com-
mission, 677, 678; Provincetown tercentenary
commission, 677; railroads, 2328; relations of
negroes and Indians in, 2401; Secretary of the
commonwealth, 1399; Superior court of judica-
ture, 2267; Supreme court justices appointed
from, 2267; Supreme judicial court, 2267. See
also New England, and Pilgrim tercentenary.
Massachusetts Bay colony, 686-723, 727; first official
frontier of, 522.
Massachusetts historical society, photostat repro-
ductions of, 364, 377, 380, 382, 411, 422, 425-128,
741, 752, 755, 756, 778, 789, 2767, 2979a, 3124.
Massachusetts institute of technology, 2548; class oi
1895, 2561; European war records of, 1130.
3
238
INDEX.
Massachusetts society of the colonial dames of
America, 502.
Massacres, Indian, 1443, 1625. Sec also Custer mas-
sacre, and Whitman massacre.
Masfaicotte, E. Z., 2777-2784, 2828, 2849, 2838, 2885-
2S89.
Masterson, P. V., 2494.
Matamoras expedition, 1886, 1607.
Mathematical notebooks of Harvard students, 1780-
1784, 1387.
Mather, F. J.,V>., 2596.
P. R., 1160.
Matherly, E. P., 2653.
Mathews, Basil, 637.
George, 1822.
J. M., 1266.
Mathieu, Beltrau, 3112.
Ma.ttern, Johannes, 980.
Mattox, W. C, 1072.
Matthews, Albert, 708, 981, 1400, 1851, 2068, 2562,
2563.
Brander, 909, 2631, 2643.
Mrs. P. L., 1220.
Maurice, A. B., 2627.
Maurras, C. M. P., 1073.
Maximilian's empire in Mexico, 3024.
Maxson, C. H., 2417.
Maxwell, J. R., 1893.
May, Dorothy, 619.
-^^ S. J., 455.
Mayas,v 347; account of the creation, 342; archi-
t'ecture, 267; art, 357; calendar, 356; chronology,
330; linguistic stock, 336; prehistoric city of,
298; ruins at Uxiual, Yucatan, 310.
Mayda, prehistoric island of, 307.
Maye, Lilian, 638.
"Mayflower," after the return voyage in 1621, 618;
ancestors, 2023, 2024; documents concerning tlie
appraisement of, 619; famUy connections, 635;
finding of, 617, 620a; historical pageant of, 647;
John Clark of the, 552; log of, 606; mate of, 683;
men of, 569; passengers, 577, 639, 079, 6S4; sail-
ing of, 641; story of, 623; women who came in,
633. See also Pilgrim tercentenary.
"Mayflower," an Irish, 544.
Mayflower compact, 577, 579,
Mayflower council of England, 647.
Maynard, F. A., 2270.
■ I. A., 2241.
Mayo, Katherine, 1074.
Mazorriaga, L. G., 400.
Ma^zuchelli, S. C, 2511.
Mead, C. W., 333.
N. P., 742, 2418.
■ Spencer, 2100.
Meaford, Ont., 2906.
Means, P. A., 205, 2993, 3138.
Meany, E. S., 1632.
Mecham, J. L., 3031.
Lloyd, 1242.
Mecklenburg co., Va., 812.
Medals relating to American history, 527.
"Medea," in ancient Mexico, 331.
Medford, Mass., 1385, 1386, 1390, 1398; turnpike
corporation, 1384.
Medical biographies, 1668.
Medical chemistry, 2703.
Medical college library, Philadelphia, 2361.
Medical coUege of the State university of Iowa, 2558.
Medical department, U. S. army, during the Revo-
lution, 869.
Medical history, early, 2705; New York city, 2708;
Utah, 1609a. See also Epidemics, Hospitals,
and Physicians.
Medical science. See Medical chemistry and Phy-
siological optics.
Medical units, European war. See Ambulance
corps.
Medicine, prehistoric, 334, 335.
Medicine ceremony, Indian, 288.
Medieval period, western exploration during, 367.
Medsker, W. F., 1294.
Meehan, T. F., 2438.
Meek, Basil, 1536.
Meeker, J. E., 1830.
Meekins, L. R., 1129.
Meily family, 2018.
Meissner, S. R. de, 2152.
MeUon, Thomas, 1891.
Mellors, Robert, 640.
Memoiials, monument at Antietam, 970; New Eng-
land temple of honor, 1190;of American history,
mural paintings as, 2602; of Columbus, 406;
of the founders of New England, on both sides
of the Atlantic, 1215; ol throe eminent Illinois
pioneers, 1268. See also Monuments.
Mendeuhall, T. C, 2584.
Mendon, Mass., 2118.
Mengert,H. R., 2354.
Mennonites, 2468, 2469.
Menomini Indians, 286.
Mercantile interests in Massachusetts during the
Revolution, 851. See also Commerce and
industry.
Merchant marine, 2308, 2313, 2318; articles on, 25;
development of, 1502; of Boston, 1202, 1203,
1207. See also Packet ships, and Sea power in
American history.
Merchants. See Mercantile interests.
Mercure, P. L., 2859a.
Merino, Abelardo, 401.
Meriwether, Lee, 2355.
Merlant, Joachim, 865.
Merriam, C. E., 2245.
MerriU, Anne, 2740.
C. S., 2019.
G. P., 2707.
Merrill family, 2019.
"Merrimac" and "Monitor" fight. See Hampton
Roads, battle of.
Meriimack river, 1191a.
Mervine family, 1940.
Mesa Verde national park, 183, 185.
Metallurgy. See Goldsmith's art.
Metals. See Bronze, Copper, Gold, and Iron.
Methodism in the West, rise of, 2472.
Methodist Episcopal church, 2470, 2471; educational
efforts in Oregon to 1860, 2530; in Illinois, to the
year 1832, 1263; mission in the Oregon country,
1847-1849, 1211; of Maiden, Mass., 1383; Western
conference, 1800-1811, 2472.
Methodist Episcopal church, South, 2471.
Metropolitan museum of art, 2587, 2596,2597.
Metzger, C. H., 2439v
INDEX.
230
Meurin, S. L., 2439.
Meuse-Argonne battlefields, 1019.
Mexican campaign, Pershing's, 2147.
Mexican imprints, 73.
Mexican war, 933-936; American occupation of Cali-
fornia, 1227.
Mexicans, prehistoric, history of, 340. See also
Aztecs, and Mayas.
Mexico, 3017-3042; and the Monroe doctrine, 2198;
antiquities of, 267, 300-302, 304, 306, 307, 310,
311, 314-316, 329a-332b, 338, 340, 341a, 342, 343,
348, 354-357, 358a, 363; banking in, 3029; bounda-
ries, 2968; colonial residences, 3042; Congregaci6n
de la Misi6n in, 3033; conquest of, 420, 2979a;
first bishop of, 3039; Hayes administration and,
2174; Indian languages of, 73; Indian myths of,
297; intervention in, 2154, (Shelby's expedition,
1865), 966; Jesuit missionary and explorer in,
2506; Jesuits in, 1615-1652, 2983; Maximilian's
empire, 3024; nation builders of, 3023; poUtics
and government, 3018; prehistoric calendars
of, 356; prehistoric civilization in, 311, 314; pre-
historic inhabitants, 419; prehistoric mythology
of, 348, 354, 355; prehistoric period, 313, 340, 346,
348, 358a, 361; press of, 3030; recognition of the
republic by the United States, 3038; relations
with the United States, in regard to the Isthmus
of Tehuantepec, 1848-1860, 2183; relations with
the United States, since 1910, 2180; relations
with the United States, during the Ilayes
administration, 2174, 2185; revolution, 3018-
3020; Shelby's expedition to, 1865, 966; Spanish
architecture in, 3036; the United States and, in
the forties, 3025. See also Mayas.
Mexico, City of, colonial residences in, 3042.
Meyer, Eduard, 468.
H. H. B., 24.
Meyers, J. A., 459.
Michigan, 1419-1437; archeology, 187; Daughters of
the American revolution, war work of, 1915-
1919, 1138; Detroit commercial organizations,
2324; [European] War history commission, 1187;
governor of (Mason), 1828; Hope college, at Hol-
land, 2576; Huron mission in, 1743 to 1751, 279;
in the Great war, 1126; outUne of the history
of, 495; regiments at the battle of Shiloh, 982;
Revolutionary soldiers buried in, 893; ShUoh
soldiers' monument commission, 982; soldiers
awarded the medal of honor, 1433; Woman's
relief corps, 2383; Pioneer and historical society
of, 1432; University of, 2570; State teachers'
association, 495.
Middle association of Congregational churches of
the state of New York, 2458.
Middle Templars, American, 1681 to 1836, 634.
Middle West, grain trade, 1850-1860, 2304; Indian
names of states in, 1193; journey to, in 1849,
458; pioneer democracy of, 522, 1217. See also
Mississippi vaUey.
Middleborough, Mass., 2119.
Middlesex club, Boston, 1876.
Middlesex co., Mass., registry of deeds, 1776, 1373.
Middletown, R. I., 1134.
Migeon, J. B., sieur de Bransat, 2805.
Miles, J. M., 2020.
Maeslanuly,2020.
Militia, first companies in eastern Wa.shirigton
territory, 1630; Iowa, 1865-1916, 2156, 2157;
Ohio, in the War of 1S12, 916; state of Washing-
ton, boginning of, 1629; system in New France,
2810; Virginia, in the French and Indian war,
556.
Military academy, Norwich, Vt., cadet at, 1824,
1681.
Military camps, European war. See Camp Devens,
Camp Merritt, and Training camps.
MiUtary commissions, New Jersey, 1713-1714, 747.
Military draft, European war. See Selective service.
Military defense, colonial, 873.
MUitary engineers. See Engineers of the A. E. F.
MiUtary equipment. See Ordnance.
Military government in Canada, 1759 to 1704, 2765.
Mihtary headdress. Revolutionary war, 802.
MiUtary history, 2146-2157; biography of West
Point graduates, 1661a; Canada, 2758, 2816, 2S.)0;
inspection of the central Mississippi Valley
region, 1819, 1212. See also Militia, and Wars.
Mihtary Usts, Connecticut soldiers, colonial period,
732; New Jersey commissions, 1713-1714, 747.
See also Registers, and Revolutionary soldiers'
names.
MiUtary manuscripts, of the War of 1812, 916.
MiUtary occupation of Canada, 1754-1763, 2821.
Military organizations, of the American revolu-
tion, 870. See also Continental army, Militia,
Regimental histories, and Registers, etc.
Military service. See Selective service.
MiUtary strategy on the western front, European
war, 1088.
Military supplies, European war, 1060. See also
Ammunition train, and Ordnance.
MiUer, Emile, 402.
H. R., 1169.
Joaquin, 2875-2679.
MiUigan, H. V., 2703.
MUligan family, 2021.
MiUiken family, 2021.
Mills, Clark, 2606.
J. T., 2179.
L. S., 2282.
Stanley, 2916, 2917.
Mills family, 2917.
MlUs, grain, in New France, 2811; grist, in Medford,
Mass., 1385, 1394; on the Medford turnpike,
Mass., 1395.
MiLner, D. C, 1803.
Milton, John, 728.
Mind, the American, 512, 520.
Mmdeleff, Charles, 248.
Mine barrage in the North sea, 1102.
Miner, G. L., 1581.
MyrtiUa, 2544.
Miners' laws of Colorado, 2288.
"Minerve," French-Canadian newspaper, 2885.
Mining activities, submarine, European war, 1102.
Mining settlements in Colorado, early, 1243.
Mining squadron in the European war, 1022.
Minnesota, 1438-1448; . geographic names, 1448;
Martin county in the World war, 1132; pubUc
school support in, 2533; recruiting engineers
for the World war in, 1128; Sioux Indian war
in, 1862, 962.
240
INDEX,
Minnesota historical society, 94, 1438, 1445.
"Minnesota Pioneer," newspaper, 1438.
Minnesota- Wisconsin boundary controversy, 1440.
Mmority representation m Illinois, 2247.
Minot, C. S., 1830a.
Minton, E. E., 641.
Miranda, Francisco de, 3007.
Miscellaneous, 523-530.
Missionaries, for the Indians of the far West,
18S1-1839, 2420; in the Southwest, 797; Jesuit,
791, 797, 2439. See also Franciscans, Jesuits,
and Rasle, Sebastian.
Missions, among the Indians, 290, 1194, 2421, 2429,
2447, 2773, 2787, 3133; at I'Abre Croche, Mich.,
1426; at Fort Wilham, Ont., 2934; California,
437, 1228, 1233, 1235; Cathohc, 2429, 2447; Fran-
ciscan, 404, 437; in Alaska, 1221; in Canada,
2773, 2786, 2787; in Hawaii, 3149b, 3151, 3151a,
3152, 3152a; in Guiana, 3133; in Quebec, 2773;
in Spanish America, 2983, 2984; in the Ohio
Valley, 1194; in the Oregon country, 1211;
in the Sandwich and Detroit district of New
France, 2787; Jesuit, 384, 1426, 2786, 2983^
2984; Methodist, 1211; "Moravian, 1194; Presby-
terian, 1221. See also Corporation for the
propagation of the gospel in New England.
Mississippi, founding of Biloxi, 1449, 1450; origin of
name, 1193.
Mississippi bubble, 802.
Mississippi river, early transportation and traffic
on, 2331; ferrying on, in pioneer days, 2336;
origin of name, 1193; steamboating on, after the
Civil war, 2339; trade on, 1880-1860, 2326.
Mississippi Territory, life and political events in,
1804-1807, 1867.
Mississippi Valley, agricultural history of, 155;
Carver's explorations on, 1766-1767, 1210; com-
merce, 1830-1860, 2326; Jesuits in, 1205; military
inspection of, 1819, 1212; project for an expedi-
dition against the Spanish in Louisiana, 1793,
907; significance in American history, 522;
trading expedition in, 1807, 908; travels in, 1816-
1839, 448. See also Louisiana, province of.
Mississippi Valley historical association, 118a.
Missouri. 1451-1471; banking and finance in, in the
thirties, 2349; Baptist activities, 1857-1917, 2423;
CathoUc church in, 2427, 2428, 2431, 2435, 2147,
2448; Catholic beginnings in Kansas City, 2430;
CathoUc mission of, 1837-1861, 2431; constitu-
tion, 2293, 2294; constitutional convention, 1875,
2294; entrance into the Civil war, 979; labor in,
2355; literary history, 2625, 2628; negro public-
school system, 2541; origin of name, 1193;
philosophy, 2628; social customs in the last
century, 2379; transportation in, 2343; woman
suffrage movement, 2230.
Missouri, University of, European war record of,
1131.
Missouri river, fur-trading expedition on, in 1812-
1813, 449.
Missouri Territory, miUtary inspection in, 1819, 1212.
Mistral, Fr6d6ric, 1877.
MitcheU, E. P., 2693.
S. W., 1831.
Mitla, Mex., ruins of, 343.
Mittelman, E. B., 2246.
Miwok moieties, 267.
Mobile, battle of, 1864, 965.
Mobile Bay, battle of, 1864, 965.
Mogrovejo, Santo Toribio Alfonso, 2992.
Mohawk trail, 1365.
Moieties, Miwok, 267.
Moley, Raymond, 2283.
Molina, Diego de, 552.
Money, Argentine inconvertible paper, 3099; in New
France, 2811; paper, 897. See also Coins.
"Monitor" and "Merrimac" fight. Sec Hampton
Roads, battle of.
Monk, L. H., 642.
Monongahela, battle of, ^755, 554.
Monongahela house, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1561.
Monopoly, trade, 3161.
Monroe, James, 1667.
Monroe family, 2022.
Monroe doctrine, 2191-2204; application to the Cuban
question in 1825, 2181.
Montagnais Indians, 2773, 2815.
Montauk Indian cemetery, 217.
Montcalm, L. J., marquis de, aide-de-camp to, 2775
Montecito, Cal., 1240.
Montero, Juan, 70.
Montesinos, Fernando, 2993.
Montgomery, Sir Archibald, 2855.
D. H., 496, 497.
Montgomery, Ala., 985.
Montgomery co.. Pa., 2486.
Month-signs on the Copan inscriptions, 336.
Monticello, Va., 1613.
Montreal, Can., 2760, 2878, 2879; committee on
grievance, 1828, 2875; law school, established in
1851, 2894; Notre Dame church, 2884; police
administration, 2889; schools, 1828, 2891; secret
political society, 2886; theater at, in 1816, 2888.
Monument, historical, at North Point, Md., 761;
commemorating the settlement of old Biloxi,
1450; erected in New Orleans in 1874, 1337;
memorial to Gen. Shafter, 1431; New York's,
at Antietam, 970; Revolutionary war, 859; to
commemorate the starting of Magellan's voyage,
401; to Gen. James WoKe, 737; to pioneers of
Illinois, 1277. See also Memorials.
Monuments, prehistoric, at Copan, 336; of the Aztec
kings, 339; of Yochicalco, Mexico, 338.
Moodie, R. L., 334, 335.
Moore, B. F., 1275, 2247.
C. B., 206.
Mrs. F. H., 1252.
J. R. H., 136.
Mrs. John H., 1615.
S. A. M., 1615.
— W. E., 1075.
Moores, Merrill, 1818.
Moorhead, R. L., 1170.
Moors, J. F., 3018.
Moran, T. F., 1294.
Morand, J. P. M., 17.
Moravians, at York, Pa., 1564; in Guiana, 3133; in
Northampton co.. Pa., 1570; missions among
the Indians of the Ohio valley, 1194.
Morazan, Francisco, 3046.
More family, 2023, 2024.
Moreau, Gen. Victor, 921.
Morgan, A. E., 1804.
E. W., 1402.
INDEX.
241
Morgan, J. C, 84.
J. M., 983.
L. H., 267.
Morgan family, 2025.
Moriarty, G. A., 727, 1745, 1937.
MoriUo, Pablo, 3120, 3121.
Morin, A. N., 2885.
Morison, S. E., 866, 1207, 1227, 1826a, 3152.
Morley, Christopher, 1562.
John, 1807.
S. G., 336.
Mormons, geographic names associated with the
history of, 1204; pioneer in Utah, 2473; relations
with the United States government, 1609; war
in Missouri, 1452.
Morris, Charles, 498.
G. S., 2579.
1. K., 1001, 1512.
Keith, 2846.
M. T., 1750.
Margaret, 819.
Robert, 1667.
■ Chief Justice Robert, 820.
W.A.,84.
Morrison, A. J., 1616, 1907, 2409.
Morrow, W. W., 1917, 2225.
Morse, C.R., 2565.
D. P. ,1171.
E. S., 1830a.
E. W., 2674.
F. S., 2205.
J. T.Jr., 1759, 1760.
Jedidiah, 2410.
Morton, Daniel, 2026.
J. S., 1473.
Nathaniel, 655.
O. F., 1617.
. W. T. G., 1671.
Morton family, 2026.
Moses, Armida, 984.
Moss, C. R., 274.
. J. A., 1076.
Mothers, Pilgrim, 674.
Mott, H. L., 1951.
Lucretia, 1668.
Motmd-builder culture in New York, 212.
Moimd builders, 257.
Mounds, Indian, in Ohio, 198.
Mount Baker, Wash., 1624.
Mount Desert Island, Me., 1349.
Mount Hope rock, 180.
Mt. Pleasant, Ind., 1296.
"Mount Vernon," ship, 2313.
Moimt Vernon ladies' association, 2374.
MoureUe, F. A., 437.
"Mourt's relation," 643.
Moxley family, 1938.
Mozley, George, 1172.
Muir, John, 2680.
< Ramsay, 546.
Mmrhead, Findlay, 1077.
J. F., 547, 2659.
Muitzeskill, N. Y., 2120.
Mulford family, 2027.
Mullanphy family, 1457.
Mundelein, G. W., 2452.
"Mundus novus," 425-42g.
Municipal charters In Iowa, 18S6-J8S8, 2290.
Municipal debt, New Orleans, 1336.
Municipal legislation in Iowa, 2289.
Municipal loan fund in Upper Canada, 2900.
Mimnings, Mahalaleel, 698.
Munro, W. H., 918, 919.
Munsey family, 2028.
Mural paintings, 2602.
Murder, execution for, in 1755, 687; trial in Edge-
combe CO., N. C, 18S4, 2264; trial in Upper
Canada, 1817, 2931; trials in Canada, 1787-1788,
2831.
Muriel, Domingo, 2994.
Murphy, M. A., 1667, 1668.
Mxirray, C. A., 1310.
John, 2490.
R. H., 644.
William, 1274b.
Murrell, J. A., 1601.
Muscoda, Wis., 1652.
Museum, art. See Metropolitan museum of art.
Museums of history, at the Northern Illinois state
normal school, 140; educational value of, 88.
Music, 2701-2704; Indian, 320; of Spanish America,
2976; of the European war, 1010; "Who's who"
in, in California, 1670. See also French opera
house in New Orleans.
Musical fund society of Philadelphia, 2704.
Muzzey, D. S., 499.
Myers, Walter, 1294.
Mystic river, 1386.
Mythology, Latin American, 297; Mexican, 330,
331, 348, 354, 355. See also Traditions, Indian.
Millar, Donald, 1401.
Miller, E. A., 2538.
"La Nacion," newspaper, 3096.
Nahuatl Indians, 250.
Names, American state, origin of, 528; Indian, 733,
1193, 1494. See also Political terms.
Names, geographical, California Spanish, 1239;
Canadian, 2722; Indian, in New Mexico, 1494;
Indian, of certain states and rivers, 1193; Min-
nesota, 1448; in New Brunswick, Can., 2861;
origin of the name "Acadie," 2867; origin of the
name of Oregon, 1196; Pennsylvania, 1553;
Rhode Island, 1582; state of Washington,
1632; western, 1204.
Nantucket, Mass., 1359, 1362, 1402.
Narcotic drinks of the Indians, 327.
Narragansett Bay, inscribed rocks of, 180.
Nashville, Tenn., evacuation of, 1862, 947.
Nassau, Fort, In New Jersey, 1487a; in New
York, 1730.
Natchitoches, La., 1331.
National affairs. See Political affairs.
National characteristics and ideals, 465, 468, 512-520.
National convention. See Chicago convention of
1860.
National defense. See Council of national defense.
National development, transportation as a factor
in, 2335.
National education association, 82.
National government, aid to education, 2527.
National government and administration, 2278-
2285.
"National intelligencer," 1738.
242
INDEX.
National league for woman's ser\4ce, European war,
1055.
National military parks, Vicksburg, Miss., 972.
National monixments, Arizona, 179, 216; Kayenta
national monument, 216; natural and historic,
529; New Mexico, 229; story of our, 523. See
also National parks.
National parks, Mesa Verde, 183, 185; Zion, 530.
See also National monuments.
National period, syllabus for study, 506.
National society of the colonial dames of America,
Massachusetts, 502.
Nationalism in American history, 107, 524; Ca-
nadian, 2755.
Natural history, early letters upon, 1587; surveys,
2707.
Natural resources question in Canada, 2950.
Naumkeek, the "great river," 567.
Nautical school for officers, 2146.
Navajo war dance, 253.
Naval battles. Civil war, 965, 975, 983.
Naval history, 2146, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2155;
Canada, 2816; European war, 1016, 1022, 1092,
1102; Spanish-American war, 1008, 1009; War
of 1812, 918-920; warfare in the West Indies,
British, 1739-1748, 3054; warfare in the West
Indies, French, 17th century, 3070. See also
Freedom of the seas, Marines, Navy, Sea-
power, and Submarme controversy.
Naval inventions, Ericsson's, 1502.
Navarro, L. F., 403.
Navas, M. Rodriguez. See Rodriguez Navas.
Navigation, early Ohio river traffic, 1198; Indian,
232; OH the Georgian Bay, early, 2936. See
also Steam navigation, and Steamboats.
Navy, Confederate, 969, 984; French, in the Ameri-
can revolution, see French sailors in the
American revolution; South Carolina, in the
Civil war, 983.
Navy, U. S., assistant secretary of, 1861-1866,
997; during the Civil war, 997; in the Spanish-
American \\ar, 1008; in the European war,
1039, 1079; the AVorld war, laws and joint
resolutions regarding, 1100; influence upon
American development, 2149; office of naval
records, 1100-1103; officers and enlisted men
kiUed during the World war, 1098; school
for officers, founded in 1821, 2146.
Navy Island episode, 1837, 2830.
Nazca, Peru, 333.
Neal, John, 1832.
Nebraska, 1472, 1473; constitutions, 2295.
Nebraska legislative reference bureau, 2295.
Nebraska state historical society, 2295.
Necklace, Indian, 222.
Negro colleges, religious education in, 2540. See
also Hampton normal and agricultural in-
stitute.
Negro public school system in Missouri, 2541.
Negroes, advancement of, 2394; colonization, 939,
1807, 1906; free, in North Carolina, 2399; in
education, 2531; in Massachusetts, relations
of Indians and, 2401; in poUtics, 2232; in
public offices, 2402; insurrection in Virginia,
1831, 938; slavery, Spanish policy in regard
to, 2978; slaves, diplomatic relations with
Great Britain bearing on the return of, 1783-
1828, 2175; soldiers in the European war,
1071; women, normal school for, in the Dis-
trict of Columbia, 2544. See also Slavery.
Neilson, John, papers of, 2818.
Neisser, George, 821, 1564.
Nelson, A. M., 1132.
N. C, 213a.
William, 1487.
Neosha, origin of name, 1193.
Nephrite, prehistoric amulet of, 350.
Nepveu, Jan, 3126a.
Nerinckx, Charles, 2441, 2442.
Nes, H. M. van, 645.
Netherlands, relations with Venezuela, 1816-1920,
3144. See also Dutch, and Holland.
Netherlands America institute, 653.
Neutral Indians, 224, 225.
Neutral trade, 2179a; European war, 1097.
Neutrality, during the European war, 1073; of
Chile during the European war, 3112.
Neutrals, during the American revolution, repres-
sion of, 876.
Nevada, pioneer life in, 1474; trappers and ex-
plorers of, 434.
NeviUe, Henry, 2406.
Nevis, Island of, naval battle, 1667, 3070.
New Bern, N. C, founding of, 785.
New Brunswick, Can., 2859a-2861.
New Brunswick, N. J., 1485.
New-church. See Church of the New Jerusalem.
New Concord, N. Y., 2121.
New England, ancestral heads of families of, 2122;
bibliography, 3; books about, 1622-16^6, 559;
colonial history, 557-561; connecting links with
England, 1215; colonial architecture, 2599;
colonialsettlementsin, 612; Corporation for the
propagation of the gospel in, 692; description
and travel, 452, 455, 457; division of the A. E. F.
in France, 1917-1919, 1178; ecclesiastical history,
655; founders of, 1190; history, 1208; history and
education for citizenship in, 83; in the life of the
world, 1191; industries, 1208; influence upon
states and lands beyond its borders, 1191;
literary culture in, 1620-1730, 561; map of, 1691,
696; old-time waU-papers, 2601; public schools,
2537; spirit of, 560; steam navigation in, 2329;
temple of honor, 1190; theologians of the 18th
century, 2412; theology, 2413; town mandates,
colonial, 558; towns of, 1215; travel in, 446, 452,
455, 457; wages in the cotton manufacturing
industry, 2353. See also Pilgrim tercentenary.
New England company of 1649, 692.
New England society of Charleston, S. C, 2375.
New France, 2759-2815; governors of, 2790, 2797;
manuscripts relating to, 65; marriages in, 16S8-
1656, 2812; militia system organized by Fron-
tenac. 2810; Spanish accoimt of, 1608, 2807. See
also Celoron's expedition, and French regime.
New Granada, intellectual development in, 3118;
Jesuits in, 2983. See aZso Colombia.
New Hampshire, 1475-1480; colonial history, 566,
567; genealogical records of Somersworth, 2136;
laws of, 1811-1820, 2296; Merrimack river, 1191a;
southern boundary of, about 1680, 567; travel
in, in 1808 and 1809, 457; travel in, in 1819, 455;
volunteers in the Civil war, 974.
Nev Hampshire historical society, 2367.
IITDEX.
243
New Jersey, 1481-1493; antiquities, 226; biography,
1687; chaplain in the Revolution, 1694; cliief
justice of, letters, 1777-1779, 820; civics, 500;
colonial history, 747, 748; commissions, civil
and military, 171S-1714, 747; Dept. of public
instruction, 500; geography, outline for study,
. 500; in the Revolution, 874; judicial system,
2268; Presbyterian church in Lambertvillo,
2477; Revolutionary soldiers of, 888; Revolu-
tionary war period, 819; travel in, 1794-1811,
444; Universalist church history, 2490; vital
records of Vineland, 2140; Washington's march
across, 1777, 840.
New Jersey historical society, 1488; "Proceedings,"
subject index to, 56.
New Jersey society of Pennsylvania, 1489.
New Mexico, 1494, 1495; antiquities, 195, 196, 199,
202, 229, 234; controversy over the Texas bound-
ary, ^S^S-i 850, 924; Indians of, 234, 277; national
monuments of, 229; Spanish exploration in,
1581-1582, 3031; Texan jurisdiction in, 1848-
1860, 924.
New Netherland, Dutch settlement of, 738.
New Orleans, La., archives preserved at, 794; battle
of Sept. 14th, in 1774, 1338; bonded debt of,
1822-1920, 1336.; capture of, 1862, 2150; custom
house, 1332; founding of, 1341, 1342; historic
buildings, 1330 ,1332, 1334; Liberty monument,
1337; "Mobile" landing, 1329; old French city,
1335; Reconstruction in, 1338.
New Paltz, Huguenots of, 740.
New Plymouth. See Plymouth colony.
New Shoreham, settlement of, 727.
New Spain, exploring expeditions sent out from,
378, 379, 437; first bishop of, 3039; geographical
"relations" of, 3026; Jesuits in, 1697-1768, 3022;
postal service, 2954; Rodrlguez-Chamuscado
expedition into New Mexico, 1581, 3031. See
also Mexico, and Spanish America, colonial
period.
New Sweden, Me., 1353.
New Trier township. 111., 117, 485. See also Dis-
covery and exploration.
NewWindsor, S. C, 786.
New York (city), archaeological investigations in,
221; Bank of the Manliattan company, 2345;
Bar association of, 2275; Central Park, 1514;
Collegiate Dutch church, introduction of Eng-
lish language into service, 736; commercial and
industrial development, 1502; committee of
association, 1775, 822; daily journalism in, 1507;
Down town association of, 2373; epidemics in,
1501; genealogical records, 2123; growth, since
1790, 1497; in Indian possession, 239; Indian
land sales, 733; influence of Luther upon, in
the colonial period, 735; liberty poles erected
in, 1766-1770, 863; Uterary history, 2626; Uter-
ary landmarks, 2627; MetropoUtan museum of
art, 2596, 2597; monument to Gen. Wolfe
erected in, 1762, 737; Park Presbyterian church,
2474; practice of medicine in, 2708; Presbyter-
ian church history, 1776-1782, 810; Presbytery
of, minutes, 1776-1782, 810; recipients of the
freedom of the city, 1505; religious history,
colonial period, 735, 736; religious Uberty in,
742; Revolutionary history, 810; statues of
King George III and the Honorable William
Pitt in, 1320.
New York (state), 1496-1521; almanacs, 1694-1850,
53; antiquities, 212, 217; bibliography, 2, 55;
Buffalo and Erie county during the European
war, 1136; cavalry regiment in the Civil war,
959; colonial history, 733-746; colonial period,
administration of Gov. Jacob Leisler, 741; Con-
gregational chiu-ches of, 1806-1810, 2458; Qonk-
ling-Platt senatorial contest, 1881, 2257; Enghsh
governors of, 744; first constitution, 2297; first
governor, 1712, 1713; Friends' school in Dutchess
county, 2461; geneq,logical records, 2092, 2007,
2099, 2103-2105, 2107-2109, 2111, 2112, 2115, 2120,
2121, 2123, 2137, 2139, 2143-2145; hall of fame,
1511; history of, wri-tings on, 1916, 55; hospital
unit in France, European war, 1028; infantry
in the Civil war, 1000a, 1001; Jefferson county
in the World war, 1133; Jews in, 2396; Know
Nothingism in, 2454; life in a country town
seventy years ago, 2380; monument at Antie-
tam, 970; mound builder culture in, 212; politics
and government, colonial period, 741; politics
during the governorship of David B. Hill, 1886-
1892, 2241 ; press, in western part, 2405; Protest-
ant Episcopal bishop of western New York,
1893-1917, 2522; Protestant Episcopal church
at Cold-Spring-on-the-Hudson, 2483; public
school system, 2542; Revolutionary camp in
the Hudson highlands, 835; Revolutionary
war in, 811, 822; Revolutionary records of Dutch-
ess county, 837; Seneca Indian reservation, 26^;
trade with Indians, 1684 to 1692, 734; western
part, under the French, 745.
New York gazette, 1732-1736, 743.
New York genealogical and biographical society,
2092, 2097, 2099, 2103-2105, 2108, 2109, 2111, 2112,
2115, 2120, 2121, 2123, 2137, 2139, 2145.
New York historical society, 743, 743a; field explo-
ration committee, 835.
"New York pubUc library, history of, 2363; Pilgrim
tercentenary exhibition, 646.
New York state archeolog'ical association, Lewis
H. Morgan chapter, 745.
Newark, N. J., 1490.
Nevvburgh, N. Y., 1500.
Newbury, Mass., 2124.
Newbury, N. H., 1775.
Newburyport, Mass., 1374, 2310.
Newfoundland, discovery and possession, 407;
story of, 2852.
Newlands, F. G., 1833.
Newman, F. G., 1819.
Newmyer, I. N., 1565.
Newport, R. I., loyalist of, 1585.
Newport historical society, 731.
Newspaper reading room, Danversport, Mass., 1417.
Newspapers, American, bibliography of, 1690-1820,
5; Argentine Republic, 3096; California, early
day, 1232; daily, 1858, 2407; earUest printed in
western New York, 2405; early Norwegian-
American, 2403; first in Iowa, 1305; first in
Minnesota, 1438; history in, 150; in New York
city, 2407; oldest daily in America, 1858; Phila-
delphia, pubhc opinion as seen in, 1789-1801,
913. See also JournaUsm, National intelli-
gencer, and New York gazette.
Newton, C. C, 709.
Nez Perce Indians, 2420.
244
INDEX.
Niagara Falls, discovery of, 410.
Niagara historical society, 2916.
Niagara region, bibliography of, 2411; notes on,
17 69-1860, 2918; under the French, 745.
Nicaragua, antiquities of, 362.
Nicaragua canal, 3043; route of, 45.
Nichols, C. L., 710.
F. A., 1753.
J. L., 2394.
Richard, 1834.
W. S., 1490.
Nicknames. See Political terms.
Nicoky, Helen, 867.
Nieto, Asensio Ponciano, 3033.
Nightingale, Benjamin, 634.
Nilsson, M. P., 208.
Nimuendaju, Curt, 336a.
Nine Partners boarding school, 2461.
Ninety-two resolutions, Quebec, 18Si, 2876.
Nizqually, Fort, Oregon country, 1628.
Noah, M. M., 2396.
NoaiUes, vicomte de, 868.
Noble, E. M., 1355.
Nobility, in New France, 2791; Spanish, in the
PhiUppines, 3160.
Nomenclature, California, Spanish, 1239. See also
Names.
Noonan, R. L., 2254.
Nootka Soimd controversy, 1209, 1219.
Nordenskiold, Erland, 337.
NordhofE, C. B., 1157.
Norfolk CO., Mass., 2125.
Normal schools, for negro women in the District of
Columbia, 2544; Oregon, 2528; Terre Haute,
Ind., 2557.
Norombega, 423.
Norris, W. B., 2149.
Norriton, Pa., 2128.
Norse discovery of America. See Icelandic dis-
covery of America, and Norombega.
Norse theory of the Dighton rock, 181.
North, opponents of the Civil war, 981; trade in,
1850-1860, 2326; travel in, in 1816, 442.
"North American," newspaper, 1858.
North Carolina, 1522-1528; blockade runners
stranded along the coast, 1861-1865, 993; colonial
history, 781-785; Granville coimty in the
World war, 1124; murder trial in, 1834, 2264;
race elements in the white population, 2390;
World war records, 68, 69. See also Carolina.
North Carolina historical commission, 137.
North Carolina- Tennessee boundary line survey,
1799, 1528.
North Dakota, 1529, 1530; missionary bishop of,
1883-1896, 2522.
North Kingstown, R. I., 2133.
North Point, Md., 761.
North pole, discoverer of. See Peary, R. E.
North Sea mine barrage, 1022.
Northampton co., Pa., 1554.
Northampton co., Va., 772, 2126.
Northend, M. H., 1404.
Northern Neck of Virginia, boundaries settled,
1736,771.
Norton, F. E., 138.
Norway, diplomatic relations with, 1814-1905, 2172.
Norwegian, colony in Pennsylvania, 1567; im-
migration, 1848; press in America, early, 2403.
Northwest, fur trading expedition in, 1812-1813,
449; Huron mission in, 1743 to 1751, 279; Indians
of, 232, 267; Pacific, Indians of, 232, 267; Pacific,
shipbuilding in, 15; public documents relating
to, 44; routes of travel in, about 1763, 450; trans-
Mississippi, historical activities in, 1919-1920,
141. See also Oregon cotmtry.
Northwest, Canadian, exploration in, in 1734, 438;
explorers of, 2945; fur trade and exploration,
during the French regime, 2808-2809a; trade
routes to, 2913.
Northwest, Old, allied Indian tribes of, 236; Clark's
campaign, 854; exploration in, 432, 433, 435, 436;
historical activities in, 102; military control of,
at the end of the Revolution, 854; source ma-
terial for the history of, 1797-1817, 916. See
also Ohio country, and Western reserve.
Northwest coast, early voyages to, 1787-1792, 1202,
1203; exploration of, 1775, 437; exploration of,
1790-1792, 440; fur trade, 1207, 1216; maritime
trade, 1207; Russian-American relations with
regard to trade on, in 1824, 905. See also
Nootka Sound controversy, Oregon country,
and Pacific coast.
Northwest company of Canada, 2948; Astoria under,
1213; exploring expedition into the Idaho
region, 1809, 1260; pathfinder for, 1807-1812, 454.
Northwest rebellion of 1885. See Riel rebellion of
1885.
Norwich, Eng., 671.
Notestein, Wallace, 14.
Nott, Eliphalet, 930.
Nottingham, Stratton, 2126.
Nottoway co., Va., 1116.
Nourse, C. C, 2239.
Nova Scotia, 2863-2872.
Noyes, Nicholas, 700.
Nueva reino de Granada, Jesuits in, 2983. See also
Colombia, and Gran Colombia.
Nullification in South Carolina, 925, 932.
Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, Alvar, 399.
Nuns, Catholic, 2449, 24,50. See also Sisters.
Nurse, Civil war, 1688.
Nye, E. T., 1405.
Oak HiU, N. Y., 2104.
Oakes, Urian, 688.
Oakman, Tobias, 2029.
O'Bannon, P. N., 1836.
Oberlin- Wellington fugitive slave cases, 937.
Obrecht, E. M., 1320.
O'Brien, E. G., 2928.
O'Connor, Patrick, 1306.
R. F., 2951.
Oculist, an early, 2709.
O' Daniel, V. F., 2440-2442, 2497.
O'Day, E.G., 2644.
O'Dwyer, G. F., 562, 1276, 1406.
Oetteking, Bruno, 209.
Officers, Revolutionary, 886, 887, 889, 891.
Officers' training camps. See Training camps.
Officials. See Public officials.
Ogeron de la Bouere, Bertrand d', 3078.
Oglethorpe's treaty with the Lower Creek Indians,
1739. 788a.
INDEX.
245
O'Hara, J. F., 2995.
J. M., 2505.
O'Higgins, Bernardo, 3083, 3110a.
Ohio, 1531-1537; archaeology, 219; Catholics in, 2440;
high schools in, prior to 1850, 2538; in the War
of 1812, 916; Indian village site and cemetery
in, 198; militia in the War of 1812, 916; news-
papers, 1690 to 1820, bibliography of, 5; origin
of name, 1193; pioneer days, 1198; Presbyterian
church in Cleveland, 2479; worlanen's compen-
sation law, 2354. See also Western Reserve.
Ohio country, exploration of Ct^loron in, 432, 433,
435, 436; French claims to, 435. See also North-
west, Old.
Ohio river, 1198; Celeron's expedition down, 1749,
432, 433, 435, 436; early transportation and
traffic, 2331; origin of name, 1193.
Ohio state archaeological and historical society,
1862.
Ohio state university, 2564.
Ohio valley, in history, 1198; in the preliminaries
of the War of 1812, 914; loyalists of, 876; Mora-
vian missions among the Indians, 1194; sig-
nificance in American history, 522; states of,
Lafayette's visit to, 906.
Ohio Valley historical association, 150a.
Ojibwa Indians, 286; myths of, 2813.
Old Belmont, Wis., 1649.
Old Colony trust company, 518, 1208.
Old Fort Nassau colonial monument commission,
1487a.
Old Fort Nassau settlement, 1487a.
"Old Indian road," in Maryland, 759.
Old Northwest. See Northwest, Old.
Old Southwest. See Southwest, Old.
Olean, N. Y., 1499.
O'Leary, D. F., 3008, 3009.
Oliger, Livarius, 404.
Oliphant, E. P., 1837.
. J. A., 1686.
Oliveira Lima, Manuel de, 2199.
Oliver, J. W., 1294.
Olson, J. E., 1806.
Omaha Indians, 267.
O'Neill, Scannall, 2002.
Onondaga historical association, 8.
Ontario, Province of, 2897-2940; antiquities, 224,
225; Bureau of archives, report of, 2787; farmer
government, 2935; founder of Gananoque, 2827;
Huron mission at Sandwich, 1740 to 1751, 2787;
Indian copper celt from, 224; loyalists, 2827;
pioneer experiences in, 2836; rebellion of 1837,
2833; War of 1812 in, 2839-2841 . See also Upper
Canada.
Opera, a century of grand opera in Philadelphia,
2701.
Opera house in New Orleans, 1334.
Orange co., Va., 2127.
Orators, great Canadian, 2732.
Orbison, Inez, 139.
Orchard, N. C, 210.
Orcutt, L. E., 1078.
Ordeal, an ancient Mexican, 332a.
Order of colonial lords of manors in America, 739,
746.
Ordnance, and the World war, 1036. See also
Cannon foundry.
Oregon, 1538-1542; Catholic missionary in, 1872,
2521; educational efforts by Methodists, to 1860,
2530; emigration to,*ln 1852, 439; meaning and
origin of the name, 1196, 1540, UAl; normal
schools, 2528; Pacific university, at Forest
Grove, 2545.
Oregon country, early explorations of, 1540; ex-
ploring expedition in, 1809, 1260; fur trade,
1202, 1207, 1216; history of, 1213; in 1849-50,
1214; Indian troubles in, 1847-1849, 1211; In-
dians of, 1216; journal kept at Fort Nizqually,
1849-1860, 1628; Methodist mission in, 1847-
1849, 1211; origin of the name, 1540; Spain and
England's quarrel over, 1219. See also Nootka
Sound controversy. Northwest coast, Pacific
northwest, and Whitman massacre.
Organ, church, oldest in the United States, 2702,
Organizations, welfare, European war, 1043, 1055,
1057. See also Knights of Columbus, Red
Cross, AVar camp community service, and
Young Men's Christian association.
Organized labor, 2351, 2352.
Orgemont, Houdin d', 2559.
Original narratives, Plymouth plantation, 587.
Original narratives of early American history. See
America, early accounts to 1600.
Orleans Territory, constitutional history of, 903.
Ornament, prehistoric, 321. See also Decorative
art.
Orr, R. B., 211.
Ortega Munilla, Jose, 2954.
Orth, S. P., 2397.
Oruba, aboriginal population of, 326; archaeology
of, 325, 326.
Osage Indians, 268.
Osage war, 1455.
Osgood, David, 1390.
Osgoode,.J. A., 985.
Osier. B. B., 2732.
O'Shaughnessy, E. L. C, 3032.-
O'Shiel, K. R., 829.
Osterhout, G. H.,;r., 3076.
Ostlangenberg, G. H., 2512.
Oto Indians, sacred warclub of, 193.
Otomi Indian cultm-e, 314.
Ots Capdequi, J. M., 2996.
Ottawa Indians, 271; Jesuit mission to, 1426.
Ottman, F. C, 2493.
Otto, L.-G., comte de Mosloy, 896.
Oudschans Dentz, Fr., 3131.
Ousley, Clarence, 487.
Outlines for the study of American history, 479,
511; for eighth year, 98, 507, 508; for seventh
year, 98, 491, 507; of California history, 1234;
of Michigan history, 495; of New Jersey history,
500; political parties and the presidential cam-
paign, 490. See also Textbooks, outlines, etc.
Overland journeys to the Pacific, in the fifties, 439,
447, 453; Canadian, 1862, 2822. See also Astor's
overlanders.
"Overland monthly," 2644, 2670.
Overman, V. V. M., 895.
Owen, M. A., 2379.
W. O., 869.
Owen Sound, Ont., 2901 a, 2912, 2915 a, 2939.
Ozark highland ol Missouri, 1463.
246
INDEX,
i
Pach, Walter, 275, 276.
Pacific coast, early vo3^ages to, 1202, 1203; Indians
of, 232, 267; Russian-American relations with
regard to trade on, in 1824, 905; Spanish explora-
tions on, 437. See also Overland journeys to
the Pacific, Pacific northwest, and West, far.
Pacific coast branch of the American histoiical
association, proceedings, 84.
Pacific Islands, Hawaiian Islands, 3149a-31.52a;
Philippine Islands, 3153-3161.
Pacific northwest, conditions in, during the Civil
war, 1837; early trading voyages to, 1202, 1203,
1207; fur trade, 1202, 1207; shipbuilding in, 15.
See also Oregon country, and Pacific coast.
Pacific Ocean, discoveries and acquisitions in
390a.
Pacific states, public documents relating to, 44.
Pacific university, 2545.
Packet service in the colonies, 549.
Packet ships, transatlantic, 2310.
Padouca Indians, 252.,
Paducah, Ky., 1319.
Page, E.G., 140.
Pageants, historical, 87; at Marquette, Mich., 1423;
at Sault Ste. Marie, 1435; Mayflower, 647; Pil-
grim, 574, 636; UniversaUst church in America,
1770-1920, 2490.
Paget, Harold, 580.
Paine, A. B., 2G45.
R. D,, 920, 1079, 2318, 2319.
S. H.,1513.
Sumner, 988.
Paine family, 2030.
Painter, Carl, 1292.
Paintings, historical, 477, 686; by Gilbert Stuart,
2610; in the Virginia state library, 2003; mural,
2602; of Harvard college in 1795, 1807, 2559, 25C0;
of the Indians, 276. See also Art, and Por-
traits.
Palacios, E. J.,338.
Palafox y Mendoza, Juan de, 2983.
Palatines In North Carolina, colonial period, 785.
Paleopathology, studies in, 334, 335.
Palma, Ricardo, 2981.
Palmer, A. F., 1668.
G. H., 2583.
Paltsits, V. H., 59, 556, 646, 1762.
Panama, 3047-3049.
Panama, city of, 3047; English attack on, 1741-174S,
3054; foundation of, 1673, 3049.
Panama canal, 3050, 3051; public documents relat-
ing to, 45.
Panama congress of 1826, 2165, 3005, 3008.
Pan American financial conference, second, 2178.
Pan- Americanism, 2176; its beginnings, 29 9. See
also Panama congress of 1826.
Pange, comte Jean de, 1080, 1081.
Panhuys, J. L. C. van, 3132.
Papago Indians, 273; religious ceremony of, 243.
Paper money, Argentine, 1880-1900, 3099; post-
Revolutionary period, 897.
"Papunahung," Indian chief, 254.
Paraguay, descriptive account of, 3081; history of,
2994; Jesuits in, 2983, 2994.
Paraguay river, 317.
Paraahos, U., 3108.
Parish, J. C, 141, 1082, 1305, 25U.
Park, C. E., 2502.
Roswell, 3066.
Park family, 2031.
Parker, A. C, 212.
Cortlandt, 1838, 1840.
G. F., 1711, 2249-2251.
Parkhurst, CD., 2000, 2017.
Clinton, 986.
Parkinson, Henry, 1839.
Parks. See Central park, and National parks.
Parra Perez, C, 3010.
Parry, Hugh, 647, 648.
Parsons, E. A., 909a, 1335.
E.C., 277.
Eugene, 1244.
Henry, 2032.
J. W., 2444.
John, 451.
Samuel, 1514.
W. B., 1083.
Parsons family, 2032.
Parties, political. See Political parties.
Pastells, Pablo, 405.
Paterson, M. A., 1659.
William, 1840.
Paterson, New Jersey, 874, 1487, 1493.
Paton, Andrew, 843.
W. A., 1877.
Patriotic duty of an historical association, 92.
Patriotic societies. See Daughters of the American
revolution, Massachusetts society of the colo-
nial dames of America, and Sons of the
American revolution.
Patton, C. S., 1430.
Paul, G. F., 339.
Paulc'us Sannon, H., 3077.
Paulists,in Spanish America, 2883.
PauUin, C. O., 2252.
Pawnee Indians, 272.
Paxson, F. L., 1083.
Pay roll, Revolutionary war. 892.
Payne, F. O., 406.
G. H., 2617.
Paz, Diego Alvarez de, 3001.
Peabody, Charles, 213.
Peace, Indian league of, 258; power of Congress to
declare, 2211. See also Portsmouth peace con-
ference.
Peace commission to the eastern Indians, 1726,701.
Peace commissioners, British, in 1778, 858.
Peaoe proposal, German, 1916, 1105.
Pearson, E.L., 1878.
H. C, 1780.
Peary, R. E., 1841-1847.
Pea'^e, P. P., 2685.
Peck, Jedediah, 2542.
Peckham, G. E., 1474.
Sir George, 407.
H. H., 2646.
Pedregal, Mexico, 314.
Pedreira Deibe, Felipe, 408.
Peerson, ICleng, 1848.
Pelland, Leo, 2890.
Pendleton,W. C, 1618.
Penn, WilUam, 1553, 1667, 1849.
Pennamite war, 753.
Penniman family, 2033.
INDEX.
247
Pennsylvania, 1543-1578; antiquities of, 226; Catho-
licity in, 2436a; charter of, 749; colonial architec-
ture, 2589; colonial history, 749-754; Confederate
raid in to, 999; Connecticut claim sin, see Sus lue-
hanna company and dispute; early architecture
2594; early history of, 504; early Quaker educa-
tion in, 2543; education of youth in colonial
period, 2536; food administration in, during the
World war, 1127; freemasons. 2370; frontiers,
1747-1764, 750; genealogy, 2085, 2110, 2128, 2129,
2134; history of, 498; history teaching in, 142;
Indian trails of, 2333; loyalists of, 876; Lutheran
church in, 2519; newspapers of, 1690 to 1820,
bibliography of, 5; political affairs in, from
1756 to 1772, 1700; Presbyterian church in, 2476,
2480, 2482; Quakerism in, 2462; Reformed
church history, 2486, 2487, 2489, 2507; Revolu-
tionary period, 821, 825; Swiss emigrants to,
1734-1744, 540; travel in, 1794-1811, 444; Virginia
boundary dispute, 1736, 771; York county in the
World war, 1122.
Pennsylvania federation of historical societies, 1553.
Pennsylvania, Historical commission of, 1567.
Pension records, Revolutionary, 839.
Pensioners, Revolutionary, 888; Georgia, 891; Maine,
890; Michigan, 893.
Pepper, C. M., 1724.
G. H., 213a, 214.
Pepperell, Sir William, 543, 1850.
Pepys, Samuel, 784.
Pequea, Pa., 1577.
Percorini, Alberto, 502.
Pereyra, Carlos, 2972.
Periodicals, American and English, index to, 1;
history of, 2408; Presbyterian, of Richmond,
Va., 1815-1860, 2409. See also Magazines, and
Southern literary messenger.
Perkins, Nathan, 452.
S. G., 988.
W. L., 1851.
Perley, M. V. B., 2006.
Sidney, 711, 712.
Perrault, Antonio, 2891.
Perrin, P. G., 649.
Pershing, J. J., 1039; Mexican campaign, 2147; report
of the operations in the European war, 1085,
1089.
Personal narratives. Civil war, 942, 959, 960, 967,
974, 986, 995, 1000a; Civil war. Confederate side,
963, 978, 992, 996; European war, 1021, 1037,
1041, 1042, 1050, 1052, 1058, 1059, 1070, 1108,
1140.
Persons, W. M., 2320.
Peru, 3136-3140; ancient textiles of, 299, 303; antiq-
uities, 360; conquest of, 2981; early history, 2993;
Indians of, 320; Jesuits in, 1615-1652, 2984;
organizer of the Catholic church in, 1581-1608,
2992; prehistoric period, medicine and surgery
in, 334, 335; prehistoric poncho from, 333; pre-
historic slings found in, 205; trephining in
ancient, 334; viceroy of, 1709-1711, 2997.
Pests, insect, 680.
Peters, Richard, 900.
Petigru, J. L., 1852, 1853.
Petiteau, A., 3078.
Petition for protection of Marblehead harbor,
17X7, 713.
"Petrel," Confederate cruiser, 983.
Petroglyphs, in ^^uadcloupe, 312; on the upper
Paraguay river, 317. Sec also Inscribed rocks,
and Kensington rune stone.
Pettigrew, J. J., 1854.
Pettingell, F. H., 1983.
Pettit, W. W., 2166.
Phare, G. A., 2786.
Pharmaceutical chemistry, 2705.
Phelps, E. L., 2929.
E.M., 25.
Esther, 2928, 2929.
W. L., 2660, 2661.
Philadelphia, Pa., British occupation of, during the
Resolution, 876; century of grand opera in, 1546;
colonial architecture, 2589; Danish American
achievement in, 1858; description and travel,
1582; genealogical records, 2129; Knights of Co-
lumbus war activities in, 1044; library of the
College of Physicians, 2361; Mikveh Israel
cemetery and congregation, 1545; Musical fund
society of, 1563; North Presbytery, 2482; op-
erations aroimd, in the Revolution, 811;
public opinion in, 1789-1801, 913; silversmiths
and allied artificers of, from 1682 to 1850,
1544.
Philanthropy, 2383-2387; and the colony of Georgia,
546; " Female charitable society of Wiscasset,"
Me., 1350; Iowa state educational institutions,
2529. See also Sisters of charity. Soldiers' or-
phans' home, and Welfare work.
Philippine Islands, 3153-3161; Dewey's squadron
in Manila Bay in 1898, 1008; Society of Jesuits
in, 1615-1652, 2983.
Philipsborough, manor of, 739.
Philipse family, manor of, 739.
Phillipps, Sir Thomas, 65.
Phillips, G. S., 2445.
H. P., 1336.
Naphtali, 2396.
P. L., 26, 27.
Wendell, 1855.
Philosophers, Cuban, 3061.
Philosophical society, St. Louis, 2628.
Philosophy, Emerson and, 2649; professors of, 2579;
St. Louis movement in, 2628.
Phinney, Elihu, 2411.
"Phinney's calendar or Western almanack," 2411.
Phrase, political, that beat Blaine, 2237. See also
Political terms.
Physician in pioneer Wisconsin, 1648. See also
Medical biography.
Physiological optics, 2709.
Pickering, E. C, 1856.
Timothy, 822, 900.
Pictorial history of the 26th division, U. S. army,
European war, 1156.
Pictorial narrative, European war, 1039.
Picture-map, ancient Mexican, 301, 302.
Picture writing. See Codex Borbonicus, and Codex
Magliabecchi.
Pictiu-es, European war, 1027, 1039, 1075, 1156;
from Canadian history, 2739; historical, 90, 477,
2614; of the World war, official, 1075. See also
Paintings, historical, and Posters.
Pierce, B. L., 143.
G. M., 870.
248 INDEX.
Pierce, L. A., 2920.
William, 28.
Pierce's register of Revolutionary oflBcers and sol-
diers, 886.
Pierson, W. W., 2200.
Piggott, Sir Francis, 870a, 2179a.
Pike, Albert, 1857.
Pilcher, J. M., 1685.
Pilgrim legacy, 627.
Pilgrim movement, beginning of, 660.
Pilgrim studies for the tercentenary, 104.
Pilgrim tercentenary celebration, 4, 6, 7, 29, 37, 104,
116, 573, 574, 583, 591, 593-596, 677, 678, 1208,
1215; celebrations in England, 621, 647, 648, 671,
682; celebrations in Holland, 621; celebrations
in Massachusetts, 636; congressional committee
on, 677, 678; exhibition in the New York public
library, 646; souvenirs of, 619.
Pilgrims, 568-570, 572, 582, 586, 589, 592-594, 597,
599, 604-606, 608, 610, 611, 614-616, 644, 650,
652, 653, 667, 670; and constitutional liberty,
593; and Plymouth, England, 682; and the
melting pot, 2392; arrival of, 622; at Scrooby,
640; bibliography, 4, 6, 7, 28, 29, 37; Cape Cod
journal of, 642; connection with Southampton,
650; contribution to literature, 601; Dutch in-
fluence on, 613; English homes and haunts of,
632, 638, 685; English records of, 670a; history
of, 584, 684; in Holland, 572, 576, 578, 581, 626;
in Holland and in England, 645; in literature,
661; in the life of to-day, 681; influence of, 162;
legal processes against, 684; lesson for us to-day,
610; Leyden documents relating to, 653;
mothers, 674; motive and contribution, 673;
Norwich, Eng., and, 671; of the "Mayflower,"
the "Fortune," and the "Anne," 679; pastor
of, 585; psalmody of, 598; romances of, 669;
spirit in the life of to-day, 664; spirit of, 662,
664; theology of, 668; trials and adventures,
629; women, 633, 674; young people's history
of, 676. See also Founders of New England,
and Plymouth colony.
Piman Indians, 250.
Pinckney, C. C, 1589.
Pine, J. B., 2566.
Pinz6n, Vicente Y4nez, 395.
Pioneer and historical societies, of the state of
Washington, 1627. See also Society of Indiana
pioneers.
Pioneer and historical society of Michigan, 1432.
Pioneer democracy in the Middle West, 522.
Pioneer ideals, western, 522.
Pioneer life, in Indiana, 1283, 1286, 1288; Michigan,
1419, 1430; Nevada, 1474; North Dakota, 1530;
Ohio, 1850-1860, 1535; Old Southwest, 1740-
1790, 798; Pittsburgh, Pa., 1787, 1565; Wis-
consin, 1648, 1650; Wyoming, 1660a.
Pioneer schools, Ontario, 2903.
Pioneer towns of Indiana, 1296.
Pioneers, Indiana, 1295; Illinois, 1268, 1277; western,
441, 1192, 1200.
Piper, F. S., 1407.
Pipes, Indian, 173, 214.
Piracy. See Illegitimate trade with the Indies.
Pirates, 696; Louisiana, 1781; (fl Cuba in 182], 2319.
See also Buccaneers, and Filibusters.
Pissurlancar, Panduranga S. S., 409.
Pit, a prehistoric, 187.
Pithousc village, prehistoric, 199.
Pitt, William, 1st earl of Chatham, 1520.
Pitt, Fort, Pa., 750.
Pittsburgh, Pa., canon foundry at, 1571; Carnegie
institute and Carnegie library, 2365; colonial
history, 750; early lawyer of, 1891; events in,
1833-1848, 1549; floods in the rivers at, 750, 1550
in 1761, 754; Indian burying ground, 1568
Lincoln in, 1797; Monongahela house, 1561
pioneer Presbyterian minister in, 2508; pioneer
settler in, 1787, 1565; reminiscences of, in 1857-
1858, 1551; toll gates about, 1566.
Pizarro, Francisco, 400, 417, 2981.
Place, C. A., 1408.
Plains Indians, 294a; costxunes and culture of, 267;
warfare of, 267.
" Plant cutting" disturbances in Virginia, 1681-168S,
779.
Plantation manufactiires, 2314.
Plants, food, of the CoahuiUa Indians, 267; use of,
by the Indians, 289.
Plater, George, 757.
Piatt, R. B..,jr., 1175, 2741.
T. C, 2257.
Pleasants, J. H., 1821, 2015.
Plebiscite, as seen in the secession decision of the
South, 980; in St. Bartholomew, French West
Indies, 1877, 3071, 3072; Tacna-Arica question,
3115.
Plimpton, G. A., 2410.
Plooj, Daniel, 653.
Plow, development of, 2302.
Plumb, A. H., 654.
Plymouth, Eng., "Mayflower" celebrations in,
648; pilgrim associations of, 632. 682.
Plymouth, Mass., First church, 655; old road from
Boston to, 1375; vital records, 2130.
Plymouth colony, 532, 568-685, 590, 657, 1364;
bibliography of, 6; Bradford's history of, 580;
debt to the Indians, 625; earliest minor accounts
of, 587: governor of, 1922; part played by Essex,
the eastern counties and London in settlement
of, 634; relations with the Rhode Island colony,
672; swarm of cicadas in, 16S3, 680; true-hearted
of, 603; vital records, 2131; women of, 633. See
also Pilgrims.
Plymouth copy of the first charter of Virginia, 619.
Plymouth rock, 526, 583.
"Pocket'' in Indiana history, 1289.
Poe, Edgar AUan. 520, 2681-2687.
Poem, early American, 688; relating to Pennsyl-
vania, colonial period, 752.
Poets, American, 520; early Vermont, 2629; south-
ern, 1905. See also Literary biography.
Point Judith, R. I., 1582.
Point Pleasant, Va., battle of, 1774, 881.
Police, Royal Northwest mounted, 2944.
Police administration, Montreal, Can., 2889; To-
ronto, Can., 2902.
Political biography, lUinois, 1262; Maine, 1351.
Politics, government, and law, 2158-2299.
PoUtical affairs, at Wasliington, 1793-1819, 900-902;
from 1789 to 1801, pixblic opinion regarding, 913;
from 1829 to 1861, 923, 925, 927-932; from 1840 to
1847, 929; m 1836, 928; in 1845, 927; in Penn-
sylvania, 1766-1772, 1700.
I
INDEX.
249
Political ideas and principles, American, 2222, 2245,
2254; of John Adams, 2259.
Political liberty, American, English background
of, 532. See also Democracy.
Political parties, 2236; Federalist period, 913; in
Canada, 2847; topical outline of, 490; Demo-
cratic party, 225S; Democratic party, revival of,
2553; Know-nothing party, 2252; Populist
party, 2301; Progressive party in Indiana, 2248;
Republican party, birth of, 1797; Republican
party in Indiana, formation of, 2255. See also
Federalists, and Know-nothingism.
Political philosophy of the Declaration of inde-
pendence, 849.
Political phrase that beat Blaine, 2237.
Political science, public documents relating to, 4f5;
study of, in Smith college, 2551.
Political society in Montreal, secret, 2886.
Political simmiary of the Uriited States, 1789-1929,
Political system, American, 468, 2236.
Political terms, "butternut" and "copperhead,"
981.
Political theory. See Political ideas, and Repre-
sentative idea.
Politics, farmer in, 2301; in Indiana, 1292; in the
20th century, 1739; of the landed gentry 100
years ago, 1504; Wisconsin territorial, 1640. See
also Presidential elections.
Politics and goA'-ernment, colonial period, 537, 723,
741, 749, 751, 762, 777, 832, 848; Connecticut,
colonial and revolutionary period, 832; contest
in California in 1854, 1231; early experiment in
socialism, 910; early New England, 558, 560;
Federalist period, 913; Hawaii, 3150a; Illinois,
1893-1918, 1266; Illinois, pioneer daj-s, 1262;
Louisiana, records of the Superior council,
1726-1727, 801; Maryland, in 1692, 762; Massa-
chusetts colony, 723; New York, colonial
period, 741; New York, revolutionary period,
822; Pennsylvania, colonial period, 749, 751;
Philippines, 31.55, 3159; revolutionary period,
822, 828, 848, 849; source book in, 510; text-book
in, 482; unrest in the early days of the republic,
898; Virginia, colonial period, 777; Wilson's
administration, 1003; Wyoming, 1655a, 1660.
See also Church and state. Citizenship, Colonial
system, Constitutional history, Governors,
National government and administration, and
Political affairs.
Politics and government, Canada, 2716, 2730, 2817-
2821, 2826, 2834, 2835, 2843, 2844, 2847, 2875, 2876,
2908, 2935.
Politics and government, Spanish America, colonial
period, 2986, 2990, 2996, 2999, 3091; Mexico, 3018-
3021; revolutionary period, 3004, 3008, 3009,
3011, 3013, 3015.
Pollard, E.B., 656.
Pollock, H, M., 657.
"Polly," ship, 2318.
Pomeroy, A. A., 2513.
Benjamin, 2513.
Ponca Indians, 286.
Poncho, a prehistoric, 333.
Ponciano Nieto, Asensio, 3033.
Pontiac's conspiracy. See Bushy Run, battle of.
Popham colony, 564.
111124°— 23 18
Popular government in early New England, 558.
Popular rcpro^sentative, colonial agent as, 537.
Popular vote. See riebiscite.
Population, of Ne.v France, origin of, 2772, 2812;
of New Spain, census of, 3026; of the United
States, growth of, 521.
Population and race elements, 1120, 1276, 1281, 1282,
1318, 1353, 1360, 1451, 1580, 2388-2402; attitude
of Swedish Americans toward the European
war, 1094; public documents relating to, 41;
Argentina, 3090; in Brazil, 3105, 3107-3109. See
also Danish Americans, Emigration, Finns,
French, Huguenots, Irish, Jcm^s, Norwegians,
Race mixture, Race problems, Scotch -Irish,
Swedish, and Welsh.
Populist party, 2301.
Porter, D. D., 997.
F. H., 2598.
P. A., 410.
W. L., 1321.
William Sydney, 2631, 2688.
Portcus, T. C, 658.
Porto Belto, English attack on, 17S9, 3054.
Porto Rico, as a national problem, 3052; capture
by the English, 1598, 3079a; relations between
the United States and, 2162.
Portrait, of Benjamin West, 2613; of Ezra Stiles by
Nathaniel Smibert, 2585: of Thomas Sully, 2612;
of Washington, Archibald Robertson's, 1918; of
Washington, newly found, 1919; presented to
the Province of Massachusetts in 1705, 716.
Portrait painters, 2600, 2605, 2610-2613.
Portraits, American, made by St. Memin, 2600; by
Gilbert Stuart, 2610; historical, 90; in the Vir-
ginia state library, 51; of eminent Americans,
rare, 1672; of Massachusetts justices from 1692
to 1920, 2267.
Portsmouth, R. I., inscribed rocks at, 180.
Portsmouth peace conference, 1879.
•Portugal, discoveries in Amejica, 369; disputes
with Spain over boundaries in South America,
2985, 3141. See also Demarcation line of Alex-
ander VI.
Portuguese, founding of Colonia del Sacramento
by, 1679, 3141; Jewish congregation in New
York, 2396.
Posada Gutierrez, Joaquin, 3011.
Posadas, G., 3092.
G. A. de, 3092.
Post office in British North America, 1659-1870,
549, 2751.
Postal service in Spanish America, 2954.
Posters, European war, 1049.
Potawatomi Indians, 269, 271, 286.
Potier, Pierre, 2787,
Potlach of the Kwakiutl Indians, 267.
Potomac landings, 2381.
Pottawatomie river, Kans., murders at, 1856, 1315.
Potter, A. C, 30.
Edgar, 1409.
G. R.,728.
Thomas, 2490.
W. W.,1431.
Potter CO., Pa., 1567.
Potter county historical society, 1567.
Pottery, prehistoric, 308, 326, 363; Indian, 234.
Potts, A. E., 1515.
250
INDEX.
Poulson, Zachariah, 1858.
Pound, Thomas, 696.
Roscoe, 2272.
Poutrincourt, baron de, death of, 1616, 2763.
Powel, M. E., 1S97.
Powell, Jeremiah, 2928.
M. G.,2084.
■ W. D.,2922.
Powers, S. R., 2526.
Powicke, F. J., 659, 660.
Pownal, Me., 813.
Pownall, Thomas, 750.
Pradel de Lamase, Martial de, 800.
Prairie du Chien, Wis., 445.
Prayers, in ancient America, 186.
Pre-Columbian discovery of America, by Ice-
landers, 397; by navigators from India, 409;
from Africa, 431; exploration of the western
hemisphere, 3*36, 3n7. See also Atlantis.
Prehistoric America, connection between Europe
and, 213; connection with the Atlantis of the
ancients, 419. See also Aboriginal America.
Prehistoric exploration. See also Pre-Columbian
discovery and exploration.
Presbyterian beginnings in Maryland, 761.
Presbyterian church, 2474-2482; first services in the
Baltimore presbytery, 1714, 761; mission work
in Alaska, 1221; pioneer minister of, 2510; West
Durham, N. Y., 2105; Wilmington, Del., 1252.
Presbyterian college, Halifax, N. S., 2869.
Presbyterian periodicals of Richmond, Va., 1815-
1860, 1616.
President, U. S., inabiUty, 2285; power to sign bills
after adjournment of Congress, 2228; succession
law, 2285.
Presidential campaigns and elections, 490; in Cali-
fornia, 1229; in Iowa, 1888, 2244; nomination
and election of Cleveland, 2250; of 1844, 930,
2232a; of 1852, 2252; of 1856, 12S0, 2240; of 1888,.
in Iowa, 2244.
Presidential convention. See Chicago convention
of 1860.
Presideatial electoral votes, 1900-1916, 2279.
Press, early Norwegian- American, 2403; freedom of,
2210; freedom of, in the federaUst period, 2266;
history of, 2408; in Philadelphia, 1789-1801,
913; in western New York, 2405; London, re-
garding New England, 1662-1646, 559; of Chile,
3114; of Mexico, 3030. See also Journalism,
Newspapers, and Printing and publishing.
Pressey, E. A., 563.
Preston, H. F., 1134.
H. W., 31.
William, papers in the Virginian state
library, 824.
Preuss, K. T., 339a.
Preusse-Sperber, O., 280.
Price, EUphalet, 1306.
G. v., 144.
John, 937.
WilUam, 801.
Prices, control of, during the European war, 1062;
control of, in 1681-1683, 779; tobacco, in 1681-
1683, 779. See also Cost of living.
Prickett, E. M., 62.
Priest, Josiah, 871.
Priestley, H. I., 1209, 1219, 1239, 2180, 3034, 3035.
Primary histories of the United States, 473, 480,
496.
Prince Edward co., Va., 1621.
Prince Edward Island, Merchants bank of, 2745.
Prince George co., Va., 780.
Prince of Wales, in Buffalo, in 1860, 1516.
Prince society, Boston, 692.
"Princesa," log of the, 1209, 1219.
Princeton college broadside of 1805, 2567.
Printer, an early American, 1762.
Printing and publishing, 2403-2411; Brewster im-
prints, 576, 577; earUest Catholic history printed
in America, 2443; early Massachusetts editions,
706; in Rhode Island, 1790-1816, 31; in the
Massachusetts colony, 703, 706, 710; Richmond,
Va., 1815-1860, 1616; in Central America, 3045.
See also Almanacs, Americana, JoumaKsm,
Newspapers, and PubUshers.
Printing press, first in Minnesota, 1438.
Prison ships, Wallabout, 1776-1783, 831.
Prisoners of war, American, in Germany, 1041,
1070.
Privateers, of Halifax, in 1757, 2776; of the South
Carolina navy in the Civil war, 983; War of 1812,
918, 919.
Probate records, Barnstable co., Mass., 2087, 2088;
Essex CO., Mass., 1675-1681, 2106. See also Wills.
Progressive party in Indiana, 2248.
Prohibition, 2385; first Canadian war time measure
1813, 2832. See also Temperance.
Propaganda in history, 162.
Property distribution, Indian. See Potlach.
Property holders, early Massachusetts, 715.
Protestant Episcopal church, at Cold-Spring-on-
the-Hudson, N. Y., 2483; diocese of Maine, 2484.
Protestants in colonial Maryland, 755, 756, 761.
Prothero, G. W., 390a, 3042a.
Providence, Md., battle at, March 25, 1655, 756.
Providence, R. I., luminous appearance of river
water at, Sept. 16, 1784, 1584.
Providence Plantations, colony of, court records,
1647-1662, l'2a.
Province road, N. H., 1480.
Provincetown, Mass., 2132; Pilgrim tercentenary,
591, 593, 677.
Provine, W. A., 215.
Psabnody of the Pilgrims, 599.
Public affairs. See PoUtical affairs.
Public archives, of Idaho, 59. See also Archives,
and Manuscripts.
Public archives commission, 18th report of, 59,
Public documents, in the Washington state hbrary,
54; relating to Alaska, 38; relating to American
history and biography, 39; relating to educa-
tion, 40; relating to laws, federal and state, 42;
relating to maps, 43; relating to political science,
46; relating to the Pacific states, 44; relating to
the Panama canal, 45; relating to the public
domain, 48; relating to the tariff and taxation,
49. See also Archives.
Public finance, Ontario, 2900.
Public information, committee on, 1032.
Public lands, public documents relating to, 48.
See also Land.
Public officials. New Jersey, 1713-1714, 747.
PubUc opinion in Philadelphia, 1789-1801, 913.
♦
INDEX.
251
Public records, of Massachusetts, 1399; of Nova
Scotia, 2866. See also Archives.
Public schools, 2524; Illinois, 1268; Minnesota, sup-
port of, 2533; negro, in Missouri, 2541; New
England, grading in, 2537; state of New York,
2542.
Publisher, an early Puritan, 559.
PublisMng. See Printing and pubUshing.
Pueblo Bonito, 213a.
Pueblo Indians, 293; at Laguna, N. Mex., 277.
Pueblos, Zuni, 195. See also Villages, prehistoric.
Puget Sound agricultural company, 1628.
Puget Sound Indians, 20, 232.
Pukina language, 305.
Punshon, W, M., 2732.
Puquinan. See Pukina
Purcell, J. B., 2513.
Purdy family, 1934.
Purifoy, John, 987.
Purington family, 2034.
Puritans, 582; a painting of, 686; literary products
of, 661; publisher, 559; rise of settlements of,
612; Sebastian Rasle and, 562; settlement in
New Jersey, 1666, 1490. See also Massachusetts
Bay colony.
Purvis, W. J., 1491.
Putnam, E. C, 988.
E. D., 1276a.
Eben, 1931.
Harrington, 2273.
Herbert, 73.
Israel, 834.
Rufus, 1671.
Tarrant, 1918.
W. L., 988.
Pylldngton's case, 2221.
Pyre, J. F. A., 2568.
Quaife, M M., 806, 910, 1210, 1315, 1647, 2298, 2299.
Quakers, and Quakerism in Indiana, 1287; educa-
tion in Pennsylvania, early, 2543. See also
Friends, Society of.
Quaker magazine, an old, 1214.
Quarrels in American politics, 2251.
Quartermaster supplies, European war, 1090.
Quebec (city), capture of, 1769, 2789; committee
on grievances, 1828, 2875; defense of, 17§9, 554;
defense of, aide-de-camp to Montcalm at, 861.
Quebec, province of, 2873-2895; ecclesiastical
architecture and decoration, 2838; history of.
to 1763, 2759-2815; politics and government,
2818, 2819, 2847, 2875, 2876; proclamations
issued by the governor-in-chief, 1764-1791, 2817;
siege of St. Johns, 1776, 884; under the admin-
istration of Sir Guy Carleton, 1776-1778, 2816.
See also Quebec act.
Quebec act, 2835.
Quebec conference, 1864, 2819.
Queen's bench, court of, 2932.
Queen's university, Kingston, Can., 2937.
Queenston, Ont., attack on, 1812, 2840.
Quesada, Ernesto, 2201.
QueveUon, L. A., 2838.
Quiche language, 3143.
Quileute Indians, 249.
Quincy, Dorothy, 1859.
Quinn, A. H., 661, 2662.
Quinon, Stephen, 1568.
Quirigua, Guatemala, prehistoric city of, 298.
Qulsenberry, A. C, 989, 1000, 1322, 1323.
Quit rent in the Massachusetts colony, 715.
Quit rent rolls, Virginia, in 1704, 780.
Quorum, in Congress, 2233.
Rabb, K. M., 451, 1294.
Race elements, in politics, see Germans in Iowa
politics; in the white population of North Caro-
lina, 782; mixture, in the United States, 520.
See also Population and race elements.
Race history of the Indians, 259.
Race problems, in Peru, 3138; in the United States,
see Language question.
Race troubles in the South, in 1831, 938.
Racine, Wis., 1643.
Radford, William, 2152.
Radicalism, among the Friends, 1842 to 1865, 2463;
in Connecticut, 1754-1776, 832.
Radin, Paul, 282, 340.
Radisson, P. E., 2945.
Radziwill, Princess Catherine, 1879.
Raffety, F. W., 872.
Rafting on the Susquehanna, 1561a.
Railey, W.E., 1324.
Raihoads, 2328, 2330, 2334; Canadian Pacific rail-
way, 2846, 2847, 2849; development of the Union
Pacific railroad in Wyoming, 1656; first train
in America, 2332; in Canada, development of,
2834; in Canada, politics and, 2847.
Rainsford, W. K., 1173
Rainy Lake, Ont. See La Pluie, Lake.
Raithbeck family, 1937.
Ralf, F. L., 2856.
Ralston, J. H., 2226.
Ramon, Melida Jos6, 3036.
Ramos, Julidn, 3114.
Ramsay, David, 2901.
Ramseur, S. D., 1860.
Ramsey's Annals of Tennessee, '1596.
Rand, A. A., 1861.
Randall, E. O., 1862.
Randolph, John, 818.
Rankin, T. E., 2618.
Rantoul, R. S., 1908, 1921.
Rasle, Sebastian, 562.
Eattermann, H. A., 1863.
Raymond, W. O., 2860.
"Readers' guide to periodical literature," 32, 33.
Reading room, Danversport, Mass., 1417.
Readings, American historical, 476.
Reagan, A. B., 216.
Real compania de Fihpinas, 3161.
Rebellion, of 1885 in Ontario, 2914. See also Mac-
kenzie's rebellion.
Recall, in e?rly New England, 558.
Recent history, teaching of, 149. See also Current
events.
Reciprocity, Canadian, 2842.
Reconstruction, 1007; in Louisiana, 1338; in South
CaroUna, 1588; in Tennessee, 1600; negro in
poUtics during, 2232.
Records of service, military. See Registers, etc.
Red Cross, American, in France, 1054; ambulance
driver in France, 1059; in Italy, 1020.
"Red Jacket," Indian chief, 526.
252
INDEX.
Reed, Charles, 1864.
E. P., 1517.
John, 1373.
T. B., 2233.
Reed family, 2035.
Reel, Caspar, 1565.
Rees, J. E., 1541.
Reeve, J. C, 1648.
Reeves, A. B., 802.
. G. W., 1133.
Referendum, in early New England, 558.
Reform movements, 2352; s ocial, in Missouri, 1459.
Reform schools, Iowa, 2529.
Reformed church, 2485-2489; Alcola, Pa., 2507.
Reformed Dutch church, Herkimer, N. Y., 1519;
Leeds, N. Y., 2115; New York city, introduc-
tion of English language into, 736; of Greenwich
inNew York city, 2123.
Refugee's home society, negro, 940.
Regicides Goffe and Whalley, 709, 717.
Regimental histories, Civil war, 1000-1002; European
war, 1140-1187; War of 1812, 916, 917; Canadian,
World war, 2851, 2855.
Regiments in the French and Indian v, ar, Vir-
ginia, 556.
Regional (local) history, 1188-1660; colonial, 557-803;
educational, 2528-2544; genealogy, vital records,
etc., 2081-2145; literary, 2623-2630. See also
under individual section.
Registers, etc., of European war soldiers, 1098; Bu-
reau county (111.) honor roll, 1137; Century asso-
ciation, N. Y., 1115; Massachusetts institute of
technology, 1130; naval officers and enlisted men
killed, 1098; Pennsjdvania society Sons of the
revolution, 1135; Saint George's school. Middle-
town, R. I., 1134; soldiers from Nottoway co.,
Va., 1116; University of Missouri, 1131.
Registers, etc., Revolutionary war, 886, 888-892;
Michigan soldiers in several wars, 1433; New
Jersey commissions, civil and inilitary, 1713-
1714, 747.
Reighard, F. H., 1537.
Relief work. See Welfare work.
Religion, in America, 512; of the Indians, 233, 243,
247, 271, 329, 336a, 358, see also Eschatology,
Human sacrifice. Mythology, and Supersti-
tions; prehistoric Mexican, 332a, 341a. See also
Prayers.
Religious agencies in the European war, 1043.
Religious education in negro colleges, 2540.
Religious history, 2412-2523; awakening of 1737-
1742, 551; biography, 585, 2491-2523; colonial
period, 535, 551; dissension in colonial Mary-
land, 755, 756; general, 2412-2421; Ilhnois, 1267
Indiana, 1287; Maryland colony, 755, 756, 758,
761; Massachusetts colonies, 612, 655; Minne
sota, 1444; New York city, colonial period, 735
736; Oregon country, 1847 to 1819, 1211; particu
lar denominations, 2422-2490; Pennsylvania
1576, 1578; Wilmington, Del., 1252; Alaska, 1221
Canada, 2821, 2824, 2825, 2847, 2874, 2878, 2883, 2884
2915; Central America, 3046; Mexico, 3031, 3039
See also Church attendance. Churches, Clergy-
men, Corporation for the propagation of the
gospel in New England, Missions, Society for
the propagation of the gospel In foreign parts;
Sunday schools, and Theology.
Religious drama, Pueblo Indian, 293,
Religious liberty, in New York city, growth of, 742;
Roger Williams and, 2415.
Religious orders. See Dominicans, Franciscans,
Jesuits, and Nuns.
Religious organizations in the European war, 1043,
1057. See aho Knights of Columbus, and Young
Men's Christian association.
Remonstrants, 705.
Renaut, F. P., 3059.
Renshaw, J. A., 1337.
Rent. See Quit rent.
Renton, Margaret, 1043.
Repplier, Agnes, 683.
Representative constitutional government, 2208.
Representative idea, and the American revolution,
828, 830.
Reprisals upon loyalists. Revolutionary war, 876.
Repr:l)lica de Rio Grande, 3041.
Republican party, birth of, 1797; convention of 1860,
Iowa delegates to, 2239; first presidential cam-
paign, 2240; history of, 2242; in Indiana, forma-
tion of, 2255.
Rescates, 3069.
Reservation, Buffalo Creek, 263.
Restarick, H. B., 3151a.
Retana, W. E., 3160.
Revello de Torre, Jos6, 2997.
Revere, Paul, 1367, 1865.
Reville, F. D., 2921.
Revival, religious, in 1740, 2417; of 1737-1742, 551.
Revivalist, Methodist, 2503.
Revolo, P. M., 3012.
Revolution, American, 520, 536, 541; Canadian sup-
porter of, 2837; commerce during, 73; currency,
841; French participation in, 815, 2775; from a
British point of view, 872; general, 826-830; in
the Illinois country, 790; medical department
of the army during, 2153; military organizations
of, 870; New Jersey in, 874; officers, 838, 1684,
1694, 1706, 1753, 1754, 1775, 1829, 1834, 1901; pen-
sion records, 839; political theories of, 2222; post
office during, 549; quartermasters' accounts in,
73; records, aid in Americanization, 839; records
of Dutchess co., N. Y., 837; sea power during,
2155; soldier, 1692; soldiers, names of, 886-894;
sources and documents, 804-825; Spanish expe-
ditions against the British in West Florida,
1779-1780, 1327, 1339; special, 831-885; statesman
and patriot of, 1728; supplies from abroad, 843,
846; supporter of, 1774; true cause of, 830; Valley
Forge in, 1575; York, Pa., history during, 1564.
Revolution, in Germany, in 1848, American posi-
tion on, 2177; in Uruguay, in 1868, 3143; Mexican,
1913-1917, 3020; Spanish-American, 3003, 3015-
3089, 3098, 3110a, 3120-3123; Spanish- American,
inner meaning of, 2900.
Revolutionary societies. See Daughters of the
American revolution, and Sons of the American
revolution.
Revolutionary war journals, 811, 814, 817, 819.
Reyner, John, 630.
Reynolds, F. C, 1174.
F. J., 1085a.
John, 788.
Mrs. John, 1274.
Rhoades, N. O., 2033, 2038.
INDEX.
25 [I
Rhoades family, 2036.
Rhode Island, 1579-1585; burial ground inscriptions,
2133; colonial history, 724-731; colony of, rela-
tions with the Plymouth colony, 672; court
records, 16.i7~166£, 729; education, 2539; in 1750,
725; inscribed rocks of, 180, 181; land grants,
issued under Andros, 1687-1688, 715; privateers
in the War of 1812, 918, 919.
Rhode Island, State board of education, 2539.
Rhode Island books entered for copyri;';bt, 1790-
1816,31.
Rhode Island historical society, 726, 729.
Rhodes, J. F., 1817.
Rial Side, Salem, Mass., 712.
Ribadeneyra, Pedro de, 384.
Ribaut, Jean, 789.
Rica, Antonio Bermejo de la, 3141,
Rich, I. A., 2009.
■ J. W.,990.
Rich family, 2037.
Richard, M. F., 2868.
Richardie, A. de La, 2787.
Richards, C. E. J., 284.
Richardson, F. L., 1338.
J. W., 519.
W. H., 1884, 1885.
Richepin, Jean, 520.
Richmond, H. W., 547a, 555, 278S, 2788a.
Richmond, Va., 1616, 2409; Jews of, in the World
war, 1120.
Ridden, W. R., 2182, 2227, 2742, 2743, 2830-2833,
2922-2933.
Rider, R. P., 2-i23.
Ridout, John, 2931.
Riel rebellion of 1885, 2914.
Riggs, M.H., 1175.
Riis, J. A., 16C5.
Riley, E. S., 1770.
■ James Whitcomb, 2689, 2690.
■ P. M., 2589.
Rindlaub, M. P., 1649.
Rinfret, Fernand, 2744.
Ring family, 203S-2010.
Ringgold, James, 760.
Rio Grande, Republica de, 3041.
Ripley, H. G., 2599.
Rippy, J. F., 2183.
Risco, Alberto, 1009.
Risley, T. G., 1277, 1691.
Rites, ancient Mexican, 304, 332b. See also Cere,
monials.
Rivas, Francisco, 2202.
"River of the West," 1213.
Rivers, Indian names of, 1193; of New England,
li91a; states bordering on, boundary contro-
versies between, 1440. See also Allegheny
river, Colorado river, Conestoga river, M ssis-
sippi river, Missouri river. Mystic river, Ohio
river, and Rock river.
Rivet, Paul, 34, 35, 305.
Roads, 2335; early Massachusetts, 1375, 1384, 1396;
early New Hampshire, 1480; history and de-
velopment of, 2340; New Jersey, 1491; old coast-
road from Boston to Plymouth, 1375; old Indian
road in Maryland, f59; Ontario, 2910. See also
Streets, Trails, and Turnpikes.
Robbery. See Hold-up.
Robbins, E. E., 1690.
Roberts, B. S., 1866.
Richard, 664.
W. M., 1211.
Robertson, A. T., 2491.
Archibald, 1918, 2607.
E.S., 2647.
F. I., 1893.
H. W., 548, 2419.
J. A., 2974.
W. S., 2202a.
Robeson, G. F., 2290.
Robin, Eugenie, 2934.
Robinson, Bridget, 606.
Corinne Roosevelt, 1876.
G. L., 564.
H. P., 665.
H. W., 1339.
J. O., 2935.
J. S., 2357.
John, 585, 588, 589, 606, 632, 659, 660; Fare-
well address of, 609; theology of, 668.
L. E., 1807.
M.N., 1569.
M. P., 145.
W. A., 1348.
W. J., 1086.
Wirt, 1661a.
Rocheraux, Henri, 341.
Rochester, N. Y., 1503, 1517, 2454, 2509.
Rock carvings, prehistoric, 317. See also Kensing-
ton rune stone, Petroglyphs, and Rocks, in-
scribed.
Rock, Fritz, 341a.
Rock river. Wis., 1641.
Rock Springs, Wy., 1659.
Rockbridge co., Va., 1617.
RockefeUer, H. O., 2107.
Rocks inscribed, prehistoric, 180, 181. See also
Kensington rune stone, Petroglyphs, and Rock
carvings.
Roddis, L. H., 1446.
Rodney, Thomas, 1829, 1867.
Rodd, Jos6 Enrique, 2962.
Rodon, Francisco de A., 2284.
Rodriguez, Agustin, 3031.
Rodrigiiez Beteta, Virgilio, 3045.
Rodrlguez-Chamuscado expedition, 1581-1582, 3031.
Rodriguez del Busto, A., 3094.
Rodriguez Navas, Manuel, 412-414, 3013, 3014.
Rodriguez Villa, Antonio, 3120.
Rogers, John, 2608.
Lindsay, 1087, 2228, 2285.
Rogers family, 2041.
Rohdenburg, G. L., 2708.
Roig de Leuchsering, Emilio, 2184.
Rojas, Aristides, 3148.
Romances of the Pilgrims, 669.
Romero de Terreros, Manuel, 3042.
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1663, 1667, 1868-1890; letters
of, 1869; letters to his children, 1882; papers of,
73.
Theodore, 2d., 1027.
Roosevelt association of Jersey City, 1884, 1885.
Root, Elihu, 1697, 1809, 1810.
Rosati, Bishop, 2448.
Roscoe, E. S., 1849.
254 IKDEX.
Rose, J. C, 911.
John, 2842.
Roselli, BruBO, 1223.
Rosenberg library, Galveston, Tex., 2362.
Ross, E. D., 2553.
E. M., 2870.
Sir George, 2732.
James, 1891.
Victor, 2745.
Ross's brigade of cavalry, Confederate army, 1002.
Rossiter, W. S., 2398.
Rost, P. A., 60.
Roth, L. v., 991.
Rothensteiner, John, 2420, 2447, 2448.
Rouer de la Cordinniere et de Villeray, Augustin,
2796.
Rouer de ViUeray, Louis, 2796, 2800.
Rouer de Villeray family, 2769.
Rouillard, Eugene, 2861.
Roume de Saint-Laurent, Philippe-Rose, 3059.
Rousby, Christopher, 757.
Rousseau, Victor, 2789.
Rousset, R. U., 415.
Roustan, Desir6, 161, 471.
Rowland, A. L., 504.
Dunbar, 14.50.
H. S., 1076.
Roxbury, Mass., 1410; committee of vigilance,
1834-1835, 1410; historical landmarks, 1411.
Roy, P. G., 921, 2790-2801.
Regis, 2802-2806.
Royal bank of Canada, 2848.
Royal commissions, colony of Georgia, 788.
Royal governors, of Georgia, 788; of Massachusetts,
1741-1756, 723; New York, 743a, 744; Pennsyl-
vania, 1756-1759, 751. See also Leisler, Jacob,
and Pownall, Thomas.
Royal Northwest mounted police, 2944.
Royal Philippine company, 3161.
Royal province of Maryland, 762.
Roys, R. L., 342.
Rubio, J. M., 3015.
Ruckman, J. H., 1130.
Ruffin, Thomas, 1524.
Rufino, Ricardo, 416-418, 3095.
Rugg, E. U., 146.
Ruggles, H. S., 2042.
Ruggles family, 2042.
Ruggs, A. P., 1722.
Ruins, prehistoric, Arizona, 179; Copan, Honduras,
336; Kayenta region, 216; Mesa Verde Park,
183, 185; New Mexico, 213a, 216, 229; of Mitla,
343; of Teotihuacan, 339; Tiahuanacu, Bolivia,
309; of Xochicalco, Mex., 338; Yucatan, 307, 310.
See also Archaeology.
"Rum, Romanism, and rebellion," 2237.
Rtimpler, Mrs. E. C, 1294.
Rune stone. See Kensington rune stone.
Ruppenthal, J. C, 2274.
Russel, C. J., 988.
Russell, H. S., 988.
J. C, 1075.
Russell family, 2043.
Russia, and the Cuban international question in
1825, 2181; and the Monroe doctrine, in 1825,
2181; relations with, 1917-1920, 2166; relations
with, in 1824, 905; relations with, in regard to
trade on the Northwest coast, 182J,, 2168. See
also Alaska purchase.
Russian- American convention of 1824, 2168.
Russian appreciation of Theodore Roosevelt, 1879.
Russians, exploration in Alaska, 2947; fur trade on
the Northwest coast, 2947.
Rutherford, J. H., 2936.
Rutot, A., 419.
Ruyter, Michel de, admiral, 3070.
Ryden, G. H., 1748.
Sabin, A. K., 1049.
Sac and Fox Indian council, of 1841, 1307; of 1842,
1308.
Sackville-West, Lord, 2164.
Sacramento, Colonia del, 3141.
Sacrifice, human, 304.
Saginaw, Mich., treaty of, 1819, 1424.
Sailor's Creek, Va., battle of, 1865, 946.
Sailors, killed during the World war, 1098; in the
American revolution, French, 865.
St. Bartholomew, West Indies, plebiscite, 1877,
3071, 3072.
Saint Boniface, Man., 2951.
Saint Cyr, J. M. I., 2514.
Saint Gaudens, Augustus, 1665, 1881, 2609.
Saint George's fort, 1607, 564.
Saint George's school, Middletown, R. I., 1134.
St. John, R. P., 2254.
St. John, Virgin Islands, 3080.
St. Johns, Quebec, siege of, 1775, 884.
St. Joseph CO., Mich., 1429, 1434.
Saint Lawrence, parish of, Que., 2878.
"St. Lawrence," U. S. frigate, 983.
St. Lawrence co., N. Y., 1504.
St. Lawrence river, 2720.
St. Louis, Mo., 1457; Catholic church in, 2447, 2448;
language question in the old cathedral, 2435.
St. Louis movement in philosophj^, 2628.
St. Louis philosophical society, 2628.
St. Louis university, 2556.
Saint Mark's school, Southborough, Mass., 1112.
Saint-Martin, capitaines de, 2792.
Saint Maurice Forges, Que., 2893.
Saint Memin, C. B. J. F. de, and his portraits, 2600.
Saint-Mery, Moreau de, 2462.
St. Mihiel, battle of, 1918, 1019, 1048, 1050.
Saint Pierre, Martinique, naval battle, 1667, 3070.
St. Thomas, Island of, 3080.
Sainte-Anne de la Perade, seigneur de, 2795.
Salas, J. C, 3055.
Salem, Ind., 1750.
Salem, Mass., 712, 2313.
Salem, N. J., 895.
Salem athenaeum, Salem, Mass., 2366.
Salford, Pa., 2134.
Salisbury, Stephen, Sd, 1671.
Sahnon, Edward, 666.
Samplers, Rhode Island, 1581,
Samson, Elijah, 2044.
San Antonio, Tex., 1608.
Sanborn, N. Y., 2083.
Sanchez Chamuscado, Francisco, expedition into
New Mexico, 1581-1582, 3031.
Sancho, Hipolito, 2998.
San Cristobal de la Habana, 3062.
Sandals, Indian, 210.
Sanders family, 1892.
INDEX.
255
San Diego, Cal., 1242; mission, 1233.
San Diego de Alcala, mission, ITiiS.
Sands, Harold, 2947.
Sandt, G. W., 2518.
Sandusky cc, O., 1536.
Sandwich, Ont., Huron mission at, 279.
Saner, R. E. L., 2185.
San Felipe de Austin, Ayuntamiento of, 1604.
San Francisco, Cal., 1241; survey of, in 1775, 437.
San Jos^, Cal., 1224.
San Jose rancho, Cal., 1225.
San Juan Teotihuacan, 339.
San Juan valley, N. Mex., ruins in, 292.
San Martin, Jos6 de, 3006.
Santa Anna, Antonio Lopez de, 935.
Santa Barbara, Cal., 1236, 1240.
Santa Clara co., Cal., 1224.
Santa Cruz, Alonso de, 370.
Santa Fe, N. Mex., Pueblo Indian festival, 293;
trading expedition to, I84I, 1605; unknown ex-
pedition to, 1807, 908.
Santa Fe railroad, 2330.
Santa Maria, Juan de, 3031.
Santander, Colombia, 3117.
Santiago de Cuba, battle of, 1898, 1009; English at-
tack on, 1741-1742, 3054.
Santo Domingo, Island of, 3075; American achieve-
ments in, 3052; American intervention in, 2184,
3052; French rule in, 1803-1809, 3074; its past and
present, 3073.
Santos Chocano, Jose, 2962.
Sao Paulo, Brazil, 3109a.
Sapper, Karl, 345.
Sargent, C. S., 1892.
■ H. H., 1088.
P. D., 1892.
Winthrop, 1892.
Sargent family, 1892, 1937.
Sarmiento, D. F., 3087.
Sarrazin, Michel, 2784.
Satterlee, M. P., 1447.
Saucier, J. B., 802a.
Sauer, C. O., 1463.
Sauk Indians, beaded garters of, 192; bird-quill belt
of, 190.
Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., 1435.
Savage, James, 901, 988.
Saville, F. H., 217.
M. H., 346, 420.
Sawtelle, W. O., 1349.
Sawyer, A. L., 1432.
Sayre, D. F., 1650.
L. E., 2705.
Scandinavian element in the history of the West,
2403. See also Norwegians, and Swedes.
Sdiaefer, F. J., 36, 218.
Schafer, Joseph, 1651-1653.
SchafE, PhiUp, 2488.
Schappelle, B. F., 352.
Schepers, J. B., 667.
Schiemann, Theodor, 1089.
Schlesinger, A. M., 148, 149.
Schmauk, T. E., 2515-2519.
Schmidt, A. S., 2600.
L. B., 2304-2306.
P. W., 285.
Schodack, N. Y., 2120.
Schoenrich, O., .3052.
School histories. See Text-books.
School of art, first in America, 2607.
Schooling, Sir William, 2746.
Schools, free, and the wage earner, 2352; Friends'
school in Dutchess co., N. Y., 2461; history in,
76, 82, 83, 93, 95, 96, 98, 100, 101, 108, 110, 123,
129-131, 136, 138, 143, 144, 156, 159; history teach-
ers' training, 82; in Canada, 2892, 2S94, 2903, 2940;
Iowa, 2529; Ohio, prior to 1850, 2538; Oregon
normal, 2528. See also Public schools, Saint
George's school, Saint Mark's school, and Sun-
day schools.
Scotch prisoners at Block Island, 1861, 727.
SchuUer, Rudolf, 346a, 347.
Schurz, Carl, 1665, 1811.
W. L., 3161.
Schuyler, R. L., 873.
Schwartze, W. N., 1570.
Science, 2705-2710; debt of history to, 125. See also
Astronomy, Chemistry, Massachusetts institute
of technology, Natural history, and Sheffield
scientific school.
Scientific invention. See Aircraft invention.
Scioto CO., O., 1531.
Scoggin, G. C, 2569.
Scotch, in Canada, 2749 (see also Highland regi-
ment); in Illinois, 1274a; settlers in colonial
North Carolina, 2390.
Scotch-Irish, in colonial North CaroUna, 2390; in
Tennessee, 1594.
Scotland, towns and cities, associated with the
founders of New England, 1215.
Scott, A. L., 1090.
J. B., 1S12, 2218, 2229.
M.S., 2230.
— — T. J., 2045.
Scott family, 2045.
Scott's nine hundred volunteer. cavalry. Civil war,
959.
Scouts, Indian, in the Dakota war of 1876, 1005.
Scrooby, Eng., 632, 638, 640.
ScuUard, H. H., 668.
Sculptors, American, 2608, 2609.
Sculpture, Indian, 223, 226; prehistoric, 321,323,357.
See also Statuettes.
Sea, freedom of the, 870a, 2179a: law of the, 1097;
supremacy on, see Maritime supremacy.
Sea captain of the Revolution, 843.
Sea power, French, and her colonial empire in
America, 3070; in American history, 2149; in-
fluence on the English-French struggle In
North America, 2788.
Searcy, J. T., 1893.
Sears, L. M., 2186.
Seath, John, 2940.
Seattle, Wash., 1626.
Secession decisions of the South, as an instance of
the plebiscite, 980.
Secession of the South, Canadian opinion of, 1860-
1861,973.
Secret political society of Montreal, 2886.
Secret service, British, report on Canada, 1711,
2774. See also Spy.
Sedition act, 904, 2266.
See, A. P., 6G9, 1350.
Selective service, in the European war, 1139.
256
INDEX.
Seler, Eduard, 348.
Self-determination. See Plebiscite.
Selkirk, T. D., Earl of, 2928.
Senate, U. S., committee on foreign relations, 2216;
treaty-making power of, 2216, 2223. See also
Congress.
Senatorial contest, New York, 1881, 2257.
Senators, U. S., born in Kentucky, 1322.
Seneca Indian reservation, 2o3, 1508.
Separatism in Utah, 1847-1870, 1609. See also
Secession.
Serra, Father Junipero, 1228.
Serrano, Luciano, 3039.
"Seven cities of Cibola," 195.
Severance, F, H., 744, 745, 2411.
Sevier, John, journal of, 1790-1815, 1598, 1602,
Seville, Spain, archives of, American material in,
75; archives of, research in, 1340; monimicnt to
Magellan in, 401. See also Archivo general de
Indias.
Sewall, Samuel, 700.
Seward, J. L., 147.5.
Seymour, M. W., 1248.
Shackleton, Robert, 1278.
Shafer, Robert, 1G79.
Shafter, W. R., 1431.
Shambaugh, B. F., 2387.
• B. M. H.,150.
Sharman, Lyon, 643.
Sharp, Horatio, 550.
W. R.,1293.
Sharpless, Isaac, 1894.
Shaw, A. H.,1668.
-R. G.,988.
Wilfred, 2570.
Shaw family, 2046.
Shawnee Indians, Clark's campaign against, 1782,
854.
Shay, Frank, 2699.
Shays rebellion, 897.
Shead family, 2067.
Sheard, Charles, 2709.
Sheboygan co.. Wis., 188.
Sheffield scientific school, 2578.
Shelby, Isaac, 907, 912.
Shelby's expedition to Mexico, 966.
Sheldon, E. W., 2275.
Sheldon- Williams, Inglis, 2856.
Shell implements, Indian, 206.
Shelton, T. W., 774, 1919, 2380.
Shenandoah Valley campaign, 1861-1862, 943; 186^,
949,951,952,956.
Shepard, C. E., 1827.
Charles, 2076.
N. M.,1176.
Odell, 2692.
Thomas, 703.
Shepard family, 2047.
Shepherd, H. E., 1726, 2571.
W. R.,3052.
Sherman, Stuart, 1680.
T. T.,204S.
Sherman family, 2048.
Sherwood, E. J., 32, 33.
Shetrone, H. C, 219.
Shields. See Escutcheons.
Shilling, D. C, 1728.
Shiloh, battle of, 1862, 982, 990.
Shiloh soldiers' monument commission of Michigan,
report of, 982.
Shinn, H. C, 1492.
Ship Mount Vernon of Salem, 2313.
Shipley, A. E., 670.
Shipmasters, Dan vers, Mass., 1414.
Shippee, L. B., 506, 1212, 1899, 2339.
Shipping, United States, in the La Plata region,
1809-1810, 2311. See also Merchant marine.
Shipping board emergency fleet corporation, U. S.,
1072.
Shipping policy, national, 2309.
Ships, connected with discovery and early settle-
ment of America, 398; Dan vers, Mass., 1414;
lost at sea, 993, 2318, 2319; old Salem, Mass., 2313;
transatlantic packet, 2310. See also Merchant
marine.
Shipwreck, 2318. See also Ships lost at sea.
Shirk, J. A. G., 2340.
Shirley, William, 723; letters of, 1766, 750.
Shively, G. J., 1177.
Shoe industry, 2321,
Shoemaker, F. C, 2294.
Shortt, Adam, 2748, 2937, 2938.
Shoshonean Indians, 250.
Shriner, C, A., 1487, 1493.
C, E., 874.
Siberia, American marines in, 1063
Sickles' Excelsior brigade, 1001.
Sidney, Ont., 2908.
Siebert, W. H., 154a, 875, 876.
Silliman, S. I,, 893, 1433, 1434.
Siloam, N, J., 2135.
Silva, J. Francisco V., 2999, 3004.
Jose Asuncion, 3116,
Silver, E. C, 2457.
Silver, American, of the 17th and 18th centuries,
2587; plate, of the British commissioners to
America in 1778, 858; Sir William Pepperell's,
543.
Silversmiths, Philadelphia, 1682-1860, 2588.
Simancas (Spain), Archivo general de, 70.
Simmons, F. J., 2049.
Simmons family, 2049.
Simonds, F. H., 1091.
Sims, H. D., 2540.
W. S., 1039, 1092.
Sinclair, Arthur, 2146.
Helen, 1109.
"Singing of Psalms a Gospel ordinance," author-
ship of, 703.
Sinnett, C. N., 1971, 2034, 2035, 2041, 2050, 2053, 2078.
Sinnett family, 2050.
Sinsinawa, Wis., 1638.
Sioussat, S. L., 2256.
Sioux Indian war, 1862-1865, 962, 1447; aftermath of,
1648; in Wisconsin, 1639; war of 1876, 1005.
Sioux Indians, 291; in Canada, 2952; sim dance of,
244.
Sioux massacre of 1862, 1443,
Sipaia, .336a.
Sisters of charity, Quebec, 2879.
Sisters of St. Joseph, 2427.
Sisters of the Holy child Jesus, 2449.
Six Nations Indians, Trent's journal of proceedings
with, 17 5S, 750.
INDEX.
257
Skelton, O. D., 2834, 2847.
Skillinan, W. R., 1092a.
Skinner, Alanson, 220-226, 286, 350, 351.
C. L., 1213.
C. R., 1518, 2257, 2341.
Skirven, P. G., 760.
Slater, Samuel, 1671.
Slave labor in the colonies, 770.
Slavery, 937-941, 2222; and the beginnings of indus-
trialism in the colonies, 770; control of, by
Congress, 2206; extension of, 927; in Canada,
2743, 2930; in the American colonies, 2314; in the
Indies, 2986; Roger B. Taney and, 2224; Spanish
policy in regard to, 2978; struggle in Illinois,
1823-1824, 1262. See aso Anti-slavery move-
ment.
Slaves, arming of, 970a; diplomatic relations with
Great Britain bearing on the return of, 1783-
1828, 2175; in Upper Canada, 2930; murder trial
of a, in 1834, 2264.
Sleeper, H. D., 1052.
Sleepy Hollow cemetery, 1498.
Slings, in pre-Columbian America, 205.
Sloan, J. M., 2749.
Slough, Matthias, 825.
Small nations, rights of, 2184.
Smibert, Nathaniel, 2585.
Smith, C. Alphonso, 2684.
C. H., 507, 2469.
C. W., 453, 1214.
Clara H., 98.
D. H., 1356.
E. B., 469.
E. C, 565, 1351, 1633, 1771.
E. F., 2710.
G. W., 1279.
H. A., 2154, 2231.
Harriet, 1606.
J. H., 934-936, 3025, 3041.
J. P., 992.
■ M. P., 1309.
Munroe, 1013,
R. C, 1607.
Sydney, 909.
Mrs. Sydney, 1619.
W. C, 1412.
W. G., 2750.
Rev. William, 1397.
WiUiam, 549, 2751, 2835.
Smith college, history and government in, 2551.
Smither, Harriet, 487.
Smoking, origin of the practice, 431.
Snider, D. J., 2628.
Snow family, 2051-2054.
Snowden, Yates, 1591.
Snowshoes, Indian, 2813.
Snyder, J. F., 802a.
J. L., 2527.
Snyder co.. Pa., 1572.
Social character of British lands oversea, colonial
period, 546.
Social economics, teaching of, 166.
Social forces in American history, 522.
Social history, Argentina, 3090; legislation in the
laws of the Indies, 3002; libraries, societies and
institutions, 235&-2375; life and manners, 2376-
2382; philanthrophy and social welfare, 2383-
2387; population and race elements, 2388-2402;
reform, in Missouri, 1459; unrest in the early
days of the republic, 898. See also Economic his-
tory, and Welfare work.
Social life, in Washington, 1897-1919, 1253; pioneer
Indiana, 1288. See also Life and manners.
Social organization, of the Bribri Indians, 351; of
the Kwakiutl, 238.
Social service. See Welfare work.
Social study. United States history as, 100.
Socialism, an early experiment in, 910; Virginia
colony as an experiment in, 764. 3ee also Com-
munism.
Socialization of history, 138, 143, 144.
Soci6t4 des Am^ricanistes de Paris, 105, 163.
Societies and institutions, 2367-2375; American
council of learned societies, 126; first Catholic
literary society in Chicago, 1271; Indiana federa-
tion of clubs, 1294; New England society of
Charleston, S. C, 1592. See also Historical
societies, Patriotic societies. Secret political
society, and imder name of individual societies.
Society for the propagation of the gospel in foreign
parts, American manuscripts from, 73.
Society of Indiana pioneers, 1287, 1294.
Society of Mayflower descendants, 2372.
Sociology of Indian tribes, 328, 329. See also Life
and manners.
Soissons, battle of, 1019.
Soldier vote in Iowa, 1888, 2244.
Soldiers, of the A. E. F., 1029; of the American
revolution, French, 865; of the Champlain val-
ley, in the early wars, 1513; of the colony of Con-
necticut, 732; of the European war, 1029, 1093;
Revolutionary, 886-894. See also Registers, etc.
Soldiers' orphans' home, Iowa, 2529.
Solorzano, Juan de, 2955.
Somerndike, J. M., 2480.
Somers, A. N., 227.
Somersworth, N. H., 2136.
Somerville historical society, 1376.
Somme offensive, 1918, 1099.
Sommelsdijck, Gouverneur van Aerssen van, 3172a.
Sommer, I rederico, 352.
Songs. See Chanson, and " Marching through Geor-
gia."
"Sonora," voyage of, 1775, 437.
Sons of the American revolution, Connecticut
society, 877; Louisiana society, 1327, 1340.
Sons of the Revolution, Indiana society, 1294;
Pennsylvania society, European war service of
members, 1135.
Soto, Hernando de, discoveries of, 394.
Souchon, Paul, 421.
Source book, historical, 510.
Source materials, for Catholic church history in
America, 2433; for the history of the Scandi-
navian element in the west, 2403; of Reformed
church history in Pennsylvania, 2487.
Sources and documents, 1763-1783, 804-825; 1789-
1829, 899-902; acquisition of CaUfornia, 1227;
Celoron's expedition down the Ohio, 17^9,
432, 433; correspondence of assistant secretary
of the navy, 1861-1865, 997; European war, 1014;
first Franciscan mission in America, 404; French
and Indian war, 553, 556; history of the Old
Northwest, 1797-1817, 916; Jesuit missions in
258
INDEX.
America, establishment of, 384; letters and
papers of Cadwallader Golden, 743a; Louisiana
under the Spanish, 1340; Nootka Sound con-
troversy, 1209; Pilgrim fathers, 606, 653; the
Philippines, 381; postal service in the Spanish
colonies, 2954; Spanish discovery and explora-
tion, 372; Spanish exploration of the northwest
coast, in 1775, 437; Spanish policy toward
Virginia, 1606-1612, 552; spirit of America as
shown by, 518; War of 1812, 916, 918, 922. See
also America, early accounts to 1600, Archives,
and Manuscripts.
South, academy movement in, 2534; and the arming
of the slaves, 97Ua; and the War of 1812, 914;
architecture of, 2590; civilization of, 1206; com-
mercial development, colonial period, 2314;
compulsory education in colonial period, 769;
expansion during the first half of the 19th cen-
tury, 1201; famous steamboats on the rivers of,
1197; history and education for citizenship in,
82; literature, 2624; poet of, 1905; secession of,
980; secession of, Canadian opinion of, 973;
trade in, 1830-1860, 2326; women of, in Civil war
days, 944. See also Reconstruction.
South America, 3081-3149; American diplomacy in,
2189; antiquities of, 299, 303, 306, 308, 309, 311,
317, 318, 321-323, 325, 326, 333-335, 352, 359, 360,
363; diplomatic documents, 1811-1820, 3013;
Dutch expansion in, prior to 1652, 539; expul-
sion of the Jesuits, 2995; general, 3081-3085;
Indian myths of, 297; Indians of, 297, 305, 320,
324, 327-329, 336a, 337, 339a, 341, 347, 349, 358;
Jesuits in, 2995, 3001; politics, 1808-1812, 3015;
relations with France, 3084; United States
commercial relations with, 1809-1810, 2311. See
also Spanish America.
South Carolina, 1586-1592; annexation of Texas and
the Bluffton movement in, 2232a; colonial his-
tory, 786, 787; colonial period, slave labor in,
770; education in, 1588; Friends in Charles-
ton, 1819, 2464; genealogical records, 2094-2098,
2138; leader of the bar, just before the Civil
war, 1852; navy in the Civil war, 983; New
England society of Charleston, 2375; nullifica-
tion in, 932; reconstruction and education, 2535;
slave labor in industries, colonial period, 770;
the Union man of, 1852.
South Dakota, first organized government of, 1593.
South sea bubbles, 802.
Southampton, Eng., association of the Pilgrims
with, 632,650,670a.
"Southern literary messenger," editor of, 1905.
Southwark cathedral, London, Eng., 2580.
Southwest, archaeology of, 174, 175, 178, 179, 183, 185,
191, 194, 195, 196, 199, 202, 207, 213a, 216, 229, 234;
as part of New Spain, 1604; French activities in,
17th and 18th centuries, 795; historical memoir
of, 1683-1711, 797; Indians of, 248, 266; Jesuit
missionary in, 1683 to 1711, 791; Texan jurisdic-
tion in Mexico, 1848-1850, 924; trading expedi-
tion to Santa Fe, in 1807, 908. See also Louis-
iana, province of.
Southwest, Old, conquest of, 798; migration and set-
tlement, 1740-1790, 1199; project for an expedi-
tion against the Spanish in Louisiana, 1793, 907.
Southworth, Mrs. E. D. E. N., 2691.
J. R., 1240.
Souvay, C. L., 2451.
Spain, American hostility towards, in 1793, 907; and
her rivals in America, 1498-1607, 511; attitude
in the American revolution, 836; boundary dis-
putes in South America, 2985; civilization and
influence in America, 2972; colonial adminis-
tration in the Philippines, 3153; Confederate
diplomatic mission to, 60; controversy with
Portugal over boundaries in the La Plata
region, 3141; failure to ratify the treaty for the
cession of Florida, 902; government in the In-
dies, 2986, 2990, 2996, 2999; interest in voyages
of other European nations to America, in 1608,
2807; intervention in boundary disputes in
Spanish America, 2968; navy, in the Spanish-
American war, 1009; political affairs in America,
1808-1812, 3015; poUtics in Spanish America,
2986; quarrel with England over the Oregon
country, 1219; supplies from, during the Revo-
lutionary war, 843; trade with the Philippines,
3161; treaty with, 1795, 2216; treaty with, for the
acquisition of Florida, 1819, 909a; unofficial
relations with Spanish America, 3048; war with
England, attack on possessions in America,
1698, 3079a; war with England in the reign of
Queen Elizabeth, effect in the Indies, 3069; war
with England, 1739 to 1748, operations in the
West Indies, 3054. See also Demarcation line
of Alexander VI, and Spanish America, colonial
period.
Spanish, account of New France, 1608, 2807; archi-
tecture in Mexico, 3036; archives relating to
America, 66, 70, 72, 75, 552; archives relating to
the Philippines, 1519-1622, 3154; book of 1778
concerning the United States, 826; colonial
regime in America, 2986, 2990, 2991, 2999 (see
also Indies, laws of); colonies in America,
archives relating to, 66, 70, 72; colonies In North
America, history of, 536; conquest, of Cuba,
411; conquest, of Mexico, 420 (see also Pizarro,
and Velazquez de Cuellar, D.); discovery and
exploration, 368, 370, 372, 373, 378, 379, 380, 381,
383, 388, 394-396, 399-402, 405, 412, 413-418, 420-
422; discovery and exploration on the north-
west coast, 437; documents regarding Virginia,
1608-1612, 552; dominions on the Mississippi,
project for expedition against, 1793, 907; expedi-
tion to Nootka Sound, 1789, 1209; expeditions
against British in West Florida, 1779-1780, 1327,
1339; exploration in New Mexico, 1581-1582,
3031; exploration of CaUfornia, 1239; exploring
expedition on the Virginia coast, 1611, 552; Jewish
congregation in New York, 2396; missions in
CaUfornia, 437, 1228, 1233, 1234; nobiUty in the
PhiUppines, 3160; policy toward Virginia, 16(^
1612, 552; regime in Louisiana, 1330, 1340; regime
in Louisiana, archives of, 794.
Spanish America, 2954^-3149; boimdaries, 2968; colo-
nial period, 2983-3002, 3069, 3070, 3079a, 3091,
3093-3095, 3118, 3119, 3148, colonial period, press
in, 3045; colonization of, 3053; contribution to
civiUzation, 2979; diplomatic relations with the
United States, 2967; discovery and conquest,
1492-1550, 2980-2982; Indians of, 3109; literary
history, 3116, 3118; literature, 2958, 2962; music
of, 2976; politics and government, colonial pe-
riod, 3091; politics, revolutionary period, 3004,
ESTDEX.
259
3008, 3009, 3011, 3013, 3015; revolutionary period,
1810-1830, 3003-3015, 3089, 3092, 3098, 3110a, 3120,
3123; revolutions, inner meaning of, 2966; trade,
early colonial period, 3069.
Spanish American congress of history and geogra-
phy, 2970.
Spanish American solidarity, 2956.
Spanish American views on the Monroe doctrine,
2973.
Spanish- American war, 2155; Cervera's fleet in the
battle of Santiago de Cuba, 1009; Dewey's
squadron in Manila Bay, 1008; service in, 1739.
Spanish-American wars of independence, 3089,
3092, 3120-3122. See also Spanish America, rev-
olutionary period.
Speakers of the House of representatives, 2279.
Speck, F. G., 288.
Speculation. See Mississippi bubble, and South
Sea bubble.
Speech, freedom of, 2210.
Spence, Lewis, 353-355.
Spencer, P. L. 2836.
Spinden, H. J., 267, 356, 357.
Spirit, of New England, 560; of the Pilgrims, 662,
664. See also National characteristics and
ideals.
Spooner, W. W.,2258.
Spoons, Indian antler, 225.
Sports. See Fishing, Games, and Hunting.
Spottsylvania, Va., battle of, 1864, 954, 955; cam-
paign, 1864, 963.
Sprague, J. F., 423, 1352, 1353, 1898.
Springfield, Mass., 37.
Springfield Center, N. Y., 2137.
Sprunt, James, 993.
Spunker club, Boston, 1772-1775, 1400.
Spurs, prehistoric, 318.
Spy, revolutionary, 877.
Squair, John, 2940.
Stacey, Richard, 1895.
Stackpole, E. S., 1978.
■ Everett, 2055.
Stackpole famUy, 2055.
Staehelin, Ernst, 2488.
Stage, American, influence of British drama on,
2616; in the 18th century, 538.
Stage coach, hold-up in Wyoming, 1878, 1656a; sta-
tion at Rock Springs, Wyo., 659.
Stage-coach days, in New Hampshire, 1477.
Stahl, F. A., 3139.
Stamp, special delivery, 2341.
Stamp act of 1765, 864, 848.
Stamp distributor for Connecticut, 1765, 848.
Standardized tests in history, 146.
Standish, Josiah, 602.
. Myles, 104, 590, 632, 658.
Stanislaus co., Cal., 1231.
Stanton, R. B., 1813.
Stanwix, Fort. See Fort Stanwix.
Staples, L. C, 151.
Starbird, C. M., 2001.
Starkey, G. W., 1354.
Starr, P., 3018.
State and local government. 2286-2299.
State history, study and teaching of, 1294.
State publications relating to the European war,
1014.
State rights, 2224.
State street trust company, Boston, 1215.
State universities, western, 622. See also under
name of state.
Staten Island, N. Y., 1512.
States, bordering on rivers, boundary controversies
between. 1440; boundary lines, settlement of,
771; constitutions, see Constitutions, state; con-
troversies between, 2220, 2231; Indian names of,
1 193 ; origin of names of, 528. See also Interstate
problems.
Statistics of Canadian progress, 1867-1917, 2729.
Statues, in New York city, 1510, 1520; in the Vir-
ginia state library, 51; of Alexander Hamilton
1510; of King George III, 1520; of William Pitt,
1520. See also Memorials.
Statuettes, prehistoric, 362. See also Sculpture.
Steadman, C. M., 1860.
Steam navigation, Ericsson's inventions, 1502;
in New England, 2329.
Steamboating on the Mississippi after the Civil war,
2339.
Steamboats on western and southern waters, early,
1197.
Stearns, T. P., 2685.
Steel. S. A., 994.
Steele, Harwood, 2857.
Steensby, H. P., 295.
Stefansson, Vilhjalmur, 1846, 1847.
Steiner, B. C, 761, 762, 1773, 2481.
Stephens, E. W., 1465.
F. F., 2349.
— J. L., 357.
Stephenson, G. M., 1094.
M. A., 1325.
Walter, 671.
SterUng, W. T., 228.
Sternberg, G. M., 1896.
M. L., 1896.
Stevens, M. L., 1583.
O. A., 289.
W. B., 1467.
W. O., 2155.
Stevenson, R. L., 1310.
Stewart, A. W., 2056.
C. S., 3152.
F. H., 1489.
W. R., 2373.
Stewart family, 2056.
Stiles, Ezra, 2585.
Stillwell, Leander, 995.
Stirhng, Earl of, 838.
Stock, H. T., 29a, 2421.
Stocking, WiUiam, 2324.
Stockton, J. L., 152.
Stone, Joel, 2827.
Stone, eflSgy pipe, 214; monuments, prehistoric,
336, 338, 339.
Stone inscriptions, prehistoric, 352. See also Pet-
roglyphs.
Stoney Indians, 2952.
Stoney Brook township, Minn., 1439.
Stoney Point, battle of, 1779, 878.
Storm van s'Gravensande, Laurens, 3129.-
Storrow, Samuel, 988.
Story, Joseph, 1413.
Stowe, H. B., 1668.
260
INDEX.
Strasburg, Pa., 1578.
Strategy. See Military strategy.
Straw bonnet, first made in Massachusetts, 1409.
Strawberry, S. C, 2138.
Strpets, Boston, Mass., 1416; Old Market street,
Chester, Pa., 1543.
Stuart, G. R., 2503.
GUbert, 1897, 2610, 2611.
Jane, 1897.
Slaiart family, 1897.
Students in the World war. See Educational
institutions in the World war.
Sturgis, William, 1216.
Sturmberg, Robert, 1608.
Sublette, W. L., 453a.
Submarine controversy with Germany, 1097.
Submarine mines in the European war, 1102, 1103.
Submarine operations, in the European war, 1016;
German, 1101.
Subscription for Harvard college, 1672, 704.
Sucre, Antonio Jose de, 3083.
Sueve, Edmond de, 2795.
Suffield, Conn., 1249.
Suffolk CO., Mass., 1381.
Suffrage, woman. See Woman suffrage.
Sum van, James, 153, 1898.
L. R., 291.
Sully, Thomas, 2612.
Suite, Benjamin, 438, 2808-2812, 2837, 2338, 2893.
Sun dance of the Teton Sioux, 244.
Sun worship of the Hopi Indians, 247.
Sunday schools in early Boston, 2416.
Super, C. W., 154.
Super?or, Wis., 1639.
Superstitions, Indian, 281, 329.
SuppUes, miUtary, during the European war, 1090;
Revolutionary war, from Europe, 843, 846. See
also Ammunition train.
Supreme court of the United States, 526; as an
international tribunal, 2231; five to four de-
cisions of, 2270; justices of, 1695, 1705, 1722;
justices appointed from Massachusetts, 2267.
Surgery, prehistoric, 334, 335.
Surinam, prehistoric inhabitants of, 318. See also
Dutch Guiana.
Surveyer, E. F., 2894.
Susquehanna company, 832.
Susquehanna dispute, 848. See also Pennamite
war.
Susquehanna river, rafting on, 1561a.
Susto, Juan Antonio, 3049.
Sutton, J. D., 1634.
Swan, F. W., 560.
Swanton, J. R., 267.
Sweden, diplomatic relations with, 1814-1905, 2172.
Swedenborgian church. See Church of the New
Jerusalem.
Swedish Americans, attitude toward the European
war, 1094.
Swedish Lutheran church in Minnesota, 1441.
Swedish settlement in Kansas, 1318.
Sweeney, D. J., 1136.
Sweet, Manly, 918.
W. W., 2472.
Sweetser, K. D., 1694.
Swindle. See " Qreen goods game.'!
Swiss, emigrants to the Amsrican colonies, 540;
emigration to America, 2391; emigration to
South CaroUna in 1736, 786; settlement in
North Carolina, colonial, 785.
Swiss Reformed church theologians in the United
States, 2488.
Swisshehn, J. G., 1899.
Syllabus, history, for elementary schools, 501; for
the' study of the national period of United
States history, 506.
Symplagades, myth of, 348.
Syracuse, N. Y., bibliography of history of, 8.
Syracuse university, 2572.
Tabago, capture of, 1677, 3070; naval battle, 1677,
3070.
Taboo rites, ancient Mexican, 332b.
Tache, A. A., Monsignor, 2951.
Tacna-Arica controversy, 3100, 3101, 3111, 3115,
3136, 3137.
Taffanel, J. P. de, 2790.
Taft, Alphonso, 1900.
W. H., 1912; papers of, 73.
Taney, B. B.,2224.
Tapestry, prehistoric Peruvian, 333.
Tapley, C. S., 1414.
H. S., 1415, 1895.
Tappan, E. M., 1669, 2619.
Tarbox, J. W., 1807.
Tariff, controversy in 1833, 932; public documents
relating to, 49; questions in America, 184&-
1847, 929.
Tarkington, Booth, 2631, 2664.
Tarrytown, N. Y., 526.
Taste vin, C, 3109.
Tate, Joseph, 2136.
Taunay, Affonso d'Escragnolle, 3109a.
Taverns, Danvers, Mass., 1415; Dover, Me., 1345.
Taxation, public documents relating to, 49; rights
of, in 1774, 812. See also Stamp act.
"Taxation without representation," 830.
Taycheedah, Wis., 1654.
Tayloe, B. O., 1357.
Taylor, E. G., 1178.
F. H., 880.
Francis, 1901.
George, 1902.
R. G., 155.
R.H., 2399.
W. B., 1326.
Tazewell co., Va., 1618.
Teachenor, R. B., 2060.
Teachenor family, 2060.
Teaching. See Educational history, and Norniial
schools.
Teaching, history. See History, teaching of.
Teachers of history. Conference of, Dec. 29, 1917, 81;
training schools for, 82.
Tehuan tepee, Isthmus of, 2183.
Teich, E. L., 11.
Teixeira, Pedro, 2987.
Temperance, Lincoln's views on, 1803; movements
and legislation in Indiana, 2384; reform, in the
United States, 2385.
Templars. See Middle Templars.
Temple, G. L., 2601.
Temple, ancient Toltec, 338.
INDEX.
261.
Tenafly, N. J., 1030.
Ten Kate. See Kate.
Tennessee, 1594-1603; aboriginal remains in, 204:
archaeology of, 215; frontier and pioneer life in,
1740-1790, 798; marriage record of Knox county,
1792-1837, 2113; North CaroUna boundary line
survey, 1799, 1528.
Tennessee, University of, 2565, 2574.
Teotihuacan, archaeological discoveries in, 315;
ruins of, 339.
Tercentenary. See Pilgrim tercentenary celebra-
tion.
Termer, Franz, 358, 358a.
Terms, "American" and "Indian," 2811; political,
see Political terms.
Terreros, Manuel Romero de, 3042.
Territorial expansion, 521; colonial period, 536;
Connecticut's efforts at, 832; constitutional his-
tory of, 2206.
Territories, status of inhabitants of, 2206.
Terry, Roderick, 672.
Tests, American history, 503; Harlan's American
history, 485.
Texas, admission into the Union, passage of the
resolution by Congress, 927; annexation of,
2232a; cavalry in the Civil war, 1002; contro-
versy over the New Mexico boundary, 1848-1 S60,
924; Disciples of Christ in, 2456; freemasons,
2371; high schools, history in, 156; jurisdiction in
New Mexico, 1848-1850, 924; libraries, 2362;
manuscripts relating to the history of, 58;
preservation of European war history mate-
rials, 1121; republic of, Lamar's administration,
1605.
Texas, Dept. of education, 156.
Texas, University of, European war music in, 1010;
historical manuscripts of, 74; Wrenn library,
2362.
Tex^s revolution, 1605, 1607.
Text-books, outlines, etc., 472-511; colonization of
North America, 1492 to 1783, 536; early New
England history, 560; first American geography,
2410; history of Brazil, 3102; history of Mexico,
3034; history of Nebraska, 1473; Illinois history,
1279; Missouri history, 1458; United States his-
tory, 1865-1920, 1004; Wisconsin history, 1635.
See also Mathematical note books.
Textiles, ancient Peruvian, 299, 303; Indian, 210.
See also Tapestry.
Thacher, John, 2057.
Thatcher, Herbert, 830.
J. B., 1903.
J. W., 996.
Thayer, EU, 1671.
W. R., 157, 2673.
Th4ard, D. H., 1341.
Theatre, at Montreal in 1816, 2886; in 18th century
America, 2376. See also Stage, dramatic.
Theft, ancient Mexican laws regarding, 332b.
Theologians, New England colonial, 2412; Swiss
Reformed church in the United States, 2488.
Theological seminary, Lutheran, at Philadelphia,
2516. See also Augsburg seminary.
Theology, New England, 2413; of colonial America,
2419; of the Indians, 249; of the Pilgrim fathers,
668.
Therriault, Patrick, 2359a.
Thew family, 1937.
Thomas, A. C, 2463.
C. C, 158.
Isaiah, 710, 1671.
J. P., 1853.
S. E., 508.
Shipley, 1095.
Theodore, 1665.
Thomas family, 1934.
Thompson, CM., 1265.
Cephas, 1672.
David, 454, 1260.
H. C, 2678.
J. G., 1904.
J. H., 2058.
J. J., 1280-1282, 2400, 2452.
J. R., 1905.
L. W., 159.
Lucy, 291a.
R. M., 997.
Thompson family, 2058.
Thoreau, H. D., 2692.
Thorn, H. C, 1179.
Thornely, Thomas, 929.
Thornton, William, 939.
Thorpe, F. N., 2259.
G. C, 3052.
Thomas, 2927.
Thousand Islands, 2720.
Throwing sticks, prehistoric, 360.
Thrum, T. G., 3152a.
Thwaites, R. G., 509.
Thwing, A. H., 1416.
C. F., 673, 1096.
Tiahuanacu, BoUvia, 309.
Tibbetts family, 2059.
Tichenor family, 2060.
Ticonderoga, expedition against, 1777, 807.
Tighe, B.C.B., 160.
Tild, Jean, 421.
Tilden, S. J., 2553.
Tilghman, Richard, 760.
Tilton, A. C, 257^.
Timberlake, Henry, 1907.
Time reckoning, primitive, 20S. See also Calendar,
and Chronology.
Tindall, William, 1258, 1740.
Titus, E.D. ,2001.
W. A., 1654.
Titus family, 2061.
Tlingit Indians, 267.
Tobacco, origin of, 431; price of, 1681-168S, 779.
Tobacco-pouch, antique, 220.
Todd, J. E. ,2061a.
V. H., 785.
Todd family, 2061a.
Toffanin, Giuseppe, 2672.
ToU gates, 1566; in New Hampshire, 1477.
Toltecs, prehistoric, 419; culture of, 341a; temple of,
338.
Tomahawk, Indian, 173.
Tomson family, 2062.
"Tonquin," Astor's ship, 1213.
Tontitown, Ark., 1223.
Tooley, S. A., 674.
Toomoy, T. N., 2063.
Toomey family, 2063
262
INDEX.
Topsfield, Mass., 695. 720, 1372, 1401.
Toronto, Can., Court of King's bench, 2926; police
administration, 2902; Publiclibrary, 2753.
Torres Lanzas, Pedro, 2975, 3000.
Torrey, H. A. P., 2579.
Toscanelli, Paolo del Pozzo, 429, 430.
Totten, J. R., 1699, 1963.
R. C, 1571.
Touro, Abraham, 1398.
Toussaint Louverture, Pierre Dominique, 3077.
Tower, Charlemagne, 2203, 2204.
Town mandates. New England, colonial period, 558.
Tov/n meeting system, early New England, 558.
Towner, JVfrs. H. M., 2374.
Towns, aboriginal, 170. See also Villages, prehis-
toric.
Toy, C. H., 2520.
Trabue, A. E., 1326.
E.F., 1097.
Tracy, Louis, 675.
Trade, Argentine international, 1880-1900, 3099; be-
tween Spain and the Philippines, 3161; England
and her colonies in America, 542a, 546; expedi-
tion from St. Louis to Santa Fe, 1807, 908; expe-
* dition to Santa Fe, I84I, 1605; grain, 1850-1860,
2304; in the Illinois country, 1274b; in the Indies,
illegitimate, 3069; maritime, Boston and the
Pacific northwest, 1790-1822, 1202, 1203, 1207;
monopoly, Spanish, in the Philippines, 3161;
neutral, during the French wars, 2179a; north-
west coast in 1824, 905; northwest coast, relations
with Russia in regard to, 182^, 2168 {see also
Nootka Sound controversy); northwest fur
trade, 1207; Ohio river, early, 1198; protection
and attack in the West Indies, British, 17^6-
1H7, 3054; rivalry, Franco-British, to 1763, 546;
routes to the Canadian northwest, 2943; Russian-
American relations in regard to, in 1824, 905;
voyages to the Northwest coast, 1787-1792, 1822,
1202, 1203, 1207; with the Indians, federal system
of, 910; with Indians in the West, 1684 to 1692,
734. See also Commerce and industry, and Fur
trade.
Trade and plantations. Commissioners for, 542a.
Trade union, iron, steel and tin workers, 2357. See
also Organized labor.
Traders with the Indians, at Albany, 1684 to 1692,
734.
Trading post, at Fond du Lac, Wis., 1654; Dutch,
at Trenton, 748.
Tradition, the American, 488. See also National
characteristics and ideals.
Traditions, Indian, 336a.
Trails, Indian, 2335; in Pennsylvania, 2333; in Wis-
consin, 1642, 1645, 1646; Mohawk trail, 1365.
Training camps, during the European war, 1061;
Fort Sheridan officers' training camp, 1155a.
See also Camp D evens, and Camp Merritt.
Tramond, Joannes, 161.
Transcontinental travel. See Overland journeys to
the Pacific.
Transcontinental railroads. See Canadian Pacific
railway, and Union Pacific railroad.
Transportation, in the Canadian Northwest, 2943.
Trappers, early western, 434; in the Oregon coun-
try, 1213.
Trappists, in Kentucky, 1320.
Travel. See Description and traveL
Travelers, American, from 1 846 to 1900, books by, 13.
Treacy, G. C, 2453.
Treason, Benedict Arnold's, 879; forfeiture of land
because of, in Upper Canada, 2929; trial in On-
tario, 1838, 2931a; trial in Upper Canada, I8I4,
2929. See alto Sedition act.
Treaties, from 1789 to 1817, 2216; Indian, 1789-1795,
2216; Indian, in Maine, 1352; the Senate and,
1789-1817, 2216.
Treaty, between the republics of Venice and the
United States, proposed, 1784, 833; for the ces-
sion of Florida, failure of King of Spain to ratify,
902; Indian, of Saginaw, 1819, 1424; with the
Indians of Maine, 1726, 701; with the Lower
Creek Indians, 1739, 788a; with the Sac and Fox
Indians, I84I, 1307; with Spain for the acquisi-
tion of Florida, 1819, 902, 909a.
Treaty-maldng power, 901, 2213; bibliography of,
24; of the Senate, 2223. See also Foreign policy,
Congressional control of.
Trees, historic, 895.
Trejo, Fernando de, 3094.
Tremaudan, A. H. de, 438a.
Tremont, lU., 1269.
Trent, WiUiam, journal of, 1753 , 750.
Trenton, N, J., Dutch trading post at, 748.
Trenton decree of 1782, 753.
Trenton historical society, 753.
Trephining in prehistoric times, 334.
Trials, criminal, in Louisiana, 1720-1766, 794; in
Canada, 2831, 2833, 2931; in North Carolina,
1834, 2264; murder, 2264, 2831, 2931; in Rhode
Island, 1647-1662, 729; treason, in Canada, 2833,
2931a.
Tribal organization, Iroquois, see Iroquois gens;
of the Omaha, 267.
Tribal rites, Osage, 268.
Tricoche, G. N., 3097.
Trimble, C. R., 1137.
Trinka, Z. I., 1530.
Tripoli, war with, 1836.
True, R. H., 2620.
Truman, Thomas, 1584.
Trumbull, John, 1672, 1919.
Truslow family, 1932.
Truxal, A. E., 2489.
Tuckerman, C. K., 1807.
Frederick, 455, 2581.
Tucuman, province of, Argentina, 3000; conquist-
adores of, 3093; government of, 1653-1600, 3091.
Tunnicliff, H. G., 676.
Tupper, Sir Charles, 2732.
Turner, F. J., 522, 1217.
F. N., 1437.
H. B., 1359.
J. B., 1268.
J. K., 1527.
Nat, 938.
Turnpikes, early Massachusetts, 1365, 1396; Med-
ford, to Charlestown, Mass., 1384; New Hamp-
shire, 1477.
Tutt, V. M., 1294.
Tuttle, J. H., 551, 714-718, 1751.
P. M., 2320.
Twain, Mark. See Clemens, S. L,
Twichell, Ginery, 1671,
INDEX.
263
Tyler, L. Q., 162, 776, 776, 881, 882.
Ugarte de Ercilla, E., 3001.
Uhle, Max, 359.
Ulrick, L. F., 3121.
Ulster pilgrims, attempted emigration to America,
1636, 544.
Uniforms, Continental army, 842.
Union, the Farmers', 2303.
Union cause. South Carolina supporter of, 1852.
Union Pacific railroad, 1656.
Unions, trade. See Trade unions.
United Brethren, in Guiana, 3133.
United Empire loyalists. See Loyalists.
United States, 1783-1789, 896-898; 1789-1829, 899-922;
1829-1861, 923-941; 1861-1865, 942-1002; 1865-
1920, 1003-1187; colonial history to 1763, 531-803
comprehensive, 460-471; description and travel
439-459; miscellaneous, 523-530; national charac
teristics and ideals, 512-520; revolutionary
period, 1763-1783, 804-895; territorial expansion,
521, 522; text-books, outlines, etc., 472-511.
"U. S. A.," first official use of the abbreviation, 525
United States Department of agriculture, 2307.
United States National museum, 205.
"United States of America," adoption of the term,
525.
Universallst church, 2490.
Universities, in the European war, 1096, 1118, 1125,
1131; western state, 522. See also State univer-
sities, and under name of individual university.
University of Michigan students in the "World
war, 1118.
University of Tennessee magazine, 2574.
Unrest in the early days of the republic, 898.
Upham, C. B., 2156, 2157.
G. B., 566, 567, 1478-1480.
W. P., 1908.
Warren, 1445, 1448.
Upper Canada, attempt to create a King's counsel,
1815, 2924; court of King's bench, 2933; early
banking in, 2745; German loyalists in, 2920;
leader of the opposition in, 2927; legal history,
2922, 2923, 2929, 2931-2933; old province tales,
2928; prohibition measure, 1813, 2832; rebelhon
of 1837, 2830; the slave in, 2930. See also
Ontario.
Upper Canada college, 2941.
Uran Indians. See Uru.
Urquieta, Felipe, 2976.
Urrutia, F. J., 2187, 2977.
Urtazun, Valentin, 883.
Urteaga, H. H., 360.
Uru language, 305.
Uruguay, descriptive account of, 3081.
Utah, geographic names associated with the Mor-
mons, 1204; history and biography, since state-
hood, 1609a; Mormon pioneer in, 2473; separa-
tism in, 1847-1870, 1609; Zion national park, 530.
Utensils, Indian. See Spoons.
Utensils, prehistoric. See Artifacts.
Utica, N. Y., 2139.
Uto-Aztecan group, 250.
Uxmal, Yucatan, prehistoric ruins at, 310.
Uzureau, Frangois, 2815.
Vail, R. W. G., 453.
Vaillancourt, ^mile, 2838.
Valdivia, Luis de, 2983.
Valentine family, 1940.
VaUandigham, E. N., 2575.
VaUetti, M. F., 292, 361.
Valley Forge, Pa., 1575; campaign, 880.
Valley Forge park commission, 880.
Van Buren, Martin, "Autobiography of," 923, 931.
Van Cortlandt manor, 746.
Vancouver, George, 2740.
Vancouver, B. C, 2946.
Vancouver Island, Indians of, 267.
Vandegrift, R. A., 1241, 1242.
Van der Heyden, J., 2521.
Van der Zee, Jacob, 2276, 2277.
Van Dyke, J. C, 1696.
Van Home, Sir WiUiam, 2849.
Van Husen family, 2065.
Van Nes. See Nes.
Van Rensselaer family, 2066.
Vase, a prehistoric, 319. See also Pottery.
Vaughan, Robert, 760.
Walter, 2849.
Velasquez, Diego, 411.
Velazquez de Cu^Uar, Diego, 416.
Venable, R. N., 1621.
Venice, republic of, despatches relating to Franklin's
mission to France in, 833; treaty of friendship
with the United States, proposed, 1784, 833.
Vennema, Ame, 2576.
Venezuela, 3144^3149; and the Monroe doctrine,
2197.
Venezuela-British Guiana boundary arbitration,
2196.
Verdun, Quebec, 2811.
Verendrye. See La Verendrye.
Verhaag, Louis, 2521.
Vermont, early poets of, 2629; genealogy, 2086;
tourthrough,/7S5,452.
Vermont historical society, 1820.
Verneau, Rene, 163, 362, 363.
Vernon, Edward, Admiral, 3054.
Vero, Florida, fossil man found at, 172, 200.
Verrill, A. H., 3068.
Vespucci, Amerigo, 425-428; letters of, 386.
Vicksburg campaign, 1863, 976-977.
Vicksburg national park memorial commission of
Kansas, 972.
Vigilance committee, Roxbury, Mass., 1834-1836,
1410.
Vignaud, Henry, 429, 430.
VIkita, Papago ceremony of, 243.
Viles, Jonas, 1468.
Villages, Indian, in Kentucky, 230; in Ohio, 198;
in Wisconsin, 203, 1641; pit house, at Luna,
N . Mex., 199; prehistoric, 175. See also Aztalan,
and Towns, prehistoric.
Villeray. See Rouer de Villeray.
Villiers, Marc de, baron, 803, 3135.
Violette, E.M., 164.
Vinas, Carmelo. See Vinas Mey.
Villas Mey, Carmelo, 2978, 3002.
Vincent, I. O., 2895.
Vineland, N. J., 1486, 2140.
Viner, Jacob, 2754.
Virgin Islands, American achievements in, 3052;
plesbiscite in regard to cession to the United
States, 1868, 3080
264
INDEX.
Virginia, 1612-1622; and the revolution, 882; charter
of 1676, 775; Civil war in, 949, 951, 953, 954, 955,
961, 962, 963, 971, 987, 992; claims to Pennsyl-
vania lands, 750; commissary general of, 1777,
808; colonial history, 552, 763-780; colonial
history, study outline of, 511; compulsory
education in, 769; Council and general court,
minutes, 1626-1627, 777; first charter of, 619;
frontier fighter, papers of, 1781-1782, 824;
genealogical records, 2084, 2091, 2116, 2126,
2127, 2141, 2142; historic houses, 23S1; in 1681-
1683, 779; Jews of Richmond in the World
war, 1120; laws of, colonial period, 765; letter
written from, 1776, 804; loyalist attornej^-
genoral of, 818; negro insurrection in, in 1831,
938; officers in the revolution, 887; Presby-
terian periodicals of, 1815-1860, 2409; quit rent
rolls, 170^, 780; regiments in the French and
Indian war, 556; Revolutionary war, frontier
fighter of, 824; Revolutionay war in, 881; set-
tlers of Tennessee from, 1597; Shenandoah
Valley campaign, 1861-1862, 943; slave labor in,
colonial period, 770; soldiers in the World
war, 1116; Spanish exploring expedition to,
1611, 552; Spanish policy toward, 1606-1612,
552; state troops in the revolution, 894.
Virginia, University of, 2547, 2571.
Virginia company of London, 778.
Virginia state library, 57, 824, 2603; historical re-
search in, 145; portraits and pieces of statuary
in, 51.
Vital records. See Regional genealogy, vital rec-
ords, etc.
Vizcaino, Sebastian, 379.
Vogan, John, 1556.
Voganville, Pa., 1556.
Voigt, G. P., 786.
Voorhees, D.W., 1910, 2243.
Vosburgh, R.W., 1519, 2092, 2097, 2099, 2103-2105,
2108, 2109, 2111, 2112, 2115, 2120, 2121, 2123, 2137,
2139, 2143, 2145.
Voting in Illinois, 2247. See also Elections, and
Suffrage.
Voyages, Northwest coast, early, 1209; of Vicente
Yafiez Pinzon, 395; to America in 1608, Spain's
interest in, 2807; to the Pacific coast, early,
1202, 1203, 1209. See also Discovery and explo-
ration.
Wabash co., HI., 1277.
Wadsworth family, 2067.
Wagenseller, G.W., 1572.
Wages, movement of, since 1860, 2353; New Eng-
land, since 1860, 2353.
Wagner, C. A., 165.
H. R., 52.
Harr, 2679,
• Hermann, 429.
Wagon, journey by, in 1802, 443.
Wahpeton Dakota Indians, 286.
Wainwright, Richard, 997.
Wainwright family, 2068.
Wait, C. H., "Mrs.W. H.Wait," 1138.
■ T.B., 901.
Waldoboro, Me., 1353.
Walker, D.D., 2522.
Wall, A. J., 53, 1520.
Wall-papers, colonial, 2601.
Wallabout prison ships, 831.
Wallace, Gen. Lew, 990.
W. S., 2755.
Waller, Jocelyn, 2820.
Wallingford, Conn., 1250.
Walpole, Hugh, 2636.
Walter, P. A. F., 229, 293.
Wambaugh, Sarah, 3072.
Wampum belt, 184.
Wanger, G. F. P., 2134.
Ruth, 166.
Wanlass,W. L., 2307.
Wanzer,W. D., 2069.
Wanzer family, 2089.
War. See Wars.
War camp community service, 1104.
War clubs, Indian, 193.
War contracts, government, 1035.
War dance, Navajo, 253.
War government, American, 1917-1918^ 1084.
War of 1812, 914-922.
Ward, Artemus, 1671, 2633.
Edward, 750.
Ward family, 2070.
Wardle, H. N., 230, 231.
Ware, H.E., 680, 719.
Warfield, Edwin, 1911.
Warren, Joseph, 699.
Nathaniel, 2071.
Warrum, Noble, 1609a.
Wars. -See Civil war, Colonial wars, European
war, French and Indian war, Indian wars,
King George's war, Mexican war, Spanish-
American war, and War of 1812.
Warwick, R. I., 724.
Washburn, C. G., 1876.
Emory, 1671.
Ichabod, 1671.
M. T. R., 2018.
Washburne, E. B., 1262.
Washington, B. T., 1667, 1912.
George, 520, 526, 1663, 1667, 1913-1920; head-
quarters in seven states, 844; in Guilford, N. C,
1525; manuscripts of, 73; march from Princeton
to Morristown, 840; miniatures and portraits of,
1672; note book of, selections from, 1757, 556.
W. L., 1920.
Washington, D. C, Early's march to, in 1864, 950;
home of Mrs. Southworth, 2691; life in, 1897-1919,
1253; mayor of, 1827-1830, 1738; municipal
authorities of, 1257; political affairs at, 1793-
1819, 900-902; poUtical affairs at, 1836, 928;
political affairs at, 1845, 927; St. Patrick's
church, 1255.
Washington (state), 1623-1632; journey in, 1828,
459; State Ubrary, 54. See also Oregon coimtry.
"Washington," ship, voyage to the Pacific coast,
1787-1790, 1203.
Washington, Mt., ascent of, in 1819, 455.
Washington and Lee imiversity, 2577. ' ^'^
Warfare of the Plains Indians, 267.
Watchmaker, a Revolutionary, 856.
Water-colours, Indian, 276.
Water-power administration in Ontario,"2897.
Waterloo, Ont., 2910.
Waterman, Robert, 2072.
INDEX.
265
Waterman, T. T., 232, 267, 294.
Waters, E. L., 720.
T. F., 1921.
Waterways, inland. See also Canals, and Rivers.
WatMns, Albert, 1473.
G. S., 1106.
W. K., 721.
Watterson, Henry, 2693.
Wawarsing, N. Y., 2143.
Waxhaw, N. C, 1523.
Way, R. B., 167, 2326.
William, 1592.
Wayland, J. W., 1622.
Wayne co., Ind., 1287.
Weapons, Indian, 193; preMstoric, 360. See also
Celts, Implements, and Slings.
Weatherly, Josephine, 168.
Weaver, E. P., 2941.
M. G., 1573.
Weaver family, 2073.
Weaving, Indian basket, 267. See also Tapestry.
Webber, M. L., 787, 1589, 2095, 2096, 2138.
Weber, J. P., 1273.
Webster, Daniel, 932, 1667.
F. M., 2621.
Hutton, 510.
Pelatiah, 841.
Wedding in pioneer Indiana, 1288.
Weiss, H., 3133.
Welfare work, European war, 1055; of the Y. M.
C. A., 1074; war camp commimity service,
1104; in Iowa, 2386. See also Canteening,
Knights of Columbus, Red Cross, and Social
welfare.
Weller, H. A., 2519.
Wellfleet, Mass., 1405.
Welling, Richard, 1889.
Wells, H. G., 470.
Welsh in Pennsylvania, 1555.
Wentz, A. R., 2467.
Werich, J. L., 1294.
Werner, C. J., 1521.
West, Benjamin, 2613, 2614.
E.H.,58.
West, colonial period, 790, 803; contributions to
American democracy, 522; education in, 522;
famous steamboats on the rivers of, 1197; fur
trading expedition in, 1812-1813, 449; military
inspection in, in 1819, 1212; Methodism in, rise
of, 1800-1811, 2472; migration to, 1740-1790,
1199; pioneer democracy of, 1217; pioneer
emigration to, 439, 441, 443, 445, 447, 453; pio-
neers of, 1192; routes of travel in, about 1763,
450; revolution in, see Clark's campaign in the
Old Northwest; Scandinavian element, 2403;
the old, 522; trade with Indians of, 1684 to 1692,
734; travel in, in 1840, 451; wheat growing in-
dustry, 2306. See also Middle west, Mississippi
valley Northwest, Ohio valley. Pacific coast,
and Southwest.
West, Canadian, early exploration of, 2813; emi-
gration to, 2822. See also Northwest, Canadian.
West, Far, description and travel, in 1828, 459;
early exploration in the canyons of the Colo-
rado, 1189; early governments, 2288; expedition
to the Rocky Mountains, 1843, 453 a; exploration
in, 1809-1812, 454; geographic names, associated
1111«4°— 23 19
with the history of the Mormons, 1204; journey
to, in 1852, 439; trappers and explorers of, 434;
travel and adventure in, 1800 to 1865, bibli-
ography of, 52. See also Northwest, Oregon
coimtry. Overland journeys to the Pacific, and
Pacific coast.
West, middle. See Middle west.
West Florida, history of, 909a.
West India company, French. See Compagnie
des Indes occidentales.
West Indies, 3052-3080; antiquities of, 312, 325, 326;
British trade protection and attack in, 1746-
1747, 3054; Carib Indians of, 344; colonization of,
3053; Dutch expansion in, prior to 1652, 539;
English colonization in, 460; first Franciscan
mission in, 404; French colonies in, manu-
scripts relating to, 65; naval operations during
the war between England and Spain, 1739-1748,
3054; Spanish conquest of, 411. See also
AntiUia.
West Indies, Danish, vote on annexation to the
United States in 1865, 980. See also Virgin
Islands.
West Jersey, province of, 1489.
West Point, defenses of, during the Revolution,
845; U. S. Military academy, register of officers
and graduates, 1661a.
West Virginia, and the European war, 1139; Braxton
county and central West Virginia, 1634; Lewis
county, 1633; organization and execution of the
selective service act in, 1139; vote on the ordi-
nance of separation, 980.
Westchester co., N. Y., 2144.
Westcott, Allan, 2155.
We^terfield, R. B., 2327.
Western provinces of Canada, 2943-2953.
Western Reserve, and the fugitive slave law, 937.
Western Reserve historical society, 1532.
Westminster diocesan archived, 1675-1798, 67.
Westmoreland co.. Pa., 2489.
Weston family, 1937.
Westward expansion, Coimecticut's attempt at,
832.
Westward movement, early, 2331.
Wetherell, James, 456.
Whahng, Thornton, 1785.
Whaling equipment, Indian, 294.
Whalley, Edward, the regicide, 717.
Wharton, A. H., 1574.
K. J., 1585.
Whatley, W. A., 74.
Wheat growing industry, 2306.
Wheat Sheaf inn, N. J., 1484..
Wheaton, Harriet, 233.
Wheeler, E. P., 1850.
Wheelwright, John, 2074.
Wheelock, J. H., 1890.
Whig reprisals upon loyalists, 876,
Whitcomb, E. W., 1660a.
White, A. C, 1251.
E. J., 2343.
James, 1189.
John, 2928.
P. H.,2629.
W. P., 2482, 2501.
White family, 2075.
White House invitations, 2378.
266
INDEX.
White Mountains, N. H., journeys through, in
1808 and 1809, 457; in 1819, 455.
Whltefield^ George, 551.
Whitehead, R. F., 2591, 2592, 2595, 2599.
Whitesboro, N. Y., 2145.
Whitestown, N. Y., 2145.
Whitfield, H., 682.
Whitley, W. T., 683, 1922.
Whitlock, Brand, 1814a.
Whitman, Walt, 520, 2G94-2699.
Whitman massacre, 1195, 1625.
Whitmore,B. G., 701.
Wbitney, Eli, 1671.
Whittemore, C. W., 3098.
Wiant, H. H., 2507.
Wickes, Joseph, 760.
Widder, Frederick, 2909.
Wiener, Leo, 431.
Wigs, in colonial times, 700.
Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, 2700.
Marrion, 2611.
Wilde, C. E., 457.
Wilder, H. H., 182.
Wilderness, battle of, 1864, 953.
Wildes family, 2076.
Wilkie, John, 2787.
WiUard, F. E., 1668.
Joseph, 1418.
Susanna, 1418.
Williams, B. C.,2631.
H. S., 2541.
Hannah, 1587.
J. H., 3099.
M. W., 3046.
Pelagine, 169.
Roger, 718, 728; and religious liberty, 2415.
S. C, 1528.
Sherman, 2542.
Talcott, 1815.
WiUiam, 458.
Williams family, 2046, 2077.
Williams co., O., 1531a.
Williamson, C. C. H., 2622.
G. C, 3079a.
WiUiston, S. W., 2705.
Willoughby, C. C, 198.
WiU CO., 111., 1267.
Wills, Allegheny co., Pa., 2085; Brunswick CO., Va.,
2091, See also Probate records.
WiUson, Beckles, 2858.
Wilmer, Simon, 760.
Wilmington, Del., 1252.
Wilson, G. R., 1296.
J. G., 1807.
James, 2261.,
Olive, 234.
S. M., 912.
Woodrow, 471, 1003; and the European war,
1025, 1033, 1073; "fourteen points" of, 1080, 1081;
historical writings of, 161.
Wilstach, Paul, 2381.
Winchell family, 2078.
Windsor, Conn., 877.
Wingate, K. H. G., 2510.
Winger, Otto, 2455.
Winnebago Indian, autobiography of, 282.
Winnebago villages in Wisconsin, 1641.
Winnipeg, Lake, exploration of, in 1734, 438.
Winship, G. P., 446, 692, 722.
Winslow, Edward, 104, 584, 632, 1922.
Winthrop, John, 1389; course across the Atlantic,
719.
Wirt, WilUam, 902.
Wiscasset, Me., 1350.
Wisconsin, 1635-1654; ancient Indian city in, 203;
antiquities, 228; archaeology, 188; constitution
of 1846, 2298, 2299; constitutional convention of
1846, 2298, 2299; [European] war history com-
mission, 1187; first capitol, 1649; Indians of, 233;
infantry in the Sioux war of 1862, 962; Lincoln
in, 1806; Minnesota- Wisconsin boundary con-
troversy, 1440; pioneer life in, 445.
Wisconsin, University of, 2568.
Wisconsin domesday book, 1653.
Wisconsin Heights, battle of, 1832, 1654.
Wise, J. C, 1107.
Wissler, Clark, 235, 267, 294a-296.
Wister, Owen, 2188.
Wiswall, Ichabod, 602.
Witherbee family, 2014.
Wits, the Connecticut, 2623.
Woburn, Mass., 1376.
Wolfe, Gen. James, 737; death of, Benjamin West's
picture, 2614.
Wolfeboro, N. H., 1476.
Wolff, Christian, 849.
Woman suffrage, in Missouri, 2230; in Wyoming,
1660.
Woman's relief corps, 2383.
Woman's rights, 1899, 2300.
Women, in Latin America, education of, 2959; in
the library profession, 2358; leaders of American
and English Ufe, 1668; Maryland, services to
the Confederacy, 964; of Illinois, European war
work, 1113; of the South in the Civil war, 944;
Pilgrim, 674; service in the European war, 1018,
1055; who came in the Mayflower, 633.
Women's clubs, in Maine, 1350; of Madison, Ind.,
1297.
Wood, C. A., 2079.
E. F., 1926.
F. J., 897, 898.
G. A., 723.
H. A. W., 1924.
H. G., 684.
J. S., 2688.
Leonard, 1923-1926, 3060.
R. K., 2872.
Simon, 1521.
William, 922.
Wood family, 2079, 2080.
Wood-Kulling, C. E. S., 1975.
Woodberry, G. E., 1855, 2366, 2688.
Woodbum, J. A., 1294.
Woodbury, Margaret, 913.
Wooden architecture of the lower Delaware valley,
2591.
Woodford, co., Ky., 1324,
Woodman, Henry, 1576. ^
M. S., 1575.
Woods, H. E., 1927.
Woodson, C. G., 2401.
W. H., 1471.
Woodward, F. E., 1982.
INDEX.
267
"Woody, Thomas, 2543.
Woolman, John, 2523.
Woonsocket, R. I., 1580.
Wooster, L. C, 2705.
Worcester, Samuel, 1892.
Worcester, Mass., 1378, 2459; biography, 1671.
Work, H. C, 1928.
John, 459.
M. N., 2402.
Workmen's compensation law, 2354.
World power, United States as. See International
position of the United States.
World war. See European war.
Wormley, G. S., 2544.
Wormwood, R. F., 2498.
Womer, W. F., 1577, 1578.
Worsham, J. H., 1989.
Worthen, S. C, 884.
Wren, Christopher, 1672.
Wrench, Winifride, 685.
Wrenn Ubrary, University of Texas, 2362.
Wright, F. E., 336.
F. G., 2580, 2586.
George, 2382.
I. A., 75, 552, 3069.
T. G., 561.
Wright family, 2081.
Writers, American, 19th century, 2622; 1890 to 1920,
2618; first American, to write in the British
quarterlies, 1832; Mexican, 3028. See also
Authors, and Literature, biography.
Writing, prehistoric. See Codex Borbonicus,
Hieroglyphs, Kensington runestone, and Rock
carvings.
Wrong, G. M., 2758.
Wyatt family, 2082.
Wyoming, 1655-1660a.
Wyoming Valley, Pa., Connecticut settlers in, 1558.
See also Susquehanna dispute.
Xochicalco, prehistoric ruins of, 338.
Yakima Indian war, 1623.
Yale, EUhu, 2586.
Yale ambulance unit with the French army, 1177.
Yale college, Sheffield scientific school, 2578.
"Yale liistorical publications," 848.
Y&nes, F. J., 2979.
"Yankee" division in the A. E. F., 1178.
" Yanlsee," privateer, 919.
Yard, R. S., 529.
Yardley, Sir George, 776.
Yarnall, ElUs, 2464.
Yewdale, M. S., 2687.
York, Me., 2598.
York, Ont., 2941.
York, Pa., 821, 1122, 1564.
York CO., Pa., 1122.
York CO., Va., 768.
Yorkshire, Eng., 685.
Yorktown, battle of, centenary celebratimi of, 868.
Yorktown, Va., 1619.
Young, Brigham, 2083.
Ewing, 1542.
F. G., 1219, 1542.
J. R., 2473.
L. E., 530.
Thomas, 2709.
Young family, 1936.
Young men's Christian association, in the European
war, 1074, 1110; in the Le Mana area, 1109.
Ypres, Canadian fighting near, 2858.
Yucatan, antiquities of, 307, 310, 357. See also
Mayas.
Yuman tribes, 266.
Yurok Indians, 291a.
ZebaUos, E. S., 2189, 3085.
Zell, R. R., 999.
Zeno, Marco, 833.
Zimmerman, R. I., 511.
Zion national park, 530.
Zoelen, R. Groeninx van, 2190.-
Zogbaum, R. F,, 2802.
Zumdrraga, Juan de, 3039.
Zuni breadstuff, 242.
Zvifii pueblo of Kechipauan, 195.
Zwierlein, F. J., 2454.
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