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Full text of "[Appletons'] annual cyclopaedia and register of important events of the year: 1861-1875"


York. D Appleton & C9 



fl 

THE 



("AMERICAN) 



ANNUAL CYCLOPAEDIA 



AND 



REGISTER OF IMPORTANT EVENTS 



OF THE YEAR 



1869. 



EMBRACING POLITICAL, CIVIL, MILITARY, AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS; PUBLIC DOCU- 
MENTS; BIOGRAPHY, STATISTICS, COMMERCE, FINANCE, LITERATURE, 
SCIENCE, AGRICULTURE, AND MECHANICAL INDUSTRY. 



VOLUME IX. 




NEW YOKE: 

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 

90, 92 AND 94 GRAND STREET 

1870. 



EJTTTUD, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by 

D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 

la th Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the 
Southern District of New York. 



PREFACE. 



THIS volume of the ANNUAL CYCLOPEDIA, for the year 1869, presents the 
United States in a condition of peaceful development. The armies have en- 
tirely disappeared, the wounds of the recent conflict are liealing, the angry pas- 
sions are calmed, legitimate authority exerts its powerful sway, institutions are 
moulded to the new order of affairs, industry is everywhere active, improve- 
ments of every conceivable kind are projected, and a buoyant spirit inspires the 
nation with vast anticipations of future prosperity. A change in the persons 
who administered the Federal Government took place during the year, which 
secured unanimity and cooperation in all departments. Immediate steps were 
taken to hasten the work of reconstruction in the three States then unrepre- 
sented at Washington. Conventions were held, constitutions drafted and dis- 
cussed, amended and submitted to the people, and adopted ; State officers were 
chosen, and the entire organization of local governments completed. The prog- 
ress of the other reconstructed States, under the joint rule of the white and 
colored man, as a citizen, a legislator, and a judicial officer, the contests of 
factions, the disturbances of citizens, the relaxation of restraints upon those 
active in the late hostilities, and the recuperative power of the people, socially 
and financially, are herein presented. The proposition to throw open the ballot 
of the country to every citizen, without distinction of race, color, or previous con- 
dition ; the debates in Congress upon the measure, the arguments in its favor, 
and the objections against it ; the numerous aspects of the question presented 
and discussed, with the final action of that body and the formal submission of 
the question to the Legislatures of the States, are also contained in these pages, 

-L O JL O 

The details of the internal affairs of the United States comprise the revenue 
and expenditures of the Government,, the measures taken to reduce the public 
debt, the modifications of its currency, and the discussions relative to the same ; 
its fluctuations, the changes in the system of taxation to promote the relief of 
the people, with its effects upon their industrial interests and prosperity; the 
banking system, with its expansions and contractions ; the fruits of agriculture,, 
and the spread of internal trade and commerce ; the proceedings in the Southern' 
States to establish securely their social affairs ; the various political conventions 



|r PREFACE. 

of the rear, both national and State ; the results of elections ; the acts of State 
Ltsiu"iarf* ; the rapid improvement of educational and charitable institutions 
under the care of the State governments ; the surprising extension of the facili- 
c* importation, oj-ecially of railroads; the resources of the several States, 
*t>d all ibo* fact* whieh manifest their rapid progress. 

In Europe, the progrwv of the peaceful reconstruction of the Government 
e.f France, under tlie control of Napoleon, has awakened unusual interest. The 
improvement* in Turkey and tlie unsettled relations with Egypt ; the move- 
ment* in S|ain. under the conduct of a provisional government, to inaugurate 
popular institution* ; the modifications in "the relations existing between Eng- 
land and Ireland ; the unsettled state of affairs in Italy, together with other 
event* of lc** im|>ortance, and the movements among the nations of Eastern 
Aia for a more free and friendly intercourse with the civilized world, are very 
folly narrated in these pages. 

The progress of mechanical industry was displayed by the completion of the 
Pacific Railroad, and the opening for navigation of the Suez Canal, besides 
many other works less extensive and important, which are herein noticed. 

The diplomatic relations of the Federal Government were of a most friendly 
character during the year, and the discussions or efforts to arrange every vexed 
question were, by common consent, as it were, laid aside. Negotiations for 
authority to construct a canal across the Isthmus of Darien, and for the acqui- 
sition of San Domingo, were successfully made, and are stated in these pages. 

Tin? advance in the various branches of Astronomical, Chemical, and other 
cieDcea, with new applications to useful purposes, are extensively described. 

Geographical discoveries have been actively pushed forward in various quar- 
ter* of the globe, with interesting results. 

fhe record of Literature and Literary Progress is as extensive as during any 
H year: The titles of all the more important works have been presented, 
with omc remarks on the nature of their contents. 

5 hiMorr of the religious denominations of the country, with an account 

onvcntiona, plans of union, branches, membership, views on public 

and progress of opinions, are presented from official sources. The pre- 

T proceedings and opening of the -(Ecumenical Council in Eome are also 

fully narrated. 

f tribute has been given to the memory of deceased persons of note in 
ftrjr department of society. 

Al mportant documents, messages, orders, treaties, and letters from official 
I* ** bav c been inserted entire. 



THE 



ANNUAL CYCLOPAEDIA. 



A 



ABYSSINIA (Arabic, H&besK), an empire 
in Eastern Africa, consists of the three former 
kingdoms of Amhara, Shoa, and Tigre. It has 
an area estimated at 158,392 square miles, and 
a population of from three to four millions. 
The inhabitants are mostly Ethiopian Chris- 
tians, but there are many Mohammedans in 
the towns, the most important of which are 
the following : Adoa, with a population vari- 
ously estimated at from 3,500 to 10,000 inhab- 
itants; Aliya Amba, 2,500 ; Aouzienne (Tigre), 
2,000; Dixan (Sarae), 2,000; Gondar, 5,000 to 
12,000; Methemmeh, 1,200 to 5,000; Mota 
(Godjam), 3,000; Tchelenkot (Tigre), 3,000; 
Kurata has become the most important town 
since the destruction of Gondar.* The soil of 
Abyssinia is exceedingly fertile ; but the pop- 
ulation is subject to exorbitant taxes and con- 
tinued plundering, and thereby reduced to 
wretched poverty. 

The great interest which the civilized world 
has for several years taken in Abyssinia has 
nearly come to an end with the close of the 
English expedition. The Emperor Theodore 
II., whose life and tragic death have been 
narrated in the preceding volumes of the AN- 
NUAL CYCLOPAEDIA, was, by his superior states- 
manship and barbaric energy, on the point of 
consolidating the incongruous tribes which in- 
habit that country into one, of creating an 
Abyssinian nationality, and of securing for his 
country a recognized rank among the nations of 
the earth. No more conclusive proof of the ex- 
ceptional ability of Theodore could be given, 
than a comparison of his administration with 
the Anarchy into which Abyssinia is now re- 
lapsing for want of a man who can follow in 
his footsteps. In fact, the whole history of 
Abyssinia from December, 1868, to October, 
1869, the date of our latest advices, has been 
an uninterrupted civil war. Three princes are 
aspiring to the inheritance of Theodore. Kas- 



* For a fuller account of the topography of the country 
see AMERICAN ANNUAL CYCLOPEDIA for 1868. 
VOL. ix. 1. A 



sai, Prince of Tigre, who last year concluded 
friendship with Sir Eobert Napier, keeps at 
his court at Adoa two German missionaries, 
asd an English officer, Colonel Kirkham, who 
renders Mm important services as instructor 
of his army ; and he intends, as soon as his 
troops shall have been well drilled, to begin a 
campaign against Gobazie, the ruler of Amhara, 
and Menilek, the Prince of Shoa, the former of 
whom last year caused himself to be proclaimed 
Emperor of Ethiopia. The occasion for this 
imminent war has* been furnished by the ex- 
pected arrival of a new Abuna, or head of the 
Abyssinian Church, who, as usual, is sent by 
the Coptic Patriarch of Cairo, and for the re- 
ception of whom Kassai has sent an embassy 
to Egypt with costly presents. Gobazie dis- 
putes with his neighbor the possession of the 
Abuna, who generally resides in Amhara ; for 
it is the privilege of the Abuna to crown the 
Emperor of Ethiopia. 

Prince Kassai, one of the three competitors 
for the throne, has abolished the slave-trade, 
and the export and import duties. His chiefs 
have been ordered to assist foreign merchants. 
Kassai has also established a market for foreign 
goods at Adoa, and offers large tracts of un- 
cultivated land for the culture of cotton, coffee, 
indigo, and sugar. 

The people of Abyssinia are so well aware 
of the great loss which their country has suf- 
fered by the death of Theodore, that they have 
begun to venerate him as a saint. The Ger- 
man missionaries in Abyssinia report that 
thousands of pilgrims visit his grave, where a 
number of miracles are said to have occurred. 
A greater influence, however, upon the desti- 
nies of Abyssinia, than by the* miracles of St. 
Theodore, is likely to be exercised by the prog- 
ress which neighboring Egypt cannot fail to 
make in consequence of the opening of the Isth- 
mus of Suez. 

There still are in Abyssinia a few distin- 
guished Europeans who hold a high position. 
A German naturalist, Wilhelm Schimper, who 



ABYSSINIA. 



Wi M fcrtka Eaat to 18M, aettled, after scv- 
air. In Abyi-inla, married a 
wottaa, and woo the confidence of the 
r W*. of TV*, to eb a decree, as to 
W Otr**d by bim with the .Immigration 
flW *rict of Antilccho. Another German, 
4aard Zaajdar* weal to Abriinia in 1847, 
M*J ol<*io*d fikewbe an indacntial position 
with l*U*. Altar the dcciMve battle, in 1855, 
Zaarfar aa*ard the aerrire with Theodore, was 
aaanlajtaal cowroaodcr of the fortified island of 
<!amr io Ito Lake Tana, and rose to the 
UhfciH Uiury rank. He Mill was with Thao- 
4aw hi February. 1 868, bat has not been heard 
fru n*f+. l*r. Monxinjrer, a native of Swit- 
tvrlftad. ba* beco for many rears English con- 
rtt at Itaawwah. near the Abyarinian frontier, 
wbatvbaatiDrvaidca. He is also married to a 
afire woman, and author of some of the best 
woHtc OQ the coqntry and its languages. The 
Latbcraa Church of Sweden, a few years ago, 
ed a miarioo in Abyssinia, which re- 
oodUtorbcd by Theodore, and new 
iaatoajariaa were sent to the country 

: n '" tML war inatK-, 

ijDWtfir. tbe life of foreigners in Abyssynia 
rrry ioMcore. An Englishman, Mr. Powell, 
Mi vMb, Ua soo, A Swedish missionary, Mr. 
KatboU, and aareral attendants, were, in April, 
IStt. nardercd by the natives. A brother of 
Mr. Powell, and another relative, Mr. Jenkins, 
obaranently, in tracing the muti- 
t, which, by certMn infallible proofs 
at peculiar stoppages of teeth they 
able to identify as the remains of their 
md relatives. Moreover, they avenged 
UM murder by marching with an armed force, 
ttaecd at their disposal by Prince Kassai, of 
TVrri. arainrt the Shangnlla tribe, the perpe- 
of the cruel deed. The Shangallas, 
r. were informed of tha expedition be- 
Ilowcr of Mr. Powell were ready 
fcr tW attack, and the greater portion escaped 
<h larooflh the jungle, which in this neigh- 
boriiooi la ?a*T high. Eight Shangolla sava- 
ajaa were killed in the affray, one of whom 
i the murdered Mr. Po'well's coat, and 
it OTbaeqnenUy transpired, been the chief 
r of the crime. Five villages, num- 
-two bouses, in which two guns and 
aUaa were found, were ignited and razed 
fTooad. Fourteen hundred head of cat- 
* ^ r *" eaajtered, and, in short, every thing 
too* to show the Shangalla tribe the pun- 

tbey had laid themselves open to. 
iiaajd, the tntereat in the Abyssinian 
HBWM aomewhat kept up by the dis- 
that tbe artnal coat of tho war exceeded 
"a eaicolation. The work already 
; Captain Hotter, who waa Assist- 
to Lord Napier, gives on 
information, which sup- 
.-j aoooonta of the English 
i. If (Wata Horier's statementa 
n, in the long records of Eng- 
Tinr in former war*, nothing can 




^i eaicoiati 

aMagmjrf by Captain 

Huf J oajfajaajy 



be found to surpass the absurdity of the prepa- 
rations for the Abyssinian war made in Bom- 
bav. The following is a specimen of the com- 
plaints of the author: Every thing depended 
on land transport, and this, according to Cap- 
tain llozier, was intentionally crippled. The 
early difficulties of the expedition were tracea- 
ble to defective organization, which Sir Robert 
Napier had to remodel after he took the field. 
The first of the series of posts by which the 
British line of march was secured was Senafe, 
about seven thousand feet above the sea-level, 
and sixty-five miles from Zulla. The road be- 
tween these two places was made by the army, 
and it was liable to be interrupted in the rainy 
season, so that it was absolutely necessary to 
accumulate supplies in Senafe sufficient to feed 
the army in the event of communications being 
temporarily severed. The only food that could 
be obtained in the country was meat, and, in 
order to maintain the health of the troops, 
vegetables, tea, sugar, and spirit?, had to be 
carried on every day's march. The supplies 
of these articles required by an army of even 
moderate dimensions quickly swell up to an 
enormous amount, and demand a large quan- 
tity of carriage. In this requisite the force 
was still deficient at the end of January, nearly 
a month after the commander-in-chief and a 
large part of his army had landed at Zulla. 
Sufficient time had not yet elapsed to repair 
an originally defective organization, and the 
ravages of epidemic among the animals. At 
Adigerat, in February, an alteration was made 
in the general organization of the Transport 
Corps. It was separated into two divisions. 
One, called the lowland division, carried sup- 
plies from Zulla to Adigerat. The other, called 
the highland division, worked between Adi- 
gerat and the army advancing on Magdala. 
The highland train consisted of four divisions, 
of two thousand mules each, which were sub- 
divided into troops of one hundred and fifty 
mules. Its organization was entirely military, 
and it worked under the department of the 
quartermaster-general. The two Punjab mule- 
trains were the nucleus of the highland trains. 
The muleteers were armed, and Bunder strict 
discipline, and, consequently, the highland train 
was independent of the regular army for escorts 
or convoys, or for guards for grass-cutters. In 
fact, this train had now become what Sir Rob- 
ert Napier had wished to have originally. The 
cold nights of the highland region rendered 
blankets and warm clothing necessary, and 
thus increased the baggage necessarily carried 
by the troops ; but, on the other hand, the fol- 
lowers, which are indispensable in India, were 
left behind at Zulla as an encumbrance. 

The English expedition, which was accom- 
panied by a large number of able scholars, 
nos, as was to be expected, called forth many 
able works on Abyssinia, which have con- 
siderably added to our knowledge of the coun- 
try. Among them we mention: Graham, 
"Glimpses of Abyssinia" (London, 1867); 



AFGHANISTAN". 



3 



Dufton, " Narrative of a Journey through Abys- 
sinia ; " the works of Hotton, Chandler, Plow- 
den, Peacock, Abbadie, Lejean, Dr. H. Blanc's 
"Narrative of Captivity in Abyssinia," etc. 
(London, 1868) ; Markham, "A History of the 
Abyssinian Expedition " (London, 1869. Mr. 
Markham accompanied the expedition as official 
geographer); Prideau, "A Journey through 
the Soudan and "Western Abyssinia " (London, 
1869); Stern, " The Captive Missionary " (Lon- 
don, 1869); Hozier, "The British Expedition 
to Abyssinia" (London, 1869). 

The following works of German missionaries 
and smants on Abyssinia are the most impor- 
tant: Heuglin's "Reise nach Abyssinien," in 
1861-'62 (Jena, 1868); also his "Reise zu 
Kaiser Theodoras " (1862) ; E. Andree's 
"Abyssinia" (Leipsic, 1868); Th. Waldmeier 
(pilgrim-missionary), " Erlebnisse in Abyssinien 
in 1858-'68," prefaced by Dr. L. Krapf (Basle, 
1869); T. M. Flad, "Zwolf Jahre in Abys- 
( sinien, oder Geschichte des Konigs Theodor's 
II. und der Mission unter seiner Regierung " 
(Basle, 1869); Rohlfs "Im Auftrage sr. Maj. 
des Konigs von Preussen mit dem Englischen 
Expeditions-corps in Abyssinien " (Bremen, 
1869) ; Count of Seckendorff, " Meine Erleb- 
nisse mit dem Englischen Expeditions-corps in 
Abyssinien " .(Potsdam, 1869); Lieutenant F. 
Stumm, under the same title (Frankfort, 1868). 

An interesting work on the Abyssinian Jews 
(Falasha) has been published by the German 
missionary, Flad, "Kurze Schilderung der 
bisher fast ganz unbekannten Abessinischen 
Juden" (Basle, 1869). The author, by a long 
sojourn among the Falashas, was fully compe- 
tent to give trustworthy information on the 
life, the manners, and customs, of that inter- 
esting tribe. The chief subjects of the book 
are their origin, country, physical constitution, 
food, and occupation, religious service, sacri- 
fices, monks, nuns, priests, prophets, magicians, 
festivals, purification-laws, books, betrothals, 
wedding, marriage, death, and burial. The 
Falashas, according to Flad, inhabit the fol- 
lowing fourteen provinces: Semia, Vogera, 
Armatshoho, Valkait, Tchelga, Dembea, Da- 
gusa, Tankel, Atafa, Kunsula, Wandigio, At- 
schafer, Agau-meder, and Quara. Since 1862, 
a few hundred families have been living in 
Shire, and, after the plundering of Dembea, in 
1863, many families have emigrated to Begem- 
der, Lasta, and Bellessa. As to their number, 
only an estimate can be given ; according to 
Flad, they, may amount to two hundred thou- 
sand souls. 

AFGHANISTAN, the Persian name of the 
land of the Afghans. This country is acquiring 
a great importance in consequence of its connec- 
tion with the approaching solution of the Cen- 
tral Asian question {see ASIA). It has an area 
estimated at 225,000 English square miles; it 
rises toward the northeast to more than 6,000 
feet above the sea, and sinks to 1,600 feet tow- 
ard the southwest. It is bounded on the north 
by the Hindoo Koosh, the Kohi-Baba, and the 



Ghoor mountain-ranges. On the east the deso- 
late range of Takht-i-Suleiman separates Af- 
ghanistan from India. The river Cabool flows 
through the eastern mountains, and empties 
into the Indus. Owing to the diversified eleva- 
tion of the land, its climatic character offers 
striking contrasts ; the protected valleys pro- 
ducing various fruits, tobacco, and cotton, while 
snow-storms rage in the northern highlands. 
Bears, wolves, and foxes, are found, besides 
lions, tigers, and camels. The mountains seem 
to abound in valuable minerals and metals, 
such as iron, lead, gold, and sulphur. The 
number of inhabitants is variously estimated at 
from 5,000,000 to 9,000,000. The Afghans be- 
long to the Iranic race, and are divided into an 
eastern and a western group. Of a vigorous 
and proud temper, they appear disinclined to 
amalgamation, though they have been, of late, 
politically united. War is their element. 

The present ruler of Afghanistan, Shere Ali, 
is the son of the powerful and energetic Dost 
Mohammed, the ally of England, and the con- 
queror of Herat, the key to India. Shere Ali 
succeeded him in 1863. He concluded peace 
with Persia, but Afghanistan soon fell again a 
prey to discord and civil war, which ended in 
January, 1869, after Shere Ali had completely 
routed his adversaries. 

Afghanistan is not so much threatened by 
the savage tribes of Central Asia as by England 
and Russia, both of which desire the possession 
of Herat. Shere Ali owes his success in part to 
English subsidies in money and arms, for the fall 
of Samarcand, and the Russian advance toward 
the Oxus, made it an imperative necessity for 
England to acquire a trustworthy ally and friend 
at the gates of India. The grand reception of the 
Afghan ruler in British India, and his confer- 
ence with Lord Mayo at Umballa, in March, 
1869, created a great sensation in Persia and 
Russia. England recognized him formally as 
the sovereign of Afghanistan. In order to 
strengthen his power in the interior, Shere Ali 
introduced various changes, the most impor- 
tant of which is the reduction of his former 
allies to the status of subjects. It would seem, 
however, as if the plans of Russia had a greater 
chance of success. The conquests of the gen- 
erals Kaufmann and Abramo w have changed the 
Emir of Bokhara from a bitter enemy to a de- 
voted vassal to Russia, and opened the way to 
the very gates of Afghanistan. The relations 
of Russia to Persia secure to her the influence 
of Nasredin-Shah, who recently concluded a 
kind of compromise with Shere Ali by which 
a portion of Afghan Sustan has been ceded to 
the Persians, who erected, immediately, some 
forts on the eastern shore of the Lake Zare, 
while the Russians are building roads to Bu - 
dukshan and Balkh. Iskender-Khan, the legiti- 
mate heir of Herat, has been taken to St. Peters- 
burg by General Kaufmann, and entered the 
Russian army, in the hope of reobtaining his 
paternal inheritance by Russian assistance. 

The literature on the history and geography 



AFKICA. 



of Afghanistan is not very copious. Among 
the best works are: Eaye, "History of the 
War in Afghanistan," London, 1861 ; Bellew, 
" Journal of a Political Mission to Afghanistan," 
London, 1862; the reports of travels by Con- 
oily, Burnes, Masson, Ferrier, Bellew, Vam- 
be>y, etc. 

The Afghan language (Pukhtu) belongs to 
the Iranic group of the Indo-Germanic lan- 
guages ; it is mixed with Persian, Arabic, Syr- 
iac, and Chaldean elements, and written in Per- 
sian characters. It has an eastern and a west- 
ern dialect. 

Eecent works on Afghan language and litera- 
ture are scarce; among them are, Eaverty, 
" Grammar of the Pukhtu," " Dictionary of the 
Pukhtu," and the reader " Gulshan-i-roh " (Se- 
lections from the Poetry of the Afghans), to- 
gether, 3 vols., London, 1860-'61. Miiller, 
'"'Die Conjugation des Afghan. Verbums" (Vi- 
enna, 1867). There exists, besides, a trans- 
lation of the New Testament and the historical 
books of the Old into the Pukhtu, made by 
T. Lowenthal, and edited by the Serampore 
Bible Society in India. 

AFEICA. The year 1869 will remain in 
the history of Africa of prominent importance. 
Not only for many years, but for many centu- 
ries, no event has occurred which could stand 
any comparison with the opening of the Suez 
Canal, in November, 1869. It was one of 
the great sensations of the year, and not of late 
has an equal solemnity on African soil been 
witnessed. The attendance, at the festivities, of 
the Empress of France, the Emperor of Aus- 
tria, the Crown-prince of Prussia, and the repre- 
sentatives of the chief newspapers of Europe and 
America, gave a brilliant and weighty expres- 
sion to the belief of the whole Christian world 
that the opening of the Suez Canal signifies an 
entire revolution in the relation of this part of 
Africa to the family of the civilized nations. 
It is now the common expectation that a revo- 
lution of trade and commerce must commence ; 
that Egypt must rise from its past lethargy ; 
that it cannot much longer remain a vassal of 
Turkey, but must become the seat of a new 
and great empire, with an extensive commerce, 
on the one hand, with Turkey, Greece, Italy, 
France, Spain, Portugal, Great Britain, and the 
remainder of Europe, and, on the other, with 
Hindostan, Persia, the western and southern 
coast of Asia, and the eastern coast of Africa. 
The annual progress of Egypt will henceforth 
command in the annals of contemporaneous 
history a much more prominent place, and its 
natural influence upon its weak neighbors can- 
not fail to lead, ere long, to considerable changes 
in the map of Africa. From a religious point 
of view,^the transformation which Egypt, un- 
der the influence of European ideas, is sure to 
undergo, and the effect this may have upon 
the Mohammedan world at large, will be a 
problem well worthy to be watched. In Egypt 
as well as in Turkey, both the government and 
the people anticipate that a struggle for the in- 



dependence of Egypt is near at hand. Through- 
out the year 1869 the Government of Egypt 
was involved in an open diplomatic war with 
the Sultan, and several times the outbreak of 
hostilities appeared imminent. At the close 
of the year the submission of the Khedive of 
Egypt to the ultimatum of Turkey was an- 
nounced. (See EGYPT.) 

The celebrated constructor of the Suez Canal, 
Ferdinand de Lesseps, is meditating another 
project, equally grand in its conception, and 
which, if carried out, cannot fail to have, like- 
wise, a great influence on the future destinies of 
the African Continent the conversion of the 
Desert of Sahara into a great inland sea. The 
plan is seriously studied and prepared, but no 
steps to its realization have yet been taken. 

Abyssinia has lost again the transient im- 
portance which the English expedition im- 
parted to it. Civil war again reigns supreme, 
and there appears to be no immediate prospect 
of the establishment of a strong and consoli- 
dated Abyssinian empire. The effects of the 
war were, however, still visible during the 
year in the production of a large number of 
able works, by English, German, and other 
scholars, which have greatly improved our 
knowledge of the people and the country, and 
facilitated the way for the establishment of a 
closer intercourse between Abyssinia and the 
civilized world. (For some interesting details 
of these literary researches, see ABYSSINIA.) 

An event which cannot fail to have a con- 
siderable influence upon the progress of civili- 
zation in Africa is, the conversion to Christi- 
anity of the Queen of Madagascar. For about 
half a century the rulers of this important 
island have been vacillating between Christi- 
anity and paganism, between civilization and 
barbaric isolation. Now the victory of Chris- 
tianity and civilization seems to have been for- 
ever decided. Paganism had long been under- 
mined, and was only upheld by the influence 
of the court. Now there is a rush of the civil 
officers of all classes, and of the leading men of 
the island, to solicit admission into the Chris- 
tian Church, and the utter collapse of pagan- 
ism is drawing near with remarkable celerity. 
Madagascar, with its five million inhabitants, 
will be the largest among the independent 
Christian states, the others being Abyssinia, 
Liberia, the Orange Free State, and the Trans- 
vaal Eepublic. (See MADAGASCAE.) 

In September the town of Bonny, on the coast 
of Western Africa, was almost wholly destroyed 
in a fight, lasting thirty-six hours, between 
two rival chiefs, Oko Jumbo and Ja Ja. These 
native conflicts are becoming much more sangui- 
nary than formerly, because the parties are 
supplying themselves largely from the Euro- 
peans with guns, rifles, and munitions of war. 
Under the treaty between Great Britain and 
the king and chiefs of Bonny, they undertake 
not to go to war so long as they are indebted 
to the merchants trading for goods, under the 
penalty of a fine of two hundred puncheons of 



AGRICULTURE. 



palm-oil (worth about six thousand pounds), 
besides all damages and expenses. This is the 
only safeguard white men have against a dis- 
turbance like the present becoming most dis- 
astrous. 

The population of Africa is estimated, by 
the best authorities, at about one hundred and 
eighty-eight millions. A real census of the 
population is only made in the European colo- 
nies, and even there it is, in most cases, based, 
not upon an actual count, but upon taxes and 
hearths. In the dependencies of Turkey noth- 
ing but estimates are made ; only Egypt has 
taken a few censuses, but the method of taking 
them has inspired but little confidence in their 
accuracy. As to the interior, the vague state- 
ments of travellers are the only source of our 
information. This source has, of late, how- 
ever, become much more abundant than in 
former years. If we do not know yet the ac- 
tual number of the population, we already 
have a tolerably trustworthy picture of the 
density of the population in the different sec- 
tions of the country. The densest population 
is to be found on the land-girdle encircling the 
Gulf of Guinea. The territory to the north of 
this girdle is but thinly settled, even Nubia, 
Kordofan, Taka, and Abyssinia, not excepted. 
In the countries of the Gallas, and the shores 
of the White Nile, the population is again 
more numerous; farther south, down to So- 



fala, the population again declines ; Livingstone 
found it on the Zambesi small in comparison 
with what the country would be able to sup- 
port. British Kaffraria has about twenty-two 
men to a square mile, but the southern ex- 
tremity of Africa is, again, thinly peopled. 
Only on the Cunene we again find an increase 
in the density of the population, which from 
there increases steadily in Benguela, Angola, 
up to the equator. 

AGRICULTURE. The necessity of issuing 
the ANNUAL CYCLOPAEDIA early in the year 
succeeding that whose date it bears, renders it 
impossible to obtain accurate and complete 
returns of the crops of the preceding year, 
agricultural statistics being always very slow 
of collection. We are compelled, therefore, in 
this, as in the last volume, to give the complete 
returns of the year before the last in a con- 
densed form, which have just been published 
by the Agricultural Department, and then to 
make our estimates of the principal crops for 
1869 from the data furnished by the monthly 
reports. This is the less to be regretted, be- 
cause these monthly reports have now attained 
to such a measure of accuracy as to approxi- 
mate with sufficient nearness to the official re- 
turns, to answer all practical purposes. The 
final returns of the principal crops for 1868, 
and the comparative crops of 1860 and 1867, 
were as follows : 



CROPS. 


1860. 


1867. 


1868. 


Value of Crops of 1863. 


Corn .... 


. . . . . . bushels .... 


838,792,740 
173,104,924 
21,101,380 
172,643,185 
15,825,898 
17,571,818 
111,148,867 
434,209,461 
19,083,896 
5,387,052 
60,264,913 


768,320,000 
217,875,400 
23,490,000 
275,098,000 
25,727,000 
21,359,000 
67,783,000 
323,724,000 
26,277,000 
2,300,000 
112,000,000 


906,527,000 
224,036,600 
22,504,800 
254,960,800 
22,896,100 
19,863,700 
106,090,000 
320,382,000 
26,141,900 
2,500,000 
104,000,000 


$569,512,460 
319,195,290 
28,683,677 
142,484,910 
29,809,931 
20,814,315 
84,150,040 
40,081,942 
351,941,930 
225,000,000 
51,500,000 


Wheat .... 




Eve . . . 




Oats 




Barley 




Buckwheat . 




Potatoes 




Tobacco 


pounds 


Hay........ 
Cotton 
Wool 


tons 
. bales of 400 pounds 
pounds 


Aggregate value of principal crc 


ps in 1868 


$1,862,674,495 





How much should be added for the crops 
of sugar (cane, sorghum, maple, and beet-root), 
honey, and wax, peas, beans, rice, hemp, flax, 
hops, sweet potatoes, beets, turnips, parsnips, 
squashes, melons, cucumbers, onions, silk, 
fruits of all kinds, and dairy products, is, of 
course, a matter of conjecture ; but, basing our 
estimates on the census of 1860, with the 
known increase in many particulars, both in 
quantity and price, we are satisfied that 



$400,000,000 is not an over-estimate, which 
would give for agricultural products, aside 
from live-stock, or the meat and skins, of 
slaughtered animals, $2,262,674,495 as the 
agricultural productions of the year 1868. 

The following table shows the number, 
average price, and total value, of the domestic 
animals in the United States, in February, 1869, 
together with the number of cattle, sheep, and 
swine, in Great Britain and Ireland, in 1868 : 



LIVE-STOCK IN UNITED STATES, FEBRUARY, 18G9. 


Number. 


Average Price. 


Total Value. 


Cattle, etc., in Great BriW 
am and Ireland in 1868. 


Horses 


6,332,793 
921,662 
9,247,714 
12,185,385 
37,724,279 
23,316,476 


$84 16 
106 74 
39 11 
25 12 
2 17 
6 26 


$533,024,787 
98,386,359 
361,752,676 
306,211,473 
82,139,979 
146,188,755 




Mules and Asses 




Milch Cows 


3,625,137 
5,458,279 
35,607,812 
3.189,167 




Sheep 


Swine 


Total value of live-stock in United States 


$1,527,704,020 





AGRICULTUEE. 



We now proceed with our usual summary 
of the crops of 1869. 

Wheat. The crop was in most sections 
better than in 1868, and a large acreage was 
sown. Had the spring-wheat been equal to 
the winter-wheat, the crop would have been 
unprecedented; but floods in some sections in- 
jured the spring- wheat seriously, and the long 
wet season caused it to smut and to lodge. 
The average improvement on the previous 
year is 11 per cent., and some of the great 
wheat States do even better than this. The 
aggregate cannot vary greatly from 260,000,000 
bushels. 

The Corn crop was in some of the largest 
corn-growing States very much below that of 
1868. A greater breadth was sown, and some 
of the new States and Territories raised larger 
quantities than ever before. We put this crop 
at 846,000,000 bushels.' 

Eye was on the average about six per cent, 
better than in 1868, and did not vary much 
from the crop of 1867. We estimate it at 
23,850,000 bushels. 

Oats were materially better, both in quantity 
and quality, than in 1868, averaging 16 per 
cent, advance in quantity, and a considerably 
greater weight. We estimate the crop at 
295,750,000 bushels. 

Barley is never a large crop, and its use for 
malting purposes is decreasing, from the sub- 
stitution of cheap sugars. Still we have every 
year imported considerable quantities from 
Europe. The crop of 1869 was about 12 per 
cent, better than that of 1868, amounting to 
25,640,000 bushels. 

JBitcfcwheatwas worse than in 1868 by about 
7 per cent., and the crop did not probably ex- 
ceed 18,400,000 bushels. 

The yield of Potatoes was large, but the 
quality was not so good as the previous year. 
We estimate the crop at 114,600,000 bushels. 

Tobacco fell off slightly from the high aver- 
age of the previous year. The yield is esti- 
mated at 319,377,000 pounds. 

The Hay crop has varied but little for three 
years past. It approximates very closely to 
that of 1867, being not less than 26,250,000 
tons'. 

The Cotton crop was larger than in any year 
since 1860, amounting to not less than 2,700,- 
000 commercial bales, of 466.8 Ibs. average 
weight, or fully 3,000,000 bales of 400 Ibs. 

The Root crops generally were large as 
were also the melons, squash, pumpkin, and 
cucumber crops and of excellent quality. 

Of Fruits, the small fruits, owing to the wet 
and cool season, were not as plentiful or of as 
good quality as usual. Grapes were abundant, 
and generally of fine quality. Peaches were 
very plentiful, but not quite as large as usual. 
Apples were not abundant, but of good quality. 
Pears were of fine size and flavor, and mod- 
erately plentiful. Of most other fruits there 
was a deficiency. 
The Hop crop was not so large as the pre- 



vious year, but of better quality, and com- 
manded somewhat better prices. 

Wool is still laboring under a considerable 
degree of depression, but there are indications 
of improvement. The failure of several heavy 
manufacturers of woollen goods, early in the 
year, and the very low price at which foreign 
wools were thrown upon the market, have 
contributed to increase the discouragement of 
the wool-growers, but these difficulties are 
now receding, and a considerable number of 
new woollen mills have been put in operation, 
especially on the Pacific coast. The price of 
wool in the later months of 1869 advanced 
slightly, but at the close of the year there was 
again a declension in price. The entire wool 
product of the year, including both the clip 
and pulled wool, did not probably exceed 
100,000,000 pounds, of which nearly one-fifth 
was grown on the Pacific coast. 

The Wine product of the year was very 
large, and every year increases it. The Cali- 
fornia vineyards produced nearly ten million 
gallons, aside from the large quantity of spu- 
rious wines which, we are sorry to say, are 
manufactured in San Francisco ; and the vine- 
yards on the Hudson River, on the shores of 
Seneca and Crooked Lakes, on Lake Erie, at 
Cincinnati and its vicinity, and in Missouri, 
have added not less than six million gallons 
more to the supply. A considerable amount of 
brandy is also distilled from these wines. 

The production of flax and hemp has fallen 
off of late years. Flax is grown largely for the 
seed, but the greater part of the lint is wasted, 
because jute, a greatly inferior but easily manu- 
factured fibre, can be imported more cheaply 
than the flax can be produced. Less than one- 
fourth of the quantity of hemp is now grown 
in Kentucky and Missouri which was produced 
there in 1860, because manilla and other 
Eastern fibres can be imported more cheaply 
than hemp can be raised. 

The number of Hogs slaughtered for the 
pork-packing trade up to March 1, 1869, were 
about 2,400,000, against 2,781,180 the previous 
year, a falling off of 14 per cent., caused largely 
by the prevalence of hog-cholera, and perhaps 
influenced to a slight extent by the alarm in 
regard to the presence of trichinae and the 
germs of tape-worm in pork. 

We give below two tables : the first showing 
the number of acres devoted to each of the 
principal crops in the United States in 1867 
and 1868 (the acreage for 1869 will not be 
made up for several months to come), and the 
space devoted to the same crops, or a part of 
them, in Great Britain and Ireland, together 
with the average yield per acre of each crop, 
and its average value per acre, in the United 
States ; the second giving the average yield of 
farm products to the acre in each State in 1868, 
and the average value of all crops per acre in 
each State the same year. This last table will 
be an excellent guide to the comparative value 
of farming-lands in different States. 



AGEICULTUKE. 



PRODUCTS. 


No. of Acres, 

18C7. 


No. of Acres, 

1868. 


y 
in 
i 


Average value of 
farm products per 
acre in the United 
States. 


.3.3 

i 

<> a 

* 


y 
1 


Indian Corn, or Maize 


32,529,249 


34,887,246 


Bu*Mi. 
25.9 


$16.32 




Busheli. 


Wheat 


18,321,561 


18,460,132 


12.1 


17.29 


3,951,018 


36 




1,889,175 


1,651,321 


13.6 


17.37 


54,827 






10,746,416 


9,665,736 


26.3 


14.74 


4,469,387 


65 




1,131,217 


937,438 


24.4 


31.79 


2,348,068 


38 




1,227,826 


1,113,933 


17.8 


18.68 






Potatoes 


1,192,195 


1,131,552 


93.7 


74.36 


1,584,213 






494,333 


427,189 


751 Ibs. 


93.82 






Hay... ...... 


20,020,554 


21,541,573 


1.21 tons. 


16.33 


5,690,318 




Cotton 


7,000,000 


7,000,000 


160.7 Ibs. 


32.14 




















Total . . 


94,343,326 


96,816,240 











TABLE SHOWING THE AVERAGE CASH VALUE OF FARM PRODUCTS PER ACRE FOR THE 

YEAR 1868. 



STATES. 

m 


j 


i 
I 


1 

A 


1 


1 

1 


1 

k 

1 
M 





Tobacco. 


i 


S-3 

B. 

gS/3 
<) 


Maine 


$41 12 


$24 00 


$24 15 


$18 04 


$20 28 


$22 08 


$101 40 




$12 24 


$16 72 


New Hampshire. . 


50 05 


28 31 


20 22 


20 14 


31 75 


18 60 


93 72 




13 50 


18 03 


Vermont 


51 59 


36 16 


21 16 


22 50 


33 12 


13 44 


81 00 




14 79 


19 54 


Massachusetts . . . 
Khode Island .... 


48 84 
44 55 


37 20 
31 46 


26 72 
30 71 


21 69 
21 56 


31 35 
36 80 


14 25 
19 89 


107 88 
108 07 


$299 00 


25 16 
22 40 


29 96 
32 70 


Connecticut 


45 90 


31 00 


21 46 


22 71 


25 20 


21 84 


106 47 


862 50 


19 83 


24 79 


New York 


35 84 


30 36 


20 68 


19 24 


38 09 


19 89 


71 44 


100 00 


15 00 


21 49 


New Jersey 


37 12 


29 32 


20 25 


15 45 


35 49 


21 37 


94 09 


73 50 


26 60 


28 46 


Pennsylvania .... 
Delaware 


35 00 
21 25 


25 34 

22 80 


17 42 

9 38 


17 79 
4 80 


35 09 

29 28 


17 98 

25 00 


81 84 
75 00 


66 00 
54 00 


21 60 
25 00 


23 58 
14 91 




24 09 


21 31 


16 33 


11 52 


28 67 


22 44 


87 42 


60 48 


21 46 


21 16 


Virginia 


14 66 


15 96 


9 79 


9 g| 


15 00 


18 03 


54 76 


66 55 


15 Rft 


16 59 


North Carolina. . . 
South Carolina. . . 
Georgia. . 


11 15 
10 20 
11 55 


11 80 
12 60 
12 32 


9 54 
7 90 
11 73 


8 45. 
8 24 
9 87 


19 50 
17 10 

qq qo 


12 94 


67 64 
156 55 
150 96 


109 71 
85 00 
175 50 


18 75 
16 15 
21 QO 


13 92 
10 93- 
12 13 


Florida . . 


14 80 


24 75 


17 50 


11 50 


28 60 




moo 


148 40 


21 00 


15 50 


Alabama 
Mississippi . . . . 


9 28 
12 65 


12 07 
19 92 


9 80 
20 68 


10 29 
15 45 


18 48 
14 00 




92 11 
94 25 


158 48 
260 73 


32 00 

01 0* 


9 97 

tq -17 


Louisiana ........ 


16 50 


18 25 


21 85 


24 00 






283 50 


210 00 


90 00 


17 30 


Texas 


15 50 


13 50 


18 76 


23 94 


23 76 




91 50 


149 12 


12 50 


16 11 


Arkansas 


19 21 


27 00 


14 09 


18 00 


23 10 




83 16 


104 40 


20 00 


20 18 


Tennessee 


12 39 


12 40 


11 25 


10 96 


26 16 


13 79 


54 75 


133 66 


-iq qy 


U4-8 


West Virginia 
Kentucky 


26 25 
15 36 


20 11 
15 81 


16 59 
14 03 


12 59 
10 56 


31 99 
26 72 


22 01 
18 45 


62 10 
53 60 


104 48 
89 53 


18 75 
16 82 


22 19 
17 20 


Missouri 


17 27 


20 86 


17 76 


14 14 


42 10 


17 81 


81 00 


89 94 


15 40 


17 92 




14 70 


13 80 


15 06 


12 44 


35 08 


17 76 


57 51 


68 88 


14 00 


14 52 


Indiana 


17 68 


16 80 


15 79 


12 19 


32 18 


18 33 


66 00 


74 02 


UQY 


17 01 


Ohio 


20 40 


21 45 


15 50 


14 50 


33 07 


18 51 


66 36 


61 86 


17 Q4. 


20 10 


Michigan 


25 08 


20 50 


19 72 


15 05 


36 34 


15 90 


52 64 


231 00 


18 75 


21 00 


Wisconsin 


19 14 


13 00 


16 74 


15 68 


32 40 


14 98 


55 44 


150 00 


i q on 


UR4- 


Minnesota 


21 44 


12 45 


14 00 


17 28 


28 50 


19 98 


92 11 


140 00 


980 


Ua<) 


Iowa 


13 69 


13 77 


16 15 


11 55 


32 24 


18 06 


60 48 


178 25 


q hr. 


1090 


Kansas. . . . 


17 82 


21 06 


2] 42 


14 25 


22 54 


2 22 


79 90 


143 00 


noq 


1 S R2 


Nebraska 


15 80 


14 88 


18 30 


16 41 


35 25 


14 I 9 


69 30 


115 50 


10 09 


1 c q^ 


California 


45 00 


20 60 


19 60 


21 00 


28 84 


18 00 


50 40 




iq q^ 


OO QK 


























The diseases among cattle and live-stock 
generally have not been as prevalent as in 1868. 
There has been, however, in the West a con- 
siderable amount of the Spanish, or, as Prof. 
Gamgee calls it, "splenic fever," and it seems 
to be traced to the Texas cattle. Just at the 
close of the year a disease, bearing resem- 
blance to rinderpest, made its appearance 
in some of the Hudson Eiver counties of 
New York, but has not as yet spread to any 



extent. Notice has been sent to our Govern- 
ment by some of our consuls in Europe of the 
existence there of a new disease of cattle, 
known as "the foot and mouth disease," con- 
tagious and debilitating, but not generally fatal, 
and precautions have been taken to prevent 
its introduction here. The "hog cholera" 
has greatly diminished in its prevalence, and 
severity, but still destroys a considerable num- 
ber of swine. The treatment of the foot-rot 



8 



AGRICULTURE. 



in sheep with the cresylic foot-dip, a cheap 
oarbolic-acid soap, has proved effectual wher- 
ever it has been tried. 

Considerable attention has been paid to the 
testing of new fibrous vegetables, not so much 
for the making of woven fabrics as for the 
supply of material for making paper, though 
both have been considered in the investigations 
which have taken place. The new demands 
for paper, not only for books and newspapers, 
but for collars, and cuffs, for stereotyping, for 
papier mache goods of all kinds, for boats, the 
Avails of houses, for roofing and sheathing pur- 
poses, as a substitute for leather, etc., etc., 
have quite outrun the old supply of material 
for it, raised the price of rags so high as to 
make them too costly for the paper-maker's 
use, and compelled him to turn to other fibrous 
materials for the production of this indispen- 
sable article. Straw and husks answer a very 
tolerable purpose for binders' boards, and the 
coarser papers generally, but the paper made 
from them is too brittle and tender, and often 
too variable in color, for many purposes. The 
bamboo, the giant rush or cane of the Southern 
coast, the large maha or mallow of the Jersey 
swamps, basswood shavings, and a variety of 
other articles, have been used. All these will 
make paper, and most of them paper of good 
quality ; but the- practical question is, can they 
be furnished in sufficient quantity, and at a 
price sufficiently low, to make paper-making 
profitable? The English paper-makers have 
been using for some years past a fibrous grass, 
known as esparto grass, growing upon the 
barren heath-lands of Spain, and gathered by 
the poor there. There are two genera of this, 
the true and the bastard A tocha, known botan- 
ically as Macrochloa tenacissima, and Lygeutn 
spartum. This material makes an excellent 
paper, and the English manufacturers con- 
sumed, in 1868, 95,000 tons of it. At first it 
was used in connection with rags, but after 
a time it was found to make better paper 
alone ^ than with rags, and the process was 
materially simplified. The present duty on 
the esparto grass prohibits its importation 
here at such a price as would make it profit- 
able; but an effort, which promises to be 
successful, has been made to encourage its 
growth on the waste and sandy lands of the 
sea-coast in the Southern States, which are 
now unimproved, but are well adapted to the 
crop. Meantime, attention has been attracted 
to a species of grass found abundantly in river- 
bottoms and marshy lands, especially in the 
Mississippi Valley. It is called marsh or cord 
grass, and, by the botanists, Spartina cynosu- 
roides. It can be mowed in September or 
October, and brought to a market near at hand 
for about five dollars a ton. There are no joints 
in the stalk, and experts pronounce it a better 
fibre for paper than the esparto. A Mr. Wood- 
ruff, a paper-manufacturer of Quincy, Illinois, 
has used many hundred tons of it for making 
a fine quality of wrapping-paper, and has 



recently changed his mill into a print and 
book p*aper-mill, in which he purposes using 
this stock only. On the Pacific coast the 
manufacturers are beginning to utilize the tule 
rushes for the same purpose. Still more 
recently, the paper-makers of the Atlantic 
States have been making experiments to ascer- 
tain the practicability of using the okra-plant 
for paper-making. Its fibre is sufficiently 
strong to answer the purpose, and it is con- 
tended that it will yield such immense quan- 
tities to the acre, that it will prove a profitable 
crop to cultivate for paper pulp. For this 
purpose, as well as for the production of fibres 
for cordage and for bagging, it has been pro- 
posed to bring cargoes of the textile fibre 
(Bromelia syhestris) from the Isthmus of 
Tehuantepec ; or of some of the agaves, from 
Yucatan, Campeachy, or the Mexican coast. 
The fibrous portions of these may be easily 
extracted, and they cost little besides the trans- 
portation. From some of these sources, or 
those indicated in previous volumes of the 
AMERICAN ANNUAL CYCLOPAEDIA, it is probable 
that an ample supply of material for paper- 
manufacture will be obtained. 

FISH-CULTURE has made great progress in 
most of the Eastern States within a few years 
past, and in every State on the Atlantic slope 
there are numerous ponds and hatching-houses 
for the rearing of brook and lake trout, salmon, 
whitefish, black bass, etc., while the rivers are 
fast becoming better stocked with the finny 
tribes. An effort is now making to introduce 
the system of oyster cultivation which has 
proved so successful and profitable in France. 
The whole business of oyster-planting on our 
coasts has been conducted in a careless, waste- 
ful, hap-hazard way, which has involved a great 
loss of the valuable bivalves from overcrowding, 
silting over, and the needless destruction of mill- 
ions of the spat or embryo oysters ; and, though 
the oysters of the American coast are the finest 
in the world, a few more years of the reckless 
mismanagement of past years would enhance 
their value above the means of the common 
people. Oyster-breeding is a very simple and 
easily-acquired art, and the oyster is so pro- 
lific, two million ova being often found in a 
single female at the breeding-season, that 
there is no difficulty with ordinary care in ob- 
taining a largely-remunerative crop. About 
three years are required to bring the oyster 
to perfection, but, by planting them in suc- 
cessive years, there can be always an ample 
crop each year after the first is ready for the 
market. 

The culture of the beet for sugar, though not 
proving so successful as was expected, at Chats- 
worth, Illinois, owing to the lack of skilled work- 
men, or some other cause, has been taken up 
and prosecuted largely and with most admir- 
able results, in Wisconsin, in California, where 
it bids fair to attain a great success, and be- 
come a leading article among the agricultural 
products of that fertile State, and in New Jer- 



AGRICULTURE. 



9 



sey, where some of the light and sandy loams 
have proved well adapted to the production of 
a superior quality of the white sugar-beet. It 
will doubtless become in a few years one of 
our most valuable articles of produce. The 
methods of extracting, reducing, and clarifying 
the syrup, have been much cheapened and sim- 
plified within a year or two past, and there 
seems to be no good reason why beet-sugar 
should not be produced as cheaply as that from 
the cane. The rearing and feeding of silk- 
worms, and the sale of their eggs and cocoons, 
are becoming a very considerable business, and 
will hasten the period now fast approaching 
when the silk consumed in this country shall 
be wholly manufactured here. California is 
admirably adapted for silk culture, and is em- 
barking in it extensively. She is already ex- 
porting very largely both of silk-worms' eggs 
and cocoons, and her cocoons command the 
highest prices of any in the world. The silk- 
worm is not affected with disease there, nor is 
it killed by the thunder-storms which prove so 
fatal in Europe. 

The Agricultural Colleges and agricultural 
departments of previously-existing colleges, es- 
tablished under the agricultural land-grants of 
Congress, have not as yet achieved the suc- 
cess which was expected of them. This has 
resulted from several causes : there were, previ- 
ously to the establishment of these institutions, 
no schools in this country in which a thorough 
training in many branches of agricultural sci- 
ence could be acquired, and the European ag- 
ricultural schools and colleges were intended 
to supply intelligent agriculturists for a dif- 
ferent climate, soil, and circumstances, and 
the sudden demand for so many agricultural 
professors could not readily be met by men 
competent for the work which they under- 
took. There has been also a great degree of 
ignorance on the part of many of the trustees 
of these institutions of what was required for 
an agricultural college. The model farms have 
been very far from what ordinary farms could 
or should be made ; and the whole course of 
instruction lacked clearness and definiteness 
of purpose. There are, in all, twenty-one 
of these colleges or collegiate departments or- 
ganized, and in a few of them there is the 
prospect of a better state of things ; but, as 
most of them are at present constituted, we 
believe the young man who aspires to become 
a skilful and successful farmer would do better 
to hire himself out, at no matter what wages, 
for three years, to some clear-headed, intelli- 
gent farmer, and learn by actual experience 
the practical value of his plans of farming, 
studying meanwhile at all intervals of leisure 
those sciences which have a direct bearing up- 
on agriculture. He would in this way acquire 
fewer theories, but more and better practical 
knowledge. A very important question to 
agriculturists and those intending to become 
farmers is, how long it will be possible to ob- 
tain land at any reasonable price. Already in 



most, even of the newer States, the Government 
lands, except the most sterile and worthless, 
are already taken up, and farming lands ad- 
vantageously situated are not to be obtained 
below ten, fifteen, or twenty dollars the acre. 
The tendency to accumulate large landed es- 
tates is greatly on the increase; and farms, 
ranches, or estates, of from 50,000 to 300,000 
acres are by no means uncommon in the re- 
gions west of the Mississippi River and on the 
Pacific slope. It is not too much to believe, 
what is roundly asserted by many of the most 
intelligent land-owners at the West, that by the 
year 1900 there will be no Government lands 
worth having (except perhaps in Alaska) to be 
purchased, and that no good farming-lands will 
be purchasable under a hundred dollars per acre 
in our vast domain. There is, indeed, a large 
amount as yet professedly unsold ; but of this 
the greater part is as yet unsurveyed, though 
its available tracts are staked for preemption, 
location with land- warrants, or under the 
homestead act, or destined to be secured by 
some of the land-grant railroad companies, or 
set apart for educational or charitable pur- 
poses. Vast tracts, too, especially in the Rocky 
Mountain and Pacific regions consist of moun- 
tain-summits, or desert and uninhabitable lands, 
like the bad lands (mauvaises terres} of Ne- 
braska and Dakota, or covered with extensive 
lakes like much of Minnesota and Wisconsin, or 
great masses of primitive rock. Mr. Ezra Cor- 
nell, the wealthy and shrewd founder of Cor- 
nell University, though employing for three 
years past one of the best land-buyers in the 
West, and expending money very freely to 
secure good opportunities for locating land- 
warrants, has found it impossible to locate the 
whole amount of the agricultural land-grant 
of New York (990,000 acres) advantageously, 
and is still securing lands wherever he can 
find those which are available for his pur- 
pose. The farmer who has ample capital, and 
farms on a large scale, with the improved 
methods of ploughing, cultivating, sowing, reap- 
ing, mowing, thrashing, and packing his prod- 
ucts by machinery, driven by steam or other 
motive power, has greatly the advantage of 
the small farmer, and can reckon up his profits 
each year by scores of thousands of dollars ; 
this style of farming may be expected there- 
fore almost wholly to monopolize agriculture 
as it is already doing manufacturing, commerce, 
mining, and trade. This tendency to land mo- 
nopoly is a great evil ; for land differs from 
other descriptions of property in giving to its 
owner a greater measure of independence, as 
well as a more permanent interest in the na- 
tional welfare. Especially is this the case in 
a country where suffrage is free. Were every 
voter a landholder, our legislation would be far 
more thoughtful and judicious than it now is. 
A nation, the large overwhelming majority of 
whose voters are dependent upon others, and 
have no tie binding them to the soil, is on the 
high-road to ruin. 



10 



ALABAMA. 



ALABAMA. During this year there was 
no election for State officers held, except in 
one or two districts, to fill vacancies in the 
Legislature. On the first Tuesday in August 
there was held an election for representatives 
to the Forty-first Congress, resulting in the 
choice of Messrs. Buck, Buckley, Heflin, and 
Hays, the Republican candidates in the first, 
second, third, and fourth districts respectively ; 
and Dox and Sherrod, Democrats, in the fifth 
and sixth districts respectively. 

In December, 1868, a resolution was passed 
by the Legislature, directing the Executive to 
initiate proceedings for the annexation of the 
territory of Western Florida. Accordingly 
Governor Smith appointed three commission- 
ers, who, in May, met three commissioners 
appointed by the Governor of Florida, and 
terms were agreed upon for the proposed 
transfer. The leading features of the contract 
are as follows : 1. It conveys to the State of 
Alabama jurisdiction over all the country west 
of the Appalachicola Eiver. 2. It vests the 
State with a title to all the lands belonging to 
the State of Florida west of the Appalachicola, 
which are estimated at over two million acres, 
and are supposed to be of the average value of 
$1.25 per acre ; and with the right to five per 
cent, of the proceeds of the sale of public lands. 
It is provided that these lands shall continue 
subject to the trusts imposed by the act of Con- 
gress donating them. 3. The contract requires 
that the State of Alabama shall issue its bonds 
in favor of the State of Florida for $1,000,000, 
payable in thirty years and bearing eight per 
cent, interest ; and that two railroads, radiating 
from Pensacola, one in the direction of Appa- 
lachicola, and the other in the direction of 
Pollard, shall receive the benefit of the indorse- 
ment law of the State of Alabama, approved 
September 22, 1868, and entitled "An Act to 
amend the law to establish a system of internal 
improvement in the State of Alabama." If 
this contract is consummated, it will add to the 
State of Alabama the eight counties of West 
Florida, which are represented to have con- 
tained, in 1867, a white population of 17,813, 
and a black population of 8,858, and paid a 
revenue to the State of $31,245.92. By the 
adoption of the contract, Alabama will acquire 
about 10,000 square miles (6,400,000 acres) of 
territory, with a water front on the Gulf of 
Mexico of about 180 miles, including the har- 
bors of Pensacola, St. Joseph, St. Andrews, 
and Appalachicola. The harbor of Pensacola 
is unquestionably the best on the Gulf of Mex- 
ico, as it affords a safe anchorage, and an en- 
trance for vessels drawing twenty-four feet of 
water. The question was submitted to a popular 
vote on the 2d of November, in those counties 
of Florida to be transferred. There were 
1,162 votes cast in favor of annexation to 
Alabama, and 661 against it. 

Before taking effect, it is provided that the 
agreement shall be approved by the Legisla- 
tures of both States and by Congress. 



On the 2d of June an Immigration Con- 
vention met at Montgomery to adopt meas- 
ures for the encouragement of immigration 
into the State. A committee of five was ap- 
pointed to prepare an address to the people of 
the United States and of Europe, setting forth 
the advantages offered by the State, and the 
true feeling of the people toward immigrants 
from any and all sections. After stating the 
agricultural, mineral, commercial, manufac- 
turing, and railway advantages, the address 
concludes : 

But, one and all, this convention of the State of 
Alabama declares with no dissentient voice : 

1. That all new population, from whatever country 
or section, coming among us to aid in the recuper- 
ation and development of our material interests, is 
heartily and honestly welcome. 

2. That all latitude of opinion, thought, and ex- 
pression, will be found to obtain among us ; and that 
neither nationality, sect, nor political views, will be 
found to injure any man in his business interests, or 
subject him to social annoyance in any degree far 
less to cause him the least danger or any outrage 
whatever. 

3. That any and all immigrants, who come from 
any point whatever for the purpose of aiding their 
own material interests and, through them, ot bene- 
fiting the State at large not only meet encourage- 
ment, but hearty welcome, and every facility we can 
offer. 

Exertions have been made during the year 
to connect Northern and Southern Alabama 
by means of the South and North Alabama 
Eailroad, the charter of which provides for its 
extension from Montgomery to Decatur. On 
the 16th of February the Board of Directors 
met and elected ex-Governor R. M. Patton as 
president, vice John Whiting, deceased. Under 
the contract, closed in April, work was to be 
commenced at Montgomery, and the road 
completed to Lime Kiln by the 1st of October, 
1870, to Elyton by the 1st of April, 1871, and 
to Decatur by the 1st of December, 1871. 
The contracting parties are to receive for build- 
ing the road, in round numbers, $5,014,000. 
One-fourth of this amount is payable in State 
indorsed bonds, and the remainder is pay- 
able in cash so far as the remaining in- 
dorsed State bonds, the city bonds, and the 
the three per cent, fund, will go. If the cash 
realized from these sources does not complete 
the payment, the remainder is payable in 
second-mortgage bonds at 66f cents, converti- 
ble into stock within ten years. 

On the 1st of December a meeting of the 
stockholders of this road was held, and F. M. 
Gilmer, Jr., elected president for the ensuing 
year. During the year there has been fair 
progress in the construction of the Montgomery 
and Eufaula and the Montgomery and Selma 
railroads. The latter road runs along the 
southern bank of the Alabama River to Selma, 
there connecting with roads to Vicksburg, 
Memphis, Rome, Dalton, etc., and will estab- 
lish a continous railroad line between the Mis- 
sissippi and the Atlantic. 

The Executive, in his message to the Legis- 
lature, having called the attention of that body 



ALABAMA. 



11 



to the policy of railroad management, whereby 
there was an unjust discrimination between 
the through and local freight tariffs, operating 
to the prejudice of Alabama merchants, a con- 
vention of the officers of the various railroad 
companies in the State was held at Mont- 
gomery on the 6th of November, and a com- 
mittee appointed to confer with a joint com- 
mittee of the Legislature for the adoption of a 
plan securing the best interests of the State. 

In accordance with the law requiring the 
indorsement of railroad bonds by the State to 
the amount of $16,000 per mile, indorsements 
from September, 1868, to the meeting of the 
Legislature, November 15, 1869, were made as 
follows : 

For the Alabama and Chattanooga Railroad $1,800,000 
For the Montgomery and Eufaula Railroad 480,000 
For the Selma, and Marion, and Memphis 
Railroad.... 320,000 

$2,600,000 

The aggregate number of convicts in the 
penitentiary on the 15th of November was three 
hundred and seventy-four, of whom less than 
forty were mechanics, over two hundred were 
common laborers, and the balance farmers, 
cooks, barbers, waiters, etc. Under the lease 
made in 1866 with Messrs. Smith and McMillan, 
for the period of six years, they are authorized 
to employ the convicts anywhere in the State, 
in coal-fields, iron-mines, and in the building 
of railroads. The policy of employing the con- 
victs in this way seems to have been adopted 
mainly as a means of avoiding the expense that 
would have been entailed upon the State if 
they had remained within the prison. 

The finances of the State are in a sound con- 
dition. For the fiscal year ending September 
30th, the expenditures amounted to $1,412,- 
857.81, of which the sum of $380,453.39 was 
for expenses incurred during the previous 
year. The receipts from all sources during 
the year amounted to $686,451.02, which, with 
the balance in the treasury at the beginning 
of the year, made a total of $902,238. The 
surplus remaining in the treasury at the end 
of the fiscal year was $127,138.15. The pres- 
ent bonded indebtedness of the State amounts 
to $5,370,400, on which the annual interest 
amounts to $307,354. 

The school-lands in Nebraska given to Ala- 
bama, in exchange for the sixteenth sections 
embraced in the twelve miles square reserva- 
tion in this State, realized by sale $20,480. 

The eighth annual fair of the Alabama State 
Agricultural Society was held at Montgomery 
on the 23d to the 26th of November. The 
amount of the premiums exceeded $5,000, 
and the contributions in the various depart- 
ments were indicative of the general industrial 
prosperity of the State. 

The Legislature assembled at Montgomery 
on the 15th of November; Governor Smith 
submitted the usual message. After con- 
gratulating the Legislature on the favorable 



auspices under which it had assembled, he 
stated that the removal of political disabilities 
was a wise measure, and hoped that Congress 
would pass a general law for the removal of 
all those which were imposed by the four- 
teenth amendment; he spoke favorably of 
the freedmen in their exercise of the elective 
franchise, argued in favor of immigration as 
a means of developing the material resources 
of the State and advancing its prosperity, 
and recommended a repeal of the law requir- 
ing the indorsement by the State of railroad 
bonds to the amount of $16,000 per mile. 
He regarded the registration law as too com- 
plicated and too easily manipulated by de- 
signing men, and recommended a simplifica- 
tion of the system so as to provide against 
the abuses to which it was liable. A reduc- 
tion of the rate of taxation was recom- 
mended to one-half, or at most six-tenths of 
one per cent., instead of three-fourths of one 
per cent. He transmitted also, with his ap- 
proval, the fifteenth amendment to the Consti- 
tution of the United States. 

The Legislature at once proceeded to the 
consideration of this important measure, which 
was ratified by both Senate and House without 
delay. The vote in the Senate was yeas 24, 
nays none ; in the House it was yeas 69, nays 
16. A bill was presented for the reorgan- 
ization of the municipal government of Mobile. 
This bill provided for vacating the municipal 
offices of the city, and constituted the Lieu- 
tenant-Governor, the Speaker of the House, 
and the Attorney-General, a board of commis- 
sioners, whose duty it should be to appoint a 
mayor, twenty-four aldermen, and eight mem- 
bers of the Common Council. It was made the 
duty of the Executive immediately to commis- 
sion such appointees, who should continue in 
office until the election and qualification of 
their successors. It was further provided, that 
an election should be held in Mobile on the 
Tuesday after the first Monday in December, 
1870, and every year thereafter, for the election 
of municipal officers, who should hold office 
for one year, from the first of January next 
following their election. 

In consequence of the movements in the 
State during this year, in favor of immigration, 
considerable attention has been attracted to 
the material resources of Alabama. With ref- 
erence to its physical and industrial features, 
the State may be divided into five great divis- 
ions, viz. : The timber region, containing 11,000 
square miles; the cotton region, 11,500; the 
agricultural and manufacturing region, 8,700 ; 
the mineral region, 15,200 ; the stock and ag- 
ricultural region, 4,322. Total, 50,722 sq. miles. 

The timber region, bordering on the Gulf 
of Mexico and the State of Florida, extends 
across the southern portion of the State, and 
northwardly one hundred and thirty-two miles 
from the Gulf, and forty miles from the Florida 
line. This section, covered with forests of long- 
leaf yellow pine, yields excellent timber, tar, 



12 



ALABAMA. 



pitch, and turpentine. On the low lands along 
the rivers is found white, black, and Spanish 
oak, also bald and black cypress, the timber 
of which is noted for its durability. The soil, 
composed largely of sand and clay in its nat- 
ural condition, is best adapted to the cultivation 
of grapes, apples, peaches, and pears ; but, by 
manuring, may be made productive of cotton 
and corn. The mild climate and the natural 
pastures of the pine-forests afford unusual ad- 
vantages for profitable stock-rearing. Fish 
and oysters in great abundance are supplied 
from the waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the 
Bay of Mobile. This section is watered by the 
Alabama and Tombigbee rivers, and has good 
railroad facilities in all directions. It has long 
been a popular summer resort for families 
from all parts of the State. Land here is in- 
creasing in value, but good locations may be 
obtained at prices ranging from $1.50 to $4 
per acre. 

The cotton region joins the timber region 
on the north, and has a width of about one 
hundred and two miles on the western, and 
sixty miles on the eastern line of the State. 
This belt of land, interspersed with large 
prairies, with an unsurpassed climate, and 
having a stiff, black soil, remarkably rich, from 
two to twenty feet deep, is especially adapted 
to the cultivation of cotton, corn, and provi- 
sions, and is considered one of the most 
healthy and fertile agricultural tracts in the 
South. Its railroad and river facilities afford 
easy access to markets. Prior to the late 
war, this section was much sought after by 
planters, on account of its great advantages of 
soil and climate, and plantations commanded 
prices ranging from $30 to $50 per acre. Now, 
rich, cultivated plantations, convenient to 
rivers and railroads, may be obtained for from 
$5 to $10 per acre. This land will produce 
from fifty to sixty bushels of corn, or 800 to 
900 pounds of seed-cotton per acre. 

Immediately north of the cotton region 
lies the agricultural and manufacturing district, 
extending eastwardly and westwardly across 
the State, and having an average breadth of 
about thirty -five miles. The soil, being sandy, 
is poor; but there are numerous streams, 
affording good water-power for manufacturing 
purposes. This is a healthy section of country, 
and has good railroad facilities. 

The mineral region occupies the north- 
eastern corner of the State, extends in a 
southwesterly direction about 160 miles, and 
has an average width of about eighty rniles. 
In the southeastern corner of this section, 
white marble of remarkable brilliancy is 
found, some of it not inferior to Carrara marble, 
and lias been successfully worked. Soapstone, 
flagstones, graphite or plumbago, and granite, 
of good quality, are also quarried here. In 
this region there are three distinct coal-fields, 
covering an area of 4,000 square miles, namely, 
the Warrior, Cahawba, and Tennessee fields. 
The beds of these fields are from one to eight 



ALASKA. 

feet thick. The coal is bituminous, generally 
soft, and well adapted for generating steam, 
and for the manufacture of gas, coke, and 
iron. Near these coal-fields are extensive beds 
of limestone, sandstone, and iron-ore; the 
iron mines have been worked with good re- 
sults, the ores producing from 36 to 58 per 
cent, of metallic iron. There are also abun- 
dant materials, of good quality, for the manu- 
facture of bricks, lime, and millstones. In the 
mineral region are numerous fertile valleys, 
well adapted to the production of wheat, corn, 
and cotton, and the rearing of 'stock. Lands 
in the mineral district may be bought at prices 
ranging from 12-J- cents to $2 per acre. 

The stock and agricultural region occupies 
the northwestern portion of the State : its prod- 
ucts are cotton, corn, grains, grapes, and 
stock. The climate is mild and healthy, and 
the soil rich. Previous to the war, there were 
many valuable plantations here, and extensive 
stock-farms ; cultivated lands were valued at 
from $30 to $50 per acre. Present prices vary 
from $5 to $10 per acre. 

Alabama is a valuable timber country, which 
produces in abundance nearly every kind of 
useful timber. Besides the long-leaf yellow 
pine, there grow here the different varieties of 
oak white, red, black, Spanish, port-pin, and 
overcup ; also sweet and black gum, poplar, 
ash, walnut, hickory, locust, chestnut, red and 
white cedar, dogwood, maple, and elm. By 
its great advantages of soil and climate, Ala- 
bama has always held a high rank as an agri- 
cultural State ; and, from the above exhibit of 
its industrial resources, it will be seen that 
good advantages are offered to those wishing 
to engage in the raising of cotton, corn, or 
stock, fruits or vegetables ; making wine ; 
manufacturing cotton, iron, or lime; or sup- f 
plying coal, marble, or granite. 

ALASKA. As yet there has been little in- 
crease in the white population of this Territory, 
which is still under the military government 
of the United States. Time enough has not 
elapsed for the acquisition of much infor- 
mation in regard to its industrial resources. 
Our knowledge is confined mostly to its shores, 
comparatively little being known of the inte- 
rior. Since Alaska became a part of the Uni- 
ted States, an Anglo-Russian newspaper has 
been projected, and is carried on with success. 
It is reported that game abounds, but none 
except Indians hunt it. Ducks are abundant, 
and the grouse are of excellent flavor. There 
is a large variety of fish, of which the salmon 
is said to be most delicious; but no oysters 
have yet been discovered by the whites. Of 
shell-fish, there is the crab, enormously large, 
and whose sweetness increases with its size, 
the clam, and the muscle. During the past 
summer there was an abundance of berries, 
principally a berry called the salmon-berry, 
from its strong resemblance to the roe of that 
fish, both in color and in its collection of little 
globules like fish-eggs ; it is very palatable, 



ALASKA. 



13 



and lasts during nearly the whole summer. 
Cranberries are plentiful, and of excellent 
quality. The potatoes are small and watery ; 
cabbages will not generally head, while toma- 
toes and peas do not thrive. Corn, wheat, 
barley, oats, and such grains, will not ripen, 
as there is too little sunshine and too much 
rain. 

During this year Alaska has been visited by 
two distinguished observers, the accounts of 
whose observations materially differ. One of 
these, William H. Seward, arrived at Alaska 
in August, by way of the Portland Canal, 
passed through the Prince of Wales Arch- 
ipelago, Peril, and Chatham Straits, and Lynn 
Channel, up the Chilcat River to the base of 
Mount Fairweather, thence returning through 
Clarence Straits to Sitka. According to his 
account, given in a speech at Sitka in Au- 
gust, the skies were bright and serene, and, 
during his visit, there were more clear than 
cloudy days. The scenery of the southwestern 
coast was fall of grandeur. The Coast Range 
of mountains, which begins in Mexico, is con- 
tinued into the territory and "invades the 
seas of Alaska, rising to an exalted height, and 
clothed with eternal snow and crystalline gla- 
ciers." The plains between the mountains, 
as well as the sides of the mountains them- 
selves, almost to their summits, are covered 
with forests so dark and dense as to be im- 
penetrable, except to wild beasts and savage 
huntsmen. On the lowest intervale cotton- 
wood grows. The birch-tree sometimes ap- 
pears upon the river-side, upon the level above 
the cotton-wood, and is generally found a 
comely and stately tree. The forests of Alaska 
consist mainly of the pine, the cedar, the cy- 

Eress, the spruce, the fir, the larch, and the 
emlock. These forests begin almost at the 
water's edge, and they rise with regular gra- 
dation to a height of two thousand feet. The 
cedar, sometimes called the yellow cedar, on 
the coasts of the islands and rivers, attains an 
immense growth both in height and circum- 
ference. The cultivation of gardens, fields, 
and meadows, has been attempted by natives 
and soldiers with most encouraging results. 
The native grasses preserve their nutritive 
properties, and the climate is so mild that cat- 
tle and horses require but slight provision of 
shelter during the winter. There is reason to 
believe that, beyond the Coast Range of moun- 
tains in Alaska, there is an extension of the 
rich and habitable valley-lands of Oregon, 
Washington Territory, and British Columbia. 

In regard to the acimal productions of the 
forests, he says the elk and deer are so plenty 
as to be undervalued for food or skins by both 
natives and strangers. The bear of many fam- 
ilies, black,, grizzly, and cinnamon ; the moun- 
tain-sheep, inestimable for his fleece ; the wolf, 
the fox, the beaver, the otter, the mink, the 
raccoon, the marten, the ermine, the squirrel, 
gray, black, brown, and flying, are among the 
land fur-bearing animals. The furs thus found 



here have been the chief element for more 
than a century of the profitable commerce of 
the Hudson Bay Company. This fur-trade, 
together with the sea fur-trade within the Ter- 
ritory, was the sole basis of Eussian commerce, 
and the present supply of furs in Alaska is not 
diminished. It has not yet been proved that 
the supply of ice may be made a source of 
wealth, since it is obtained chiefly upon the 
small lakes and ponds ; and it is not yet ascer- 
tained that glacier ice is pure, and practical for, 
commerce. The range of hills, nearly two 
thousand feet high and thirty miles long, ex- 
tending along the Chilcat River, abounds in 
iron, while limestone and marble crop out on 
the banks of the same river, and in many other 
places. Coal-beds, accessible to navigation, 
are found on Kootznoo, but the concentrated 
resin in the coal renders it too inflammable to 
be used by steamers. What seems to be ex- 
cellent cannel-coal is also found in the Prince 
of Wales Archipelago. 

The natives are the only laborers at present 
in the Territory, the whites going there as 
traders and soldiers. Considering how greatly 
most of the tribes are reduced in numbers, and 
how precarious their vocations are, they are 
neither indolent nor incapable, but they are 
vigorous, energetic, docile, and gentle in their 
intercourse with the whites. The Indian tribes 
here must do as they have done in Washington 
Territory and British Columbia retreat before 
the advance of civilization. The citizens of 
Sitka are the pioneers the future population 
of Alaska. The resources of the Territory, its 
singularly-salubrious climate, and sublime sce- 
nery, must attract immigrants from our own 
States, Europe, and Asia. Such is Alaska, as 
seen by the ex-Secretary of State of the United 
States. 

The other account is by General George H. 
Thomas, the commander of the military dis- 
trict of the United States which embraces 
Alaska. His report of his observations in this 
Territory was made to the War Department, 
and dated at San Francisco on the 27th of Sep- 
tember. On the 22d of July he reached Sitka, 
formerly the headquarters of the Russian- 
American Fur Company, now the military 
headquarters of the Territory. According to 
General Thomas's report, the Indians are 
treacherous, warlike, and, until recently, dis- 
contented with the change of governments. 
It will be necessary, he thinks, to maintain a 
large garrison at Sitka to protect the traders 
from Indians, and to preserve order and good 
behavior among the whites and half-breeds. 

General Thomas left Sitka on the 25th of 
July, and arrived at Kenay, about one hun- 
dred miles up Cook's Inlet, on the 30th. This 
is the old Russian- American trading-post of 
St. Nicholas, and is now occupied by one com- 
pany of artillery. There is a village of Aleuts, 
numbering about two hundred, near by; an- 
other small village, a few. miles below; and a 
settlement of some half-dozen Russian families 



14 



ALASKA. 



thirty miles below. There are no other settle- 
ments, either white or Indian, near. On the 
eastern shore of the inlet, about sixty miles 
below Kenay, General Thomas examined a 
coal-deposit, and found in it a fine quality of 
cannel-coal, in veins of from four to eight feet 
thick. About twenty miles below this point 
another deposit was observed ; mining works 
were established here a few years ago by the 
Russian- American Fur Company, but were sub- 
sequently abandoned, because the coal proved 
to be comparatively worthless. On the 3d of 
August Kodiak was reached. Near this place, 
which is garrisoned by a company of artillery, 
is the establishment of the ice company which 
supplies San Francisco with ice, and it is the 
most southern point on the coast where ice 
can be produced with certainty. General 
Thomas did not think there was any necessity 
for the continuance of this post or the one at 
Kenay, but did not deem it wise to disturb 
them until regulations should be established to 
govern intercourse with the natives. On St. 
Paul's Island he found a post established to 
secure the enforcement of the law of Congress 
regulating the killing of seals, to support the 
revenue officers, and to preserve order on the 
islands. The revenue officers restrict the kill- 
ing of seals to the smallest number necessary 
for the maintenance of the natives. General 
Thomas was not favorably impressed with the 
moral condition of the Aleuts : " Though 
nearly all members of the Greek Church," he 
says, "they seem to have no control over 
their passion for ardent spirits, nor have they 
very correct ideas in regard to chastity; 
consequently the effects of contact with the 
stronger-willed Americans are apparent, as 
venereal diseases and scrofula are quite com- 
mon, and there are scarcely any, either male 
or female, who will not get intoxicated if they 
have the opportunity; almost the first thing 
they ask for is whiskey." He saw no evidence 
of dissipation among the people of Kenay and 
the islands of St. George and St. Paul, but was 
favorably impressed with their intelligence and 
honesty, and found many of the men skilled 
in mechanical arts. 

The fur-bearing seals, he reports, are found 
only on St. Paul and St. George's Islands, and 
are killed for their furs and oil. Here, from 
April to September or October, are seen im- 
mense numbers of these animals estimated at 
from five to fifteen millions lying in the rook- 
eries, and covering hundreds of acres. During 
the season between fall and spring they are 
not seen, nor is it known where they pass the 
winter. He thinks that legislation regulating 
the hunting and killing of these animals is ne- 
cessary, to prevent the destruction of the rook- 
eries; that with such legislation, and with a 
wholesome superintendence of the Indians and 
Aleuts, one garrison of two hundred or three 
hundred men, and a revenue-cutter, will be all 
the forces needed in Alaska. The fur-trade of 
the interior, on account of the fatigue and hard- 



ALLEN", CHARLES. 

ship attending it, will never be carried on by 
white men. He recommends that a mail-route 
be established between Port Townsend, Wash- 
ington Territory, and Sitka, touching at San 
Juan Island, Tongass, and Wrangle, all of which 
ports are immediately on the route to Sitka. 
In regard to the settlement of Alaska, General 
Thomas says: "I see no immediate prospect 
of the country being settled up. The climate 
is too rigid ; there is too much rain and too 
little sun for agricultural purposes. At most 
of the posts there are gardens, in which are 
raised radishes, turnips, lettuce, and other wa- 
tery vegetables, and fair potatoes, though they 
will not keep any time. The moisture of the 
climate is so great that these vegetables con- 
tinue to grow, but do not ripen. The same 
difficulty has attended all attempts to raise 
barley, oats, or wheat ; the stalk grows green 
and rank, but the seed does not come to ma- 
turity or ripen. There is comparatively little 
land suitable for agriculture ; the largest tract 
and best climate known is the plateau on the 
east side of Cook's Inlet, extending from Kenay 
to Chogotshaik Bay. The soil is an alluvial 
sandy loam, very rich and deep, but the sum- 
mer, though pleasant while it lasts, is not long 
enough for successful farming. Though the 
timber is of the finest quality, and in many 
places conveniently located, still the supply in 
Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia, is 
equally good and abundant, and much better 
located for a market. The fishing-banks along 
the northeastern coast of the Aleutian Penin- 
sula and islands are very extensive and boun- 
tiful, and salmon abounds in all the streams. 
In addition to the coal mentioned as being at 
Chogotshaik, there are many other known lo- 
calities of coal." 

Congress has as yet taken no steps for the 
formation of a Territorial government for Alas- 
ka, and this outlying possession will probably 
remain under the control of the military au- 
thorities of the nation for the present. 

ALLEN", CHARLES, LL. D., an eminent jurist 
of Massachusetts, born in Worcester, Mass., 
August 9, 1797 ; died in Worcester, August 6, 
1869. He was a graduate of Harvard College, 
studied law in his native town, and was admit- 
ted to the bar in 1821. In 1829 he was elected 
to the State Legislature, and again in 1833, 
1834, 1836, and 1840, and was a member of the 
State Senate in 1835, 1838, and 1839. He was 
a commissioner to negotiate the Webster 
Treaty in 1842, and judge of the Court of Com- 
mon Pleas from 1842 to 1844. In 1848, he 
took an active part in the Free-Soil movement, 
and that year was elected to Congress from 
the Worcester District, and reflected in 1850. 
His political views, and his known hostility to 
slavery, placed him to a considerable extent 
under the ban in Congress ; but he displayed 
marked ability in all that he had the opportu- 
nity of doing. In 1849 he had the editorial 
charge for some time of the Boston Whig, or, 
as it was subsequently called, the Boston Be- 



ALLIANCE, EVANGELICAL. 



ALMONTE, JUAN N. 



15 



publican, a paper owned and sustained by his 
friend Charles Francis Adams. In 1858, he 
was appointed Chief Justice of the Superior 
Court of Suffolk County, and, on the abolition 
of that court in 1859, he was appointed Chief 
Justice of the Superior Court of the State, 
which office he held until 1867, when he re- 
signed in consequence of his age. He was a 
delegate to the Peace Congress of 1861, but 
maintained there a firm and statesmanlike posi- 
tion. Judge Allen received the honorary de- 
gree of LL. D. from Yale College in 1836, and 
from Harvard in 1863. His decisions in the 
Superior Court were regarded as very able, 
and as evincing his profound legal knowledge. 
In private life he was highly esteemed. 

ALLIANCE, EVANGELICAL. The meeting 
of the Evangelical Alliance, for holding which 
in New York, in 1869, arrangements had been 
made, has been postponed to 1870, for rea- 
sons which were explained by Dr. Schaff, at a 
meeting of the American Branch of the Alliance 
held in New York, on the 4th of November. 
Dr. Schaff had just returned from a visit to 
Europe, where his mission had been to consult 
upon the holding of the proposed meeting. At 
the meeting of the British Branch of the Alli- 
ance held on the 6th of May, the subject of the 
contemplated meeting was a prominent topic. 
Serious difficulties concerning the expense of 
the conference had arisen in the course of cor- 
respondence between the American committee 
and the British council. These difficulties were 
entirely removed after a full and frank discus- 
sion, and terms of satisfactory cooperation on 
a fraternal basis of perfect equality were unani- 
mously agreed upon. The programme for the 
meeting is drawn up on the basis prepared by 
the New York Executive Committee, but is 
considerably changed, in conformity to the 
wishes of the English and Continental brethren. 
It embraces the leading religious questions of 
the age, such as Christian unity and coopera- 
tion, Christianity and its antagonists, Protes- 
tanism and Eoman Catholicism, Christianity 
and civil government, Christian union and 
Christian life, foreign and domestic missions, 
Christianity and social evils ; also reports on 
the Society of Protestant Christendom by the 
delegates. 

The Congregational Union of England and 
"Wales, which Dr. Schaff subsequently attended, 
passed unanimously a resolution in reference 
to the meeting, expressing the hope that they 
might send a delegate, and desiring that events 
might continue to favor its arrangements, and 
that the Divine blessing may crown its accom- 
plishment. Dr. Schaff also attended the two 
General Assemblies of the Established and of 
the Free Churches of Scotland, and a number 
of meetings specially held for the objects of 
the Alliance, all of which returned a unanimous 
response to the invitation. The Archbishop of 
Canterbury would not commit himself, but ex- 
pressed himself very happy to correspond on 
the subject. The Dean of Canterbury is to 



prepare a paper, and, from the position of the 
Church of England, extend the hand of brother- 
hood to all evangelical nations. Several emi- 
nent Evangelical clergymen of England have 
promised to attend, and " in Germany, France, 
Holland, and Switzerland," said Dr. Schaff, 
"the subject has been greatly agitated, and 
they have promised us their best men, who 
have truly a representative name and char- 
acter. The conditions and the circumstances 
are very favorable. I am confident that, if a 
meeting had been held this year, it would have 
been a failure." After hearing the remarks of 
Dr. Schaff, the New York meeting adopted the 
following resolutions : 

Resolved, That we have listened with feelings of 
lively interest and grateful satisfaction to the report 
of Key. Dr. Schaff, and, while gladly welcoming home 
the distinguished representative of the American 
Branch of the Evangelical Alliance, beg to exchange 
with him our warm congratulations upon the success- 
ful issue of his mission, and thank him for the im- 
portant and efficient service he has rendered. 

Resolved, That as we heartily approve, so we are 
prepared to second, with Christian zeal, the steps 
which have been taken in furtherance of our cher- 
ished purpose, and, as we believe, the general desire, 
to hold a Conference of the Evangelical Alliance in 
the United States ; and, therefore, be it further 

Resolved, That we hereby extend a whole-hearted 
American invitation and welcome to the several 
branches of the Evangelical Alliance in the various 
parts of Christendom, to meet in General Conference 
in the city of New York, at a date hereafter to be 
agreed upon, during the autumn of the year 1870. 

Resolved, That we are eminently gratified to learn, 
by the report of Eev. Dr. Schaff, that the preliminary 
invitation of the American Branch, conveyed through 
him. to our brethren in Europe, has been so kindly 
received that we have already good reason to expect 
the attendance of a number of distinguished dele- 
gates, and that we have pleasing encouragement to 
anticipate a large representation from Great Britain 
and the Continent. 

Resolved, That, in offering to our brethren abroad 
the hospitalities of New York, we propose, under 
God, more than open doors and hearts full of wel- 
come, looking forward as we do to such communion 
in Christ, and such " sweet counsel together" touch- 
ing the interests of His Kingdom, as shall bring down 
upon our churches and the world we seek to evan- 
gelize a fresh baptism of blessing, and help us all, who 
now labor in Christian unity and spiritual fellowship, 
to the achievement, through Christ, of a heavenly 
fellowship when labor shall cease and love be in- 
throned forever. 

ALMONTE, JUAN N., a distinguished Mexi- 
can general, statesman, and diplomatist, born 
about the year 1812 ; died in Paris, March 22, 
1869. He was the reputed son of the priest 
Morelos, the famous -partisan chief, who was 
shot in 1813. His youth was spent in the 
United States, where he managed, by the en- 
ergy of his character, to support himself while 
obtaining an education. Returning to his 
native land, he entered upon a military career, 
and was chosen by Santa Anna one of his aides- 
de-camp, in which capacity he served in the 
Texas campaign against General Houston, being 
made prisoner with his chief at the battle of 
San Jacinto. On regaining his liberty he was 
made Secretary of State, and was subsequently 
appointed minister plenipotentiary at Wash- 



16 



AMERICA. 



ington; but, when the annexation of Texas 
was resolved upon, he demanded his passports, 
protesting at the same time against that meas- 
ure. In 1845 he was a candidate for the pres- 
idency of the Republic of Mexico, but failed ; 
and was afterward, upon the elevation of Pare- 
des to power, appointed, first, Minister of War, 
and then ambassador to Paris. He was on 
his way to France when he heard, at Havana, 
of the return of Santa Anna to power, upon 
which he immediately went back to Mexico, 
and, joining Santa Anna, took part in the war 
against the United States, distinguishing him- 
self at the battles of Buena Vista, Cerro Gordo, 
and Churubusco. After the close of the war 
he entered the ranks of the Liberal opposition, 
and for the second time became a candidate 
for the presidency, but again without success. 
He was solaced, however, with an appoint- 
ment as Mexican minister at Paris, which office 
he held at the period when President Miramon 
was overthrown by Juarez. He returned to 
Mexico with the allied expedition in 1862. 
Juarez protested against his presence in the 
French camp, and demanded that Almonte 
should be delivered up to him ; but, although 
General Prim and Sir Charles' Wyke, the Eng- 
lish commissioner, were willing to comply 
with this demand, the French commander re- 
fused, and shortly after a proclamation was 
issued by General Taboada, declaring Juarez 
deposed, and Almonte invested with supreme 
power in his place. He found himself, how- 
ever, unable to organize a government; and 
General Forey, on his arrival in Mexico, an- 
nulled Taboada's decree, and announced to the 
Mexicans that they were free to choose a new 
government. After the decisive victory of the 
French arms, Almonte became one of the tri- 
umvirate to whom they intrusted the manage- 
ment of affairs in Mexico, assigning him the 
Foreign Department and the Finances. He 
was appointed Lieutenant of the Empire by 
Maximilian in April, 1864, and some weeks 
later Marshal of the Empire. He adhered to 
the fortunes of his imperial patron throughout 
his short reign, and, wljen Maximilian fell, left 
his country for Europe, spending the last days 
of his restless life in exile. 

AMERICA. No territorial change affected 
the map of America during the year 1869. 
The Senate of the United States took no action 
upon the purchase of the two Danish islands, 
St. Thomas and St. Joim, which had been 
negotiated by Mr. Seward, and had been rati- 
fied by an almost unanimous vote of the popu- 
lation of the two islands, and this scheme of 
annexation may therefore be regarded as hav- 
ing for the present failed. At the close of the 
year, the project of an annexation of San Do- 
mingo to the United States again assumed a 
more tangible shape, having received the full ap- 
proval of President Bae'z. In Cuba, the war for 
establishing the independence of the island con- 
tinued throughout the year, and in the course of 
the year the Cubans were recognized by a num- 



ber of the South American republics as belliger- 
ents. In British North America, the scheme of 
consolidating all the colonial possessions, inclu- 
sive of British Columbia, into one empire, re- 
ceived the open and emphatic indorsement of 
the British Government ; but the dissatisfaction 
of the people of Nova Scotia remained unabated, 
and a party openly advocating annexation to 
the United States gained in the course of the 
year considerable strength. 

The war in Paraguay was in October, 1869, 
not ended, although a provisional govern- 
ment had been established in Asuncion. The 
strength of President Lopez had been greatly 
impaired, but, driven from one stronghold, he 
always had another ready to fall back upon. 
(See PARAGUAY.) 

In other parts of South America the number 
of civil wars and revolutions was somewhat 
smaller than usual. The lawful government 
was overthrown in Ecuador, and in San Do- 
mingo, Hayti, and Venezuela, civil war raged 
almost without interruption; but in many of 
the other States the reign of order appears to be 
fortified, and the beginning of a new era of 
peaceful development and progress to be se- 
cured. Besides Chili, the model republic of 
Latin America, Mexico, Colombia, Peru, and 
especially the Argentine Republic, under the 
wise administration of President Sarmiento, 
enjoyed a year of peace, and in many respects. 
a year of real progress. 

The Pacific Railroad was pushed forward in 
the latter part of the year 1868, and in the first 
months of the year 1869, with a rapidity here- 
tofore unknown, and thus it was completed 
long before the time heretofore anticipated. 
The final tie was placed on the 10th of May, 
1869, with as much display as possible. Many 
deficiencies were complained of in the first trans- 
continental road, but the intercourse between 
the Atlantic and the Pacific remained uninter- 
rupted. The important influence which this 
connection of the two oceans by means of rail- 
roads must have upon the development of the 
resources of the continent, was everywhere 
recognized. Numerous schemes of a similar 
character are under consideration ; among them 
is one connecting the Atlantic and Pacific 
coasts of British North America, and another 
connecting Chili and the Argentine Republic 
across the Andes. 

While transcontinental railroads are bring- 
ing into closer contact West with East, and 
North with South, new transatlantic cables 
are strengthening the electric communications 
between the Old and the New World, and 
placing their uninterrupted intercourse beyond 
any danger from accidents. To the English- 
American cable, which has now been in suc- 
cessful operation for several years, a French- 
American was, in 1869, added; besides, a con- 
tract for the laying of a Belgian-American 
cable was concluded, and negotiations for lay- 
ing one between Portugal and South America 
were in active progress. 



ANGLICAN CHUKCHES. 



The immigration from Europe to America 
by far exceeded, in 1869, that of any of the pre- 
ceding years. The great bulk continues to go 
to the United States, but in several South 
American republics there has also been for 
years a considerable increase. A new feature 
in the history of immigration is the extraor- 
dinary rush to America of the Chinese, who, 
it seems, may now come not only in as large 
numbers as the Europeans, but much larger. 
It is now certain that this new immigration of 
people from Asia will greatly enhance the rate 
of increase of the population of the American 
Continent, but, on the other hand, grave dan- 
gers are feared by some economists from a 
large admixture of Mongolians with the present 
population of America, and the dangers of a 
coming Chinese question are discussed. 

Censuses were taken, in 1869, in Mexico and 
the Argentine Kepublic, both of which showed 
a considerable increase of population over the 
previous official statements. The population 
of America, at the present day, certainly ex- 
ceeds 85,000,000, of which, at least, 78,000,000 
are inhabitants of independent American States. 

ANGLICAN CHUKCHES. The Church 
Almanac for 1870 gives the following statis- 



tical summary of the Protestant Episcopal 
Church in the United States* for the year 
1868-'69 : 

Dioceses 39 

Bishops 54 

Bishops elect '.I'/. 

Priests and Deacons 2,711 

Whole number of Clergy 2,762 

Parishes 2,512 

Ordinations Deacons, in 26 Dioceses 115 

Priests, in 24 85 

Total, in28 200 

Candidates for Orders, in 20 208 

Churches consecrated, in 18 47 

Baptisms Infants, in 26 20,749 

Adults, in 26 5,030 

Not specified, in 6 3,760 

Total, in32 29,539 

Confirmations, in 36 " 20,793 

Communicants increase in 23 Dioceses during past 

year 7,186 

Number reported in 33 Dioceses . . 176,686 
Present number in the whole 

Church 200,000 

Marriages, in 30 Dioceses 7,647 

Burials, in 30 u 12,475 

Sunday-School Teachers, in 27 Dioceses 18,644 

Scholars, in 30 " 185,975 

Contributions, in 31 " $4,205,029,41 

The following table exhibits the number of 
clergymen, parishes, baptisms, communicants, 
teachers and scholars of Sunday-schools, and 
the amount of missionary and charitable con- 
tributions for each diocese : 



DIOCESES AND MISSIONS. 


& 
j 


j 


1 


Communicants. 


SUNPAY-SCHOOIS. 


Contributions for 
Missionary and 
Church purposes. 


! 


1 


Alabama. 


28 
86 
43 
65 
158 
26 
25 
t!6 
30 
89 
36 
35 
15 
48 
87 
29 
19 
135 
122 
67 
42 
t27 
34 
22 
22 
123 
287 
+49 
105 
209 
47 
40 

tw 

38 
20 
28 
135 
t78 
70 
12 
7 


26 
104 
40 
98 
137 
31 
32 
t!4 
81 
84 
32 
54 
14 
35 
70 
48 
21 
107 
85 
78 
42 
t44 
34 
16 
22 
116 
170 
+73 
106 
177 
51 
35 
+59 
32 
35 
42 
172 
+82 
58 
13 
5 


1,343 

945 
1,832 
346 
351 

378 
1,211 
505 
368 
112 
753 
1,950 
610 
440 

1,347 
1,241 
518 

571 
186 
106 
1,950 
3,644 

1,168 
3,775 
751 
514 

856 

875 
368 

1,128 
120 

77 


7,887 

8,093 
16,609 
1,576 
1,581 

2,616 
5,815 
2,418 
1,931 
486 
3,468 
10,307 
2,351 
1,751 

10,965 
6,021 
2,400 

2,509 
843 
939 
9,499 
20,000 

8,310 
20,196 
3,012 
4,533 

2,066 
1,520 
2;421 
8,600 

5,580 
233 
130 


915 

925 
1,713 
318 
140 

222 
943 
437 
365 
61 
462 
1,438 
285 
218 

'807 
256 

'iii 

1,271 
1,894 

1,053 
2,808 . 
412 
601 

'iss 

200 

564 
"37 


6,708 

6,795 
11,780 
2,981 
904 

1,823 
6,968 
3,491 
2,596 
418 
3,759 
12,780 
2,397 
1,765 

8,902 
5,673 
2,053 

'"778 
10,960 
20,867 

8,793 
41,176 
"; 2,814 
4,786 

' i'.32i 

1,502 
6,500 

4,343 
526 
316 


$186,242 58 

181,425 84 
471,124 97 
23,738 13 

34,289 96 
215,473 11 
42,03982 
60,205 67 
8,126 87 
89,005 53 
318,786 70 
29,107 92 
64,767 01 

139,531 95 
89,813 87 
45,666 42 

6,42952 
4,600 70 
338,325 31 
565,329 69 

200,772 18 
613,820 70 
98,455 00 
134,867 85 

16,793 42 
12,959 60 
16,984 88 
63,747 00 

106,696 74 
13,835 80 
12,014 67 


Albany . . . 


California 


Central New York 


Connecticut 


Delaware 


Easton 


Florida 


Georgia 


Illinois 


Indiana. . . . 


Iowa 


Kansas 


Kentucky 


Long Island 


Louisiana . . . 


Maine 


Maryland 


Massachusetts 


Michigan 


Minnesota 


Mississippi . . 


Missouri. 


Nebraska 


New Hampshire. . . . 


New Jersey 


New York 


North Carolina . . . 


Ohio 


Pennsylvania 


Pittsburg 


Rhode Island 


South Carolina 


Tennessee 


Texas 


Vermont 


Virginia 


Western New York 


Wisconsin 


Oregon and Washington 


Montana 



* It will be seen, on examination, that the above summary does not include, in some of its items, the statistics 
of the whole Church. Several of the convention journals were not published when the Church Almanac went to 
press, and of those published and received by the editor, two contained no abstract of the parochial reports, and no 
summary of statistics for the conventional year. 

+ The statistics marked with daggers are taken from the Convention Journal of 1868. 
VOL. ix. 2. A 



18 



ANGLICAN CHUKCHES. 



The total statistics of the bishops and clergy 
of the Anglican Church in Great Britain, Ire- 
land, and the British Colonies, were, in 1869, 
as foflows : 

England and Wales. Archbishops, 2 ; bish- 
ops, 26 ; deans, 30 ; archdeacons, 71 ; benefices, 
12,837; curates, 5,678; rural deaneries, 613; 
church sittings, 5,643,492. 

Ireland. Archbishops, 2 ; bishops, 10 ; 
deans, 32 ; archdeacons, 34 ; benefices, 1,560 ; 
curates, 599. 

Scotland. Bishops, 8 ; clergy, 169 ; parson- 
ages, 72 ; churches, 168 ; schools, 101. 

The Colonies. Dioceses (including those in 
process of formation), 51; bishops, 49; clergy, 
2,400. 

The contributions to the Board of Missions 
for the year ending October 1, 1869, were 
$127,710.85. There is a deficit of funds of 
over $19,000. The mission to Greece is in a 
condition of financial embarrassment. Dr. 
Hill's resignation of his position there was to 
take effect in November. Bishop Paine, of the 
African mission, has returned to the United 
States to recover his health. The China mis- 
sion is in a promising condition. A transla- 
tion of the Bible into the Mandarin dialect is 
being made. No agent has been appointed 
among the freedmen since the death of Mr. 
Gillette. 

The anniversaries of the Low-Church party 
were held in November, in Philadelphia. The 
total receipts of the American Church Mission- 
ary Society were $98,172.39 : of which $49,- 
824.89 were for its own purposes ; $38,837.98 
for objects kindred to the work, but not under 
the control of the committee ; and $9,509.52 
for foreign missions. The year was reported 
the first in which the payments exceeded the 
receipts. The society has had 108 missionaries 
in the field. At the twenty-second annual 
meeting of the Society for the Promotion of 
Evangelical Knowledge, the receipts of the so- 
ciety were reported at $51,583 ; the expendi- 
tures at $49,443 ; the property, at $82,000. 
The "Evangelical Education Society" held its 
third anniversary. Its receipts during the year 
were $31,659; its expenditure, $41,881. The 
close of the year leaves the society with 112 
students wholly or in part dependent upon it. 

The Church of England is divided into two 
convocations, Canterbury and York. The 
Upper House of Canterbury consists of the 
archbishops and the bishops (21 in number) of 
the several dioceses. The Lower House consists 
of 24 deans attached to the several dioceses, 
58 archdeacons, 25 proctors for the chapters, 
and 42 proctors for the clergy ; in all, 149 
members. 

The Upper House of the province of York 
consists of the archbishops and bishops of the 
dioceses (7 members). The Lower House con- 
sists of 6 deans, 15 archdeacons, 7 proctors for 
the chapters, and 31 proctors for the clergy ; 
in all, 59 members. 

The two great schools of the Church of Eng- 



land are the Universities of Oxford and Cam- 
bridge. The twenty-six colleges and halls of the 
University of Oxford had in January, 1868, 
4,190 " members of convocation," and 7,535 
"members on the books." The number of 
professorships was 41. The seventeen colleges 
and halls of the University of Cambridge had 
(including 127 members not on the college 
books) 5,435 members of the senate; 1,927 
undergraduates ; and 8,974 members on the 
books. The number of professors was 35. 

The Society for the Propagation of the Gos- 
pel in Foreign Parts report a general fund of 
76,784 12s. Id. ; appropriated funds, 12,- 
108 8s. 5d.; special fund, 14,238 19. 6d. ; 
making a total of 103,132. The receipts 
of other church societies during the year clos- 
ing May, 1869, were as follows: Church Mis- 
sionary Society, 157,330 ; .South American 
Missionary Society, 10,551 ; Colonial and 
Continental Church Society, 35,445 ; Colonial 
Missionary Society, 4,030 ; Church Pastoral 
Aid Society, 51,845; Bishop of London's 
Fund, 49,603; Additional Curates' Society, 
30,538 ; Irish Church Missions to Koman 
Catholics, 24,445 ; Incorporated Church 
Building Society, 13,757; Church of Eng- 
land Scripture Headers' Association, 11,732. 

The religious homes, houses of mercy, mis- 
sions, religious houses, and institutions of 
similar character, of which a considerable 
number have sprung up within a few years 
past, are various in organization, from volun- 
tary parochial and benevolent associations, to 
societies approaching the character of mo- 
nastic institutions. The Kalendar, published 
by the " English Church Union," enumerates 
fifty-five homes, penitentiaries, missions, and 
orphanages ; twenty guilds and brotherhoods, 
and twenty institutions and societies. The 
last are open associations. Many of the re- 
ligious homes have a number of institutions 
under their charge. Thus, the " Sisters of All 
Saints," Margaret Street, London, have the care 
of twelve subordinate institutions, dispensaries, 
homes for aged women, industrial schools, or- 
phanages, etc. Many of these homes, which gen- 
erally are sisterhoods, in the larger towns, have 
established reformatories for fallen women. 
The guilds and brotherhoods are more strictly 
devotional in character. The English Order of 
St. Benedict, founded by " Father Ignatius," 
as he styles himself, corresponds in character 
with the Roman Catholic ascetic institutions. 
The " Guild of St. Alban the Martyr," with 
nineteen branches, or brotherhoods and sister- 
hoods; the "Society of St. Osmund;" the 
" Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament of 
the Body and Blood of Christ," and others, have 
for their object the elevation of the ritual, the 
cultivation of a more devotional spirit and ob- 
servance of the purity of the Church in doctrine 
and practice, and other similar ends. Others 
are more or less open associations, for prayers, 
for missionary work, for benevolent purposes, 
for the assistance of poor churches, etc. 



ANGLICAN CHURCHES. 



19 



The most notable event in the year's history 
of the Anglican Church was the enactment of 
the law for the disestablishment and disendow- 
ment of the Irish Church. The bill was intro- 
duced by Mr. Gladstone on the 1st of March, 
when it was read a first time. It passed a sec- 
ond reading, after a long and excited debate, on 
the 24th of the same month, by a vote of 368 to 
250, showing a majority, in favor of the pas- 
sage, of 118. The bill, which contained sixty 
clauses, was entitled " A bill to put an end to 
the establishment of the Church of Ireland, 
and to make provision in respect to the tem- 
poralities thereof, and in respect to the Royal 
College of Maynooth." The disestablishment 
was to be total, but was not to take place until 
the first of January, 1870, when the ecclesias- 
tical courts were to be abolished, the ecclesias- 
tical laws to cease to have any authority, the 
bishops to be no longer peers of Parliament, 
and all ecclesiastical corporations in the coun- 
try to be dissolved. The disendowment was 
technically and legally to be total and immedi- 
ate. Provision was made for winding up the ec- 
clesiastical commission, and the constitution of 
a new commission composed often members, in 
which the whole property of the Irish Church 
was to be vested from the day the measure 
received the royal assent. A distinction was 
made between public endowments (valued at 
15,500,000) including every thing in the na- 
ture of a state grant or revenue, which were 
to be resumed by the state, and private en- 
dowments (valued at 500,000), which were 
defined as money contributed from private 
sources since 1660, which were to be restored to 
the disestablished church. Provision was made 
for compensation to vested interests, including 
those connected with Maynooth College, and 
the Presbyterians, who were in receipt of the 
regium donum. Among these interests, the 
largest in the aggregate were those of incum- 
bents, to each of whom was secured during 
his life, provided he continued to discharge 
the duties of his benefice, the amount to which 
he was entitled, deducting the amount he might 
have paid for curates ; or the interest might, 
under certain circumstances, be commuted, 
upon his application for a life-annuity. Other 
personal interests provided for were those of 
curates, permanent and temporary, and lay 
compensations, including claims of parish 
clerks and sextons. The amount of the May- 
nooth grant and the regium donum was to be 
valued at fourteen years' purchase, and a capi- 
tal sum equal to it handed over to the respec- 
tive representatives of the Presbyterians and 
of the Roman Catholics. The aggregate of the 
payments would amount to about 8,000,000, 
leaving about 7,500,000, giving an annual in- 
come of about 30,000 at the disposal of Parlia- 
ment. This was to be appropriated "mainly to 
the relief of unavoidable calamity and suffer- 
ing," but in such a way as not to interfere 
with the obligation imposed upon property by 
the poor-laws. "When the affairs of the estab- 



lished Church shall have been wound up, the 
commissioners were to report to the Queen 
that the objects immediately contemplated by 
the act have all been provided for, and to re'- 
port the amount of surplus available for char- 
itable purposes. The bill presumed that, im- 
mediately after the disestablishment, the bish- 
ops, clergy, and laity would proceed to con- 
stitute something in the nature of a governing 
body, which the Queen would be empowered, 
not to create, but to recognize, to constitute 
the disestablished Church, and come in pos- 
session of the private endowments. 

The bill was introduced into the House of 
Lords in almost the same shape in which it 
was introduced in the Commons, and was 
carried to a second reading, on the 19th of 
June, by a majority of 33, in a House of 300 
members, and about 30 pairs. Vigorous efforts 
were afterward made to attack the principles 
of the bill, and save something of the estab- 
lishment in committee. Among other provi- 
sions, the Lords sought to allot 3,000,000 to 
the disestablished Church. Their amendments 
were nearly all rejected, or remodelled in form 
or expression. This treatment was received 
with great indignation by the Lords, so that 
the farther progress of the bill was stopped, 
and its withdrawal was looked for. A com- 
promise was effected, however, in Cabinet 
council, by which the clergy who commute 
their incomes are to be allowed 12 per cent, 
over the value of ordinary lives, while the dis- 
posal of the surplus of the public endowments, 
instead of being left to the discretion of the 
Government, was placed under the direct con- 
trol of Parliament. With these amendments, 
and a few unimportant alterations supported 
by the Lords, the bill was adopted by both 
Houses, with very little opposition, and re- 
ceived the royal assent on the 26th of July. 

Among the amendments which were urged 
in the House of Lords was a scheme of " con- 
current endowment," proposing to give a par- 
sonage-house and ten acres of land to each 
clergyman in the Roman Catholic and Presby- 
terian as well as in the Episcopal bodies. It 
commanded a small but earnest majority in 
the Lords, but was rejected in the Commons 
without debate. 

The separation thus accomplished between 
the Anglican Church in Ireland and the State 
Government compelled the former to under- 
take a reconstruction upon a voluntary basis. 
The General Synod of the Irish Church, a 
union of the two Provincial Synods of Dublin 
and Armagh, met on September 14th, at Dub- 
lin. It was the first Synod held in Ireland 
since 1713. The Provincial Synod of Armagh 
had met a few days previously, but that of 
Dublin had to be formally constituted, prior to 
the union of the two into one General Synod. 
In the Upper House, the Primate (the Arch- 
bishop of Armagh) presided ; the Lower 
House elected the Rev. Dr. West, Dean of St. 
Patrick's and Christ Church, its prolocutor. A 



20 



ANGLICAN OHUECHES. 



protest against the disestablishment of the 
Church was adopted by the Lower House, 
unanimously, while, in the Upper House, the 
Bishop of Down objected to it as unnecessary. 
As to finance, all parties seemed to be agreed 
that the remainder of the old possessions 
of the Church which may be retained will re- 
quire to be largely supplemented by private 
liberality, if the Church is to be made effi- 
cient. In the matter of government, the Synod 
adopted a " Scheme for the Keform of the 
Provincial Synods, with a view to a union of 
the bishops, clergy, and laity of the Church of 
Ireland in General Synod." It proposed that 
the clergy of each diocese should meet in a 
Diocesan Synod, and elect a certain number of 
their brethren to represent them in a General 
Synod, with whom were to be included one 
dean and one archdeacon for each diocese, 
who, with certain officers of Trinity College, 
Dublin, were to sit ex officio. The latter part 
of the scheme excited much discussion, and an 
amendment, proposed by the Dean of Cashel, 
omitting the ex-officio members, was carried, 
after an earnest debate, by 107 to 29. It was 
also unanimously agreed that all parochial 
clergy, whether beneficed or not, should be 
entitled to vote for clerical representatives, 
and that the representation should be in the 
proportion of one to ten in the clergy. These 
amendments were accepted by the Lower 
House. 

In October, there was a three days' conference 
of lay delegates of the Irish Church in Dublin. 
The Duke of Abercorn presided, and some 
four hundred delegates were present, including 
a number of noblemen, members of Parlia- 
ment, and other influential and wealthy mem- 
bers of the Irish Church. One of the resolu- 
tions adopted was to the effect that the clerical 
and lay representatives should sit and discuss 
all questions together in the General Synod, 
with the right to vote by orders, if demanded 
by three of either order at the meeting. It 
was explained that this recommendation of the 
Conference was not to apply to Diocesan Syn- 
ods, but to the General Convention, which is 
bo be afterward formed. On the question of 
the relative proportions of the representatives 
of the dioceses, and also of the clergy and the 
laity, a resolution was adopted, that the num- 
ber of lay representatives for the respective 
dioceses should be partly based on population 
and partly on the old parochial system. As 
regards the proportion of clergy to laity, the 
following resolution was carried by an over- 
whelming majority : 

That, in the opinion of this meeting, it is expe- 
dient that the number of lay representatives in the 
General Synod should be to the clerical in the pro- 
portion of two to one, 

The clergy also had a private meeting, in 
October, under the presidency of the Arch- 
bishop of Dublin, at which it was resolved, by 
a large majority, that the laity should have a 
common right with the clergy to decide on 



matters of doctrine and discipline in the future 
councils of the Church. The bishops, at a 
meeting held in November, resolved to sit and 
vote as a separate order, when they deem 
proper ; or, in other words, to have the power 
of vetoing any proposal with which they dis- 
agree. This view of the bishops is, however, 
by no means acceptable to a large portion of 
the laity. At a meeting of lay delegates, held 
at Nenagh, and presided over by Lord Eosse, 
it was moved by Lord Dunalley, and agreed to, 
that the meeting greatly regretted the resolu- 
tion of the bishops, and understood "voting 
by order " to mean, that a majority of bishops 
and clergy together and a majority of lay rep- 
resentatives should be sufficient to pass any 
motion. The meeting also strongly protested 
against the bishops having the power of a veto 
in Diocesan Synods. 

The judgment in the case of Martin against 
Mackonochie has been the cause of much ex- 
citement among the advocates of ritualistic 
doctrines and practices in the Church of Eng- 
land. The views they have taken of the course 
that it would be proper for them to pursue 
have been various. Shortly after the judg- 
ment was rendered (January 12th), a meeting 
was held, at which Archdeacon Denison pre- 
sided. Its action was limited to the passage 
of resolutions, protesting against the condem- 
nation of Mr. Mackonochie to the costs in the 
case as " a course of unusual and exceptional 
severity," and declaring that the meeting did 
not consider the existing Court of Final Appeal 
" qualified to declare the law of the Church of 
England upon either doctrine or ceremonial ; " 
but that, with respect to the particular judg- 
ment of the court in Mr. Mackonochie's case, 
the meeting, " feeling the great difficulty of the 
present case, thinks there are many reasons 
why those who have used the ceremonials or 
practices now condemned by the judicial com- 
mittee of the Privy Council may be anxious to 
wait rather than to give immediate effect to 
the decision so pronounced, and considers it is 
a matter best left to the individual judgment 
and circumstances of each priest who has been 
accustomed to use the ceremonials in question." 

The course was generally adopted of con- 
forming to the explicit directions of the judg- 
ment under protest, and with the manifestation 
of such outward signs of adherence to the the- 
ories on which their practices were based as 
should not directly conflict with the terms of 
the decision. A few, of extreme views, deter- 
mined to set the decisions at naught, regarding 
it as their duty " explicitly to obey the law of 
the Church on those points where it differed 
from the law of the land, as expounded by the 
High Court of Appeals." The English Church 
Union adopted a resolution, offered by Dr. 
Pusey, calling upon all churchmen to unite 
and defend the principle on which the English 
Church was based "namely, the appeal to 
Catholic and primitive antiquity," and to ad- 
dress a memorial to the convocations of both 



ANGLICAN CHUKOHES. 



21 



provinces, praying them to take measures for 
promoting the reform of the Courts of Appeal. 
It also recommended that the particular orna- 
ments from which Dr. Mackonochie had been 
commanded to abstain ought not to be de- 
fended by the Union in any future suit, unless 
the council was satisfied that the case was one 
which it was a duty to the Church of England 
to have submitted to the proper tribunal, and 
that caution should be exercised in defending 
ornaments and usages not specifically prohib- 
ited by the monition, though indirectly and 
generally coming within the reasonings or 
principles of the report. A small party advo- 
cated secession from the Established Church, 
and a larger one favored the repeal of the es- 
tablishment, and the entire independence of 
the church and state, removing ecclesiastical 
questions entirely from the supervision of civil 
tribunals. 

The ninth Church Congress, which was held 
at Liverpool, was the scene of exciting discus- 
sions between the ritualists and their oppo- 
nents. The appointment of Eev. Mr. Mac- 
konochie to read a paper was much opposed, 
because of his having incurred judicial censure, 
but prevailed on the ground that he had purged 
himself of whatever faults he might have com- 
mitted by submitting to the decision of the 
' court. Very strong papers were read by mem- 
bers of the ritualistic party, and attracted much 
attention. A very large meeting of working- 
men was held in connection with the Congress, 
at which great interest was manifested. Dur- 
ing the sessions a meeting of the English 
Church Union was also held, at which the in- 
crease of the Episcopate and the reunion of 
Christendom were discussed. 

The case of Bishop Colenso continues in an 
unsettled condition. The Bishop of Capetown, 
who, as Metropolitan, had excommunicated 
him, and deposed him from his diocese, has 
followed up his act by the consecration of 
Bishop Macrorie, the act being approved and 
substantially cooperated in by the other South 
African bishops meeting in Synod, and who 
recognize the new bishop, both officially and 
unofficially. This act is regarded by English 
churchmen as a substantial assertion of the in- 
dependence of church and state, and as a first 
step to the erection of a free church in South 
Africa. It is not regarded by them as legal, 
eminent authorities in ecclesiastical law hav- 
ing declared, when consulted on the subject, 
that no power existed of calling Bishop Colenso 
to account for his presumed heresies, and the 
Privy Council having decided that the Metro- 
politan had no jurisdiction over him. The pre- 
vailing opinion is expressed in England that, 
having been appointed by law, Bishop Colenso 
had an indefeasible right to the title, emolu- 
ments, and functions of a bishop, beyond the 
control even of the royal supremacy. 

On the death of Dr. Philpotts, Bishop of Ex- 
eter, Dr. Temple, of Rugby, was nominated by 
the Crown to the vacant see. The appoint- 



ment was opposed by the High Churchmen 
and the Low-Church "Evangelicals," on ac- 
count of the association of Dr. Temple's name 
with the authorship of one of the papers in 
the celebrated "Essays and Reviews." Their 
remonstrances did not prevail, however, with 
the chapter, a majority of which confirmed the 
appointment of Dr. Temple, and accepted him 
as the bishop of the diocese. 

The efforts for bringing on an intercommun- 
ion between the Anglican and the Oriental 
Churches are continued, by the friends of the 
movement in England, with great zeal. By 
far the most important event that has yet oc- 
curred, in the entire history of this movement, 
is a letter from the Patriarch of Constantino- 
ple * to the Archbishop of Canterbury. It was 
written in reply to the address of the Pan- 
Anglican Synod, which was sent to him in 
common with the heads of other foreign 
Churches. The language of the Patriarch has 
greatly elated the friends of the intercommun- 
ion movement. They find that his heart 
beats in response to the desire expressed for 
union; they consider some of his criticisms 
upon the English Articles as fully justified, and 
hope that the convocations may, in particular, 
repeal the Nineteenth Article, which accuses 
the ancient Sees of Antioch, Alexandria, and 
Jerusalem, of false doctrines. The High Church 
Societies, in particular, the Eastern Church 
Society, and the English Church Union, are 
urged to send to the Patriarch of Constantino- 
ple, and other learned and influential prelates 
of the East, copies of the best Anglican ex- 
planatory works on the Articles, and also 
a collection of the devotional manuals and 
hymnals in common use in Anglican Churches, 
and to ask the patriarchs and metropolitans of 
the East to solicit the prayers of their priests 
and people that the two churches may be 
brought into more perfect union. 

The differences of opinion respecting the 
construction of laws and usages in the Protes- 
tant Episcopal Church have given rise to sev- 
eral cases of church discipline, as in the case of 
the Rev. Mr. Tyng, Jr., who was tried and cen- 
sured, in 1868, for preaching within the geo- 
graphical limits of another parish than his 
own, without previously obtaining the consent 
of the rector thereof; and in the trial of the 
Rev. Mr. Hubbard, of Rhode Island, for inviting 
and permitting a minister, not in Episcopal or- 
ders, to preach in the church of which he was 
rector. Of the cases which have sprung up 
during the last year, the most noted are those 
of the Rev. Mr. Tate, in Ohio, tried for viola- 
tions of the rubric in the introduction of sur- 
pliced-choirs in the church, in which the court 
decided that it had no jurisdiction ; and of the 
Rev. Mr. Cheney, of Illinois, for the practice 
of omitting the word regeneration in reciting 
the baptismal service. 

* The fall text of the letter is given in the Article 
GREEK CHURCH, in the present volume of the CYCLO- 
PAEDIA. 



ANGLICAN CHURCHES. 



A circular was issued in February, signed by 
twenty-three presbyters of Illinois, and about 
fifty clergymen through the United States at 
large, in protest against the progress of ritual- 
istic doctrines and practices in the Church, and 
calling a convention, of those who agreed in 
the views it set forth, to meet in Chicago in 
Jane. It met, pursuant to the call, on the 16th 
of June, and spent two days in discussion of 
the questions suggested by the protest. It de- 
clared a careful revision of the " Book of Com- 
mon Prayer " to be needful to the best inter- 
ests of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and 
particularly recommended " that all words or 
phrases seeming to teach that the Christian 
ministry is a priesthood, or the Lord's Supper 
a sacrifice, or that regeneration is inseparable 
from baptism, should be removed from the 
Prayer Book." It recommended discussion, of 
"the vital questions which now agitate the 
Church," through the pulpit and the press, and 
that the evangelical clergy of the Church 
" avail themselves of all such measures as they 
may deem best to promote fraternal and Chris- 
tian relations with the ministers of other 
Churches, especially by uniting with them in 
such great national institutions as the Ameri- 
can Bible Society." A standing committee of 
clergy and laity were appointed, to sit as often 
as they might deem expedient, and to be a body 
in perpetuity for the promotion of the general 
objects contemplated by the Conference. 

A second Conference was held, in connec- 
tion with the anniversaries of the Low-Church 
Societies, in Philadelphia, in November, and 
passed several important resolutions. The 
committee on revision was continued by a 
unanimous vote. The request to the bishops 
in sympathy with the Conference, to carry out 
their purpose of striving to obtain certain 
modifications in the baptismal office, was passed 
by a ^ decided majority, and would have been 
unanimous but that some apprehended that by 
asking only this they precluded themselves 
from asking other reforms, for which they 
were equally desirous. The resolution express- 
ing a desire for a thorough revision passed by 
a large majority, upon a division of the house. 
The resolution, requesting the bishops to seek 
the repeal of the canon on the service of 
those not ministers of the Anglican Church, 
was unanimously passed. A resolution, re- 
questing the bishops in sympathy with the 
Conference to inquire whether false doctrine is 
held and taught by any bishops of the Church, 
and, if so, to institute proceedings to bring any 
such bishop to trial, was passed without one 
dissentient vote. The Conference also, by a 
unanimous vote, resolved to prepare and ma- 
ture a plan for the organization of a brother- 
hood, upon evangelical and truly catholic prin- 
ciple. The new association of the Low-Church 
party, thus inaugurated, is based upon the fol- 
lowing statement of principles and objects: 

1. The maintenance of the purity of the doc- 
trine of the Church as opposed to sacerdotal- 



ism on the one hand and infidelity on the 
other. The doctrinal basis of the brotherhood 
shall be the Creeds and the Thirty-nine Arti- 
cles, with such latitude of interpretation as 
shall be between the extremes just indicated. 

2. The assertion and maintenance of those 
inalienable liberties which belong to ministers 
of Christ, as such, and which cannot be im- 
paired by the fact that they are also ministers 
of the Protestant Episcopal Church. Among 
these liberties is, that of unrestricted fellow- 
ship with such churches and ministers as hold 
with us the substance of the faith ; the liberty 
of preaching, so far as territorial limits are 
concerned, with no other restrictions but such 
as Christian courtesy and propriety shall dic- 
tate ; and such liberty in the use or modifica- 
tion of our formularies of worship as shall 
seem best adapted to the salvation of souls and 
the edification of the people of God. 

3. The denial of the claim that any civil or 
ecclesiastical authority can stand to any man 
in the place of his own conscience ; and the 
assertion that, in the event of any collision be- 
tween the two, the claims of conscience are 
paramount. 

4. The development of higher spiritual life 
in our own souls, by frequent systematic and 
united devotional exercises ; by united efforts 
to promote peace and good-will, and by mu- 
tual exhortation and encouragement to works 
of love, for the good of man and the glory of 
God. 

Nine Low-Church bishops of the Protestant 
Episcopal Church sent in November the follow- 
ing circular to their brethren in the Episcopate, 
in behalf of a revision of the Prayer Book : 

To OTJB BRETHREN : In consequence of very seri- 
ous indications of a state of mind among many of 
the clergy and laity^ of our Church, having regard to 
alleged difficulties in the Prayer Book, and contem- 
plating action most earnestly to be deprecated, some 
of the bishops requested a meeting, in New York, of 
several clergymen and laymen from various parts of 
the country, whose knowledge of the facts, and whose 
opinions as to needed measures, would be valuable. 
The object was to get such information and compari- 
son of views as might assist the bishops in forming 
a right judgment of their duty^ to God, and to the 
Church, and to their brethren in the state of mind 
alluded to. 

It became painfully evident that many in our 
Church are so burdened and distressed in the use of 
certain expressions in our formularies, that the in- 
quiry is obligatory as to what ought to be done, in 
brotherly kindness and charity, for their relief. 

The result is the conviction^tnat, if alternate phrases 
or some equivalent modification in the office for the 
ministration of baptism of infants were allowed, the 
pressing necessity would be met, and a measure of 
relief would be afforded, of great importance to the 
peace and unity of the Church. 

We have always been fully persuaded- that our 
formularies of faith and worship, in their just inter- 
pretation, embody the truth of Chris.t, are warranted 
by the teaching of Holy Scripture, and are a faithful 
following of the doctrines professed and defended by 
our Anglican Eeformers. 

The difficulties referred to we ascribe, in a great 
measure, to the bold innovations in doctrine and 
usage which at the present time so unhappily agi- 
tate our communion, and expose the Protestant and 



ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. 



23 



Scriptural character of our Church to distrust and 
reproach. 

The conscientious scruples of men of godly conver- 
sation and usefulness deserve the most respectful 
and aifectionate consideration of their brethren. "We 
hope they will be so regarded by the next General 
Convention. We will not allow ourselves to doubt 
that there will be found in that body such large- 
heartedness, brotherly kindness, and fervent desire 
to promote the peace and prosperity of our Church, 
as will consent to the relief already indicated. 

In this confidence we address ourselves aifection- 
ately and respectfully to our brother bishops, and 
request their kind and fraternal cooperation in our 
effort to accomplish the desired result, for the glory 
of our blessed Lord, and the harmony of our beloved 
Church. 

C. P. Mcllvaine. Alfred Lee, John Johns, John 
Payne, G-. T. Bedell/William Bacon Stevens, Thom- 
as H. Vail, Ozi W. Whitaker, Henry W. Lee. 

ARGENTINE REPUBLIC, a republic in 
South America. President, from 1868 to 
1874, Domingo F. Sarmiento. The area is es- 
timated to be 826,828 English square miles; 
the population, in 1864, was estimated by 
F. C. Ford (La Eepublique Argentine, Paris, 
1867) at 1,465,000; in 1868, in the work "Die 
Argentinische Republik" (Berne, 1869), pub- 
lished by the Ccfmmittee of Immigration in 
Buenos Ayres, at 1,801,000. The confederation 
is divided into the following fourteen States or 
provinces : 





BNTI 


IKBD. 


CLl 


EABED. 




Vessels. 


Tom. 


Veueh. 


Tons. 


1866 


1 036 


267 213 


1 103 


263 339 


1867 


1,136 


297,807 


1,316 


337,'541 



Provinces. 


Inhabitants, 
1868.* 


Capitals. 


Inhabitants. 


Buenos Ayres 
Santa Fe 


550,000 
60000 


Buenos Ayres 
Santa Fe 


200,000 
8 000 


Entre Rios... 


160000 


Entre Rios 


16 000 


Corrientes y Mi- 
siones 


115,000 


Concepcion 


8000 


La Rioja 


45000 


La Rioja 


4 000 


Catamarcft. . 


110000 


Catanxarca 


g'ooo 


San Juan 


80 000 




20 000 


Mendoza 


68 000 




10 000 


Cordova 


165,000 


Cordova 


25 000 


San Luis 


68000 


San Luis 


5 ooo 


Santiago. 


125,000 


Santiago. 


6000 


Tucuman 
Salta 


105,000 
105000 


Tucuman 
Salta 


11,000 
11 300 


Jujuy 


45000 


Juiuv 


6 900 











A new census was taken in 1869, and the re- 
sults, as far as they have been published (De- 
cember, 1869), show a large increase of the 
population. Thus the province of Santa F6 
has advanced from 45,000 inhabitants, in 1864, 
to 90,000; that of Cordova from 140,000 to 
200,000; that of the city of Buenos Ayres 
from 120,000 to 200,000. 

The imports and exports in Buenos Ayres, 
from 1865 to 1867, were as follows (value ex- 
pressed in pesos fuertes ; one peso fuerte = 5 
francs 10 centimes = 94 cents) : 



YEAR. 


IMPORTS. 


EXPORTS. 


1867 


33,370,000 
32,270,000 
27,100,000 


' 28,080,000 
23,030,000 
22,000,000 


1866 


1865 



The movement of shipping in the port of 
Buenos Ayres was as follows : 

* For the population of the several provinces in 1864 
see ANNUAL AMEBICAN CYCLOPAEDIA for 1868. 



Among the vessels which entered there were, 
in 1866, 437, and in 1867, 882 steamships. 

The administration of President Sarmiento 
has, by the wisdom which has marked its 
acts, won for itself an exalted place in the 
opinion of the people. In spite of the efforts 
put forth by the opposition to embarrass the 
Government, the great majority of the popula- 
tion, both native and foreign, fully appreciate 
the eminent qualities which distinguish the 
President, and the efforts he is making to pro- 
mote the moral and material interests of the 
country. It is felt that the republic has en- 
tered upon a new career, full of brilliant prom- 
ise. Peace and order have been reestablished 
in the provinces which had been desolated by 
civil war. 

President Sarmiento is making the utmost 
exertions to promote immigration and educa- 
tion. In fact, European immigration has given 
a great impetus to the progress of the country 
in the arts of industry within the last fifteen 
years. During this period towns and villages 
have sprung up, roads have been opened, rail- 
ways and tramways have been built, canals 
have been opened, and other improvements in 
navigation adopted, and manufactories of all 
kinds established. And all of this has been 
accomplished in spite of the civil dissensions by 
which the country has been agitated. These 
improvements are especially noticeable in the 
province of Buenos Ayres. Here there are 
four lines of railway in active operation. 
Streets are being opened, and new buildings 
erected on every hand, in this great, wealthy, 
and splendid city ; while, within a circuit of 
from five to six leagues around the city, 
several beautiful villages have appeared as 
if by enchantment, besides the manufacturing 
and commercial towns of Boca and Barraccas. 
To give an idea of the importance of these two 
towns, distant three miles from each other, 
it may be stated that not only are they con- 
nected with the capital by a railway to both, 
but that a second line runs from Barraccas to 
Buenos Ayres. The population of the two 
towns is to-day nearly 40,000 souls. That of 
Barraccas is largely Basque ; and, as the ac- 
tivity of the Basques is powerful, it is no 
wonder that this town thrives so remarkably, 
or that the heads of its principal establish- 
ments take the lead in the progressive move- 
ment. In order to give new encouragement to 
agriculture and immigration, Congress passed 
a law appropriating $200,000 (gold) for the na- 
tional exhibition at Cordova, set down for 
April, 1870. 

Religious toleration is strictly maintained, 
and no complaint, in this respect, is heard from 
the numerous German and Swiss immigrants 



24 



ARGENTINE EEPUBLIC. 



who are Protestants. Though the Catholic 
countries of Southern Europe continue to fur- 
nish a larger contingent of immigrants than 
Germany and Switzerland, the latter have al- 
ready established a number of colonies, in all 
of which the Protestant element is strongly 
represented. In the state of Entre Rios the 
colony of Villa de Urquiza, near Parana, is al- 
most wholly German. The next largest Ger- 
man population is found in San Jose", near 
Concepcion. La Esperanza, near Santa Fe", is 
likewise a wholly German colony, which, in 
1868, had 850 Catholics and 710 Protestants, 
with a Protestant church and school. In San 
Geronimo, a little farther to the southwest, 
there were 460 German-Swiss ; in San Carlos, 
406 Swiss and 16 Germans. In Buenos Ayres 
the Germans have a Protestant church and 
school, and a German newspaper. 

Immigration is increasing with great ra- 
pidity. While from 1858 to 1862 the number 
of immigrants amounted to 28,066, or an annu- 
al average of 5,613, it rose, in the period from 
1863 to 1867, to 64,599, an annual average of 
12,920; and, during the year 1868, reached the 
unprecedented figure of 29,284. According to 
nationality, the immigrants were divided as 
follows : 





1806. 


1867. 


1868. 


Italians 


6 830 


8 955 


10 004 


French 


2 330 


3*091 




Swiss 


683 


1 033 


j- 8,856 


Spaniards 


1,850 


1 250 


3 318 


English 


1 310 


1 350 


1 OQfi 


Germans . 


460 


530 


1 044 


Others 


497 


837 


5 ? 066 










Total 


13,960 


17,046 


29,384 



The Argentine Central Railroad, to connect 
Rosario and Cordova, 250 miles, is progress- 
ing rapidly. A submarine telegraph connects 
Buenos Ayres with Montevideo. The telegraph 
from Buenos Ayres to Rosario is completed. 
It is nearly 300 miles long. The tariff is, for 
ten words, under 100 miles, 40 cents (gold) ; 
over 100 and under 200 miles, 80 cents ; and 
for over 200 miles, $1.20 (gold). President 
Sarmientp had the wires of the telegraph car- 
ried to his house, and his annual message to 
Congress was conveyed by the wires to their 
most distant point, and then it was taken by 
couriers and spread over the republic in the 
shortest time ever known in South America. 
The province of Buenos Ayres passed a law 
authorizing the loan of 800,000 sterling for 
the extension of the Western Railroad. 

The export of meat forming an important 
staple, Congress voted the sum of 40,000 francs 
to be awarded as a prize to the inventor of that 
process which, upon trial, should be proved to 
bo the best for the preservation of fresh meat. 

The credit of the nation in 1869 greatly im- 
proved, and the interest and percentage of 
bonds were punctually paid. The budget of 
the current financial year, it is true, showed a 
deficit of $9,000,000, but it is chiefly caused by 



ARKANSAS. 

the extraordinary expenses of the Paraguayan 
War. The annual revenue of the country is 
rapidly increasing, the total receipts for the 
past fiscal year having reached the unprece- 
dented sum of $14,000,000. The indebtedness 
for the war is $20,000,000 (gold). The esti- 
mates for 1870 amount to $16,000,000. But for 
the disastrous war with Paraguay, the govern- 
ment would be in possession of a considerable 
surplus. 

A bill passed Congress for removing the na- 
tional capital to Rosario as early as the year 
1872. The Executive has, however, vetoed 
this measure. 

As to foreign policy, President Sarmiento 
declared, in his opening speech, at the com- 
mencement of the session of the Chambers, 
that the strongest friendship existed between 
the allied South American powers ; that they 
felt none but generous feelings for the Para- 
guayans, and they now proposed to establish 
a provisional government at Asuncion for the 
benefit of the people. (See PAKAGTJAY.) 

The new United States minister, Mr. Kirk, 
was specially charged by our Government to 
be vigilant in creating and perpetuating frater- 
nal relations between the two governments. 
Sarmiento's warm reply, on the occasion of the 
new minister's reception, concluded with these 
words: "If you have read our recent parlia- 
mentary debates,, you will have observed 
with satisfaction that Story, Webster, Taney, 
Gushing, and Pomeroy, are almost Argentine 
citizens, and masters who point out the way 
establishing among us your institutions, as re- 
markable for respect for private liberty as for 
preserving public tranquillity and the suprem- 
acy of the Federal Constitution. Be, then, 
most cordially welcome, as minister resident 
of the United States, to the Argentine Repub- 
lic." 

ARKANSAS. A history of Arkansas, since 
its first settlement by white men, and of its 
political existence to the present time, has not 
been published, perhaps not written. Some 
statements upon this subject, put together 
mainly from the official journal kept by de- 
partmental regulations at the military post of 
Little Rock, may prove not uninteresting. 
Though the narrative is intended chiefly to 
trace up the origin and subsequent growth of 
Little Rock, now the capital of the State, it 
points also to earlier explorations and settle- 
ments made by Europeans in that region gen- 
erally. It says : " No history of the State of 
Arkansas has ever been published. Fernando 
de Soto was its first explorer of any note, and 
historians still disagree as to whether he was 
buried beneath the waters of the mighty stream 
with which his name is inseparably linked, or 
under the turbid waves of the Arkansas. As 
De Soto did not explore the country with a 
direct view to its settlement or improvement, 
neither he nor his Spanish followers left any 
permanent memorials of their visits, in its 
nomenclature, except in a single instance 



ARKANSAS. 



25 



Bayou Departed. No river bears a Spanish 
name. But the enterprise of the subsequent 
French settlers is manifest in the names of 
streams and localities. 

" Louis XV., in 1720, made a grant of twelve 
square miles to the celebrated John Law, on 
the Arkansas River, on condition that he should 
settle on it fifteen hundred German immigrants, 
and maintain at his own expense a sufficient 
military force to protect them against the In- 
dians. Two hundred Alsatians arrived, and 
five hundred negroes were imported from 
Africa by the Mississippi Company, of which 
John Law was the founder, and which has 
given his name a notorious immortality. The 
scheme, as is well known, failed, and the 
colony, after a few struggling years, was aban- 
doned. It moved to a place about thirty miles 
from New Orleans, which has since been called 
* C6te d'Or,' or the * Golden Coast,' from the 
wealth and prosperity of the descendants of 
the original colony, among whom the French 
language eventually took the place of the Ger- 
man. 

"Except by enterprising French explorers, in 
search of gold, no visit was made to the State 
for along time afterward. It is probable that 
the next permanent settlement was made near 
the close of the last century, but it cannot be 
definitely ascertained. The site then selected 
was one hundred miles below Little Eock, on 
the Arkansas River. No splendid patronage of 
a world-renowned financier gave prestige to the 
undertaking, which was, this time, the result 
of the gradual increase of the prosperity of 
Arkansas. This colony had great difficulties 
to encounter. Their village was on the low, 
alluvial soil of the river-bank, and disease made 
extensive ravages. The surrounding forest 
was unbroken, and formed an obstacle to the 
clearing and settlement of the country. The 
colony would probably have perished in ob- 
livion, were it not for the cession of the 
Louisiana Territory to the United States, 
which threw the country open to the enter- 
prise of a new race of people. The Territory 
of Arkansas was established by an act of Con- 
gress, March 2, 1819, the whole population 
not exceeding one thousand, exclusive of In- 
dians. The point at 'Le Petit Rocher,' or 
' The Little Rock,' had been a regular place for 
crossing the river with the Indians from time 
immemorial. Though it has never been ford- 
able there, yet a break in the hills rendered it 
a favorable place for transition. The great In- 
dian trail passed over the present site of the 
city. A few families settled there, and Little 
Rock became the extreme outpost on the west- 
ern frontier of the United States. Practically 
it was as far from the national capital as Alas- 
ka is at present. A mail-carrier on horseback 
once a month supplied the people of the 
place with news from Washington City, at least 
three months old. Governor Miller was the 
first executive of the Territory. Mr. William 
E. Woodruff, who survives as' a citizen of Lit- 



tle Rock, on November 20 r 1819, issued the 
first newspaper ever published in the Territory, 
called the Arkansas Gazette, which still flour- 
ishes, under the supervision of his son. The 
settlement was named Arkapolis, by some 
aspiring student, but it soon resumed the 
descriptive title it now bears. After the 
Territory was admitted into the Union, in 1836, 
the growth of the State became more rapid, 
though still retarded by lawsuits concerning 
conflicting titles to the land on which the town 
is situated. A final disposition of these cases 
was not made till the December term of the 
United States Supreme Court for 1867. The 
war, which desolated so many fair cities, 
seems here to have stayed its insatiate hand, 
and rather to have developed than injured its 
prosperity. Large property-holders had been 
compelled, by pecuniary need, to relinquish 
town lots to more energetic and enterprising 
men, who erected fine houses and stores. 
The capital of Arkansas has its elegant man- 
sions, its business blocks, its temples of worship, 
its courts of justice, its public buildings, and 
every necessary characteristic of a thriving 
city, except its hotels." 

With regard to the Spanish and French ex- 
plorers, or settlers, alluded to in the foregoing 
narrative, it may be observed here that about 
the middle of the last century a Spanish fort 
was built on the high land bordering the Ar- 
kansas River, some sixty miles above its mouth, 
with a view to establishing and protecting the 
fur-trading post from the Indians, and more 
effectually to secure that Government's claim to 
the territory against the encroachments of the 
French from the Upper Mississippi and the Il- 
linois country. The fort exists no longer, but 
its site and adjoining grounds are occupied at 
present by a village called the " Fort," desig- 
nating by its name the place once guarded by a 
military force. The grandchildren of Don 
Carlos de Villemont, Governor of the fort 
125 years ago, and those of De Valliere (his 
immediate successor in that capacity under the 
short French rule), are still living in the vicinity. 
Upon Arkansas having been made a Territory 
by act of Congress in 1819, the seat of its 
government was located in the above-named 
village, where it remained for about two 
years, when the inhabitants transferred it to 
Little Rock, where the Legislature held its first 
session after such removal, on the 1st day of 
October, 1821. Little Rock has continued to 
be the capital of Arkansas both during its Ter- 
ritorial condition and since it has been admitted 
into the Union as a State in 1836. The place 
in which the city of Little Rock now stands, 
and which the French settlers, or explorers, 
had originally called "Le Petit Rocher," in 
order to distinguish it from "Le Grand Rocher," 
or " Big Rock" (now a town of this name), two 
miles above, began to be permanently settled 
about the year 1818 ; but at the end of 1822, 
nearly two years after it had become the cap- 
ital of the Territory, there were not more than 



26 



ARKANSAS. 



five or six families dwelling in it. By July, 
1824, however, that number of families had 
increased to forty, and the population of 
the place has been steadily augmenting, es- 
pecially since the final settlement of land-titles 
by the Supreme Court of the United States in 
1867. 

The local affairs of a public character in Ar- 
kansas last year continued about the same as 
they had been during the twelve months next 
preceding, as was mentioned in the CYCLOPAE- 
DIA, for 1868. 

The General Assembly met again at Little 
Rock after the holiday recess, and continued 
its regular sittings till the 10th of April, 1869, 
when both Houses adj ourned sine die. Within 
this period, and that of the session held before 
the holidays, from the lYth of November, 
1868, the Legislature transacted a vast amount 
of business, many important bills, more or less 
immediately connected with the general in- 
terests of the people, having been discussed 
and finally passed. 

The martial law proclaimed and executed by 
Governor Clayton in numerous sections of the 
State, on account of assassinations and other 
crimes perpetrated mostly on individuals known 
as Union men, not to mention the frequent acts 
of open defiance to the law, and resistance 
offered to civil officers in the exercise of their 
duty, met with great disapprobation, and com- 
plaints were made by a large portion of the 
community throughout the State, especially 
by the inhabitants of the counties designated 
as subject to it. In several of these were held 
mass-meetings, promiscuously attended by per- 
sons belonging to opposite political parties, 
without distinction, in order publicly to con- 
demn all violations of the laws of the State. 
They engaged to keep the peace themselves 
and to cause others to keep it within their 
county, and to assist the officers of the law in 
suppressing all infractions of it, and bringing 
the offenders to justice. In some of these 
counties the most prominent residents met 
together for the purpose of deprecating the 
continuance of its enforcement, solemnly pledg- 
ing themselves to the Executive for the future 
tranquillity of their county, as well as for the 
peaceful and ready obedience of their fellow- 
citizens to the requirements of the civil officers. 
A meeting for such a purpose was held in Orit- 
tenden County on January 18, 1869, when the 
following preamble and resolutions were unani- 
mously adopted : 

Whereou, His Excellency, Powell Clayton, Governor 
of Arkansas, has thought proper to declare martial 
law in the county of Crittenden, for the purpose of 
more effectually enforcing the laws of the State ; and, 
whereas, by order of the Governor, the county of 
Crittenden has been, and is now, occupied by the Ar- 
kansas State guards' andj whereas, the occupation 
by the State guards aforesaid is very expensive, both 
to the State of Arkansas and county of Crittenden, 
and has a tendency to disturb all business within the 
county of Crittenden : now, therefore, we, the citizens 
of the county, do 

Raolve, That we, the citizens of the county, whose 



names are here subscribed, do state upon honor that we 
have had nothing to do with the organization known 
as the Ku-klux Klan, directly or indirectly, to our 
knowledge. 

Itesolved, That we deprecate the shooting and hang- 
ing of men without a trial by the proper authorities, 
and that we do solemnly pledge ourselves to the 
Governor of the State of Arkansas, if he will move 
or cause to be moved from the county of Crittenden 
the Arkansas State guards, to assist the sheriff of the 
county of Crittenden in enforcing the laws of the 
State, and in preserving good order in said county. 

fiesolved. That we pledge ourselves, in order to 
carry out the above resolutions, that we will sustain 
and defend each other against all unlawful opposition. 

Which preamble and resolutions, after being read, 
were adopted by the meeting without a dissenting 
voice. 

The heavy arm of military force and its sum- 
mary proceedings, however, did not weigh 
long upon these counties ; and that of Critten- 
den was the last one from which it was with- 
drawn. In a message to the Legislature, dated 
February 6, 1869, the Governor announced 
" the speedy revocation of martial law in every 
county in the State, except in the county of 
Crittenden," wherein a small force would be 
retained ; and by a subsequent message, under 
date of March 22d, he informed the General 
Assembly that *' he had issued a proclamation 
restoring civil authority in Crittenden County, 
to take effect upon its receipt by the officer in 
charge ; also, directing prisoners in charge to 
be turned over to the civil authorities, and 
the force there disbanded. He announces 
that therewith "martial law ceased throughout 
the State." 

The vigorous execution of this extraordinary 
measure, though loudly denounced and in- 
veighed against by a large portion of the peo- 
ple and the press, seems to have produced a 
good effect in checking the perpetration of 
crimes, previously frequent, and restoring the 
country to a somewhat normal condition of 
tranquillity. In the last-cited message the 
Governor avers, " The counties lately under 
martial law can now punish desperate charac- 
ters;" adding, "letters from citizens of all 
parts of the State bear evidence that quiet, 
security, and good order, are enjoyed by all 
classes." This beneficial result may be also 
inferred from the fact that the General As- 
sembly, which was in session during the whole 
time when martial law was in operation, not 
only made repeated appropriations of money 
to pay the militia occupying the three districts 
respectively assigned them for that purpose, 
but voted public thanks to their commanders, 
and even passed an act fully indorsing the 
proclamations and action of the Governor in 
this respect, as follows: 

An act to declare valid and conclusive certain procla- 
mations of the Governor of the State of Arkansas and 
acts done in pursuance thereof, or of his orders iu the 
declaration of martial law. 

SECTION 1. That after the 3d day of November, 1868, 
and before the first day of May, 1869, respecting martial 
law, military trials by courts-martial or military com- 
missions, or the arrest, imprisonment, or trial of per- 
sons charged with any offences against the State, or any 



ARKANSAS. 



27 



resistance to the laws thereof, or as aiders or abettors 
thereof, or as guilty of any disloyal practice in aid 
thereof, or of affording aid and comfort to those en- 
gaged therein, and all proceedings and acts done by 
the military forces, or had by the courts-martial or 
military commissions, or arrests, imprisonments, 
searches, or seizures, made in the premises by any per- 
son by the authority of the orders or proclamations 
of the Governor of the State made as aforesaid, or in 
aid thereof, or otherwise, are hereby approved in all 
respects, legalized, and made valid to the same extent 
and with the same effect as if said orders, proclama- 
tions, and acts, had been issued and made, and said 
arrests, imprisonments, searches, seizures, proceed- 
ings, and acts, had been done under the previous 
express authority and direction of the General Assem- 
bly of the State of Arkansas, and in pursuance of 
the laws thereof previously enacted, and expressly 
authorizing and directing the same to be done ; and 
no courts of the State of Arkansas shall have or take 
jurisdiction of, or in any manner review any of the 
proceedings had, or acts done as aforesaid ; nor shall 
any person be held to answer in any court of said 
State for any acts done or omitted to be done, in pur- 
suance of or in aid of any of said proclamations or' 
orders, or otherwise, by any of said force or forces 
within the period aforesaid, and all officers and other 
persons in the State of Arkansas or who acted in aid 
thereof, acting in the premises or otherwise, shall 
be held prima facie to nave been authorized by the 
Governor of the State : Provided, that nothing herein 
contained shall be so construed as to prohibit the 
convening of courts-martial for the trial of persons 
belonging to the militia or State guards of the State. 

SEC. 2. This act to take effect from and after its 
passage. 

A vast number of residents within the coun- 
ties under martial law suffered heavy losses 
on account of its operation, private property 
of all kinds having been taken away from them 
for the use of the military force stationed 
therein, by order of the officer, and in many 
cases they were violently deprived of it hy 
the soldiers without authority. In the ahove- 
cited message of March 22d, the Governor 
acknowledges, "Evils have resulted to indi- 
viduals hy the occupancy of counties hy the 
militia;" and adds, "in some cases unau- 
thorized bands have robbed and plundered 
indiscriminately." In justice to those people, 
therefore, he urged on the Legislature the 
necessity of establishing " a court of claims to 
adjudicate demands arising out of the operations 
of martial law," this court " to sit for a suffi- 
cient period in each county where martial law 
existed, and holding a final session at the seat 
of government, being empowered to examine 
and adjudicate in reference to all supplies taken 
by the quartermaster's and subsistence depart- 
ments, so that those who are properly entitled 
may receive pay for supplies furnished." This 
matter, however, had been taken in hand al- 
ready hy members belonging to both branches 
of the Legislature, a hill having been intro- 
duced in the lower House on March 19th, "au- 
thorizing the Governor to appoint a court of 
claims to take proof of the indebtedness of the 
State to citizens for property taken hy the 
State guards; appropriating for that purpose 
$50,000 out of the military funds not otherwise 
appropriated." A similar hill was introduced 
on the 20th in the Senate, where it passed, 



with some amendments, on April 8th, by a 
vote of twelve to three. The House bill, or 
rather its substitute, appointing, instead of a 
court to he established hy the Governor, " a 
committee of the members of the Legislature 
to audit and adjudicate claims against the State 
on account of property taken by the militia 
forces of the State," and appropriating for it 
" the sum of $200,000," instead of $50,000, was 
passed on April 9th, the vote being thirty-nine 
yeas and fifteen nays. The Senate, to whom 
the passage of the bill was announced hy mes- 
sage on the same day, took it up on the next 
before noon, the hour previously fixed by a 
joint resolution for adjournment, when other 
bills were sought to be pushed through, and 
thus it was not finally acted upon. 

One of the most remarkable enactments 
made by the General Assembly of Arkansas at 
the last session was the " funding of the puh- 
lic State deht," a large proportion of it being 
of a very extraordinary character. The bill 
" authorizes and requires the Governor to fund 
the deht of the State, consisting of the bonds 
issued by the State to the Real Estate Bank 
and State banks, by issuing new bonds of the 
State in lieu of the old honds issued to the 
said Real Estate and State banks ; " ordaining, 
that " the amount of the new honds (of $1,000 
each, payable in thirty years after date the 
1st of January, 1870 and bearing interest at 
the rate of six per cent, per annum, with 
coupon-warrants attached) shall he the amount 
of the old bonds with accrued interest there- 
on ; said interest to be computed from the time 
of the last payment of interest upon said old 
bonds to the date of the issue of the new 
bonds ; " that is, amount of the old bonds is- 
sued to the Real Estate Bank, $500,000, in- 
terest accrued on the same from September 7, 
1840, to January 1, 1870, $870,000, making 
together $1,370,000, and bearing an annual 
interest to be paid by the State of $82,200. 
The proposal of this measure excited great op- 
position both within the halls of the Legisla- 
ture, and among the people and press through- 
out the State, the opponents professing their 
readiness to pay whatever the State owed on 
any account, but refusing to sanction the pro- 
posed bill, because, so far as the honds issued 
to the Real Estate Bank may he concerned, 
above three-fourths of the debt sought to be 
funded and imposed upon the State had no 
existence whatever. The facts connected with 
the origin and subsequent circumstances of the 
said bonds were well known, and set down 
in a decision hy the Supreme Court of Arkansas, 
as follows : 

On the 1st of January, 1840, the State issued to the 
Real Estate Bank, in pursuance of its charter, five 
hundred bonds for $1,000 each, bearing interest, etc., 
to be sold at par, for the purpose of procuring bank- 
ing capital, etc. On the 7th of September, 1840, the 
cashier of the bank, with the approval of two of the 
b,ond commissioners, entered into a contract with the 
North American Trust and Banking Company of 
New York, by which that company agreed to loan the 



28 



ARKANSAS. 



Real Estate Bans: $250,000, upon a pledge or hypoth- 
ecation of the bonds referred to, which sum was to 
be advanced by instalments and repaid at stipulated 
periods, with interest, etc. in pursuance of this con- 
tract, the bonds were delivered to the North Ameri- 
can Trust and Banking Company, and it is admitted 
that the Seal Estate Bank received, through its 
agents, and appropriated to its use, the sum of $121,- 
836.59. No further sum was advanced. 

About the 1st of December, 1840, the North Amer- 
ican Trust and Banking Company pledged the same 
bonds to James Holfora & Co., bankers, of London, 
for a loan of $325,000. Afterward Holford became 
the sole owner of the debt, and holder of the bonds 
so pledged, by transfer from his partner. The North 
American Trust and Banking Company went into 
liquidation upon being declared insolvent. Three 
referees, two counsellors-at-law, and one merchant, 
were appointed by the Court to ascertain what collat- 
eral securities had been assigned to secure surns^due 
from the insolvent company, who, after a laborious 
investigation, reported that among the collateral secu- 
rities assigned to Holford by .the Trust Company 
were the five hundred Arkansas bonds, which they 
ascertained to be of the actual value of $425,000 on 
the 1st of October, 1857. 

"Whence the opponents of the bill inferred, as 
a self-evident conclusion, that these bonds, be- 
ing affected by no other debt than the sum of 
$121,336.59 loaned on them, and interest, what- 
ever amount above this was now sought to 
be funded, under the title of State debt, on ac- 
count of the said bonds, was clearly out of ex- 
istence ; as the State of Arkansas cannot pos- 
sibly owe more than that amount to the present 
holder of the bonds, who is vested with the 
rights of the lender ; by the same reason by 
which the Trust and Banking Company itself, 
if it had not failed, and still held the bonds in 
its possession, could demand of the Real Estate 
Bank, or the State, the payment only of the 
sum it actually advanced on the bonds and 
interest ; as a pawnee, who gives fifty dollars 
on a value of one thousand, deposited with him 
as security, or his successor, cannot ask of the 
debtor the payment of as much money as the 
pledge is worth, and interest, but must be 
content to receive only the fifty dollars which 
he loaned on it, and interest. Yet the bill 
funding the public State debt for the whole 
amount of the said old bonds, and interest 
thereon since 1840, passed the liouse of Rep- 
resentatives on April 1st, by a vote of 38 to 18, 
and the Senate on the 3d, with yeas 13, nays 
4 ; and the Governor approved the act on the 
6th. 

The State Board of Education held meet- 
ings to arrange details for carrying the general 
school law into effect as soon as practicable, 
the most beneficial results being anticipated 
from its execution; though there were some 
differences of opinion as to the propriety and 
expediency of establishing separate schools 
for white and colored children. The Legisla- 
ture also took commendable interest in this 
important subject during the last session. 
Among other provisions made tending to pro- 
mote general instruction, they adopted a joint 
resolution, requesting Congress, through the 
Senators and Representatives of Arkansas at 



Washington, " to grant the State such aid in 
lands as will enable it to establish a male and 
female normal school ; " and passed an act "to 
donate the property in the city of Arkadelphia, 
formerly known as the Arkansas Blind Insti- 
tute, to said city, for the purpose of establish- 
ing tree high echools." They made " an ap- 
propriation for the purchase of books for con- 
victs in the penitentiary." 

The General Assembly also took steps " to 
establish the Arkansas Deaf and Mute Insti- 
tute," by amending the first four sections of an 
act previously passed for that purpose. 

In regard to the blind, the Legislature, be- 
sides passing a general act " for the benefit of 
blind persons of the State," adopted a joint 
resolution "to request Congress to grant one 
hundred sections of land for the benefit of the 
Blind Institute of Arkansas," and passed an 
act " making appropriations for the Blind In- 
stitute, for the years 1869 and 1870, and to 
supply a deficiency for the year 1868." This 
establishment, however, seems very well man- 
aged and in a prosperous condition; its in- 
mates, both male and female, being success- 
fully taught and trained up to execute a vari- 
ety of useful works adapted to their state. 

Internal improvements, tending to develop 
and make available the great natural resources 
of the State, are not neglected by the Govern- 
ment. The various branches of agriculture 
are attended to with success, especially the 
growth of cotton, to the profitable cultivation 
of which the soil of Arkansas, the river-bot- 
tom-lands above all, is peculiarly adapted. 
The crop of this staple in Arkansas, in 1869, 
was estimated at "nearly 300,000 bales." 
In order to redeem swamps and overflowed 
lands, and restore them to cultivation, several 
acts were passed by the Legislature, "provid- 
ing for the building and repairing the public 
levees of the State," and a joint resolution 
adopted, " requesting Congress to confirm the 
lands donated to the State by Congress, for 
the construction of levees and drains." The 
new public system of levees is considered about 
the best that could be devised, and represented 
as being now vigorously prosecuted. The 
Arkansas Gazette of November 30, 1869, briefly 
describes it in these words: "A majority of 
the owners of the land to be reclaimed present 
their petition to the county commissioner, who 
lays it before the county court. The county 
court may reject the petition, and, in case of 
granting it, it is forwarded to the Superin- 
tendent of Public Works at Little Rock. The 
superintendent advertises the contract thirty 
days, in which to receive bids, and gives the^ 
work to the lowest bidder, who files an ap- 
proved bond to the amount of the estimated 
cost of the work, for the performance of his 
contract. The State pays the contractors in 
bonds of the State, due in thirty years, the 
lands protected to pay interest thereon, being 
taxed at a valuation of about twenty -five cents 
an acre, from lists of said lands, contained in 



ARKANSAS. 



29 



the original petition of the land-owners and 
such others as may be added to such list by 
the county court.' 1 

To promote internal improvements, the Gen- 
eral Assembly made provisions for the regula- 
tion of trade, and transportation companies, by 
land or water, and adopted several joint reso- 
lutions, requesting the Post-Office Department 
at Washington "to increase the mail service 
on certain routes of the State," by establishing 
it on new routes where it had never existed, 
and reestablishing it on old ones where it had 
been discontinued. 

The people of Arkansas, however, seem fully 
to appreciate the importance of railroads, and 
are desirous to extend their lines into a general 
system, this being the quickest mode of bring- 
ing the distant portions of the State into close 
communication with one another and with the 
neighboring States. For this purpose, two acts 
were passed by the Legislature in the preceding 
session, approved on July 21 and 23, 1868, re- 
spectively, and both ratified by the people's 
suffrage at the general election in November, 
that year. The first one of these acts, under 
the title, " An act to aid in the construction 
of railroads," authorized the loaning the State 
credit to assist railway companies in construct- 
ing their lines ; the other, entitled, " An act to 
provide for a general system of railroad incor- 
porations," fixes at 850 the aggregate number 
of miles of road to which the State aid is to be 
granted, and, for the carrying out its provis- 
ions, appoints a board of commissioners, who 
were " empowered to receive applications, and 
required to designate the lines to which the 
State aid is to be granted." In the session of 
1869, however, this subject was taken up again, 
a remarkable bill having been introduced in 
the Senate, discussed and voted for by a ma- 
jority of its members, whereby, professing to 
carry out the wish of the people, expressed by 
their ratifying the act "to aid in the construc- 
tion of railroads," the Legislature repeals those 
sections of the other act, equally ratified by 
the people, which appoints a board of commis- 
sioners to designate the roads for the award of 
the State aid, and assumes the exercise of this 
function itself, by actually designating five dif- 
ferent lines of road, and granting the State aid, 
under certain conditions and restrictions, for 
850 miles in the aggregate, at the rate of ten 
and fifteen thousand dollars per mile respec- 
tively. This bill, involving some ten millions 
of the State or people's money, was warmly 
opposed, as being unconstitutional, and there- 
fore null, because of the already existing law 
ratified by the people, whose enactments could 
not be repealed by the Legislature, nor, in this 
case, by the people themselves, since third par- 
ties had entered into contract under its pro- 
visions, and been vested with rights which 
could not be taken away from them by any 
legal power. The opponents added the less 
weighty reason that the provisions of the pro- 
posed bill were partial and inexpedient, as it 



loaned the State credit to unimportant, per- 
haps only imaginary roads, and omitted most 
important ones, as the Memphis and Little 
Rock, considered of paramount advantage to 
the State. The bill passed the Senate on March 
11, 1869, by a vote of fourteen to seven; but 
in the House of Representatives it was not 
finally acted upon. 

The banking interest in the State appears 
to be quite large, considering the number of 
its population, which is estimated at about 
600,000, and in a favorable condition. 

Taxation in Arkansas is a subject of much 
complaint by the people, and presses generally 
heavily, on account both of the high rate of val- 
uation at which property is assessed, and of the 
amount levied on it for State, county, and mu- 
nicipal purposes, though some cities and coun- 
ties are taxed more than others. An apparently 
correct idea of this whole subject may be formed 
from the subjoined statement relative to Pu- 
laski County : " The people of Pulaski County, 
and of Little Rock, have been more oppressed 
by taxation than any county and city in the 
State. Our property is all assessed fifty per 
cent, above its cash value ; and, on that valua- 
tion, in 1868, a tax of more than three per 
cent, was levied. The present year, the same 
assessment is continued, and our people are 
taxed, for State, county, and city purposes, six 
per cent., the United States taxes increasing it 
to not less than eight per cent. Last year, the 
taxes amounted, in Pulaski County, almost to 
$270,000; this year they will be $500,000, 
which, to a population of 10,000 souls, white 
and black, is unprecedented to use no harsher 
term." 

The sum of the public expenditures of the 
State is said by many to be swelling up much 
faster, and to a greater extent, than her growth 
can bear or justify. A general appropriation 
bill was passed by both Houses of the Legisla- 
ture in the last session, the act fixing both the 
items of this expenditure, and the amounts per 
annum to be paid for each during the period 
of two years. 

The political excitement in Arkansas last 
year, as previously? ran high higher, per- 
haps, and with more violent movements, than 
in other States of the Union. It is not im- 
probable that the public disturbances, which 
provoked the proclamation of martial law in 
many of its counties in November, 1868, were 
prompted chiefly by party spirit, and that the 
manner in which that law was enforced, by 
those intrusted with its execution, proceeded 
from the same cause. Between the white and 
negro residents of the State, however, a recip- 
rocal good feeling toward each other seems to 
be cherished. "Within and outside the halls of 
the Legislature the Republican party is the 
larger in number and influence, especially be- 
cause a large proportion of citizens who would 
probably belong to the Democratic party are 
disqualified and ineligible according to the 
provisions of the reconstruction acts ; though 



30 



ARKANSAS. 



they are being gradually rehabilitated. At 
present, the government of Arkansas, in all its 
departments, civil as well as political, is in the 
hands of Republicans. A contrariety of sen- 
timent, however, which had been growing for 
some time within their own ranks, broke out 
at last into an open rupture, as appears from 
the preamble and resolutions unanimously 
adopted at a meeting held in Little Rock on 
the 8th of April, 1869, and attended > by 
eighteen Republican members of the legisla- 
tive body, both Senators and Representatives, 
utterly condemning and repudiating the acts 
as well as the policy of the present State ad- 
ministration and Legislature, on principle, and 
inviting their fellow-Republicans to cooperate 
with them as follows : 

Whereat, In the bad management _ of our State 
government under the unwise administration of 
Governor Powell Clayton, and in the rash, reckless, 
and improvident legislation of the General Assem- 
bly, under the control of the Governor and his par- 
tisans, the Kepublican party of Arkansas has re- 
ceived wounds, from the effects of which, the most 
energetic and untiring efforts of its true friends and 
defenders can alone rescue it, and save it from 
threatened defeat and overthrow : therefore, 

Resolved. That, renewing our allegiance to the 
National Union Kepublican party, and our fidelity 
and devotion to the true principles and doctrines of 
that party, as set forth and declared in the platform 
of the Chicago Convention, we do most solemnly pro- 
test, in the name of the Republican party and of the 
people of Arkansas, against all those great errors, 
abuses and corruptions of the administration, which. 
have caused so much dissatisfaction and discontent 
in the party, and brought so much trouble and dis- 
tress upon the country. 

Resolved, That while it is needless to specify, in 
detail, all the numerous acts and measures, so uni- 
versally known and reprobated, that characterize 
and make up the policy and administration of the 
government; yet we deem it proper to enumerate 
the following among the more prominent causes of 
complaint : 

1. The criminal abuse of power and dereliction of 
duty on the part of the Governor as commander-in- 
chief of the militia forces of the State, under the late 
reign of martial law, whereby that which was in- 
tended by its friends and advisers as a wise and 
wholesome measure of safety to the government and 
safety to the private citizen, has been turned into a 
means of wrong, crime, and oppression. 

2. The criminal and corrupt mismanagement of 
our great and important railroad interests, whereby 
a large portion of the State has been entirely ignored 
and overlooked in the dispensation of " State aid," 
and nearly all the leading authorized routes of the 
State been seized upon by an organized " ring" of 
penniless adventurers under the convenient arrange- 
ments of a General Incorporation Act passed for that 
purpose, who, in connection with the board of rail- 
road commissioners under the control of the chief 
Executive, have been made the recipients and bene- 
ficiaries of all the benefits of the " loan bill," by 
which some thirteen millions of dollars have been 
awarded. 

3. The improvident, not to say corrupt, manage- 
ment of the funding bill, by which a debt of several 
millions of dollars, being a portion of the Holford 

'laim, which the State neither legally nor morally 
owes, has been assumed and funded without the 
authority or consent of the people, and contrary to 
the constitution of the State. 

4. The general spirit of reckless expenditure and 
extravagant appropriation, which has characterized 



ARMY, UNITED STATES. 

the administration of the government in all its de- 
partments, whereby the annual expenses of the State 
government, which the representatives of the party 
promised the people, in their speeches and through 
their press during the late presidential canvass, 
should not exceed two or three hundred thousand dol- 
lars, have run up to the enormous and almost incredi- 
ble sum of a million and a half dollars per annum. 

Resolved, That with such a record of improvidence, 
folly, and crime, to father, it will be utterly impossi- 
ble for the Kepublican party to maintain itself, or 
hope for future success : therefore, that as the only 
means of safety and protection that is left us, we 
hereby, in the name of the Kepublican party, repu- 
diate said record and its authors, aiders, and abet- 
tors ; and, planting ourselves upon the true princi- 
ples of the platform of the party, we earnestly call 
upon every true Republican in the State, colored as 
well as white, to unite and cooperate with us in our fu- 
ture efforts to save the organization of the party, and 
preserve the purity and integrity of its principles. 

On the evening of October 15, 1869, Gov- 
ernor Clayton made a speech from the steps 
of the capitol, solemnly declaring the policy 
which he intended to pursue namely, "favor- 
ing the earliest possible enfranchisement of the 
people, and retrenchment and reform in public 
expenditures." These declarations, received 
with satisfaction by the people, and applauded 
by the press generally, produced the effect of 
blunting the edge of that opposition which 
had previously existed. 

The proposed amendment to the Constitu- 
tion of the United States, known as Article 
Fifteenth, was ratified by the Legislature of 
Arkansas in their last session almost unani- 
mously ; though several members refused their 
assent to the second section of the said article, 
which provides that " the Congress shall have 

Eower to enforce this article by appropriate 
jgislation," as infringing upon the rights of 
the individual States. 

ARMY, UNITED STATES. At the com- 
mencement of the year the Department of War 
was under the charge of Major-General J. M. 
Schofield, and General U. S. Grant was in 
command of the Army. The latter, on March 
4th, became President, and was succeeded in 
command by Lieutenant-General W. T. Sher- 
man, who was promoted to the rank of Gen- 
eral. On March 12th, General John A. Raw- 
lins became Secretary of War, which post he 
filled until his death, on September 6th. The 
President then appointed General Sherman 
Secretary pro tern., and on November 1st, Gen- 
eral W. W. Belknap succeeded to the office. 
For the purpose of military government, the 
United States are divided into twelve depart- 
ments and three districts, each of which is 
under the command of an experienced general 
officer, who, by law, is invested with all the " 
powers of the commanding general of an army 
in the field, and is held responsible for the dis- 
cipline and maintenance of the troops, the 
preservation of good order, so far as the mili- 
tary authority extends, and for the care of all 
the public property that belongs to the army. 
These departments, with the commanding offi- 
cers, are as follows : 



ARMY, UNITED STATES. 



31 



Department of Dakota Major-General Han- 
cock. 

Department of the Platte Brevet, Major- 
General Augur. 

Department of the Missouri Brevet Major- 
General Sohofield. 

Department of the Cumberland Brevet Ma- 
jor-General Oooke. 

Department of Louisiana Brevet Major- 
General Mower. 

Department of Mississippi Brevet Major- 
General Ames. 

Department of the South Brevet Major- 
General Terry. 

Department of the East Brevet Major-Gen- 
eral McDowell. 

Department of the Lakes Brevet Major- 
General Pope. 

Department of California Brevet Major- 
General Ord. 

Department of Columbia Brevet Major- 
General Crook. 

Department of Alaska ~Brevei Major-Gen- 
eral Davis. 

The three military districts are Virginia, 
Brevet Major-General Canby ; Mississippi, Bre- 
vet Major-General Ames ; Texas, Brevet Major- 
General Reynolds. 

The four military divisions of the country, 
with their commanders, are as follows : Divis- 
ion of Missouri, Lieutenant-General Sheridan, 
embracing the departments of Dakota, the 
Platte, and the Missouri; the division of the 
South, Major-General Halleck, embracing the 
States of Kentucky, Tennessee, "West Virginia, 
Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, 
Florida, Georgia, and North and South Caro- 
lina; the division of the Atlantic, Major-Gen- 
eral Meade, embracing the States of Ohio, 
Michigan, Indiana, and Wisconsin ; the New- 
England States, New York, New Jersey, Penn- 
sylvania, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, and 
the District of Columbia; the division of the 
Pacific, Major-General Thomas, embracing Cali- 
fornia, Columbia, and Alaska. 

A further reduction of the forty-five regi- 
ments of infantry belonging to the peace estab- 
lishment was made during the year. This was 
ordered in a clause attached to the general ap- 
propriation bill passed March 3, 1869, which 
provided, " That there shall be no new com- 
missions, no promotions, and no enlistments 
in any infantry regiment until the total number 
of infantry regiments is reduced to twenty- 
five, and the Secretary is hereby directed to 
consolidate the infantry regiments as rapidly 
as the requirements of the public service 
and the reduction of the number of officers 
will permit." By the same act the period of 
enlistments was changed from three to five 
years. The Secretary of "War determined not 
to wait until the consolidation should be effect- 
ed by the progress of time, but to make it at 
once, and on March 10th issued orders for 
that object. The colonels and field-officers 
were selected at "Washington and announced 



in general orders, but the captains and lieu- 
tenants were selected'by the commanding gen- 
eral of the department in which the regiments 
were to serve. Generally the senior officer of 
each grade was retained. After this consoli- 
dation there remained 509 unattached officers. 
All of these were soon assigned to duty, except 
156, who were considered as awaiting orders. 

The maximum of the army at the close of 
the year was 52,234 enlisted men. Relying 
upon two-thirds for actual service, the number 
of men is 34,822. A plan for the reorganiza- 
tion of the army is proposed by General Sher- 
man. It retains the present number of regi- 
ments, which is forty, and allows a maximum 
of seventy-five privates to each company. This 
would give for the line of the Army 2,135 com- 
missioned officers and 42,490 men. Allowing 
two-thirds as the proportion which can be re- 
lied on for actual service, it would give 29,750 
men. This number is not estimated to be above 
the necessities of the country. 

The staff of the army consists of those offi- 
cers and men who administer to the wants of 
the military establishments, and are classified 
as adjutants-general, inspectors-general, bureau 
of military justice, quartermasters, commis- 
saries, surgeons, paymasters, and ordnance 
department, corps of engineers, chief signal- 
officer, and post-chaplains. In the Adjutant- 
General's Department nothing of importance 
has occurred. The results of the inspection 
service during the past year have been to dis- 
cover and bring to the notice of the proper 
authorities the qualifications of officers to fill 
the positions assigned them ; the condition of 
troops in regard to discipline, drill, and effi- 
ciency whether duty has been neglected ; 
laws, regulations, or orders violated; public 
property misapplied, lost, or wantonly de- 
stroyed ; whether there have been extravagant 
or unnecessary expenditures of public money, 
stores, or material ; and the personal responsi- 
bility for all irregularities and abuses, with 
suggestions for remedial action. Through the 
agency of this branch of the service there has 
been continued improvement in the discipline 
and efficiency of the troops, as well as the pro- 
motion of a more discriminating and careful 
regard for the economical application of public 
money and property. 

The Bureau of Military Justice has received, 
reviewed, and registered 14,944 records of mili- 
tary courts. It has also been charged with 
the duty of arranging and indexing the im- 
portant state papers of the late judge advocate 
and the provost-marshal during the war. 

The expenditures of the Quartermaster's De- 
partment have decreased $14,500,000, as com- 
pared with last year. The number of civilians 
engaged in the department has been reduced 
from 10,000 to 4,000 during the year. The 
scattered condition of the troops increases the 
expenditures. To this is to be added the pe- 
culiarly sterile character of the country in 
which they are kept. The troops are stationed 



32 



ARMY, UNITED STATES. 



by companies in posts in the most inhospitable 
parts of the continent, to which every article 
of food, forage, clothing, ammunition, etc., 
must be hauled in wagons, at great cost. A 
heavy item of expenditure is the cost of fuel 
and materials for making huts, sometimes at a 
distance of one or two hundred miles from a 
place where a growing sapling may be found. 
A reduction of the estimates to those before 
the war would make it necessary to withdraw 
the troops from a large part of the distant Ter- 
ritories. The railroad companies to whom the 
materials of the department were sold, at the 
close of the war, incurred a debt of $7,591,406, 
which increased, by interest, to $9,000,000. 
About one-half of this amount has been paid. 
Suits have been commenced against those not 
manifesting a disposition to cancel their ob- 
ligations. The transportation of the depart- 
ment over the railroads of the country has 
been made at less than the war rates, and 
has amounted to $2,253,304. The water trans- 
portation has cost $1,424,222. Of the former 
amount $933,166.21 was paid to the Pacific 
Railroads, one-half being paid in cash, and the 
other half retained in the Treasury to meet the 
interest on the bonds guaranteed by the United 
States. During the year 96,000 persons, 3, TOO 
animals, and 62,000 tons of stores, have been 
moved by water, and 60,000 persons, 14,000 
animals, and 40,000 tons of stores, by railroad. 
27,000 tons of stores have been moved by con- 
tractors for wagon transportation. The Pacific 
Railroad has occupied some of the principal 
routes of former wagon transportation, and 
has saved the Government much money in 
supplying the posts along its line. The cloth- 
ing and equipage on hand at the close of the 
war has been reduced by sales, but the amount 
that still remains is estimated at more than 
$42,000,000 in value. The two most impor- 
tant depots are the Schuylkill Arsenal and the 
one at Jefferson ville, Indiana. The number of 
national cemeteries is seventy-two, and there 
are three hundred and thirteen local posts and 
private cemeteries in which soldiers lie buried. 

The subsistence supplies for the Army have 
been mainly procured in the large market 
cities of the country. The average cost of the 
ration at these markets has been about twenty- 
three cents. Efforts to procure salt meats on 
the Pacific coast for troops stationed there 
have met with great success ; supplies of excel- 
lent quality have been obtained at favorable 
prices. Tobacco, at an average monthly value 
of $19,000, has been furnished to troops at cost 
prices, and the Freedmen's Bureau has been 
supplied with stores to the value of nearly 
$250,000. 

The issues to Indians at various points have 
amounted to more than $150,000, and, at the 
request of the Interior Department, stores 
valued at $37,500 were issued to destitute 
Osages and others to prevent starvation during 
the winter. Under an arrangement between 
the "War Department and the Department of 



the Interior, the Indian Department is fur- 
nished with food for the Indians on several res- 
ervations on the Missouri River and in the In- 
dian Territory. 

There has been paid $27,621.75 as commuta- 
tion of rations to Union soldiers while prison- 
ers of war. Claims for supplies furnished the 
Army during the war, amounting to $2,899,- 
806.15, have been received, of which $288,- 
033.87 have been allowed, and $2,581,064.13 
have been rejected. 

During the fiscal year 11,907 accounts and 
returns have been received from various offi- 
cers, of which 11,787 have been examined and 
referred to the Third Auditor for final settle- 
ment. 

The current expenditures of the Medical 
Department amounted to $233,561. At Key 
"West the troops were attacked with yellow 
fever, but by their prompt removal the ravages 
of the disease were at once stopped. The 
number of cases on the sick list during the 
year was 104,235. The average number con- 
stantly on the sick report was about 5.5 per 
cent. 

The Engineer Department of the Army has 
charge of the construction of the permanent 
forts, the improvement of rivers and harbors, 
with such other duties as are imposed by 
special laws. A very interesting subject has 
been under consideration in this Department 
during the year. It relates to the alterations 
required in the various forts in consequence 
of the increased weight of ordnance. Nearly 
all the sea-coast forts were planned at a time 
when the eight-inch gun was the heaviest 
afloat, and before rifled guns came into use. 
Now, however, that ordnance of the fifteen 
and twenty inch calibres, throwing a shot over 
one thousand pounds in weight with a velocity 
of fifteen hundred feet per second, have come 
into general use, the problem of resistance is 
entirely changed. It is believed that casemate 
forts, no matter how reenforced with iron, are 
not able to resist these shot, and changes must 
be made to meet this change of facts. The en- 
gineer officers have carefully studied this sub- 
ject and made many most valuable experi- 
ments. The Board of Engineers in New York 
has laid down five general propositions for ap- 
plication to all modifications of the sea-coast 
forts, viz. : 

1. The use of barbette batteries of earth, 
with deep parapet, and a liberal number of 
bomb-proof and magazine traverses. 

2. The use of the heaviest guns practicable, 
with carriages admitting of the gun being de : 
pressed below the parapet for loading. 

3. An abundant supply of heavy mortars. 

4. The use of torpedoes. 

5. Entanglements to hold a fleet long enough 
for destruction. 

These propositions seem to fulfil all the 
conditions required. No foreign army will be 
likely to attempt a landing on the coast, and a 
hostile fleet can only endeavor to run by the 



AEMY, UNITED STATES. 



33 



forts and lay the cities under contribution. 
On firm land guns of a heavier calibre can be 
handled, and with more accuracy of aim than 
by an enemy afloat. It is also doubtful if any 
armored ship yet built can long exist within 
the range of twenty-inch guns, or even of 
fifteen-inch guns, if skilfully handled. The 
river and harbor works of the country have 
progressed as rapidly as the appropriations 
would permit. In the territory west of the 
Mississsippi reconnoissances and geographical 
and geological explorations have been con- 
tinued, and the geological survey from the 
jSierra Nevada to the Eocky Mountains com- 
pleted. 

All the troops are now supplied with breech- 
loading small-arms of the best kind. It ap- 
pears that the experience of the late war has 
demonstrated that for field-guns the Napoleon 
twelve-pounder, smooth bore, and the three- 
inch ordnance rifled gun, are unsurpassed. In 
respect to heavy coast ordnance there exists a 
diversity of opinion. Some think that for the 
heavy sea-coast forts the ten-inch, fifteen-inch, 
and twenty-inch smooth-bore cast-iron guns 
for the great mass of fire, wjth mortars of the 
same calibre, and using the same shot, would 
be the most useful. A joint committee of Con- 
gress, appointed to investigate this with other 
subjects, made a report on ordnance, on March 
20th. The conclusions to which their investi- 
gations led them were as follows : 

1. That no more heavy guns should "be purchased 
for mounting in the fortifications or use on shipboard 
until such improvements are made in the methods 
of fabrication as will insure more reliable endurance 
than has heretofore been exhibited. 



show it to be unworthy of further confidence. Re- 
cent improvements in defensive works and armor- 
plating render heavy rifled guns the most efficient 
means of attack, and no iystem of fabrication which 
does not furnish such guns should be adopted or 
continued. The principle of initial tension, which is 
the "basis of the Kodman system, appears to be of 
doubtful utility, as applied by General Rodman, es- 
pecially for rifled guns. This tension, it is admitted, 
gradually disappears from the gun with age, and in 
time is entirely lost. 

3. That guns cast solid, in the manner practised in 
the navy under the direction of Kear-Admiral Dahl- 
gren, while exhibiting satisfactory endurance as 
smooth bores with small charges and hollow projec- 
tiles, have not the requisite strength for rifles of large 
calibre. This mode of casting seems to be defective 
in principle, as the tensions inaugurated in cooling 
have a tendency to aid the powder to rupture the 
gun. 

4. That experiments should be at once conducted 
for the purpose of ascertaining the real cause of the 
bursting of heavy guns^ and of determining upon 
some method of fabrication that will secure uniform 
endurance. 

5. That every encouragement should be given to 
inventors, and a full and fair trial accorded to all de- 
vices ofl'ered to the Government that promise a 
solution of the ordnance problem. 

6. That more efficient means for harbor defence 
should be adopted. The late war demonstrated that 
sand was the best material for defensive works, and 
that forts of masonry, such as we have now mainly 

VOL. ix. 3. A 



to rely upon for the protection of our seaboard cities, 
are inefficient to prevent the passage of armored, or 
even wooden vessels. The destruction of such de- 
fences is only a question of time to ordinary guns of 
heavy calibre. It was also demonstrated that forts 
alone, of whatever character, cannot resist the en- 
trance to harbors of powerfully-armed ships, if the 
preponderance of guns ^ on the assailing fleet is 
sufficient. In the opinion of the committee, ob- 
structions must be largely relied upon for harbor 
defence, in connection with properly-constructed 
fortifications. 

7. That no officer of the Army or Navy should be 
allowed to receive a patent for any article required, 
or likely to be required, for use in those branches or 
the public service, or be in any way interested in 
the manufacture or procurement of such articles. 
It should be the duty of Congress to recognize by 
suitable rewards the services of such officers as 
might make inventions of especial value to the Gov- 
ernment. 

8. That- the Ordnance Department of the Army 
can be entirely abolished with great advantage as to 
economy, and without detriment to the good of the 
service. The duties now performed by officers of 
that corps could be performed by officers detailed 
from the artillery service, under the direction of a 
chief stationed at Washington. In this manner the 
whole expense of the ordinance establishment would 
be saved, and artillery officers, who have not only- 
scientific training, but practical experience, would 
have a voice in the selection of the guns and ammu- 
nition they are required to use. 

This committee declared the present ord- 
nance system to be a failure, and that the 
country was without a single rifled gun of 
large calibre. 

Instruction in signals has been continued in 
every department, for the purpose of so diffus- 
ing a knowledge of the service and distributing 
apparatus that every officer may have' such 
information of the duty as may suffice in cas-e 
of emergency to save life in, or prevent disas- 
ter to, his command. The signal service has 
been brought into active use in operations 
against the Indians on the plains. The organ- 
ization and development of the field telegraph 
has received especial attention, and continued 
tests have been made with portable lines, such 
as are used with trains in the field. The field 
telegraph trains are organized in a military 
form, which requires all movements to be 
executed at the word of command. An object 
has been to provide a train so equipped and 
organized as to enable four portable lines, 
carried in it, to be erected simultaneously, at 
about the rate of three miles an hour. 

The operations of the Freedmen's Bureau 
have been closed, except the educational and 
bounty divisions. All the hospitals but two 
have been closed or transferred to the civil 
authorities. Of the two, one is about to be 
closed and the other will remain in the Dis- 
trict of Columbia. The number of persons 
which the Bureau has had under its care is 
584,178. During the existence of the Bureau 
about one in two hundred, or one-half of one 
per cent, of the freed people, have been sup- 
ported by the Government. The freedmen 
were advised to make written contracts with 
their employers, and have the same explained 



34 



AKMY, UNITED. STATES. 



and approved by a Bureau officer. In a single 
State more than fifty thousand such contracts 
were made. The labor of the freedmen has 
produced nearly all the food consumed in the 
South, besides large amounts of rice, sugar, 
and tobacco for exportation, and about two 
million bales of cotton per year, on which 
were paid into the United States Treasury, 
during the years 1866 and 1867, taxes amount- 
ing to more than forty million dollars. 

Much disappointment and ill feeling were 
caused by the failure of the original plan to 
lease or sell the abandoned lands in small 
tracts to refugees and freedmen. Information 
has been published respecting lands under the 
homestead act of June 21, 1866, and some aid 
given to those who desired to enter them. 
Attention is beginning to turn in that direc- 
tion, and about four thousand families have 
already made entries and obtained homes of 
their own. In a few instances freedmen have 
united in the purchase of farms under cultiva- 
tion. They are anxious to become land- 
owners. 

More attention has been given to their edu- 
cation than to any subject respecting them. In 
each State at least one normal school has been 
organized. Several chartered colleges for freed 
people are in operation ; also a university in 
the District of Columbia. In the 2,118 schools 
under the care of the Bureau, and officially re- 
ported, the number of teachers employed is 
2,455, and the number of pupils is 114,522. 
Adding those estimated in private and Sab- 
bath schools, the number under instruction of 
some "kind during the last year was not less 
than 250,000. The freed people have, during 
the last year, paid for tuition and the construc- 
tion of buildings about $200,000. 

The whole amount of bounties paid since 
April 17, 1867, when the first treasury certifi- 
cate was received, is $5,831,417.89. The bal- 
ance on deposit now due to claimants is $1,- 
220,066.52. Three thousand three hundred 
and eleven applications for bounty are now 
under examination in this office, and 18,000 
such claims are now on file in. the Second 
Auditor's office awaiting settlement, and it is 
believed that about twenty-five thousand claims 
of this kind remain to be presented. The work 
of paying bounties to freedmen is, therefore, 
not yet complete. 

The expenses of the Bureau were met the 
first year with the proceeds of rents, sales of 
crops, school taxes and tuition, and sale of 
Confederate States property. The amount re- 
ceived from all these miscellaneous sources 
was $1,865,645.80, and from appropriations by 
Congress since July, 1866, $11,084,750, making 
a total of $12,950,395.80 received from all 
sources. The expenditures, including the ac- 
counts of the "Department of Negro Affairs," 
from June 1, 1865, to August 31, 1869, have 
been $11,194,028.10. 

In addition to this, subsistence, medical sup- 
plies, and quartermasters' supplies, were ex- 



pended, amounting in cash to $2,330,788.72, 
but whose real value when transferred to the 
Bureau was probably less than one million dol- 
dars. Adding their original cost to the cash 
expended, the total expenses of the Bureau 
have been $13,524,816.82. 

It seems* that the Board of Visitors to the 
Military Academy thought that an entire re- 
organization of that institution should be made, 
as in its present condition it was inadequate 
to meet the future demands of the country. 
They recommended that the institution should 
be enlarged, the number of cadets greatly in- 
creased, the standard of admission be raised, 
and the cadets be divided into two classes, one 
pursuing an ordinary course of military in- 
struction and its members returned to civil 
life upon graduation, to spread a knowledge of 
the military art throughout the land, and sup- 
ply trained officers for the emergencies of war ; 
the other, selected from the promising mem- 
bers of the former class, and equal in number 
only to the yearly wants of the Army, to pur- 
sue their studies and practice to the very lim- 
its of military science. 

These recommendations would doubtless be 
much modified by those of practical officers. 

The actual expenditures of the Army for the 
fiscal year were, including the Freedmen's 
Bureau, $56,761,732. To this must be added, 
for old war debts paid, $23,882,310, making the 
total $80,644,042. Of this amount there was 
expended for reconstruction purposes, $406,419. 

It is manifest that the military admin- 
istration of the Army has been effective and its 
discipline unimpaired. The duties devolving 
upon the commanders of the three military dis- 
tricts of Virginia, Mississippi, and Texas have 
been performed under many embarrassments, 
with fidelity and good judgment. 

Of the pensioned widows of soldiers in the 
Revolutionary War there,survive : One of those 
married prior to 1783, 54 of those married 
between 1783 and 1794, 38 of those married 
between 1794 and 1800, and 795 of those mar- 
ried since 1800 887 in all, and only one less 
than the preceding year. 

There are on the rolls the names of 1,293 
widows and children of soldiers who served in 
the wars subsequent to the Eevolution and prior 
to that of 1861 a decrease of five since the last 
annual report. The number of invalid pen- 
sioners who served in said wars is 2,350. 

During the past year there were examined and 
allowed 7,120 new applications for invalid pen- 
sions of soldiers, at an aggregate annual rate of 
$468,144, and 2,908 applications for increased 
pension of invalid soldiers, at an annual aggre- 
gate rate of $164,798. During the same period 
15,695 original pensions to widows, orphans, 
and dependent relatives of soldiers, were al- 
lowed, at an aggregate annual rate of $1,577,- 
281 ; and 11,998 applications by the same class 
for increased pay were also admitted, at a 
total annual rate of $784,549. On the 30th 
June, 1869, there were on the rolls 81,579 in- 



AEMY, UNITED STATES. 



35 



valid military pensioners, whose yearly pen- 
sions amounted to $7,362,804, and 103,546 
widows, orphans, and dependent relatives of 
soldiers, whose yearly pensions amounted to 
$13,567,679, making the total aggregate of 
army pensioners 185,125, at a total annual rate 
of $20,930,483. The whole amount paid during 
the last fiscal year to invalid military pensioners 
was $9,383,715, to widows, orphans, and de- 
pendent relatives, $18,609,153 a grand total 
of $27,992,868, which includes the expenses of 
the disbursing agencies. 

With regard to the Indian tribes of the West, 
no permanent policy has yet been established, 
They have generally remained peaceful during 
the year. 

The completion of one of the great lines of 
railway to the Pacific coast has totally changed 
the conditions under which the civilized popu- 
lation of the country come in contact with the 
wild tribes. Instead of a slowly advancing 
tide of migration, making its gradual inroads 
upon the circumference of the great interior 
wilderness, the very centre of the desert has 
been pierced. Every station upon the railway 
has become a nucleus for a civilized settlement, 
and a base from which lines of exploration for 
both mineral and agricultural wealth are pushed 
in every direction. Daily trains are carrying 
thousands of citizens and untold values of 
merchandise across the continent, and must 
be protected from the danger of having hostile 
tribes on either side of the route. The range 
of the buffalo is being rapidly restricted, 
and the chase is becoming an uncertain reliance 
to the Indian for the sustenance of his family. 
If he is in want he will rob, as white men do 
in the like circumstances, and robbery is but 
the beginning of war, in which savage barbari- 
ties and retaliations soon cause a cry of exter- 
mination to be raised along the whole frontier. 

It has long been the policy of the Government 
to require of the tribes most nearly in contact 
with white settlements that they should fix 
their abode upon definite reservations, and 
abandon the wandering life to which they had 
been accustomed. To encourage them in civ- 
ilization, large expenditures have been made in 
furnishing them with the means of agriculture 
and with clothing adapted to their new mode of 
life. 

A new policy is not so much needed as an 
enlarged and more enlightened application of 
the general principles of the old one. This 
policy looks to two objects : First, the loca- 
tion of the Indians upon fixed reservations, 
so that the pioneers and settlers may be freed 
from the terrors of wandering hostile tribes; 
and, second, an earnest effort at their civiliza- 
tion, so that they may themselves be elevated 
in the scale of humanity, and our obligation 
to them as fellow-men be discharged. In 
carrying out this policy, a great practical 
difficulty has arisen from the fact that in 
most instances a separate reservation was 
given to each tribe. These reservations have 



been surrounded and gradually invaded by the 
white settlers, and the Indians crowded out of 
their homes and forced to negotiate for a new 
settlement, because their presence, their habits, 
and their manners, were distasteful to their new 
and more powerful neighbors. 

The Indians north of the Platte River are not 
yet prepared for a similar concentration ; but 
the time cannot be far distant when two or 
three principal Indian territories may properly 
embrace all the tribes east of the Rocky 
Mountains. 

The same policy of concentrating the tribes 
will apply to the country west of the Rocky 
Mountains, and will be equally necessary 
whenever and. wherever the feuds existing 
among them can be so far settled that they can 
live together in peaceful neighborhood. 

In the recent organization of the Indian 
Bureau itself it was deemed advisable to de- 
part from the usual mode of selecting and ap- 
pointing the superintendents and agents. The 
tribes in Nebraska and Kansas, and some of 
those most recently placed upon reservations 
in the Indian territory, were placed under 
control of the members of the Society of 
Friends ; the others were given in charge of 
military officers, who were waiting orders 
under the laws for the reduction of the 
Army. 

These sweeping changes were made because 
it was believed that the public opinion of the 
country demanded a radical reorganization of 
this branch of the service. The selection of 
the officers of the Army was made partly for 
economical reasons, as they were on pay though 
not on duty, and the salaries of many civil 
officers could thus be saved ; and partly because 
it was believed they furnished a corps of public 
servants whose integrity and faithfulness could 
be relied upon, and in whom the public were 
prepared to have confidence. 

The Friends were appointed not because 
they were believed to have any monopoly of 
honesty or of good- will toward the Indians, but 
because their selection would of itself be under- 
stood by the country to indicate the policy 
adopted, namely the sincere cultivation of 
peaceful relations with the tribes, and the 
choice of agents who did not, for personal 
profit, seek the service, but were sought for it 
because they were at least deemed fit for its 
duties. The two yearly meetings of "Friends" 
were asked to select men in whom they had 
confidence, and who might become at once the 
business agents of the Government and zealous 
missionaries of civilization. The persons so 
selected were appointed, and, although it was 
somewhat late in the season when they were 
sent to their posts, enough has been seen of 
their labors to make it certain that the mode 
of selection was not a mistake. It is due to 
these societies to say that they have at their 
own cost sent officers of their own body to in- 
spect the work of the agents as far as it aimed 
at the civilization and instruction of the In- 



36 



ASIA. 



dians. The moral support and encouragement 
thus given to the agents must be valuable. 

In accordance with the same general plan of 
bringing moral influences to bear upon the 
conduct of Indian affairs, the present Congress 
authorized the President to appoint a commis- 
sion of philanthropic citizens to serve without 
pay in such supervisory and visitorial duty as 
might be assigned to them. No difficulty was 
found in securing the services of men of the 
highest character and known benevolence. By 
an Executive order they were authorized to in- 
spect all the accounts and records of the Bureau, 
to be present at the purchases of Indian goods, 
and advise as to the conduct of the same, 
and visit and inspect the tribes in their res- 
ervations, and examine the business of all the 
agencies. The officers of the department were 
also directed to give respectful heed to the 
suggestions and reports of the commission. 
No direct responsibility, either pecuniary or 
administrative, was put upon the commission, 
because it was believed that their usefulness 
would not be increased thereby. They now 
constitute an entirely disinterested body of in- 
telligent advisers, with full power to throw 
the light of the most searching scrutiny upon 
the conduct of our relations with the Indiana, 
and to give the public, through their reports, 
the most reliable knowledge of the condition 
and progress of the several tribes. 

ASIA. During the year 1869, no territorial 
changes have taken place in Asia ; but a change 
of vast importance, and which must affect the 
destinies of this whole division of the world, 
is irrepressibly drawing near. The indepen- 
dence of the powerless States in Central Asia 
must sooner or later come to an end. They, 
even now, live entirely upon the mercy of 
Russia and England. What remains to be de- 
cided is, whether they shall fall to the one or 
the otljer of these States ; and this constitutes 
the Central Asian question, which is fast grow- 
ing to be one of the foremost political ques- 
tions of our age. Central Asia would make a 
very large addition to the Kussian Empire; 
and, as the powerful Kussians will, in the 
course of time, have no difficulty in absorbing 
these uncivilized and comparatively small 
tribes into the compact Russian nationality, 
both in Russia and in England, the develop- 
ment of the Central Asian question is studied 
with intense interest. Some, as Grant Duff, 
the English Under-Secretary for India, believe 
that the continuance of peace between the 
two great European rivals in Central Asia is 
for the present sufficiently secured by the cir- 
cumstance that an almost inaccessible tract of 
land, of nearly 800 miles, still constitutes an 
insurmountable wall of separation between 
the new Russian conquests and India. Others, 
however, show that Russia, having now exclu- 
sive possession of the Caspian Sea, the Aral 
Sea, and ^ Oxus, could carry out aggressive de- 
against India in a much easier way than 
by a march through Central Asia. Steamships 



could carry a large Russian force to Affghanis- 
tan and only the possession of, or, what would 
be equal to it, the protectorate over, the northern 
part of Afghanistan, or the territory of Cabul, 
would be required for the Russians, to reach 
the northwestern frontier of British India. It 
will be seen, therefore, that Afghanistan is 
becoming a country of considerable interest, 
and we have, on that account, deemed it best 
to include Afghanistan in the list of important 
countries which are the subjects of special 
articles in this volume of the AMEEICAN AN- 
NUAL CYCLOPAEDIA. (See RUSSIA ; AFFGHANIS- 
TAN.) 

None of the Asiatic countries have during the 
year been the scene of such momentous inter- 
nal changes as Japan. The long struggle be- 
tween the Mikado on the one hand, and the 
Tycoon and the northern Daimios on the other, 
is at an end. A Parliament has met for the 
first time, which, though it consisted merely 
of princes and nobles, has yet introduced Japan 
into the number of constitutional monarchies. 
The Japanese have again made remarkable 
progress in the reorganization of their army, 
and of public instruction. The number of 
young men who are pursuing their studies in 
the United States and in Europe is increasing, 
and emigration is bringing large numbers of 
the people into close contact with foreign na- 
tions. 

The Chinese Government has not verified 
the sinister predictions that it would reject the 
Burlingame treaties, and only try to hoodwink 
the Governments of the United States and of 
Europe. Toward the close of the year, the 
treaties were formally ratified in Pekin, and 
the relations with foreign powers were as ami- 
cable as they had been at any previous period. 
A large class of the population were hostile to 
foreigners and Christians, and a number of 
missionaries were cruelly massacred ; but the 
Government on every occasion showed an 
earnest desire to conform to the treaties, and 
to remain on good terms with the treaty 
powers. (See CHINA.) 

A serious difficulty arose between the two 
great representatives of Asiatic Mohammedan- 
ism, Turkey and Persia, concerning the regu- 
lation of the frontier. For a time, a great war 
appeared to be inevitable, and, as Russia was 
reported to sympathize strongly with Persia, 
it was even anticipated that through this con- 
flict the Eastern question might enter a new 
stage. These anticipations were, however, not 
fulfilled, and the difficulty was for the present 
amicably settled. (See PEESIA.) 

The opening of the Suez Canal will largely 
increase the commerce of southwestern and 
southern Asia, and thus probably awaken a 
new life in the countries of these regions. The 
vast projects of railroads and telegraph lines 
which have for several years beeen under con- 
sideration, or in the course of progress, and 
which are to connect the Asiatic countries 
with Europe and with each other, must thus 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



receive anew impetus, while the commerce of 
eastern Asia with western America is rapidly 
developing under the influence of the regular 
steamboat connection through the Pacific. The 
combination of so many vivifying influences 
causes the beginning of an entirely new era in 
the history of Asia, and, as Asia is the largest 
and by far the most populous among the great 
divisions of the world, it cannot fail, even to a 
large extent, to give to the world's history a 
new aspect. 

Thus far the colonies of England and France 
in India lead the van in this new period of 
peaceful progress. Both have enjoyed a peace- 
ful year, and made new progress in commerce, 
general prosperity, and especially in point of 
education. 

ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND 
PROGRESS. The Total Eclipse of 1869. 
The novel and interesting discoveries made by 
observers particularly those at the spectro- 
scope on the occasion of the August eclipse 
of 1868 (see AMERICAN CYCLOPJSDIA of that 
year), created an unusual scientific curiosity 
with regard to the total eclipse which was to 
occur August V, 1869, and which would be 
visible, in its totality, throughout a long and 
well-populated tract of the United States. The 
line of total obscuration entered the North 
American Continent at Behring's Straits, about 
the 65th degree of latitude, longitude 90 west 
of Washington, and left at the Atlantic shore 
in latitude 34 and the meridian of Washing- 
ton itself, passing through Alaska, Iowa, Illi- 
nois, Kentucky, West Virginia, North Caro- 
lina, and other States. Congress appropriated 
a sufficient sum to enable observations to be 
taken by the superintendent of the Nautical 
Almanac (Professor Coffin); and the Navy, 
War, and Coast Survey Departments extend- 
ed liberal aid to the same object, and sent out 
scientific parties to the points most favorable 
for witnessing the phenomenon. Professor 
Coffin fitted out expeditions for Burlington, 
Mount Pleasant, and Ottumwa, Iowa, along the 
central line of totality. The Coast Survey had 
parties in Alaska, at Des Moines, Iowa, Spring- 
field, Illinois, and Abingdon, West Virginia. 
The Navy Department was represented at a 
station on the western shore of Behring's 
Straits, and the War Department detailed Dr. 
Curtis to take photographs of the eclipse at 
Des Moines. The principal colleges and ob- 
servatories in the country sent their profess- 
ors of astronomy, and spectroscopic and me- 
teorological experts, to points on the line. At 
no one time in this country has so large an 
amount of astronomical and mathematical 
talent been concentrated upon the examina- 
tion of a celestial phenomenon. 

At Des Moines, Iowa, a series of very suc- 
cessful observations was taken by the Gov- 
ernment parties and expeditions from several 
American colleges. The sky was unclouded, 
though a slight haze prevented a satisfactory 
search for the supposed mtra-Mercurial planets. 



According to Professor T. H. Safford, of Chica- 
go, the first contact occurred at 8 h 43 m 43" ; the 
commencement of the total obscurity at 4 h 
45 m 30 s ; the end of the totality at 5 h 48 m 22" ; 
the last contact at 5 h 45 ra 11' those points of 
time being from 6* to 22' later than calculated 
at Washington. The total obscuration lasted 
2 m 52|". The corona proper assumed a py- 
ramidal shape, extending toward the northeast 
(taking the zenith as north), having a breadth 
of about 25 of the moon's disk, and 3 digits 
deep. On the west side was one of similar 
size and shape. On the east side was a mass 
of light 50 at the base and 3 digits deep, but 
not so brilliant as the opposite one. On the 
north the corona was about 30 wide, and 3 to 
4 digits high. The masses seemed to consist 
of thin streaks of light radiating from the 
central direction, and lying on a less brilliant 
background, while the lengths of the contigu- 
ous rays were widely different, giving the 
outline of the perimeter a jagged appearance. 
Says the correspondent of the Chicago Tri- 
bune : 

The most deficient part of the corona was on the 
southeastern quarter, where it averaged not more 
than two-thirds of the other, and was badly broken. 
It is remarkable that this part was the scene of a long 
line of rose-colored protuberances, which stood out 
like a string of beads from the moon's disk, and pos- 
sibly caused an optical shortening in the coronal rays, 
though it is not impossible that the convulsion in 
the photosphere produced by these glowing masses 
caused a surging over of the photosphere, while it 
is also not improbable that the greater number of 
these protuberances than usual caused the outline of 
the corona to be more jagged than had been antici- 
pated from the descriptions of previous eclipses. The 
apparent motion of the corona with the sun was very 
marked, that on the west side increasing in breadth", 
while the eastern side lessened as the total phase ad- 
vanced. The corona burst on the vision like a flash 
of glory on the instant of total obscuration, and de- 
parted like a vision of the night when the first faint 
thread of light shone out on the western limb. Some 
observers thought they saw the corona for a second 
or two before the total eclipse, but this was probably 
due to the haze in the atmosphere. 

The protuberances were grand. The ocular obser- 
vations of these made by Professor Hilgard's brother 
were the best. From the lowest point of the disk a 
large, rosy patch shot out at the instant of totality, 
extending 16 and protruding half a digit, or 35,000 
miles. From the middle of this protruded a pendu- 
lous mass of about 100,000 miles long, and 20,000 
wide, which seemed to divide into three narrow 
strips. The upper mass was of a deeper rose 
tint than either of the other protuberances, and is 
described by Hilger as nebulous in structure, almost 
like a cirrus cloud, and shaped like a bird's wing 
underlaid by a fleshy tumor, the fleshy substance 
being something like a flying pile of down, illumi- 
nated with a pink light, or pink-rose color. Due east 
was another protuberance, paler and about 5 on the 
base, perhaps 20,000 miles high. Ten degrees be- 
low this was another like it in size and color, both 
masses being nearly rectangular. These two disap- 
peared near the middle of totality, and then three 
smaller ones sprung up on the west side, one due 
west, another 60 below it, and the third midway 
between them. The one on the southwest was nebu- 
lar, and rose out as a thin stem 10,000 miles high, 
from which sprung out two long streaks like an an- 
telope's horns, some 10 in length from tip to tip. 
The large one first described appeared from first to 



38 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



last of totality, and sensibly changed its form and 
brilliancy, as n in violent commotion. It seemed to 
the writer like a huge dense beacon-fire on a distant 
hill-top, shorn of Its tongues of name, and seen 
through an inverting telescope. There were^ sev- 
eral variations of light and shade perceptible in ^ its 
breadth. In depth it varied only in intensity, being 
slightly faintest toward the horizon. 

A correspondent of the Chicago Times, writ- 
ing from Des Moines, remarks that Professor 
N. A. Rogers took a measurement, hy means 
of the micrometer, of the largest colored pro- 
tuberance, and estimates its greatest extension 
at 38,000 miles. It seemed to grow up to that 
height in a moment of time, like a flame, from 
about hall* the size at first. At its base was a 
mass tinged a crimson color, and like cumulous 
clouds in composition. Along the southeastern 
side of the sun, just before any portion of his 
disk appeared after total eclipse, a long and 
low line of crimson protuberances appeared, 
which was dissipated by the full blaze of the 
crescent sun a moment afterward. 

Dr. Peters made a spectrum analysis, and 
found in all the five protuberances the red, blue, 
and violet lines, which indicate hydrogen in a 
state of high temperature. He discovered also 
the double yellow lines that indicate sodium. 
In addition to these, the spectrum showed 
green lines and other shades of color, indica- 
tive of still other metallic elements in the sun's 
atmosphere, which are common to the earth. 
Dr. Peters was of opinion that the observations 
taken will throw much light upon the prob- 
lems of the sun's constitution, and the sources 
of his light and heat. So far as the hydrogen 
lines of the spectroscope are concerned, his 
observations verify those made by Rayet and 
Herschel during the eclipse last year in India. 
Professors Rogers and Hall directed their at- 
tention just before and after the total eclipse to 
the solution of the question of a lunar atmos- 
phere. They acted upon the hypothesis that, 
if there was such an atmosphere, the ends of 
the sun's crescent just before and after totality 
would have been partially obscured by coming 
in contact with the moon's atmosphere. These 
observers found no such phenomena, the cusps 
being well defined and sharp throughout. 
Hence they draw the deduction that the moon 
is devoid of an atmosphere. 

The Naval Observatory party at Des Moines 
succeeded in taking 123 photographs of the 
eclipse, two being of the totality. They ap- 
plied the spectrum analysis to five prominences, 
no two of which were found to give the same 
lines. No absorption lines were visible in the 
spectrum of the corona ; it gave a continuous 
spectrum with but one bright line. Professor 
Harkness conducted this branch of the obser- 
vations. The thermometer, as observed by 
Professor Eastman, showed a fall of 13 dur- 
ing the progress of the eclipse. 

Professor Newcomb searched, with two six- 
inch object-glasses, for intra-Mercurial planets, 
but none were visible. Venus and Mercury 
appeared distinctly to the naked eye. 



Professor C. A. Young, of Dartmouth Col- 
lege, who was with the Nautical Almanac 
party at Burlington, Iowa, submitted two re- 
ports of his observations to the American As- 
sociation, in August, the substance of which he 
afterward furnished to the American Journal 
of Science. The following are the most im- 
portant parts of the paper : 

The spectroscopic combination employed was com- 
piled for the occasion from various instruments be- 
longing to Dartmouth College, and diifered so much 
in the relative proportion and arrangement of its 
parts from those hitherto "used, that a brief descrip- 
tion is perhaps necessary. f 

The telescope which formed the solar image was a 
comet-seeker by Merz & Son, of 4 inches aperture 
and 30 inches focal length. An ordinary Huyghenian 
eye-piece enlarged the image so that, when it fell upon 
the slit of the spectroscope at a distance of 5 inches, 
it was 2i inches in diameter. The use of an eye- 
piece gave an easy means for securing the accurate 
focus of the limb at the slit, an adjustment of great 
importance. The spectroscope proper had telescopes 
of 2i inches aperture and 16* focal length (by Alvan 
Clark). The eye-telescope was provided with an eye- 
piece magnifying 18 times, and a wire micrometer, 
constructed from a reading microscope, for determin- 
ing the position of any new lines in the spectrum by 
referring them to those already known. This, al- 
though a very accurate method, was too slow to be 
well adapted to eclipse observations, but was the 
only arrangement I could construct with the time 
and means at my command. 

The collimator had a slit i of an inch long and of 
adjustable width. It was provided with a small 
prism, which could be turned up so as to throw into 
half the slit light from an electric spark formed be- 
tween platinum electrodes by a small induction coil 
and Leyden jar. 

It also carried a thin brass disk about 2 inches in 
diameter, placed in front of the slit, with a hole of i 
of an inch in the centre. This disk was covered with 
white paper and graduated into sectors of 10 by lines 
radiating from the centre. This graduated screen, 
upon which the image of the sun was clearly visible 
even during the totality, answered the purpose of a 
finder, and its graduation furnished the means of de- 
termining within less than 3 the position of any ob- 
ject observed on the sun's limb, or of bringing any 
desired portion of the limb to the slit. 

The spectrum was formed by a train of 5 prisms of 
45 each, with faces 2* by 3i inches. They gave a 
dispersion of about 18 between A and H, with a 
total deviation of about 165 for the D line. The box 
which contained them was so connected by a link 
with the arm which carried the ey^e-telescope, that 
whenever the latter was moved by its tangent-screw 
along the spectrum the prism-box would turn through 
an angle just half as great. Thus the prisms were 
kept in the position of best definition for whatever 
lines were in the middle of the field of view, the ex- 
tent of which was sufficient to embrace D and E to- 
gether. 

The telescope and spectroscope proper were firmly 
secured to a wooden framework, and this was mount- 
ed equatorially, with slow-motion screws in both 
right ascension and decimation. 

The spectrum was about II inches broad (referred 
to a distance of 10 inches) and about 45 long. It 
showed all the lines on KirchofFs maps of the spec- 
trum ; such lines as the nickel line between D x and 
D 2 being perfectly distinct. 

Having arranged my instrument with the computed 
point of contact across the centre of the slit, I had 
the unspeakable gratification of seeing every thing 
take place as expected. First, a full hair-minute be- 
fore the time of contact, the sharp point of the needle 
was truncated by the dark edge of the moon, then it 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



39 



grew steadily shorter (not less brilliant what remained 
of it), until finally its last spark vanished, the C line 
became exactly like its neighbors, and the contact was 
effected. 

The observation was as easy and definite as ^that 
of the transit of a moderately slow star. I am confi- 
dent the observation may bo relied upon within a frac- 
tion of a second, although it was from 5 to 15 seconds 
earlier than the time assigned by any of the other ob- 
servers. I am informed by Professor Mayer, however, 
who had charge of the photographic operations of our 
party, that it agrees within one-third of a second with 
the time deduced from a preliminary measurement 
of a photograph taken about 15 seconds after the con- 
tact was announced. 

"With an instrument of sufiicient dispersive power, 
the slit might be opened somewhat widely, and placed 
tangent tol;he sun's limb. In this case a slight error 
in the estimated point of contact would not interfere 
with the accuracy of the observation. 

I wish to call attention to the applicability of this 
method at the coming transits or Venus. It is not 
possible, perhaps, to predict just how great will be 
the effect of her atmosphere: but it is difficult to see 
in what respects this method will suffer from it more 
than any other. It certainly presents this great ad- 
vantage, that the observer will perceive and watch 
the planet's approach long before the instant to be 
observed, and thus have all the benefit of prepara- 
tion. 

It seems likely also that the instant of internal con- 
tact will be more easily seized with the spectroscope 
than with any other instrument. Instead of the rup- 
ture of a black ligament, it ought to show the sudden 
formation of a brilliant line running the whole length 
of a before dusky spectrum, a phenomenon much 
more striking than the other. 

While the moon was advancing upon the sun, spe- 
cial attention was paid to the appearance of the spec- 
trum lines near her limb. They came up to the 
edge perfectly square and straight, even when the 
limb made an angle of only 5 or 6 with the slit ; 
and the longitudinal line of demarcation, before re- 
ferred to, between the brilliant and dusky portions 
of the spectrum, was hard and sharp, in striking con- 
trast with the effect of the sun's limb, which, under 
similar circumstances, always gives a boundary more 
or less hazy arid indefinite, and this to a degree con- 
tinually changing from minute to minute. This con- 
trast was beautifully exhibited a few seconds before 
the totality, when the limbs of both sun and moon 
were on the spectrum together, the width of the visi- 
ble portion of the sun having become less than the 
length of the slit. It was at first thought that this 
appearance was decisive against the existence of a 
lunar atmosphere, however rare ; but a little consider- 
ation shows that on the other hand it is, if any thing, 
favorable, being a simple consequence of that bright- 
ening of the sun's disk near the moon's limb which 
is so beautifully evident upon the photographs ; and 
which is most easily accounted for by admitting a 
slight refraction suffered by that portion of the sun- 
light which grazes the moon. Possibly, however, it 
ma y yet be explained as a case of simple inflection 
of light. 

Before the eclipse began, the existence of promi- 
nences on the limb of the sun had been ascertained 
in the following positions (reckoning from the north 
point through the east). A large but faint one near 
+ 90, a small but bright one at +146 (the photo- 
graphs show two here), a long low one at -70 , very 
near the point of first contact, and an enormous and 
very bright one at -130, with several others of small 
elevation, but considerable length, on different parts 
of the limb. 

In his examination of the prominences Pro- 
fessor Young observed 9 bright lines, the most 
remarkable of which were 0. F. and an orange 
line. 



A faint continuous spectrum, without any traces 
of dark lines in it, was also visible, evidently due to 
the corona. Its light, tested by a tourmaline applied 
next the eye, proved to be very strongly polarized in 
a plane passing through the centre of the sun. I am 
not sure, however, but that this polarization, as sug- 
gested by Professor Pickering, may have been pro- 
duced by the successive relractions through the 
prisms. This explanation at once removes the diffi- 
culty otherwise arising from the absence of dark 
lines. 

My observations decide nothing as to specific dif- 
ferences between the different protuberances^ since, 
from the smallness of my field of view, I was obliged 
to observe a portion of the spectrum on one of the 
prominences and the rest on another. 

In conclusion,. Professor Young remarks that, 
at present, it seems pretty likely that the 
spectra of the corona and the aurora borealis 
are identical, with only such differences as we 
might naturally expect, and that very probably 
the identity extends to the essential nature of 
the phenomena themselves. With reference to 
the iron line observed in the spectrum, he says 
it will he of interest to inquire whether we are 
to admit the existence of iron vapors in and 
above our atmosphere, or whether in the spec- 
trum of iron this line owes its presence to some 
foreign substance probably some occluded 
gas, as yet unknown, and perhaps standing in 
relation to the magnetic powers of that metal. 

Professor Edward 0. Pickering, who was also 
with the Nautical Almanac party at Burling- 
ton, sends the result of his observations to 
the Philosophical Magazine. He says that, in 
examining the photographs taken by the party, 
it was noticed that, while the light diminished 
near the edge of the sun, the moon's limb was 
very distinct, and that there was a marked 
increase in the light of the parts nearest it. 
The best explanation of this phenomenon the 
author thinks is to assume the presence of a 
lunar atmosphere. The corona would then 
be caused by refraction of light reaching the ob- 
server from parts of the sun already eclipsed. 
This hypothesis is strengthened by other ob- 
servations. The protuberances have often 
seemed to indent the moon's edge, an appear- 
ance usually ascribed to irradiation. An at- 
mosphere of rapidly-increasing density might 
produce this effect by reflection, and of course 
would not influence the corona if it was caused 
by refraction. The principal reason for sup- 
posing the corona a portion of the sun is, that, 
during totality, it does not appear to move 
with the moon, but remains concentric with 
the sun, or, more properly, is brightest where 
the sun's edge is nearest. Many of the photo- 
graphs show this very well, the difference on 
the two opposite sides of the moon being very 
marked. This effect could be explained equal- 
ly well by supposing the corona caused by 
refraction. For the centres of the sun and 
moon never differ during totality by more 
than half a digit, while the breadth of the 
corona is sometimes several times as much; 
so that merely covering a small portion of it 
would not produce a greater diminution of 



40 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 




through _ 

hand it is difficult to conceive of an atmos- 
phere dense enough to produce these effects, 
und yet so transparent that the edges of the 



utes later the next picture was taken. No change 
the temperature. Third, fourth, and fifth 
at three, four, and five minutes apart. No 
change still in the appearance of the earth, no tailing 



yet 



full moon are perfectly distinct, and that the O f tn e temperature. Sixth picture forty-nine minutes 



of the sun during an eclipse should be 



1, D116 lUilitgt? gitH-4.Llt*AAjr WWA*. ** ^vwv****-.* ** v ^ .. *- vu 

gives only negative results, and cannot be r difflcult to describe. It seemed as though they 
carded as proving that the light is reflected. em i tte a light that had been stored within. v ^ "- 
KTevidence of the spectroscope needs con- light was not like any other that we - 
firmation, since the dark lines may have been 
invisible owing to the feeble light of the corona. 
But, if the spectroscopic observations were 
correct, the self-luminous character of the co- 
rona is established ; and the thermometric and 
actinic experiments point toward a lunar at- 
mosphere as the cause of the corona. The ab- 
sence of a lunar atmosphere is so generally ^ ~^ oc ~ k O f foraging geese now marched by, home- 
admitted that the author suggests its existence W ard bound, and evidently*wondering at the short- 
ness of these degenerate days. A ghastliness rested 
upon the faces of our corps of operators. Pictures were 
then taken at intervals of two and one minutes,_ at 
which time the crescentic margin of the sun, remain- 
ing unobscured, was but a tenuous line, passing one- 



, and a falling of one degree in temperature. 

foliage gradually took a peculiar hue, which is 
Ti seemed as though they 
Yet the 
seen. 

It* had "a peculiar bronze-like, lurid tint, that was 
weird-like and ghostly. 

Next picture, four minutes later ; growing, darker ; 
birds here seemed agitated, and acted as though they 
had made a mistake in time ; swallows began to col- 
lect in flocks. Six more pictures were taken in nine- 
teen minutes, and darkness still growing on the 
earth. Four minutes later, and sixteen after five ? the 
thermometer fell to 72, and stars became visible. 



, 

only with reluctance, and as the most natural 
explanation of the phenomena observed. 

Professor C. F. Himes reports some interest- 
ing facts about meteoric appearances seen dur- 
ing the eclipse. He says that Mr. Zeutmayer, 



third or one-fourth around the sun. Forty-five sec- 



examining the ground glass of the camera onds, and the eclipse is total, and another exposure 
.> .,:*: rtT1 n f is made. A flaming orange and red corona was 



me to time, to notice the position of 
the image of the sun, called the author's atten- 
tion to small luminous bodies like meteors, 
which were crossing the dark image of the 
moon from cusp to cusp. Subsequently, they 
were seen to pass over from outside of the 
field on to the image of the sun, where, of 
course, they were lost, always coming from the 
same side. The observers were led by this 
circumstance to regard them as most likely to 
be optical illusions, perhaps insects with trans- 
parent wings or bodies ; but the fact, that ob- 
servers at other places report a shower of me- 
teors during the eclipse, between the moon 
and the earth, which seemed to be identical in 
their appearance with those observed by the 
author, leads Professor Himes to suppose that 
the objects seen by Mr. Zeutmayer and him- 
self may have been meteors. At any rate, he 
concludes that the apparition was caused by 
objects not less than two thousand feet distant. 
Dr. J. Gardiner contributes to the Cincinnati 
Gazette an interesting account of his experi- 
ences in photographing the eclipse at Bedford, 
Ind. He had made careful preparations for the 
occasion, and had the assistance of a compe- 
tent corps of photographic artists. Some of 
the results of the observations are thus de- 
scribed : 



made. A flaming orange and red corona was 
visible about the margin of the moon, shooting its 
rays out seemingly a distance equal to hall' the diam- 
eter of the sun. The whole face of the moon had a 
dusky hue, like old copper, and was visibly globe- 
shaped. The scene was awfully sublime, and pro- 
duced a sensation similar to that which I have felt in 
witnessing a great battle. Chimney-swallows circled 
in the air above the court-house in a dense column, 
several hundred feet in height. A sudden rush of 
wind marked the moment of totality, and one ther- 
mometer in the open air showed a falling of 5; 
another, attached to the shady side of a dead tree 
standing in the sunshine, showed a variation of 14 
in the course of an hour. 

Birds went to roost ; domestic fowls retired to their 
perches, and a premature darkness a darkness dif- 
ferent from that of any other gave the earth a more 
sombre mantle than that of night. 

Two more pictures were attempted at intervals of 
a minute each, and then a line of the sun's margin 
emerged, and light once more flooded the face of the 
earth. A cheer ran out along the street, and the 
sublimest spectacle of the generation was drawing to 
a close. During the time of the greatest obscuration a 
bright bead-like body was observed at the right lower 
limb of the sun, which sent out a fan-shaped, fiery tail 
equal to one-third of the breadth of the sun itself. This 
part was all we succeeded in getting photographed 
during totality. We hope that a future examination 
of the enlarged prints will show it to be of more value 
to science than if we had succeeded in getting the 
whole corona. As darkness suddenly shut in the 
earth like a curtain (during the greatest obscuration), 
so it flashed out instantaneously into light as the sun 
emerged. Men's faces looked like the faces of ne- 
groes, and some amusing mistakes occurred on the 
streets, by persons thinking others they met were 
" American citizens of African descent." As the 
darkness was thickest, the katydids chirped their 
nocturnal notes, but hushed into silence as soon as 



Our corps were all in place ready for business ; 
when, at four o'clock and twenty-one and a half min- 
utes, contact was observed in the magnified image on 
the ground glass. A half-minute later the watchino- 
crowds on the streets caught sight of it, and a low 

murmur, swelling gradually into a shout, heralded they found that they were " victims of misplaced 
Up to this time no noticeable change had confidence." Twenty-one pictures were taken, seven- 
en place in the whole range of nature. At the teen before and during totality, and four after. Two 
, sign of contact, I called for a plate, which was attempts during the total phase were failures, but one 
coated at once, sensitized and passed to me. The other gave the bright prominence before described. 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



41 



At Shelbyville, Ky., there were strong dele- 
gations of scientific observers from different 
parts of the country. Among those present 
were Prof. Joseph Winlock, of Harvard Uni- 
versity; AlvinG. Clark, of Cambridge; Assist- 
ants George W. Dean and F. Blake, Jr., of the 
Coast Survey ; J. A. Whipple, of Boston, as- 
sisted by Messrs. George Clark and J. Pren- 
dergast, having charge of the photographic 
business ; Prof. S. M. Searle, of New York, who 
was to look out for intra-Mercurial planets ; 
and Prof. Seymour, of Louisville, who watched 
the meteorological phenomena. Ten or twelve 
mounted instruments were in use on the occa- 
sion, the chief of these being the Shelbyville 
College telescope, which once ranked third in 
the United States, handled by Prof. Winlock. 
A shower of meteors was observed between the 
earth and the moon. Arcturus, Yega, Venus, 
and Mercury, were visible to the naked eye 
during the totality, but no intra-Mercurial 
planets could be detected, nothing fainter than 
Regulus being discerned near the sun. The 
photographs of the eclipse were highly suc- 
cessful, and accord with those of which fuller 
accounts are given in the records of observa- 
tions elsewhere. 

In a report of observations by Professor 
Winlock, published in the American Journal 
of Science, he remarks that the cromosphere 
was carefully examined both before and after 
the phenomenon ; and only three lines could 
be seen, 0, one D and F. During totality only 
the highest protuberance on the lower limb of 
the sun was examined carefully, and nothing 
was seen but a faint continuous spectrum ; but, 
since the observing telescope (an equatorial, by 
Merz, of Y^ inches aperture and 9^- feet focal 
length) took in only a small part of the spec- 
trum at once, nothing conclusive could be in- 
ferred from the observation as to the non-exist- 
ence of bright lines in the corona. 

During totality eleven bright lines were seen. Be- 
sides the three described above, there was a short line 
at or very near E, the three lines of b were bright and 
very sharp, and there were four lines above F. Al- 
though these lines were very bright on a dark ground, 
all of them but the three seen before the eclipse 
disappeared instantly on the first burst of sunlignt. 
and the same point in the sun's disk was examined 
with great care after totality without finding any of 
the lines but those above described. The photo- 
graph t of the corona taken at Shelbyville shows a 
flattening at the extemities of the sun's axis, and an 
elevation about the equatorial region. The appear- 
ance can be explained by the hypothesis that it is a 
photographic view of the sun's atmosphere, and the 
form is that which it would assume from the sun's 
rotation about its axis, with its upper surface dis- 
turbed by the protuberances or flames below, and 
by large waves which are to be expected in such an 
atmosphere. 

Dr. B. A. Gould, in a letter to Professor 
Morton, which appears in the Journal of the 
Franklin Institute for October, says : 

An examination of the beautiful photographs made 
at Burlington and Ottumwa, by the sections of your 
party in charge of Professors Mayer and Himes, and 
u comparison of them with my sketches of the coro- 



na, have led me to the conviction that the radiance 
around the moon, in the pictures made during totality, 
is not the corona at all, but is actually the image of 
what Lockyer has called the chromosphere. 

This interesting fact is indicated by many different 
considerations. The directions of maximum radi- 
ance do not coincide with those of the great beams 
of the corona; they remained constant while the 
latter were variable ; there is a diameter, approxi- 
mately corresponding to the solar axis, near the ex- 
tremities of which the radiance upon the photographs 
is a minimum, whereas the coronal beams in these 
directions were especially marked during a great 
part of the total obscuration. The corona beams 
stood in no apparent relation to the protuberances, 
whereas the aureole, seen upon the^ pnotographs, is 
most marked in their immediate vicinity. Indeed, 
the great protuberance, at 230 to 245, seems to have 
formed a southern limit to the radiance on the west- 
ern side, while a sharp northern limit is seen on all 
the photographs at about 350, the intermediate arc 
being thickly studded with protuberances, which the 
moon displayed at the close of totality. The exqui- 
site masses of flocculent light on the following limb 
are upon the two sides of that curious prominence 
at 93 , which at first resembled an ear of corn, as you 
have said, but which in the later pictures, after it 
had been more occulted, and its southern branch 
thus rendered more conspicuous, was like a pair of 
antelope-horns, to which some observers compared 
it. Whatever of this aureole is shown upon the pho- 
tographs, was occulted or displayed by the lunar 
motion, precisely as the protuberances were. The va- 
riations in the form of the corona, on the other hand, 
did not seem to be dependent in any degree upon the 
moon's motion. 

The singular and elegant structural indications, in 
the special aggregations of light on the eastern side, 
may be of high value in guiding to a further knowl- 
edge of the cromosphere. They are manifest in all 
the photographs by your parties which I have 
seen, but are especially marked in those of shortest 
exposure, such as the first one at Ottumwa. In 
some of the later views they may be detected on the 
other side of the sun, though less distinct. But the 
very irregular and jagged outline of the chromo- 
sphere, as described by Janssen and Lockyer, is 
exhibited in perfection. 

A scientific party from the University of 
Georgia made successful observations of the 
eclipse at Bristol, Tenn., which was near the 
central line of totality. A corps of observers 
from the United States Coast Survey, under 
General Cutts, and a large number of other 
scientific gentlemen representing learned insti- 
tutions, were on the ground. The weather was 
favorable, and the result of the observations 
highly gratifying. Prof. W. Leroy Brown, of 
the University of Georgia, in a report to Chan- 
cellor Lipscomb, describes the operations of 
his party, and the successive stages of the 
eclipse, as follows : 

Just at the calculated time (4* 43 m 36"), though 
no evidence whatever of the position of the moon 
could be previously seen, I observed a slight trem- 
ulous motion on the western limb, 128 d 16 m from 
the vexter, immediately at the point where it was 
known by calculation the first point of contact would 
occur. In a few moments it became visible to the 
crowd assembled around. The dark spots of the sun 
were carefully observed, and the time of first contact 
and" total immersion of the most important of them 
noted. No change whatever was observed either in 
the penumbra or umbra of any of the spots during 
the approach or recession of the moon. As the moon 
graduallv covered the sun from view, its outline was 
projected back on the disk of the sun not in a reg- 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



42 

ular, well-defined curve, but in quite a roughened. 
serrated outline, indicative of its mountains and 

jS3*before total obscuration occurred, the crescent 
of the sun gradually and rapidly faded to a delicate 
thread of silver light My attention was concentrated 
on this line of fading light, to detect, if possible, what 
ijtrftmrnir* MJinrtm as Jiatty's beads; that is, the 
sudden breaking up of this thread of light into a num- 
ber of segments, or distinct points of light like dis- 
jointed ilDra beads. I detected no indication what- 
ever of such separate points of light. The extinc- 
tion of this thread of light was sudden and instan- 
taneous. I am inclined to the opinion that one 
would anticipate naturally, from the serrated char- 
acter of the moon's disk projected on the sun, that 
such would bo the case, and, with his mind thus pre- 
pand to observe such an effect, it would not be dif- 
ficult to mistake the optical effect, produced by refrac- 
tion of light through different media, for separate 



potato or 

On the eve of total obscuration, directions were 
given to tho crowd to be silent, so as to hear the beats 
of the chronometer. The instant the silver line of 
fight disappeared, a universal exclamation of amaze- 
mtnt and wonder burst from the crowd at the superb 
spectacle of beauty immediately revealed. The disk 
of the moon projected on a sky of livid hue was 
plainly seen, of a dark, grayish color, caused by the 
reflected earth-light, surrounded by a bright halo of 
Hldnally-fading silver light, extending through a 
breadth of at least half the sun's diameter. Through 
the bright halo of light there radiated off from the 
sun great mountain-peaks of roseate light of exquisite 
batotj One of the largest was plainly discernible 
with the naked eye, and pointed toward the horizon. 
Hi base, resting on the disk of the moon, was of ex- 
treme brilliance, like a living coal of fire, while its 
mass appeared radiating off from the sun as a gush- 
ing fountain of rose-colored light, shading off in in- 
tensity toward its apex in delicate violet hues. The 
wonderful beauty or this " solar cloud," which sub- 
tended an angle of more than three minutes, and con- 
MOBMitly was nearly a hundred thousand miles in 
height, was so great that, when I directed the large 
equatorial toward it, it riveted my attention for a full 
half-minute, and hence I failed to do all I had marked 
out in the critical two minutes and a half. At the 
time of total obscuration, Mercury, Venus, and Arc- 
turus, were plainly discernible with the naked eye. 
*** 

After the lapse of two minutes and thirty-three 
seconds, suddenly an intensely diamond-bright ray 
of li^ht shot out from near the point of first contact, 
dazzling in its effect, and immediately dissipating the 
livid gloom that overshadowed the earth, and giving 
cheer to the affrighted animals and wondering spec- 
tators that surrounded us. The thermometer, exposed 
to the rays of the sun, was observed to fall from 92 
to fl* during thtime that elapsed from the first con- 
tact to the total obscuration. The barometer indi- 
cated a fall of only one-twentieth of an inch. 

The observers appointed to note terrestrial objects 
reported that the rapid approach of the dark shadow 
over the western landscape, which spread out before 
us with its symmetrical hills and shaded valleys, was 
plainly discernible. Its effect on reaching the ob- 

ver was described as almost like a physical object 
striking the body, so plainly was its passage marked. 
In a few seconds (for it travelled at about one mile 
Pr second) it wrapped in its mantle of gloom the 

igh rulge of the Alleghany Mountains, about fifteen 
miles distant, which enclosed the southeast view. 
Hog and cattle, feeding near by, were observed at 



.^ ,_ "- | wgMAt VAAVAJ. 9VVUUUfg OLJHi; 

\ flew around for some moments, and chickens 
were seen hastening to their roost. 

The eclipse, as seen at New York City ten- 



twelfths of the sun's disk being obscured 
produced a feeling of disappointment in the 
observers. It had been supposed that consid- 
erable darkness would he caused by the phe- 
nomenon, and also that the temperature of the 
air would be lowered several degrees. Mr. 
Daniel Draper, meteorologist of the Central 
Park, made thorough investigations of the 
effects of the eclipse at that point, and re- 
ported upon them fully. He declares corrob- 
orating the observations of the public generally 
that, when the eclipse was at its height, the 
light was still sufficient to enable persons to 
discern objects at any distance, and there was 
no special quality to be noticed in the charac- 
ter of the illumination, though it resembled 
twilight more than any thing else. During 
the first half of the eclipse the thermometer 
indicated a fall of only one and a quarter de- 
grees, and in the last half only half a degree. 
From three P. M. to five P. M., about the be- 
ginning of the eclipse, the fall had been from 
67.25 to 65.50 ; and after the eclipse, up to ten 
p. M., there was a further decrease of tempera- 
ture of 3. In the barometer a rise was going 
on when the eclipse commenced, and continued 
while the phenomenon lasted; after which, 
for about an hour, there was a decline, and 
then the rise was resumed. 

Speculations upon the Nature of the Corona. 
At a meeting of the Royal Astronomical 
Society in April, Major Tennent's account of 
his observations of the solar eclipse of the pre- 
ceding August, in which he stated that the 
corona gave strongly-polarized light thereby 
indicating that it was simply reflected solar 
light came up for discussion. Dr. Weiss, who 
had charge of the Austrian expedition to observe 
that eclipse, was present on the occasion, and 
remarked that the spectrum of the corona was 
found to be pale but perfectly distinct, and de- 
cidedly continuous, without any lines. Mr. De 
La Rue and Mr. Lockyer expressed the sur- 
prise they had felt at this result, and Mr. Hug- 
gins remarked that when he first heard that 
the corona gave a continuous spectrum, he 
understood it to mean that this spectrum did 
not differ materially from the ordinary solar 
spectrum, but he now found that it was desti- 
tute of the dark Fraunhofer lines. He wished 
to know whether it was possible that the dark 
lines were merely not visible from the feeble- 
ness of light of the whole spectrum. Dr. Weiss 
replied that the paleness was not sufficiently 
great to lead to such an idea, and suggested 
that the corona might consist of two parts 
reflected light, which would account for the 
polarization, and light proceeding from some 
self-luminous gas, and that the dark lines of the 
former coexisting with the bright lines of the 
latter might mutually neutralize each other. 
Mr. Huggins said that there was much difficulty 
in accepting the existence of self-luminous gas 
beyond the hydrogen, of which it had been 
proved that the prominences were formed, and 
which must probably be the extreme boundary 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



43 



of the gases. Mr. Lockyer here stated that he 
and several other persons, including M. Faye, 
had been led, by a comparison of several ob- 
servations of solar eclipses (particularly that 
of 1851), to the belief that the appearance of 
the corona depended very much on the locality 
at which it was observed, and that it was prob- 
ably, in fact, a phenomenon produced by the 
earth's atmosphere. The Astronomer Royal, 
Mr. Airy, who was present, expressed his con- 
currence with this view, which he had, indeed, 
formed from his own observations of several 
total eclipses. 

The monthly notices of the proceedings of 
the same Society for May contain a letter from 
Mr. Baxendell, of Manchester, to Mr. Huggins, 
suggesting that the results of a great mass 
of observations on the corona could be best 
explained on the hypothesis of the existence of 
an irregular nebulous ring circulating about 
the sun nearly in the plane of the ecliptic, and 
at a mean distance of 0.169, and that the re- 
flection of the sun's light upon this caused the 
appearance of the corona. 

Spectroscopic Observations of the Sun. Mr. 
Lockyer has communicated to the Royal Society 
a number of new facts disclosed by his recent 
spectroscopic examinations of the sun, which 
he regards as proving the correctness of his 
assertion made in 1865, on telescopic evidence 
only that a solar spot is the seat of a " down- 
rush " of matter to a region where the selective 
absorption of the upper strata varies from what 
it would be at a higher level. He therefore 
assigns two causes for the darkening of a spot. 
One is the general absorption of the chromo- 
sphere, thicker there than elsewhere, as the spot 
is a cavity ; the other is the greater selective ab- 
sorption of the lower stratum of sodium, barium, 
and magnesium, the surface of its last layer 
being below the ordinary level. By using a 
wide slit in the spectroscope, without the ab- 
sorbing media employed by Mr. Huggins, Mr. 
Lockyer was enabled to study the smallest de- 
tails of the chromosphere and the prominences, 
on any bright day. He describes the outline 
of the chromosphere as varying greatly, some- 
times undulating and billowy, sometimes rag- 
gedl, and sometimes nearly even for some dis- 
tance, but very nneven near a prominence. 
The prominences undergo marked changes in 
a few minutes ; in one case, in about ten 
minutes, a portion of a prominence esti- 
mated at 27,000 miles in height entirely 
disappeared, another portion of it increasing 
at the same time. The bright F. line was ob- 
served, in one instance, to undergo strange 
contortions, as if some disturbing cause va- 
ried the refrangibility of the line. At the 
same time, and in the same protuberance, the 
characteristic lines of barium, magnesium, and 
some unknown substance, were noticed. In 
this case he supposes that there was an uprush 
from the photosphere into the chromosphere, 
accompanying which changes of enormous 
magnitude occurred in the prominence, and, 



when the uprush ceased, the prominence died 
away. In observing a spot very near the sun's 
limb, Mr.* Lockyer found the spectrum of the 
chromosphere showed that the whole adjacent 
limb was covered with prominences of various 
heights blended together. These prominences 
seemed to be fed from the preceding edge of 
the spot, as F and the line near D were 
very bright on the sun itself. In the promi- 
nences and F were strangely irregular, and 
the magnesium lines were seen far above the 
spectrum of the limb. He infers that a portion 
of the upper layer of the photosphere had been 
lifted up beyond the usual limits of the chromo- 
sphere. He also saw the vapor of sodium in 
the chromosphere, and, for the first time, the 
iron lines. 

Dr. Tietjen, of Berlin, has been making fur- 
ther observations of the gaseous envelope, and 
protuberances of the sun, by the spectroscope. 
The protuberances were frequently indicated 
by their peculiar bright lines, and their shapes 
could, in some instances, be traced. On one 
occasion, a pillar-shaped prominence showed 
itself, broader at the base than at the apex, 
and in the course of a few hours became curved. 
A very beautiful one was seen February 15th, 
exhibiting its bright lines, that known as 
shining with great intensity. Its size was very 
large, and its form resembled a water-bottle, 
whose neck rested perpendicularly on the sun's 
limb. The next morning nothing of it was 
visible, but short bright lines were seen imme- 
diately on the disk. The lines usually observed 
by Dr. Tietjen were those corresponding to the 
dark lines of the solar spectrum and F, and a 
third near, but not coinciding with the dark 
line D. Of these the first was nearly always 
the most luminous ; generally, also, longer than 
F, and frequently than the third near D. 
March 25th, he saw a fine bright line between 
D and E, but could not decide whether it coin- 
cided accurately with the position of any dark 
line. 

M. Rayet has communicated to the French 
Academy his method of examining the solar 
atmosphere. He employs an equatorial with 
an object-glass having a focal length of five 
metres, and which was diaphragmed down to 
eight centimetres. The telescope was thus ren- 
dered quite achromatic, and the difference be- 
tween the brilliancy of the image of the solar 
disk and that of its atmosphere was greatly re- 
duced. At the principal focus, where the clear 
image of the sun fell, was placed the very nar- 
row slit of a direct vision-spectroscope. The 
astronomical telescope, which serves in the lat- 
ter instruments to examine the spectrum, is 
movable around an axis which is parallel with 
the edges of the prisms, and it is quite easy to 
keep only a small region of the spectrum with- 
in the field of vision, viz., that containing one 
of the brilliant lines. Between the object-glass 
and the slit of the spectroscope is placed a di- 
rect vision-prism, itself preceded by a narrow 
slit. This arrangement is considered very ad- 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



44 

vantageous as regards a clear view of the yel- 
low line in the solar atmosphere, which M. 
Rayet has been engaged in studying. An im- 
perfect image is found a little farther off than 
the principal focus of the object glass, and from 
this a determined color is thrown upon the slit 
of the spectroscope. The author says that the 
yellow line maybe seen upon the whole cir- 
cumference of the solar disk quite as easily as 
the three lines of hydrogen, and infers, there- 
fore, that the incandescent gas to which the 
line corresponds is of the same character as 
hydrogen, one of the constituent elements of 
the solar system. 

Vapor of Water in the Solar Atmosphere.- 
Father Secchi, in observing the regions adja- 
cent to the large solar spots, with a spectro- 
MODe of high dispersive power, has frequently 
noticed a series of equidistant nebulous lines, 
or band.*, in the red and orange. These differ 
in intensity, and appear to consist of five rays 
enveloped* in nebulosity, and are seen in the 
penumbras and the groups of small spots, but 
usually disappear in the sun's full disk, and are 
wanting in the interior of the large spots where 
the rays never have the form of the bands. 
January 6th, the bands were seen upon the 
full disk, but were found to arise from a cirrus 
in front of the telescope, and disappeared with 
the cirrus itself. Secchi remarked that, un- 
der these circumstances, the bands due to the 
neighborhood of the solar spots were sensibly 
increased in intensity. By studying the re- 
gion near D of the spectrum with a spectro- 
scope of nine prisms, he found that the yellow 
ray of the protuberances really exists in the sun, 
and may be recognized far from the border. He 
concludes, from these observations, that the 
vapor of water exists in the solar atmosphere 
in the neighborhood of the large spots. 

Solar Activity. During the early part of 
the year remarkable evidences of activity in 
the solar atmosphere were noted. At a meet- 
ing of the Royal Astronomical Society Mr. 
Bidder and Mr. Browning described two enor- 
mous spots observed by them. Mr. Huggins, 
in the discussion that ensued, pointed out 
the fact that it is only in the neighborhood of 
the spots that those irregularities of form are 
to be noticed which have led to the comparison 
of the granules to willow-leaves, straws, and 
so on. A cluster of spots measured by Mr. 
Browning, March 7th, was found to have a 
length of 97,700 miles, and a breadth of 27,013 
miles. The direction of its length was as 
nearly as possible parallel to the solar equator. 
Toward the close of the year, a group of spots, 
measuring in its principal dimension about one- 
eighth of the sun's diameter, was observed. 

Spectra of the Stars. The spectrum of Siri- 
us has been examined by Father Secchi to de- 
termine whether there is any displacement of 
the hydrogen lines due to a proper movement 
of the star, a question already examined by Mr. 
Hnjrgins (see ANNUAL CYCLOPAEDIA for 1868). 
With a four-prism spectroscope the ray F was 



observed to be sensibly displaced, the displace- 
ment of the centre being apparently equal to 
the breadth of the rays D' D" of sodium, and 
being toward the less refrangible side. With 
a spectroscope of two prisms the displacement 
of certain of the hydrogen rays, with respect 
to the rays C and F of Sirius, was also ob- 
served, and in the same direction. Father 
Secchi has also examined the spectrum of the 
variable star R in Gemini, which star attained 
its maximum brightness with a magnitude of 
6.5 in February, 1869. The spectrum exhibits 
a brilliant hydrogen ray, and also luminous 
bands, of which the principal correspond to 
dark bands in the spectrum of Alpha Orionis, 
and is analogous to that of the variable in Co- 
rona Borealis, which appeared in 1866. Fa- 
ther Secchi has found in Aldebaran, Alpha 
Orionis, and Pollux, the yellow ray noticed in 
the protuberances of the sun, and also in the 
body of that orb. 

A New Theory of the Universe. Mr. B. A. 
Proctor has recently proposed a new theory 
respecting the arrangement of the stars and 
nebulae. Instead of looking upon the nebulae 
as for the most part external galaxies of stars, 
he considers that they belong to our solar sys- 
tem. He discusses the reasons that have been 
commonly urged for dissociating the nebulae 
from our system, and shows that these reasons 
afford singular evidence in favor of a direct 
association. He looks upon the stellar system 
as being far more irregular in its disposition 
than has been generally supposed, and thinks 
that it is made up of an almost infinite multi- 
plicity of streams, branches, and clusters ; here 
scattered dispersed!^, there more or less aggre- 
gated ; at one place interlacing, and elsewhere, 
in the language of Sir John Herschel, " bus- 
tling upward from the t general level." The 
Magellanic clouds he looks upon as simply 
globular aggregations of the sidereal and nebu- 
lar components which are elsewhere found 
apart, but which everywhere form but one 
scheme. The Popular Science Review, com- 
menting on this theory, remarks that, accord- 
ing to these views, we see few| if any external 
universes, though our belief in the existence 
of multitudes of them is in no way affected. 
On the other hand, our conceptions of the scale 
on which our own galaxy is constructed, of the 
grandeur of its plan, and of the immense va- 
riety in the forms of matter which compose it, 
seem to be considerably enhanced by the views 
put forth by Mr. Proctor. 

The Nebular Hypothesis. Mr. J. S. Aldis, 
in a contribution to the Philosophical Maga r 
zine, remarks that a peculiarity in the structure 
of the earth is worth noting in connection with 
the nebular hypothesis. There is a tendency 
in mountain-chains to run north and south, 
and to present steep slopes to the west, but 
gentle declivities to the east. This, he sug- 
gests, may arise from the contraction of the 
earth. If a portion of the unsupported crust 
sinks toward the centre, it will subside on to 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



45 



that which is moving less rapidly than itself, 
and ia consequence will, so to speak, fall over 
toward the east, the surface forming a gradual 
slope to the east, and the fractured edges a 
precipitous descent to the west. In the moon, 
too, the author sees proofs of the contraction 
continued long after the stage in which we 
now find the earth. The spheroid of the moon 
has contracted since it assumed that shape, 
and, contracting less in the longer diameter, is 
now more spheroidal than it should he accord- 
ing to the theory, while the thickened crust, 
no longer crushed down on the interior, has 
left cavities in which the moon's ocean and 
atmosphere are entomhed forever. 

The researches of Professor Kirkwood, of 
Indiana University, by which he has brought 
the asteroids into due correlation with the 
other members of the solar system, and derived 
from the relations which they present an argu- 
ment in support of the nebular hypothesis, 
are the subject of an interesting paper in 
the Student for August, 1869, by Mr. Proc- 
tor. The author regards Professor Kirkwood's 
demonstrations as supplying a mathematical 
proof of the formation of the asteriods from a 
zone of cosmical matter, according to the pro- 
cesses which Laplace conceived to have been 
in operation ages ago, in the development of 
the solar system. In the special instance of 
the asteroids, these processes have not resulted 
in the formation of a single planet ; but that 
fact may be accounted for by the neighborhood 
of so large a body as Jupiter. Had that planet 
not been so near to the asteroid zone, the mat- 
ter which composes the asteroids might have 
united to form one planet. Such is Professor 
Kir*kwood's view. But Mr. Proctor's theory 
is somewhat different. He thinks that the 
zone of the asteroids indicates the occurrence 
of a definite change in the mode of evolution 
of the planets. Up to that' point enormous 
quantities of matter had been conglobing into 
planets with noble systems of attendant orbs ; 
indeed, there had been a pretty regular increase 
from the masses of the giant planets Uranus and 
Neptune, to the yet vaster Saturn, and to the 
giant among giants Jupiter. Then the sub- 
stance of the great revolving disk which had 
given birth to those enormous bodies seems to 
have been all but exhausted, so far as the gen- 
eration of new orbs was concerned. The zone 
next thrown off seems to have presented too 
sparse an array of cosmical particles to form a 
single planet by the action of its parts in pro- 
ducing continual collisions, and so, with much 
heat and turmoil, a vast rotating, molten, or 
vaporous globe. With further contraction, the 
disk seems gradually to have recovered its 
planet-generating powers ; for first, the small 
planet Mars was formed, then the Earth, with 
actually an attendant moon. But there the 
new effort culminated, the next planet Venus 
being moonless, and appreciably smaller than 
the Earth, and Mercury being the last and 
least of the whole series. 



The Heat of the Stars. At a meeting of the 
Royal Society, in February, Mr. Huggins read 
a remarkable paper, narrating his experiments 
to ascertain the heat of the stars. It had oc- 
curred to him that the heat received on the 
eartl; from the stars might possibly be more 
easily detected than the solar heat reflected 
from the moon. He therefore caused to be 
prepared several thermopiles, and a very sen- 
sitive galvanometer, and with this apparatus 
succeeded in obtaining trustworthy indications 
of stellar heat in the case of Sirius, Pollux, and 
Regulus. His method of procedure was as fol- 
lows : An astatic galvanometer was used, over 
the upper needle of which a small concave mir- 
ror was fixed, by which the image of the flame of 
a lamp could be thrown upon a scale placed at 
a distance. Usually, however, he preferred to 
observe the needle directly by means of a lens 
so placed that the divisions on the card were 
magnified, and could be read by the observer 
when at a little distance from the instrument. 
To preserve the sensitiveness of the galvanome- 
ter, a very careful adjustment of the magnetic 
power of the needles was made from time to time. 
So sensitive was the instrument, that the needles 
would turn through 90 when two pieces of 
wire, of different kinds of copper, were held 
between the finger and thumb. The thermo- 
piles consisted of one or two pairs of elements 
alloys of bismuth and antimony being em- 
ployed in some of the experiments. The ther- 
mopile was attached to a refractor of eight 
inches' aperture. Although some of the heat- 
rays could not be transmitted through the ob- 
ject-glass of the telescope, yet Mr. Huggins de- 
cided that the more uniform temperature of 
the air within the instrument, and some other 
circumstances, would make the difficulty of 
preserving the pile from extraneous influences 
less formidable than if a reflecting telescope 
were used. The apparatus was fixed to the 
telescope so that the surface of the thermopile 
would be at the focal point of the object-glass, 
and was allowed to remain attached to the tele- 
scope for hours, and sometimes for days, the 
wires being in connection with the galvanome- 
ter, until the heat had become uniformly dis- 
tributed within the apparatus containing the 
thermopile, and the needle remained at zero, 
or was steadily deflected to the extent of a 
degree or two from zero. When observations 
were to be made, the shutter of the dome was 
opened, and the telescope, by means of the 
finder, was directed to a part of the sky near 
the star to be examined, where there were no 
bright stars. The needle was then watched, 
and, if in four or five minutes it had experi- 
enced no deviation, then, by means of the find- 
er, the telescope was moved, the small distance 
necessary to bring the image of the star exactly 
upon the face of the pile, where it was kept by 
means of the clock-work attached to the tele- 
scope. Almost always the needle began to 
move as soon as the image of the star fell upon 
it. The telescope was then moved so as to di- 



46 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PEOGKESS. 



rect it to the sky near the star, when (gener- 
ally), in one or two minutes, the needle would 
resume its original position. In a similar man- 
ner, twelve to twenty observations of the 
same star were made, and repeated on other 
nights. The mean of a number of observations 
of Sirius, which did not differ greatly from* each 
other, gave a deflection of the needle of 2 , 
Regulus gave a deflection of 3, and Pollux of 
H. No effect was produced on the needle 
by Castor. In one observation, Arcturus de- 
flected the needle 3 3 in fifteen minutes. Mr. 
Hoggins hoped at some future time to resume 
these Investigations with a larger telescope, and 
to obtain some approximate value of the quan- 
tity of heat received at the earth from the 
brighter stars. He suggests that such observa- 
tions, if strictly comparable, might be of value, 
in connection with the spectra of the light of 
the stars, to help us to determine the condition 
of the matter from which the light emanates. 

Apparatus for Mapping Stars. Mr. H. M. 
Parkhurst has invented and described, in the 
American Journal of Science, an ingenious ap- 
paratus for mapping the exact right ascension 
and declination of stars, and also recording 
their magnitude. By means of it he can map 
as many as thirty stars a minute in a crowded 
field, and averages usually, in a night's work, 
500 an hour. He has found it easy to take a 
succession of twelve 15-minute maps in se- 
lected places, varying many degrees in right 
ascension and declination, in but little over 
three hours. Usually, by predetermining the 
order of mapping, he can map six or eight stars 
in quick succession, without an error exceed- 
ing two seconds. By the aid of his star-map- 
per, the inventor discovered a new asteroid 
(Galatea), September 30, 1862. It had been 
previously discovered by M. Tempel, in Eu- 
rope, but that fact was then unknown in the 
United States. Mr. Parkhurst has also in- 
vented a photo-mapper, which he uses in con- 
nection with the other apparatus. 

Asteroids. The number of known asteroids 
has been brought up from 106 to 109 by dis- 
coveries during the year. The finding of aste- 
roids has been so common of late that the 
scientific journals no longer think it important 
to record each successive addition to that large 
celestial family. In honor of the discovery of 
the 100th asteroid, the French Academy is- 
sued large medals, bearing upon one face the 
profiles, in alto-rilievo, of Goldsmidt of France, 
Luther of Belgium, and Hind of England, 
three gentlemen who have been remarka- 
bly successful in looking up new asteroids. 
Messrs. Peters of Utica, and Watson of Ann 
Arbor, in this country, have, of late years, 
done as much as any two European observers 
in increasing our knowledge of the members 
of the asteroid zone. 

New Comets. &. Tempel, of Marseilles, dis- 
ojfered a new comet, October 11, which was 
Ojjnred at Bonn October 12, at Carlsruhe 
October 17, and at Leipsic October 23, from 



the results of which observations the following 
elements were calculated by Mr. J. K. Bond, of 
Twickenham, England : 



Inclination to Ecliptic, 68.48 '&' 

Loo-, perihelion distance, 0899o 

Heliocentric Motion Retrograde. 

The orbit does not resemble that of any 
comet previously computed. M. Tempel dis- 
covered another comet, November 27, in the 
constellation of Pegasus, K. A. 311 15', Polar 
Distance 75 44'. The comet is a nebulous 
mass from 12 to 15 minutes in diameter, having 
no nucleus, and less luminous at the centre 
than ou the circumference. It was advancing 
at the rate of 1 per'day in K. A., and 55' in 
declination. 

Winnecke's Periodical Comet. Observations 
upon this comet were conducted at different 
times between April 13 and June 26, 1869, by 
Schmidt at Athens, Bruns and his assistant 
Vogel at Leipsic, Schonfeld at Mannheim, and 
Wolff at Bonn. The remarkable faintness of 
its light prevented much being done in the way 
of physical observation. May 14th, Vogel saw, 
very distinctly, a tail-like lengthening; and 
Schmidt remarked a small trace of a tail on 
June 25th. Schonfeld states that, in part of 
April and May, it appeared to have several 
centres of condensation, and Vogel, in the be- 
ginning of June, detected a much greater re- 
semblance to a star-cluster than to a nebula. 

Dr. Winnecke succeeded in finding and ob- 
serving this comet again on the 4th of August, 
at half-past 2 A. M., and states that it was then 
much brighter and larger than when at the 
same distance from the sun in the month of 
May before its perihelion passage. He esti- 
mated its interior brighter part at 7' in diame- 
ter ; but it appeared to be surrounded by dif- 
fused faint light of much greater extent. The 
comet was in perihelion a little before noon on 
the 30th of June. At the beginning of Sep- 
tember, its distance from the sun was about 
115 millions of miles, from the earth about 46 
millions, nearly the same as it was in the mid- 
dle of May. 

The Common Origin of Certain Comets. 
Professor Daniel Kirkwood contributes to the 
American Journal of Science for September, 
1869, a paper on the remarkable resemblance 
between the orbits of the comet of 1812, dis- 
covered by Pons, and the fourth comet of 
1846. The elements of the two comets are 
wonderfully like, so much so that diagrams 
describing their paths are almost exactly simU 
lar to the eye. The author remarks that it is 
infinitely improbable that these coincidences 
should be accidental ; and that they point un- 
doubtedly to a common origin of the two ob- 
jects. These comets have their aphelions very 
near the orbit of Neptune, and he argues that 
the original parabolas in which they moved 
were probably transformed into ellipses (the 
present form) by the perturbations of that 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



47 



planet. Before entering the solar domain they 
were doubtless members of a cometary system ; 
passing near Neptune at the same time, and at 
some distance from each other, their different 
relative positions, with regard to the disturb- 
ing body, may account for the slight differ- 
ences in the elements of their orbits. The 
question "at what epoch did they enter the 
solar system," Professor Kirkwood answers 
thus : 

The mean between the longitudes of the aphelia 
of the two comets is 271 41'. Neptune had this lon- 
gitude in 1775; the comet of 1812, in 1777 ; and that 
of 1846, in 1809. Now, with the known period of 
Neptune and the periods of the comets as determined 
byEnckeand Pierce, we find (neglecting perturba- 
tions) that 

Neptune was in longitude 271 41' in the year 694 
B. o. ; the comet of 1812, longitude 271 41' in the year 
696 B. c. ; the comet of 1846, IV., longitude 271 41' 
in the year 696 B. c. 

It seems, therefore, that the three bodies were very 
nearly together about 695 years before the Christian 
era. It is consequently not improbable that the ellip- 
tical form of the two cometary orbits dates from this 
epoch. 

The Constitution of Comets. Professor 
Tyndall advances a new theory of comets, 
after a careful investigation of the phenomena 
of those bodies. He regards the cometic tail 
as not matter projected from the head, but 
matter precipitated on the solar beams which 
have traversed the head. He shows that such 
precipitation may occur either with compara- 
tive slowness along the beam, or with the ve- 
locity with which the beam actually traverses 
space. Thus the amazing rapidity noticed in 
the development of the tail is accounted for. 
As the comet sweeps round the perihelion, the 
tail is not composed of the same matter, but 
new matter is precipitated on the solar beams, 
the part of the old tail which is not protected 
by the head of the comet being dissipated by 
the sun's calorific rays, and, tfye dissipation not 
being necessarily instantaneous, the tail leans 
toward that portion of space last quitted by 
the comet. Occasional lateral streamers are 
explained as possibly due to the temporary 
mastery of the actinic rays in parts of the-coni- 
etary atmosphere not screened by the nucleus. 
The shrinking of the comet's head as it ap- 
proaches the sun is due to the beating of the 
heat-rays against the attenuated fringe of the 
head which is thus dissipated. 

The Quarterly Journal of Science for Octo- 
ber, alluding to Professor Tyndall's views, says 
that it cannot at present admit his explanation 
of lateral streamers, because it leaves us in as 
much perplexity as we have ever been with 
respect to that strange phenomenon. When a 
tail is seen extending in a right line from the 
head, but at an angle of 60 or so to the radial 
line from the sun, more is required to account 
for the peculiarity than the bare possibility 
that along that line the actinic rays may 
temporarily have obtained a mastery; and 
the appearance of six distinct tails spreading 
from the head in the shape of a fan is still 



more difficult to explain on the Tyndall theory. 
The writer in the Quarterly Journal concedes, 
however, that the apparent swinging round of 
the comet's tail is undoubtedly explained by 
the new theory. 

Professor Tyndall's theory is the subject of 
two interesting communications to the Philo- 
sophical Magazine from Mr. Ernest Carpmert 
and Mr. "W. B. Gibbs, F. R. A. S. The former 
remarks that the theory turns on an assump- 
tion hardly compatible with the laws of mo- 
tion, viz., that the tail of a comet is "matter 
precipitated on the solar beams traversing the 
cometary atmosphere." If so, the lineal dimen- 
sions of a comet must exceed the length of its 
tail that is, in some cases, sixty millions of 
miles or more. As it seems incredible that 
such a bulk of vapor can whirl round the sun 
at the perihelion passage unbroken, the author 
suggests a slight modification of the Tyndall 
theory, to avoid this difficulty, and explain 
equally well all the observed appearances. If 
there be an extremely thin solar atmosphere, 
extending considerably farther than the- earth's 
orbit and if, when a comet approaches the 
sun, and is therefore exposed to intense heat, 
its volume becomes comparable with the vol- 
ume of the sun the heat of the sun will be 
shut off from that portion of the solar atmos- 
phere in the shade of the comet (which, though 
transparent to light, is opaque to heat), and 
actinic clouds will be formed in the solar at- 
mosphere, thus giving the appearance of a tail 
to the comet ; and, if the shape of the comet 
be irregular, there may be more than one tail. 
After the comet makes its perihelion passage, it 
recedes from the sun, and, at the same time, 
gradually cools and contracts, and the tail 
would therefore slowly diminish and fade away. 
Mr. Gibbs does not think that the theory ex- 
plains some of the cometary phenomena ob- 
served by the telescope. Immediately behind 
the nucleus, where, according to the theory, we 
should expect a very luminous region, we com- 
monly have a dark space. Also, the matter 
which forms the tail frequently streams out from 
the head toward the sun, as was the case with 
Halley's comet in 1836. The author cites Pro- 
fessor Bond's description of Donati's comet, 
where he says that "the material, after being 
thrown off from the nucleus, instead of being 
at once driven into the tail, formed a dense 
cloud of nebulosity, into which the luminous 
matter continued for some time to stream. 
This cloud extended itself on the sunward side, 
remaining in its vicinity for several days. When 
it had acquired a certain stage, the discharge 
took place mainly from the corners or cusps on 
either side in two streams, which, coalescing 
with those issuing from other envelopes, formed 
the two branches of the tail." Then, too, some 
comets have several series of envelopes, which 
rise up toward the sun. In Donati's comet 
seven were detected, and in the great comet of 
1861 no less than eleven. The force which 
causes the ascent of these envelopes is intermit- 



48 ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGEESS. 

tent and finally die, away. In the comet of The awards will be subject to the following 
b noticed the descent of the en ; ** ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 

lets discovered in each of the three years named, 



velopes on the nucleus; and Herschel and 
Schroeter remarked the same peculiarity in the 
comet of 1811. From these facts the author 
thinks that, although Professor Tyndall s hy- 
pothesis accounts for some of the phenomena, 
vet the true theory is still to be discovered. 
Mr Uuggins, in the Redo Lecture, delivered 



and only for such comets as are telescopic at time 
of discovery, that is, invisible to the naked eye. 
The comet must not have been before seen by an- 
other observer, and must not be one whose appear- 
ance could securely be predicted. 

2. The discovery must be communicated immedi- 
ately, and without waiting for further observations, 



. 

at Cambridge in May, details his spectroscopic to t j h ' e j m p er ial Academy of Sciences, by telegraph 
observations* on Winnecke's comet (II., 1868), if practicable ; and otherwise by the earliest post. 



comparison of 



spectrum' with that The Academy undertakes to transmit the news imme- 

f ; nd concludes there- 

from~tnYtYh*e7o~metary matter from which the 
light comes is the luminous vapor of carbon. 
To this theory it may be objected that the de- 
gree of solar heat to which the comet was ex- 
posed would be insufficient to convert carbon ^^^ _ 

into vapor. Mr. Huggins replies to this, that car- obgervat i ns of the discoverer suffice for the deter- 
bon may possibly exist in an allotropic state, in mination of the orbit. 
which it may be much less fixed, and so be capa- 
ble of passin'g into vapor at a comparatively low 
temperature. At all events, the matter which 
emanatts from the nucleus, and is distinguished 



the plan 

and course of the comet must be given as exactly 
as possible with the first notice. This first notice is 
to be supplemented by such later observations as may 
be made. 

4. If the discovery should be confirmed by other 
observers the prize will not be awarded unless the 



5. The prizes will be awarded in the general meet- 
ing of tho Academy held at the end of May of each 
year. In case the first notice of a discovery arrives 
between the first of January and the end of May, the 

final award of the prize will be deferred till the gen- 

by a blue tint, does give a light which the prism era i meeting in May in the following year. 



shows to be identical with that emitted by the 
vapor of carbon ; therefore it is certain that 
the light which has the blue color is not due 
to reflection from a cloud, of which the parti- 
cles are too small to reflect the longer waves of 
its less refrangible colors. The invisible spaces 
between the envelopes may possibly correspond 
to a condition of the vapor too cool to emit 
light, and yet not condensed so as to reflect 
light; and "the exterior parts of the coma, or 
tail, which have been found to be polarized in 
a plane, showing the light to come from the 
sun, may be supposed to consist of the vapor 
of the nucleus, condensed into widely-scattered 
particles of great minuteness. Mr. Huggins 
docs not support the Tyndall theory on the 
ground that it is inconsistent with the observed 
appearances and forms of the tails, and espe- 
cially with the rays frequently projected in a 
direction different from that of the tail ; and 
adds that, for further knowledge of the nature 
of cometary phenomena, we must, doubtless, 
wait until the spectrum analysis can be applied 
to the series of changes presented by a bril- 
liant comet. 

Prizes for the Ditcovery of Comets. The Im- 
perial Academy of Sciences of Yienna have is- 
sued a circular, offering prizes for the discovery 
of comets. It says that, for several years past, 
there have been remarkably few discoveries of 
new comets a fact attributed to the special 
attention given by observers to small planets. 
The Academy regard it as very desirable, that 
more should be known about comets, in view 
of the recently-established connection between 
those bodies and meteors. They, therefore, 
propose to award a gold medal, or twenty 
Austrian ducats, representing its value in 
money, as the receiver may choose, for the dis- 
covery of any new comet during the three 
tween May 31, 1869, and May 31, 1872. 



6. Application for the prize must be made to the 



not be considered. 

7. The Imperial Academy will procure the de- 
cision of the permanent astronomers of the Obser- 
vatory at Vienna as to the fulfilment of the condi- 
tions in Nos. 1, 3, and 4. 

The Radiation of Heat from the Moon. At 
the May meeting of the Eoyal Society, the Earl 
of B.osse presented a paper giving the fruits 
of his experiments to estimate the amount 
of heat which reaches the earth's surface 
from the moon. Professor Piazzi Smith had 
experimented for the same purpose, on the 
Peak of Teneriffe, with a thermopile, but ap- 
parently without any means of concentrating 
the moon's heat beyond the ordinary polished 
metal cone. Melloni had employed a glass 
lens of about 3 feet diameter, but, as glass ab- 
sorbs rays of low refrangibility, it was not so 
well adapted to concentrate heat as a metallic 
mirror. The point sought to be determined by 
Lord Eosse was, in what proportions the 
moon's heat consists of: (1.) That coming 
from the interior of the moon which will not 
vary with the phase. (2.) That which falls 
from the sun on the moon's surface and is at 
once reflected regularly and irregularly. (3.) 
That which, falling from the sun on the moon's 
surface, is absorbed, raises the temperature of 
the moon, and is afterward radiated to the 
earth as heat of low refrangibility. The ap- 
paratus consisted of a thermopile of two ele- 
ments, on which all the moon's heat, which 
falls on the large speculum of the author's 3- 
foot telescope, was concentrated by means of a 
concave mirror of 3 inches aperture, and 2.8 
inches focal length. Two wires were connect- 
ed with the two poles of each pile, and the 
ends of the wires joined two by two close to 
a Thompson's reflecting galvanometer, in such 



ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA AND PROGRESS. 



49 



a manner that a given amount of heat on the 
anterior face of one pile would produce a devi- 
ation equal in amount and opposite in direc- 
tion to that produced by an equal amount of 
heat on the anterior face of the other pile. 
The result of the experiments may be summed 
up as follows : The law of the variation of the 
moon's heat is found to differ not much from 
that of the moon's light. It may therefore be 
inferred that not more than a small part of the 
moon's heat comes from the first of the three 
sources mentioned. Readings of the galva- 
nometer taken on four different nights at the 
time of full moon showed a deviation of about 
six or eight divisions. The probable per cent- 
age of the moon's heat which passed through 
disks of thin plate-glass placed in front of each 
pile was 8 or rather less. The greater part of 
the moon's heat which reaches the earth 
appears to have been first absorbed by the 
lunar surface. The ratio of the heat of the 
sun, which reaches the earth, to that of the 
moon, is estimated at about 89,819 to 1. The 
value of the readings of the galvanometer was 
determined by comparison with those obtained 
by using a vessel of hot water coated with 
shellac and lampblack varnish as a source of 
heat. The vessel was of tin, circular, and sub- 
tended the same angle at the small concave 
reflectors as the large mirror of the telescope. 
It was thus found that (the radiating power 
of the moon being supposed to be equal to that 
of the lampblack surface, and the earth's at- 
mosphere not to influence the result) a devia- 
tion of 90 for full moon appears to indicate an 
elevation of temperature at the moon's surface 
of about 500 F. In deducing this result, al- 
lowance has been made for the imperfect ab- 
sorption of the solar rays by the lunar surface. 
Of this estimated high temperature at the 
moon the author remarks that it is quite in ac- 
cordance with the views of Sir John Herschel 
on the subject (" Outlines of Astronomy," sec- 
tion 732 and preceding sections), where he 
says that, " in consequence of the long period of 
rotation of the moon on its axis, and still more 
the absence of an atmosphere, the climate of 
the moon must be most extraordinary, the 
alternation being that of unmitigated and burn- 
ing sunshine, fiercer than that of an equatorial 
noon, and the keenest severity of frost, far ex- 
ceeding that of our polar winters for an equal 
time." And again, "the surface of the full 
moon exposed to us must necessarily be very 
much heated, possibly to a degree much ex- 
ceeding that of boiling water." 

Captain ^ John Ericsson, the distinguished 
American inventor, reported to the American 
Association, at its meeting in August, conclu- 
sions derived from a series of original experi- 
ments, exactly opposite to those submitted by 
Earl Rosse. Captain Ericsson proceeded upon 
the generally-accepted theory that the moon 
has no atmosphere, and sought to ascertain 
what was the temperature of the solar rays in 
absolute space that is, before entering the at- 
VOL. ix. 4. A 



mosphere of the earth arguing that the heat 
at the surface of the moon, by reason of the 
absence of an atmosphere, would be the same 
as that in absolute space. His experiments 
led him to believe that the temperature of ab- 
solute space, and, therefore, at the lunar sur- 
face, is more than 300 below the freezing- 
point of water. The atmosphere of the earth 
imprisons, so to speak, the solar rays, which 
are then absorbed into the earth, until the 
heat of the surface is increased to the existing 
average temperature, when other causes inter- 
fere to prevent it going higher. In other 
words, the heat received by the earth from 
the sun is prevented by the, atmosphere from 
being reflected off into space; but no such 
cause exists to check the reflection into space 
of the solar heat falling on the moon's surface. 
On Captain Ericsson's theory, the moon is a 
mass of ice, and the heat noticed by Earl Rosse 
is reflected, as heat might be from the coldest 
surfaces, and not radiated from it. 

Report of the Lunar Committee on Changes 
in the Moon. The report of the Lunar Com- 
mittee, at the August meeting of the British 
Association, contains some items of interest. 
Mr. Birt stated that, since the appointment of 
the committee, in 1868, a surface of 100 square 
degrees i. e., 10 degrees of south latitude and 
10 of west longitude has been carefully sur- 
veyed; the outlines of 433 objects laid down 
on a scale of 200 inches to the moon's diameter, 
and a catalogue prepared, containing numerous 
notices of important phenomena bearing on the 
questions relative to the physical aspect of our 
satellite. The great question of continued 
lunar change, either transient or permanent, 
as contrasted with apparent change dependent 
upon illuminating and visual angle, is one, he 
remarks, for posterity to settle. Several in- 
stances were adduced to show that the moon's 
surface had undergone successive changes dur- 
ing its past history. The determination of 
these changes rests on the strong indications 
afforded by a careful study of photograms of 
the priority and posteriority of well-marked 
features, which can only be realized by con- 
templating the lunar pictures in the seclusion 
of the study. The report alludes to certain 
differences between the photograms, particu- 
larly one with respect to a crater figured by 
Lohrmann, and found on De La Rue's map, but 
not a vestige of which can be discovered on 
Rutherfurd's. The comparison of photograms 
appears to open up a line of investigation of 
great promise. Some attention has been given 
to apparent changes of brightness and tint ; and 
three or four somewhat conspicuous spots were 
referred to as exhibiting these alterations. 

In a paper subsequently read before the 
Association by Mr. Birt, he spoke of the num- 
ber of changes which have been observed, 
during the last 49 years, on the lunar crater 
Plato. From records in his possession, it ap- 
pears that no less than 24 spots have been 
seen, at different times, on the smooth, dark 



50 ASTRONOMICAL PHENOMENA. 

floor of that crater. Previous to February, 
1869, 15 had been recorded, of which 6 have 
been observed recently. In and since Febru- 
ary, 1869, 9 additional spots have been ob- 
served, of which 6 have been more or less con- 
stantly seen by two observers. The remaining 
13 ha"ve either become invisible, or are but 
rarely seen. Certain peaks on the western 
wall of the crater Plato have been measured 
by Beer and Madler, and their height found 
to be from 5,000 to 7,000 English feet. These 
peaks, at sunrise, cast well-defined, long shad- 
ows, which have been measured by Professor 
Chailis, of Cambridge. The shadows of the 
three principal peaks come in proximity to 
three very minute craters on the floor of Plato, 
thus furnishing a means of identifying these 
craters at any future time. 

Transits of Venus. Preparatory arrange- 
ments were made in England during the 
year for the efficient observation of the impor- 
tant transit of Venus, which will take place 
in December, 1874. Numerous stations have 
been selected for observing the phenomenon in 
its various stages and conditions. For observ- 
ing the ingress of Venus upon the sun's disk, 
as accelerated by parallax, Owhyhee and the 
neighboring islands, the Marquesas Islands, the 
Aleutian Islantls, and the mouth of the Amoor, 
are regarded as more or less favorably situated. 
For observing the ingress retarded by parallax, 
Kerguelen Island and Croyet's Island are well 
situated, though geographically unfavorable. 
Next in order come Rodriguez, Mauritius, and 
Bourbon Islands, Madras, and Bombay. The 
egress accelerated by parallax can be best ob- 
served in Auckland Islands, Canterbury, Wel- 
lington, and Auckland, Norfolk Island, Mel- 
bourne, and Sydney ; while Omsk, Orsk, Astra- 
khan, Erzeroum, Aleppo, Smyrna, and Alex- 
andria, are highly suitable places for noting 
the retardation of the egress by parallax. Mr. 
De La Rue has been investigating the practica- 
bility of taking photographs of Venus in tran- 
sit, at several well-separated stations, as an 
auxiliary means of estimating the sun's dis- 
tance. He points out that the close corre- 
spondence between the result obtained by 
micrometrical measurements applied to his 
eclipse photographs in 1860, and the elements 
calculated by Mr. Farley, in the Nautical Al- 
manac, show that a very close approximation 
to the truth is to be looked for in the case of 
the transit of Venus. The difficulty of meas- 
uring the solar and lunar disks presented in 
an eclipse photograph is very much greater 
than that attending the corresponding measure- 
ments in a transit photograph. Moreover, the 
observer of a transit would not be hurried like 
the observer of an eclipse, since the former 
phenomenon is several hours in progress, while 
the latter lasts but a few minutes. The photo- 
graphing could be as easily done as that which 
occurs daily at the Kew Observatory. Mr. 
Stone, of Greenwich, suggests that the three 
following points should be carefully attended 



AURORA BOREALIS. 

to in making the telescopic observations ; that 
telescopes of nearly the same aperture should 
be employed; that magnifying powers should 
be nearly the same ; and that attention should 
be directed to observations of real internal 
contact as the chief points. By " real internal 
contact," he means the formation of the " black 
drop," as it is called, simultaneously with the 
complete ingress of the planet upon the solar 
disk. The transit of 1874 does not afford the 
same opportunity which was had in that of 
1769, for estimating the sun's distance from the 
different duration of the transit as observed 
from different points of the earth's surface ; 
nor is there a probability, according to Mr. 
Airy's calculations, of applying that method in 
the transit of 1882. The latter transit, as well 
as that of 1874, takes place in December, 
when the southern or sea hemisphere of the 
earth is turned toward the sun. The transits 
of 1761 and 1769 (the most important observed 
last century) happened in June, when the 
northern hemisphere was .bowed to the sun. 
Stations for observing the transit of 1882 have 
already been chosen. 

Transit of Mercury. The recent transit of 
Mercury was observed by Mr. Row (a Hindoo 
astronomer), at Vizagapatam. The observer 
and some of his friends noticed that near the 
middle of the transit a " wavy tint of light " 
darted from the upper edge of the planet. This 
light was occasionally disturbed, but continued 
visible for some time. No change of focal 
length or of the eye-piece employed had any 
effect on the phenomenon. It is said to be the 
first instance of the kind occurring during a 
transit of Mercury. 

AURORA BOREALIS. An auroral display of 
extraordinary extent and splendor occurred on 
the night of April 15th. It was seen through- 
out Canada, being especially brilliant at St. 
John, N. B., Montreal, and Toronto, in the 
north and middle western part of the United 
States, and in the upper portion of the South- 
ern States. At Boston the spectacle was re- 
markably fine between 7 and 8 p. M., surpass.- 
ing in richness and beauty any previous exhi- 
bition of the kind at that point for many years. 
The Western Union Telegraph Company oper- 
ated their lines in that city without the aid of 
a battery, and the same was done in many 
other places. From Philadelphia to Pittsburg 
the telegraph lines were worked by the auroral 
electricity alone. At Cincinnati it was noticed 
that all the lines, except those running south 
and west, were disturbed, the currents being 
sometimes too strong, and at others almost 
neutralized. The operation of lines at St. John, 
N. B., was seriously interfered with, and com- 
munication almost entirely ceased between 
Plaister Cove and Heart's Content, N. B. 
The phenomenon, as seen at Richmond, Va., 
is described as a belt of white, apparently 
about six feet wide, extending across the sky 
from east and west, drifting northward, and 
finally gathering as a fan closes, and then dis- 



AUROKA BOREALIS. 



51 



appearing, after which the ordinary Aurora 
Borealis was seen in the northern horizon. 
As far southwest as Louisville, Ky., the aurora 
made but little show, and its effects on the 
telegraph wires were barely perceptible. Seen 
from Indianapolis, the phenomenon was of a 
whitish color, looking like clouds rent by the 
winds. An hour later (at 9 o'clock) the sky 
was illuminated first in the northwest, then 
in the east, and streaked with spots of red 
light which rapidly came and went. The dis- 
play at that place lasted about an hour and a 
half. In New York City and vicinity the 
appearance of the phenomenon is accurately 
given in the following, from an account fur- 
nished by W. S. Gilman, Jr., to the American 
Journal of Science for July. He was stationed 
on the roof of Mr. Jacob Campbell's observa- 
tory in Brooklyn, N. Y., a favorable position 
for a good view. At 7i P. M., Mr. Gilman first 
observed thin streaky clouds pointing upward 
from the horizon, and evidently the beginning 
of an auroral display. In a few minutes after- 
ward the beams shot toward the zenith, and 
the familiar auroral corona was formed. The 
nucleus or apex of the aurora was seemingly a 
cloud shaped like the internal area described 
by a bow with the string drawn aside. The 
southwest was clear, as it was generally dur- 
ing the evening. From that point the wind 
had been blowing all day. To the south the 
auroral beams did not extend nearer the hori- 
zon than Sirius, and at no time exhibited great 
strength on the horizon. At 7 h 40 m rosy tints 
appeared at different points of the compass, 
those to the east and west of the zenith being 
remarkably deep, and generally at an altitude 
of 45 or more. At 8 p. M. the phenomenon 
brightened after a brief dull period, and the 
rose-tints were then very beautiful. Sulphur- 
ous-yellow and greenish hues were also visible. 
At 10 o'clock the aurora was faint, though 
striking in its arrangement ; but at 10|- o'clock 
the aurora reappeared with redoubled bril- 
liancy, the nucleus of light being much larger 
than it was earlier in the evening, and in shape 
resembling the denser part of the great nebula 
of Orion. At 2 A. M. when Mr. Gilman's ob- 
servations ceased, only faint beams were per- 
ceptible in the north, proceeding from the dark 
segment along the horizon from K K E. to 
K K "W. He regards this aurora as inferior 
in brilliancy to one that he witnessed at Mount 
Desert, Me., September 15, 1868, but possess- 
ing more interest than the latter in the greater 
grotesqueness of the clouds forming the coro- 
na, and the rosy, greenish, and yellowish tints 
assumed by the broad sheets of light which 
streamed on all sides from the nucleus overhead. 

Mr. E. T. Kingston, connected with the Mag- 
netic Observatory at Toronto, Canada, in a com- 
munication to the same magazine, treats of the 
aurora as seen at that place, in some of its 
more scientific aspects. He says : 

A very grand exhibition of aurora, occupying more 
or less the whole sky, took place on the night of 



April 15th, and continued, with but slight interrup- 
tion, from dusk till daylight on the following morn- 
ing. 

One part of the display, deserving notice from its 
comparative rarity, was a dark segment similar to 
those commonly seen in the north, though not so well 
defined, which appeared about 9 p. M. in the south, 
with an altitude of about 25. But the feature of still 
more unusual occurrence consisted in a belt of lu- 
minous haze from 5 to 10 in width, extending 
through the zenith from the eastern to the western 
point of the horizon, the material of which (in ap- 
pearance) moved like a torrent from east to west with 
prodigious velocity. 

The apparent movement of translation continued 
from about 13 h 10 to 13 h 50 m , when .the matter com- 
posing the belt became affected by pulsations, which 
succeeded each other in the order from east to west, 
and with a rapidity still greater than that of the pre- 
vious apparent motion of translation. 

About 14 h the belt broke up and the pulsations 
became visible over the whole sky, the order of their 
succession being from the horizon to the zenith. At 
15 h the pulsations became intermittent, and ceased 
to maintain any apparent order in the their occur- 
rence : they gradually became more feeble and ceased 
with daybreak:. 

Throughout the night a generally diffused lumi- 
nosity prevailed, such as is commonly seen with a full 
moon and hazy sky. This was evidently not occa- 
sioned by the moon, which was scarcely four days 
old, and Avas low in the horizon, "but was part of the 
aurora itself, the brilliancy of whose more active fea- 
tures it greatly impaired. 

Throughout the day and night a considerable mag- 
netic disturbance was going on. 

Declination. As regards the declination, the aver- 
age deviation was 15' of arc, or three times the limit 
required to entitle a disturbance to be considered as 
large. The easterly deviations were the more nu- 
merous, but the westerly were on the average fifty 
per cent, greater in extent. 

The greatest easterly deviation was 93' at 3 p. M., 
and the greatest westerly deviation 85' at T h 15 m p. M. 

The deviations after midnight were nearly all east- 
erly. 

Total Force. The disturbances of the total force 
were on the average nearly seven times what may be 
designated as the inferior limit of a disturbance, or 
.0004 of the total force. 

The number of the disturbances which increased, 
and of those which diminished the force, were nearly 
equal ; but the average magnitude of the latter was 
to that of the former in the ratio of 8 to 5. 

The greatest disturbance which increased the force 
was 11 (the unit being .0004), and occurred at 5 h 15 m 
p. M., while the greatest disturbance diminishing the 
force was 23, and occurred at 8 P. M. 

The disturbances which diminished the force nearly 
all took place between 6.30 p. M. and midnight. 

Inclination or Dip. The disturbances of the dip 
had an average value of about 15', or 15 times the 
disturbance limit. 

The disturbances which increased the dip were the 
more numerous, but those which diminished the dip 
were of nearly twice their magnitude. The greatest 
increase of dip was 35, and occurred at 10 h 30 ra p. M. , 
and the greatest diminution of dip was 64', and oc- 
curred at 3 P. M. 

The disturbances increasing the clip nearly all took 
place after 7 P. M., those that diminished the dip hav- 
ing^ occurred during the day. 

On the whole, the aurora, together with the mag- 
netic disturbance which preceded and accompanied 
itj was more remarkable than any that have been 
witnessed at Toronto since September, 1859. 

J. A. Angstrom sends to Poggendorff's An- 
nalen a report of his spectroscopic studies of 
the aurora. He says that, in the winter of 



52 



AUSTRALIA. 



1868-'69, he was several times able to observe 
the spectrum of the luminous arc which sur- 
rounds the dark segment, and is never want- 
ing in faint auroras. The light was almost 
monochromatic, and consisted of a single bright 
line, which was on the left of the well-known 
group of lines of calcium. Traces of three very 
faint bands were also observed, which extended 
nearly as far as F. Only once, when the lu- 
minous arc was much agitated, did he see the 
regions in question momentarily illuminated by 
some faint spectrum lines ; yet, from the feeble 
intensity of those rays, he could still say that 
the light of the luminous arc is almost mono- 
chromatic. In March of 1867 he observed, for 
a whole week, the same line in the zodiacal 
light, which at that time displayed an extraor- 
dinary intensity. Finally, on a starlight night, 
when the whole sky was in some degree phos- 
phorescent, he found traces of the line even in 
the faint light which proceeded from all parts 
of the heavens. This line, so far as he has in- 
vestigated it, does not coincide with any of the 
known lines of simple or of compound gases. 
He suggests that an intense northern light, such 
as can be observed within the polar circle, will 
probably give a more complex spectrum. 

AUSTRALIA. This continent is now di- 
vided into five colonies : New South Wales and 
Queensland in the east, Western Australia in 
the west, South Australia in the southwest, 
and Victoria, the smallest, but most important, 
in the southeast. 

The area of Victoria is 86,831 English 
square miles, or about as large as that of Great 
Britain. Its population was, at the end of 
1868, about 684,000. The proportion of the 
male population to the female is as 4 to 3. The 
soil is for the greater part undulated and trav- 
ersed by some mountain-ranges of consider- 
able height. Of its area, 40, TOO square miles 
are adapted for sheep-breeding, 26,000 for agri- 
culture, 583 square miles are calculated to be 
auriferous, the unexplored land being about 
20,000 square miles. There are numerous 
rivers, but only one, the Murray, is large ; it 
has a length of 2,400 miles, 2,000 of which are 
navigable. The climate is dry, but pleasant. 

Gold-mining is now principally in the hands 
of companies, and is regulated like any other 
branch of industry. But there still are many 
diggers who work on their own account, and 
would not work for any wages in the richest 
quartz-works. 

The yield of gold amounted in 1867 to 
1,433,687 ounces. There were 470 steam ma- 
chines in the alluvial works, and 532 in the 
quartz-works. The total value of the machines 
used in the gold-works amounted to 2,068,527 
pounds sterling. The average wages of the 
miners was 87 2s. sterling. The total value 
of gold obtained in this colony up to the end 
of 1867 was 136,000,000 sterling. The yield 
of gold in 1868 amounted to 1,657,598 ounces, 
and the value of machinery to 2,150,432. 
There was obtained in 1867 silver valued at 



3,462, tin at 195,000, copper at 4,000, 
antimony at 30,000, coal at 3,000, slate 
and flagstone at 18,000, .diamonds and jew- 
els at 8,000. The number of miners has for 
several years continually been on the decrease. 
It was, in 1868, 63,000, 15,000 of whom were 
Chinese. The main centre of the gold-diggings 
is Ballarat. The city contains a very industri- 
ous population of 28,000. The annual receipts 
of the municipality amount to more than 
20,000. A railroad connects it with Mel- 
bourne via Geelong. The next mining cities 
in importance are Bandigo and Castlemaine. 

The present agricultural population is about 
14,000. The yield in wheat is about twenty 
bushels, in oats about twenty-two bushels, an 
acre. The dry climate is favorable to wheat, 
which is of excellent quality. There were, in 
1868, 121,000 horses, 622,000 cattle, 77,000 
hogs, 8,460,000 sheep. The export of wool 
amounted to 3,800,000. The value of agri- 
culture was, in 1866, 865,693. The squatters 
had 1,156 stations for sheep-breeding, extend- 
ing over thirty-two million acres. The cul- 
tivation of tobacco, flax, and the vine, is pro- 
gressing favorably. The vineyards, in 1868, 
covered 5,000 acres. The Society of Acclima- 
tization manifests great activity. Almost all 
the domestic animals, fruit, vegetables, and 
corn, are acclimatized, and thriving very well. 
The want of sufficient flowing water, arising 
from the nature of the hard upper strata, has 
been a serious drawback both for mining and 
agriculture, so that the supply of water has 
become the matter of paramount importance. 
Among other means of remedying this want, 
the large river Murray is to be brought into 
communication with many other rivers, gigan- 
tic reservoirs are to be constructed, large salt 
lakes to be emptied, and changed into reser- 
voirs. 

All other branches of industry have also 
been greatly developed. There were, in 1866, 
114grindmg-mills, with a capital of 384,385; 
86 breweries, with a capital of 266,000 ; and of 
other manufactories there were 786, with a 
total capital of 1,980,911. 

With this development of domestic industry 
the English export has decreased. The legisla- 
ture was compelled to introduce an almost pro- 
hibitory protective tariff. Wages are exceed- 
ingly high, and every industrious and competent 
working-man finds occupation readily, as may 
be perceived by the fact that the deposits in the 
savings-banks amount to a sum of 8,000,000. 
The Government of Victoria aids immigration 
but very little now, the legislature, which is 
elected by universal suffrage, representing the 
views of the laboring classes, who think that 
immigration depresses wages. The squatters 
are mostly Scotchmen, the farmers mostly 
Irish. The English are not so numerous ; they 
are mostly shopkeepers and mechanics. The 
miners are for the'greater part from Wales and 
Cornwall ; they are skilled miners and smiths. 
The considerable immigration of Chinese is 



AUSTRALIA. 



53 



worthy of note. They are ill-treated, though 
they have proved themselves useful to the colo- 
ny by their skill, industry, and spirit of enter- 
prise. 

The revenues of the colony amounted, in 1868, 
to 3,320,354, the expense to 3,272,693. The 
revenues for 1869 are estimated at 3,294,161, 
the expenses at 3,293,042. The capital city, 
Melbourne, has in wonderful development been 
excelled- only by a few American cities. It con- 
tains (with the suburbs) 170,000 inhabitants. 

Port Darwin is said by recent explorers to be 
the best port in the Australian colonies. It lies 
southwest from Adam Bay, into which the 
Adelaide River empties. 

The foreign trade of the colony of Victoria 
continues to show an increase. In the lirst 
eleven months of 1868, the imports amounted 
in value to 11,391,938, an increase of 1,416,- 
503 over the corresponding period in 1867. 
The exports amounted to 12,814,750, an in- 
crease of 2,625,211. 

The Victoria Parliament passed a bill for a 
loan of 2,100,000 for railway purposes. Ar- 
rangements for intercolonial free trade were 
being organized. 

New South Wales. This colony embraces 
an area of 207,000,000 acres. The eastern 
coast runs a distance of 700 miles from Point 
Danger to Cape Howe. The colony extends 
500 miles from the sea into the interior. The 
coast is high and rocky; but there is a number 
of bays, affording excellent, spacious, and safe 
harbors. The country is undulating, and 
abounds in rivers, fertile valleys, and extensive 
grass plains. North of Sydney, and east of the 
Blue Mountains, there are nine rivers watering 
fertile agricultural districts with prospering 
towns. There is a regular steam connection 
between these rivers and Sydney. These dis- 
tricts are well adapted for the culture of 
cotton, tobacco, sugar-cane, and other trop- 
ical productions, as well as the grape-vine ; the 
southern portion is celebrated all over Austra- 
lia for its rich yield of cereals. Cattle are ex- 
cellent. But the richest resources of the colo- 
ny are its immense pasture-grounds. Tallow, 
hides, bones, leather, and meat, are valuable 
export articles, while wool is the great staple 
of the country. The export of wool amounts 
now to 30,000,000 a year; while the export 
of wool of all Australia amounts to 100,000,- 
000. The squatters (sheep-breeders) are a 
very wealthy class, and form the territorial 
aristocracy of the colony. The area owned as 
free property (i. e., disposed of by the crown) 
consisted, in 1867, of about 46,000,000 acres, 
only 230,000 of which were cultivated; of 
the 120,000,000 acres of leased land, only 
160,000 were cultivated. "Wheat, corn, oats, 
barley, and tobacco, were the chief articles 
of cultivation. The culture of the grape has 
increased, while that of sugar is beginning to 
grow important in the northern parts. The 
interior of New South Wales suffers terribly 
from want of water. The drought of 1868 and 



1869 lasted in some parts through the whole 
year, causing an^ immense destruction among 
the animals. This colony is rich in gold, silver, 
copper, iron, lead, tin, and quicksilver; all these 
treasures are as yet but very little worked. 
There is an abundance of coal, the great coal 
stratum extending as far as Queensland. Of 
the 1,780,000 tons yielded a year on an aver- 
age during the last ten years, more than 
one-half was taken to India, China, and the 
neighboring colonies. Twenty thousand tons 
of coal are raised at Newcastle every week. 
The strata of iron are exceedingly valuable. A 
silver-mine has been opened on the southern 
coast, 200 miles distant from Sydney ; and a 
rich stratum of red sulphuret of mercury (cin- 
nabar) was discovered in the beginning of 1869. 
The yield of gold amounted, in 1866, to 235,898 
ounces. The population was, in 1866, 420,000 
souls. The constitution is similar to that of 
Victoria, except that the members of the Le- 
gislative Council are appointed by the Crown 
(the Governor). The railroads and telegraphs 
are in the hands of the government, and yield 
a considerable revenue. The Southern Railroad, 
from Sydney to Goulburn, is 128 miles long. 
The revenues of the colony amounted, in 1868, 
to 2,107,157; its debt to 9,585,890, con- 
tracted for railroads and other public works. 
The exports from England to the colony rose, 
in 1868, to 2,872,000. Sydney, the capital of 
the colony, is seven miles from the mouth of 
the beautiful Bay of Port Jackson. An inter- 
national exhibition was opened in this city in 
May, 1869. 

Queensland. This colony occupies the north- 
eastern part of the continent; its length, from 
the southern boundary to Cape York, is 1,200 
miles; its area, 678,000 square miles (about 
four times that of France). The great bays 
form numerous harbors. Moreton Bay, at 
the head of which is Brisbane, the capital, is 60 
miles long and 20 miles wide, and encircled by 
fertile coasts. East of the range of mountains 
running at a distance of 60 to 70 miles from 
the coast, numerous broad and partly navigable 
rivers run through rich alluvial bottoms, while 
west of the mountains there is an expansive 
table-land, the Downs. Ipswich, the second 
city of the colony, has about 6,000 inhabitants. 
The country around Maryborough is excellent 
for agriculture. Gladstone is the harbor of the 
bay Port Curtis, which, being deep, wide, and 
safe, is considered to be, after Sydney, the best 
port on the eastern coast of Australia. The 
climate is healthy. Rockhampton, 30 miles 
from the mouth of the Fitzroy (in Keppel 
Bay) is a notable city, the future metropolis 
of Northern Australia. The coast near the 
Gulf of Carpentaria is not adapted for sheep- 
breeding or agriculture; but it abounds in 
minerals. 

On the whole, Queensland is exceedingly 
well adapted for sheep-breeding; its pasture- 
lands of an enormous extent and excellent 
quality. The interior is grass-land. Soil and 



54 



AUSTRALIA. 



climate adapt the Downs especially for wheat, 
barley, oats, and the vegetables and fruit of 
the temperate zone ; the coast-lands producing 
corn, and most of the fruits and spices of the 
snbtropic zone. The exhibition of the Horti- 
cultural and Agricultural Society of Drayton 
and Toowoomba, in February, 1869, in the 
Darling Downs, has proved the country to be 
excellent for producing wheat and other cere- 
als. On the other hand, the exhibition of the 
Agricultural Society of East Moreton, opened 
at Brisbane, showed excellent specimens of 
grapes, oranges, lemons, gigantic sugar-caue, 
rich cotton, and fragrant tobacco. The cotton 
equals our Sea Island staple in fineness and 
evenness, but is not as strong. Its export rose 
from 14,344 pounds in 1862 to 412,741 pounds 
in 1867. There were, in 1866, only 2,884 acres 
of cotton ; in 1867 there were 8,149 acres ; so 
that its export in 1868 can hardly have been 
below a million pounds. The colony is rich in 
valuable woods. 

The colony is particularly favorable for 
farmers with small means, and they have been 
well provided for by the legislature. Besides 
the favorable conditions for the purchase or 
lease of large tracts (as high as 10,000 acres), 
any father of a family can occupy 80 acres of 
agricultural land or 160 acres of pasture-land, 
by paying for five years nine pence a year per 
acre of the former, or sixpence for the latter 
kind of land. The discovery of gold has 
essentially improved Queensland. The city of 
Nashville, in the gold district of Gympie, al- 
ready contains 10,000 inhabitants. New and 
rich quartz strata were found in March, 1869. 
To develop this industry, however, an uninter- 
rupted supply of water is needed. The export 
of gold from Queensland amounted, in 1868, 
to 163,000 ounces. The Peak Downs contain 
copper strata of great extent. A rich stratum 
of galena was discovered, in February, 1869, 
in the Burnett district. The population was 
about 100,000 persons in 1868. Railroads 
and telegraphs are controlled by the Colonial 
Government. The telegraph was, in March, 
1869, advanced as far as Tadesville, on Cleve- 
land Bay, and will soon, by a submarine ca- 
ble to Java and Singapore, connect Australia 
with Europe, etc. Public instruction has re- 
ceived early attention, there being many pri- 
mary and grammar schools. 

Western Australia is separated from the 
other colonies by the great interior desert. It 
is now the only Crown colony in Australia. 
Its length from north to south is 1,200 miles, 
its width 800 ; the entire length of the coast is 
2,000 miles. The Darling and Roe Mountain- 
ranges traverse the colony from north to south, 
have a height of 1,5.00 to 2,000 feet and a width 
of 20 to 25 miles. Beyond them are the wide, 
v.ndulating grass prairies, with extensive pas- 
tures, but slightly wooded and well watered by 
the rivers Swan, Canning, Albany, and Augus- 
tus. Farther east begins the great desert. The 
land produces potatoes, vegetables, and fruits 



AUSTRIA. 

of all kinds. The climate is healthy and very 
favorable to European settlers, who are en- 
couraged by very favorable conditions. The 
extensive forests furnish woods of great value. 
The colony is as yet but little explored. Be- 
tween the Murchison and the Upper Irwin, at 
a distance of 40 miles from the sea, a district 
of 4,000 square miles contains coal, copper, and 
lead in abundance. Pearl-fishing is very ad- 
vantageous. According to official statements, 
each European manager obtains about a ton of 
shells a month, which is worth 100 on the 
spot. The country abounds in fish. The ex- 
port from this colony to England was, in the 
first months of 1869, very lively in wool, pearl 
shells, copper-ore, gum ; timber is sent to 
Southern Australia and "Victoria, railroad-ties 
to India, horses to Singapore, Madras, and Cal- 
cutta. The exports amounted, in 1868, to 
107,636, the imports to 212,488. The popu- 
lation, in 1867, was 23,231 persons, two-thirds 
of whom were males. There were 33 public 
schools. The revenues of the colony were, in 
1868, 83,038 ; the expenses, 82,294. 

Southern Australia is chiefly important 
for sheep-breeding, agriculture, and mining. 
The Crown had sold, in 1868, over 3,000,000 
acres; 241,712,459 acres (378,300 square miles) 
remaining still unsold. Its area is three times 
as large as Great Britain and Ireland. Breed- 
ing sheep and cattle is the most important busi- 
ness, the squatters forming an aristocratic class 
and living in a princely style. The yield in 
wheat amounted, in 1868, to more than 5,000,- 
000 bushels. The colony is immensely rich in 
copper ; it exported to England, in 1868, 14,841 
tons of copper-ore. The port of Wallaroo is a 
thriving town of 5,000 inhabitants. The cap- 
ital of the colony is Adelaide. The population 
amounts to about 180,000. The imports from 
England rose, in 1868, to 1,177,638. The 
government consists of a Governor, a Legisla- 
tive Council, and a House of Assembly. Both 
Houses of the Legislature are chosen by the 
people. The Council consists of 18 members, 
the Assembly of 36. 

The exports of England to Australia amount- 
ed, in 1868, to 12,071,435; 1,105,400 of 
which were paid for fancy goods, 971,003 for 
clothing, 966,697 for cotton goods, 649,058 
for woollens, 324,455 for linen, 924,507 for 
boots and shoes, 477,295 for beer. The ex- 
port of Australian staple articles to England, 
in 1868, shows: for hides, 14,641 tons; raw 
copper, 93,000 cwt. ; tallow, 215,418 cwt. ; 
wool, 155,745,199 cwt. The gold imported 
from Australia and New Zealand to England 
amounted, in 1868, to 6,989.594. The total 
exports from England to Australia rose, in 
1865, to 12,339,241. 

AUSTRIA, an empire in Europe. Emperor, 
Francis Joseph L, born August 18, 1830 ; 
succeeded his uncle, Ferdinand I., on December 
2, 1848. Heir-apparent, Archduke Rudolph, 
born August 21, 1858. In this article we 
treat of the affairs belonging to the Austrian 



AUSTRIA. 



55 



monarchy as a whole, and those belonging to 
Austria proper, or the cis-Leithan provinces, 
reserving the affairs of the trans-Leithan prov- 
inces for the article HIJNGAKY. 

The area of the Austrian empire, according 
to the latest official statements, amounts to 240,- 
381 square miles, and the population, in 1867, 
to 35,553,000 inhabitants. An official census 
was to be taken during the first months of the 
year 1870. The previous census was of 1857, 
which showed the population of the provinces 
now constituting Austria (Lombardy and Ve- 
netia have since been lost) to amount to 32,- 



In no country of the world is the difference 
of nationality of so great political importance 
as in Austria, as it has been the primary cause 
of all the territorial losses which the empire 
has suffered since 1815, and of nearly all the 
commotions which still threaten its unity. 
According to a new work on the subject, by* a 
writer of recognized reputation, Dr. Ficker 
(Die Vollcerstamme der OestreicJi. Ungaris- 
chen Monarchic, Vienna, 1869), the numerical 
strength of the principal nationalities in Aus- 
tria proper (cis-Leithan provinces), and the 
lands subject to the Hungarian crown (trans- 
Leithan provinces), were as follows : 



COUNTRIES. 


German. 


Northern 
Slavi. 


Southern 
Slavi. 


Western 
Rumanians. 


Eastern 
Rumanians. 


Magyars. 


All others. 


Austria 


7 230 000 


9 822 000 


1 734 000 


592,000 


213,000 


18,000 


742,000 


Hungary 


1 765 000 


2 210 000 


1 509 000 


1,000 


2,501,000 


5,408,000 


611,000 


Military Frontier 


45,000 


12,000 


932,000 


500 


147,000 


5,000 


500 


Total 


9,040,000 


12,044,000 


4,175,000 


594,000 


2,862,000 


5,431,000 


1,354,000 



The following is a list of the provinces into 
which each of the two halves of the empire is 
divided, with the population in 1867, as ascer- 
tained by adding the excess of births over deaths 
to the official statements of the census of 1857 : 
I. Cis-Leithan Provinces (Austria Proper) : 

1. Lower Austria 1,762,784 

2. Upper Austria 719,427 

3. Salzburg 146,870 

. 4. Styria .* 1,091,647 

5. Carinthia 342,656 

6. Carniola 475,437 

7. Goertz, Gradisca, Istria, and Trieste. 566,666 

8. Tyrol and Vorarlberg 878,733 

9. Bohemia ! 5,153,602 

10. Moravia 2,008,572 

11. Silesia 493,825 

12. Galicia 5,147,021 

13. Bukovina 516,418 

14. Dalmatia 446,660 

Total .19,750,318 

Adding army, and travelling popula- 
tionabout 20,205,000 

il. Trans-Leithan Provinces (Hungary} : 

15. Hungary 10,814,206 

16. Croatia and Slavonia 962,031 

17. Transylvania 2,095,215 

The Military Frontier 1,131,502 

Total .1^0027954 

Adding army, and travelling popula- 
tionabout 15,348,000 

Total of I. and II., or the whole monarchy, 35,553,000 

In the budget of 1868, for the whole monar- 
chy, the estimates of expenditure and receipts 
were as follows : 

Expenditures. Austrian florins. 

1. Common Ministry for Foreign Affairs . . 4,226,471 

2. Common Ministry of War : 

(1.) for the Army 78,778,357 

(2.) for the Navy 9,933,265 

3. Common Ministry on Finances 1.743,507 

4. Common Chamber of Accounts 104,095 

Total ."94^78~57<595 

Receipts. 

Receipts of Ministry of War. . 3,214,000 ) 

Receipts from Customs 12,000,000 > 15,326,900 

Receipts from Consulates 112,000 ) 



Remaining.. 



79,459,695 



Of which sum the cis-Leithan provinces fur- 
nish 70 per cent., or 55,621,787; and the trans- 
Leithan provinces 30 per cent., or 23,837,908. 

The budget of 1868, for the cis-Leithan 
provinces, was as follows: Receipts, 299,380,- 
999 ; expenditures, 302,999,534 ; deficit, 3,618,- 
535. The public debt, on December 31, 1868, 
was 2,692,067,316 florins. 

The army in 1869 consisted of 246,695 on the 
peace footing, and 822,472 on the war footing. 

The endeavor to assimilate and to govern 
the incongruous parts of the Austrian mon- 
archy still constitutes a difficult task. Speak- 
ing, first of all, of "West Austria, its constitu- 
tional system, as at present existing, rests upon 
the cooperation of the Germans with the 
Poles. The Germans of Austria are in the 
main centralists ; the Poles are wedded to 
theories of decentralization or provincial self- 
government. This fundamental difference of 
political principles is always threatening to 
bring about a rupture between the Austrian 
Germans and the Austrian Poles, however 
prudently and moderately the political leaders 
on both sides may act toward each other. 
There is a serious difference between the West 
Austrian Government and its supporters in the 
Reichsrath, on the one side, and the Galician 
deputies on the other. When the constitutiomil 
reforms of 1867 were passed by the Reichsrath, 
by the joint efforts of the German and Galician 
deputies, the former regarded the work as a 
finality; the latter, on the other hand, de- 
clared from the first that the demands of their 
province, in the matter of self-government, 
were not satisfied, and that their constituents 
could not let the constitution remain as the 
reforms of 1867 had left it. The Galician 
Diet passed, in fact, a series of resolutions, 
which demanded such an extension of the 
powers of the provincial legislature and ex- 
ecutive government as would conform the 
position of Galicia, toward the rest of West 
Austria, to that held by Croatia since the con- 
clusion of the new settlement in the Hungarian 



56 



AUSTRIA. 



group of countries. The constitutionality of 
these resolutions was disputed by no one, but 
the Keichsrath was the body alone competent 
to alter the constitution in the manner pro- 
posed by the Galician Diet. The Galician 
deputies avoided, however, raising the question 
after the Reichsrath had assembled, because 
the army bill and the imperial budget for 
1869 had not yet been voted, and because, in 
their estimation, the safety of the empire was 
a question that took precedence of all others. 
But after the New Year's vacation the Diet's 
resolutions were called up in the Reichsrath, 
and, after a thorough discussion, the committee 
charged with their consideration agreed that 
no obligation rests upon the Government to 
communicate the resolutions of the Galician 
Diet to the House ; nevertheless, and as a 
compromise, it requested that the Government 
would, as a matter of favor or political expe- 
diency, communicate the said resolutions to 
the committee (not the House), and that the 
committee would then lay the resolutions 
before the House. One immediate result of 
the raising of this question has been the 
endeavor to provide the means by which the 
resolutions of the Diet may from time to time 
be communicated to the Reichsrath. 

Another constituent portion of tlie empire, 
Bohemia, claims to be justly discontent. The 
Czechs belong, as Slavi, to a nationality which 
embraces a clear majority of the subjects of 
the Austrian empire, numbering 16,000,000 
souls ; yet, under the new dualistic system, 
their pride of race is offended by being sub- 
jected to the ascendency of Germans and 
Magyars, who do not together quite amount 
to 14,000,000, and, as Bohemians, their patri- 
otic feelings are outraged by seeing the con- 
stitutional rights of their ancient kingdom 
trampled upon and utterly abrogated. It is, 
therefore, not a little suggestive that Czech 
leaders wore present at the Slavonic Congress 
of Moscow in 1867. 

While the Czechs are sulking and the Aus- 
trian Poles watching with anxiety the attitude 
which the West Austrian Government and 
legislature^ intend to take on the subject of 
the extension of the principle of self-govern- 
ment in Galicia, the Austrian Germans are 
agitating parliamentary reform. They desire 
an extension of the number of members for 
the House of Deputies, and the introduction 
of direct elections into the Reichsrath. In fact, 
the example of the sister country, Hungary, 
with its time-honored system of direct elec- 
tions, has served to captivate the German 
liberal mind with such a system, and the West 
Austrian ministry are considering proposals 
to these ends before the Reichsrath. The 
West Austrian House of Deputies consists 
only of 203 members. This, for a population 
of 19,500,000 gives a member to every 97,000 
of the population. The Hungarian Diet, in- 
cluding the 29 new additions from Croatia, 
counts 442 members for a population of only 



15,000,000, or one member to every 34,000 of 
the population. It has been proposed to 
double the present number of the House of 
Deputies. 

The Reichsrath closed on the 14th of May, 
with a speech of the Emperor, enumerating 
the labor of the Parliament, and saying : 

It was necessary to found an entirely new order of 
things. This was accomplished by ^ the establish- 
ment of the constitution which, while uniting the 
cis-Leithan provinces, has afforded' a large field for 
the autonomous government of the country, and 
given the finishing stroke to the compromise with 
Hungary. The military organization has not only 
drawn the band of union more closely round the 
monarchy, but has also increased its power.' This 
fact, together with the friendly relations existing 
between Austria and the other powers, is a guarantee 
for the maintenance of peace which the empire so 
absolutely requires. Eeterring to the financial situa- 
tion, his Majesty spoke of the large demands made 
upon the tax-paying efforts of the people, and said 
that, thanks to the joint powers of the Government 
and the administrative bodies, a way had been found 
by which it was hoped to place the finances upon a 
sound footing^ adding that public economy, the re- 
form of taxation, and the general improvement of 
commerce, afforded grounds for anticipating that the 
nation would soon recover from the sacrifices it had 
made. The speech from the throne then proceeds 
to enumerate the results of the legislation of the ex- 
piring session, mentioning especially the establish- 
ment of a supreme tribunal of the empire, the 
introduction of trial by jury of press offences, the 
reform of the criminal law-, the separation of the 
Government from the administration of justice, the 
abolition of imprisonment for debt, the repeal of the 
usury laws, and many other important measures. 
Allusion is then made to the numerous railway bills 
which have been passed ; to the conclusion of several 
commercial, postal, and telegraph conventions ; to 
the adoption of the laws regulating the position of 
the religious denominations in Austria, by which 
equal rights are granted to all creeds ; to the estab- 
lishment of civil marriage, and the settlement of the 
relations between the schools and the Church. His 
Majesty added : " I trust that these laws will endure 
as the bases of a peaceful organization between the 
church and state. The law relating to popular 
schools will elevate the education of the country to 
such a degree as must constitute the surest founda- 
tions for tne welfare of monarchy and the people. I 
hope that in the next session of the Keichsrath those 
who still hold aloof from our joint efforts will decide 
to participate in them. Austria must offer a great 
home to all her different nationalities, dispensing 
toward all equal justice and equal good-will." The 
emperor concluded as follows : u The constitution is 
the groundwork upon which this object is to be ob- 
tained. An understanding among the several races 
of the empire must certainly be arrived at, because 
this cannot fail to be the ultimate result, and because 
Austria alone offers to all her peoples protection, 
freedom, and the preservation of 'their independence 
and peculiar institutions. 

In her foreign policy, Austria evidently en- 
deavors to maintain friendly relations to other 
powers in order to strengthen her inner re- 
forms. The Government has successfully 
cooperated in averting the threatening Turco- 
Grecian difference. Mutual marks of sym- 
pathy were exchanged between Austria and 
Italy, and public opinion has been favorable to 
the rapprochement between the two coun- 
tries. The interests of Austria, and her wish 
for the preservation of peace, imposed upon 



AUSTRIA. 



her complete abstinence from interference in the 
German questions that still remain open. The 
Premier of Austria, Count von Beust, excited, 
however, the hostility of the Prussian Govern- 
ment and press by the publication of his Red- 
book, in consequence of which he explained his 
views regarding German affairs in two dispatch- 
es to Count Wiinpiffen, the Austrian Minister at 
Berlin, in which he says that the hostility on the 
part of Prussia appears to have been partly 
caused by the publication of the Red-book. He 
says that " this publication is a necessity for the 
Austrian Government, as its foreign policy is 
not discussed in Parliament, but in the delega- 
tions, whose business it is to inquire into the 
budgets of the War Office and the Foreign 
Office, and who can only obtain an accurate 
notion of the relations of Austria with foreign 
states from the Red-book, which offers them 
a real and tangible source of information on 
the subject. As regards the policy of Austria 
toward Rumania, South Germany, and North 
Schleswig, the count observes that much has 
been omitted from the dispatches in the Red- 
book in order to avoid giving any cause of 
offence to Prussia, but that Austria cannot 
reject the sympathy which has been manifested 
toward her by the South Germans, and that 
Count von Bismarck himself acknowledged her 
right to interfere in the North-Schleswig 
question. The second dispatch relates to the 
plan of forming a South-German Bund. It is 
addressed to the Austrian ambassadors at Mu- 
nich and Stuttgart, and begins by recalling the 
opinion expressed by Count von Beust on this 
proposal in November, 1867. He then consid- 
ered that a Southern Bund would be desirable 
as a guarantee for the maintenance of peace, 
and communicated his views on the subject to 
the Prussian Government as well as to those 
of Bavaria and Wurtemberg. At the same 
time, though retaining this opinion, he neither 
then nor since took any steps to promote the 
formation of the Bund. " Austria has a legit- 
imate interest in the independence of South 
Germany, and hence, also, in the maintenance 
of that independence in a definite and secure 
form. * * * But for the present we will 
confine ourselves to urging this important truth 
on all concerned. We do not wish to have 
even the appearance of taking an active part 
in the development of affairs in Germany. We 
ought to wish for a Southern Bund ; perhaps 
we do wish for it; but we neither can nor 
will create it, or even help to create it. If it 
should come into existence, no one shall have 
the smallest right to describe it as the work of 
Austrian influences." 

The Government presented and carried a 
bill in the Reich srath, relative to the land- 
wehr (militia), which is to be under the direct 
control of the military authorities. The pri- 
mary-school law was strenuously opposed in 
the Reichsrath by the Polish and Tyrolese 
members, who, upon the closing of the debate, 
submitted a protest against its enactment and 



quitted the Chamber. The law was passed, 
and received the Emperor's sanction. 

The liberal reforms introduced into the em- 
pire continued to encounter a determined op- 
position from the Catholic and Conservative 
party. The Bishop of Linz was convicted be- 
fore a civil court of uttering doctrines subver- 
sive of public order, and sentenced to three 
months' imprisonment. He was, however, im- 
mediately pardoned by the Emperor. 

A serious revolt broke out, in October, in the 
province of Dalmatia, the inhabitants of the 
district of Cattaro resisting the execution of 
the new military law. The insurgents collected 
a considerable number of armed men, and had 
control of several towns, among them Pobosi 
and Maina, and, strengthened by the moun- 
tainous character of the country, kept the Aus- 
trian troops at bay for several weeks. A battle 
lasting four hours took place near Lisio, in 
which the rebels were totally defeated. From 
the sympathy with which a number of Rus- 
sian papers regarded the insurrection, it was 
inferred that it was not merely an outbreak 
of discontent with a military law, but that it 
had a Panslavic tendency, directed against both 
Turkey and Austria. It was reported that the 
insurgents received large reinforcements from 
the inhabitants of Montenegro and the Herze- 
govina, and that the Prince of Montenegro fa- 
vored the movement. Numerous arrests were 
made by the Turkish Government in the prov- 
inces bordering upon Dalmatia, and it was 
claimed that discoveries had been made, show- 
ing that the rising was to extend successively to 
Bosnia, the Herzegovina, Albania, Servia, and 
Montenegro. The Austrian and Turkish Gov- 
ernments concluded a convention, to mass large 
bodies of troops on the frontier of the disaf- 
fected provinces and resist the spread of the 
rising by combined action. The Austrian Gov- 
ernment received permission from that of Tur- 
key to march its troops through Turkish ter- 
ritory against the Dalmatian insurgents, but 
the Prince of Montenegro entered a protest 
against this convention, and was said to be 
supported by the Government of Prussia. 

The new session of the Reichsrath was 
opened by the Emperor on the 13th of Decem- 
ber. In the speech from the throne, the Em- 
peror favored a conciliatory course in dealing 
with the Dalmatian insurrection, dwelt upon 
the peaceful appearance of European affairs 
with satisfaction ; and declared that the Aus- 
trian empire was in excellent relations with 
the foreign powers, even on a point which had 
momentarily caused some trouble. Referring 
to internal affairs, the Emperor announced that 
important concessions were to be made to the 
different nationalities. Modifications of the 
constitution would be necessary, but must be 
made in accordance with its spirit. He closed 
by promising that the autonomy of the prov- 
inces would be respected as long as it was 
compatible with the maintenance of the unity 
and power of the empire. 



58 



BACON, JOEL S. 



BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. 



B 



BACON, JOEL S., D. D., a Baptist clergy- 
mnn, professor, and college president, born in 
Cayuga County, N. Y., in 1801 ; died at Kich- 
inond, Va., November 9, 1869. Prior to his 
entering upon his collegiate course, he was en- 
gaged for some time in teaching in Amelia 
County, Va. In 1826 he graduated with the 
highest honors, at Hamilton College, Clinton, 
N. Y., after which he was employed as a clas- 
sical teacher, at Princeton, N. J. In 1831 he 
graduated at the Newton Theological Institu- 
tion, and, about that time, having been elected 
to the presidency of Georgetown College, Ky., 
he accepted the position, but resigned it after a 
period of two years, and subsequently was, 
for the same length of time, pastor of the 
Baptist Church, in Lynn, Mass. From 1834 to 
1837 he was professor in the institution at 
Hamilton, N. Y., now Madison University. 
After his resignation there, he was engaged for 
a time as agent for Indian missions, his concil- 
iatory course with the Indians rendering im- 
portant service. In 1843 he became president 
of Columbian College, Washington, D. C. ; 
which office he held for eleven years, resigning 
in 1854. In 1845 he received the degree of 
D. D. from his alma mater. After leaving 
Washington, Dr. Bacon was devoted to teach- 
ing in female seminaries. For two years 
he was at the head of an institution in Tusca- 
loosa, Ala. In 1859 he became established at 
Warrenton, Va., where he remained during 
and after the war, until about two years prior 
to his death. For some time after leaving 
Warrenton, he was devoted to the self-sacrifi- 
cing labor of travelling through the Southern 
States, as agent of the American and Foreign 
Bible Society, addressing the colored people 
on the importance of Sabbath-school educa- 
tion and the study of the Bible. 

As a student, Dr. Bacon was possessed of 
a quick and clear apprehension ; acquiring with 
great readiness valuable information, both from 
men and books. As a teacher, he had an 
aptness and fertility of illustration which made 
him a favorite in the lecture-room. As a 
preacher, he was earnest and practical. As a 
man, he was remarkable for urbanity, courtesy, 
and charity ; always taking moderate views in 
controversy, appreciating the truth partially 
held by different minds, and never becoming a 
partisan, or even a leader in new organizations. 
During the late civil war, he had the entire 
confidence of the adherents of both sections, 
whose armies were alternately occupying the 
town where he resided. Dr. Bacon's versatil- 
ity of mind caused frequent changes in his 
public life; but in every position his genial 
spirit and sprightly conversational powers won 
him warm friends. 

BADEN, a gfand-duchy in South Germany. 



Grand-duke, Friedrich, born September 9, 
1826 ; succeeded his father Leopold, as regent, 
April 24, 1852; assumed the title of grand- 
duke September 5, 1856. Area, 5,912 square 
miles ; population, according to the census of 
1867, 1,434,970,* of whom 931,000, or 64.9 
per cent, (against 65.1 per cent, in 1864) were 
Koman Catholics, and 475,918 Protestants. 

The town population of the grand-duchy is 
as follows : 

Three towns with more than 20,000 inhabitants, together, 

with 86,813, 6.1 per cent, of total population. 
Three towns with more than 10,000 inhabitants, and less 

than 20,000, together with 45,470, 8.1 per cent. 
Eight towns with more than 5,000 inhabitants, and less 

than 10,000, together, with 57,819, 4.3 per cent. 
Three towns with more than 4,000 inhabitants, and less 

than 5,000, together, with 13,424, 0.9 per cent. 
Nineteen towns with more than 3,000 inhabitants, and less 

than 4,000, together, with 62,950, 4.4 per cent t 
Sixty-nine towns with more than 2,000 inhabitants, and 

less than 3,000, together, with 162,295, 11.3 per cent. 
Total one hundred and five towns with more than 2,000 

inhabitants, together with 428,470, 29.0 per cent. 

The public debtf on January 1, 1869, 
amounted to 31,285,201 florins ; besides which 
there was a railroad debt of 107,560,330 florins. 

The Grand-duke of Baden, several times 
in the course of the year 1869, declared his 
sympathy with the union movement going 
on in Germany, and his wish to see Baden 
euter the North-German Confederation. In 
a letter to the Minister of State, Jolly, he 
stated the task of his reign to be the develop- 
ment of a free public life on the safe basis of 
mental culture, and a courageous sympathy 
with the national regeneration of Germany. 
He expressed himself with a little more reserve 
on opening the chambers of the grand-duchy in 
September. The policy of the Grand-duke 
found a hearty support from the majority of 
both Chambers. In the first Chamber, the op- 
position numbered only six out of thirty-one 
members ; in the second, nine out of sixty-two 
deputies. 

BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. The 
banking movement of the year 1869, through- 
out the United States, has been marked by 
no important changes, or fluctuations, or 
reverses. The aggregate banking loans of 
the three leading Atlantic cities have reached 
$440,000,000, and, at one period, were $396,- 
000,000 a difference of about 10 per cent. 
The following tables illustrate fully the bank- 
ing movements of the United States and Great 
Britain for a series of years. 

* The total population here given is what the official ac- 
counts call the " actual " (" faktische ") population, while 
the figure (1,438,872) given in the AMERICAN ANNUAL CY- 
CLOPEDIA for 1868, is designated as the " Customs Union 
Enumeration" (" Zollveremsabrechnungs ") population. 
In the same volume of the CYCLOPAEDIA some fuller state- 
ments are given of the ecclesiastical statistics and of the 
large towns. 

t For further financial and military statistics, see AMER- 
ICAN ANNUAL CYCLOPEDIA for 1868. 



BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. 



59 



STATEMENT, SHOWING THE NUMBER OF NATIONAL BANKS, ETC., IN EACH STATE AND TERRI- 
TORY OF THE UNITED STATES, SEPTEMBER 30, 1869. 



STATES AND TERRITORIES. 


ORGANIZATIONS. 


Capital paid In. 


Bonds on deposit 
to secure circula- 
tion. 


Circulation issued 
by the United 
States to the 
banks. 


In actual circula- 
tion. 


1 
1 


q 

1 

6 


t 


Maine 


62 
41 
40 
209 
62 
83 
315 
55 
205 
32 
11 
6 
20 
15 
138 
71 
84 
43 
37 
48 
18 
5 
20 
16 
14 
3 
2 
4 
3 
9 
6 
3 
3 
1 
1 
4 
2 
1 
1 
1 


1 


61 
41 
40 
206 
62 
81 
294 
54 
197 
31 
11 
4 
17 
14 
132 
68 
82 
41 
34 
43 
17 
5 
18 
16 
13 
2 


$9,185,000 
4,835,000 
6,810,012 
85,082,000 
20,364,800 
24,606,820 
116,284,941 
11,565,350 
50,235,390 
12,790,202 
1,428,185 
1,350,000 
2,623,300 
2,216,400 
22,954,700 
12,902,000 
12,570,000 
5,460,010 
2,760,000 
4,017,000 
1,840,000 
400,000 
7,810,300 
2,885,000 
2,015,300 
1,300,000 


$8,438,750 
4,897,000 
6,538,500 
65,230,500 
14,193,600 
19,758,100 
79,096,900 
10,710,450 
44,353,500 
10,068,750 
1,348,200 
1,337,000 
2,405,000 
2,243,250 
20,642,150 
12,554,050 
11,352,850 
4,365,100 
2,715,050 
3,671,750 
1,772,200 
382,000 
4,786,350 
2,725,700 
1,490,200 
1,258,000 


$7,682,256 
4,394,395 
5,916,800 
60,104,670 
12,940,850 
18,215,115 
76,067,510 
9,736,245 
40,769,220 
9,436,780 
1,244,725 
1,339,500 
2,177,580 
2,068,950 
19,076,260 
11,391,695 
10,315,835 
3,957,555 
2,626,750 
3,436,135 
1,604,100 
371,400 
4,419,170 
2,428,470 
1,291,170 
1,251,120 
66,000 
171,500 
255,700 
1,239,900 
384,700 
192,500 
353,025 
131,700 
88,500 
429,535 
180,200 
135,500 
36,000 
63,500 


$7,509,196 
4,281,195 
5,751,720 
57,046,930 ' 
12,486,900 
17,433,978 
68,553,175 
9,407,115 
38,748,606 
8,910,880 
1,197,625 
1,099,571 
2,134,980 
1,988,050 
18,405,385 
11,017,627 
9,950,275 
3,824,755 
2,508,102 
3,217,077 
1,548,900 
341,000 
4,164,525 
2,366,720 
1,191,551 
1,094,589 
53,383 
170,000 
252,000 
1,234,100 
379,700 
192,500 
288,647 
129,700 
88,500 
407,535 
178,900 
135,000 
36,000 
63,500 


New Hampshire. 


Vermont, 




Massachusetts 


3 


Kb. ode Island 




2 
21 
1 
8 
1 

'"2" 
3 
1 

6 
3 

2 
2 

3 
5 
1 


New York 


New Jersey 


Pennsylvania 


Maryland 


Delaware 


District of Columbia 


Virginia 


"West Virginia 


Ohio 


Indiana 


Illinois . 


Michigan 


"Wisconsin 


Iowa 


Minnesota 


Kansas 


Missouri 


2 


Kentucky 


Tennessee 


1 
1 

2 


Louisiana. . . :1 . . 




Nebraska 


4 
3 
7 
6 
3 
2 
1 
1 
4 
2 
1 
1 
1 


450,000 
350,000 
1,600,000 
823,400 
823,500 
400,000 
250,000 
100,000 
525,000 
200,000 
150,000 
100,000 
100,000 


235,000 
297,000 
1,383,500 
445,100 
277,000 
310,500 
155,000 
100,000 
472,100 
200,000 
150,000 
40,000 
75,000 . 


Colorado 




Georgia 


2 


North Carolina 


South Carolina 


..... 


Alabama 


Nevada 


Oresron 


Texas. . . 


Arkansas 


Utah 


Montana . . 


Idaho 


Total 


1,694 


74 


1,620 | $432,163,611 


$342,475,100 


$317,992,516 


$299,789,892 





RECAPITULATION OF STATE BANKS IN THE UNITED STATES, DECEMBER, 1869. 



STATES. 


Number 
of Banks. 


Capital. 


STATES. 


Nmber 
of Banks. 


Capital. 


Alabama 


2 

7 
5 
1 
1 
9 
13 
2 
49 
11 
7 
8 
2. 
3 


$1,000,000 
5,100,000 
1,676,900 
780,000 
579,000 
300,000 
2,240,000 
488,000 
100,000 
12,914,650 
8,270,290 
625,000 
2,453,000 
200,000 
200,000 




2 
7 
13 
6 
34 
22 
6 
11 
16 
3 
1 
15 


$400,000 
1,710,300 
985,000 
1,125,000 
5,926,000 
12,379,000 
1,650,000 
2,154,000 
2,828,000 
270,000 
137,000 
475,000 


California 




Connecticut 




Delaware 




District of Columbia 


New York State 


Georgia 


" City 


Illinois 


Ohio 


Indiana 


Pennsylvania 


Iowa 


Ehode Island 


Kentucky 


Virginia 


Louisiana 




Maine 




Maryland 


Total 


Michigan t 


259 


$66,974,000 


Minnesota 





The national banks have an aggregate capi- together, 1,879 banks, with a combined capi- 
tal of $432,163,611 ; State banks, $66,974,000 ; tal of $479,137,611. 



60 



BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. 



THE BANKING MOVEMENT AT NEW YORK, BOSTON, AND PHILADELPHIA, 1867, 
THE BANKS OF NEW YOEK IN THE TEAR 1869. 
Seventy-three in Number. Capital, $84,961,900. 



1868, 1869. 



YEARS. 


Loans. 


Specie. 


Circulation. 


Deposits. 


Legal Tenders. 


Weekly Clearings. 


Jan. 5. 1867 


$257,852,460 


$12,794,892 


$32,762,779 


$202,533,564 


$65,026,121 


$466,987,787 


July 6 " 


264,361,237 


10,853,171 


33,669,397 


191,524,312 


71,196,472 


494,081,990 


Jan 4 1868 .... 


249,741,297 


12,724,614 


34,134,391 


187,070,786 


62,111,201 


483,266,304 


July 8, " 


281,945,931 


11,954,730 


34,032,466 


221,050,806 


72,124,939 


525,646,693 


Jan. 4 1869 


259,090,057 


20,736,122 


34,379,609 


180,490,445 


48,896,421 


585,304,799 


Feb 1 " 


265,171,109 


27,784,923 


34,231,156 


196,985,465 


54,747,569 


609,360,296 


March 1 " 


261,371,897 


20,832,603 


34,247,981 


185,216,175 


50,835,054 


529,816,021 


April 5 " 


262,933,675 


10,737,889 


34,816,916 


175,325,789 


48,496,309 


837,823,692 


May 8 " 


260,435,160 


9,267,635 


33,972,058 


183,948,565 


56,495,722 


763,768,349 


June 7* " 


275,919,609 


19,051,133 


33,982,995 


199,124,042 


53,289,429 


766,281,026 


July 5 " 


258,368,471 


23,520,267 


34,217,973 


179,929,467 


46,737,263 


846,763,300 


Aug. 2, " 


260,530,225 


27,871,933 


34,068,677 


196,416,443 


56,101,627 


614,455,487 


Sept. 6 " 


262,549,839 


17,461,722 


33,960,035 


191,101,086 


55,829,782 


556,889,275 


Oct. 4 " 


255,239,649 


15,902,849 


34,169,409 


183,124,508 


54,209,088 


792,893,774 


Nov 1 " 


250,948,833 


21,926,046 


34,136,249 


180,828,882 


52,177,881 


540,450,647 


Dec 6 " . .. 


253,235,996 


30,633,539 


34,140,468 


182,690,140 


45,989,274 


676,011,384 


" 31 " 


250,406,387 


31,166,908 


34,150,887 


179,129,394 


45,034,608 


399,355,375 

















THE BANKS OF BOSTON IN THE TEAR 1 
Forty-six in Number. Capital, $47,550,000. 



YEARS. 


Loans. 


Specie. 


Legal Tenders. 


Deposits. 


National. 


Aug. 5, 1867 


$96,367,558 


$472,045 


$15,111,084 


$33,398,850 


$24.655,075 


Jan. 6,1868 


94,969,249 


1,466,246 


15,543,169 


40,856,022 


24,626,559 


July 6 " 


100 110 830 


1 617 638 


15 107 307 


43 458 654 


25 214 190 


Jan 4 1869 


98 423 644 


2 203 401 


12 938 332 


37 538 767 


25 151 340 


Feb. 1. " 


103,696 858 


2 161 284 


12 964 225 


40 228 462 


25 312 947 


March 1, " 


101,309,589 


1,237,936 


11 200 149 


35 689 466 


25 301 537 


April 5, " . 


96,969,714 


862,276 


11 248 884 


33 504 099 


24 671 716 


May 8 " 


100 127 443 


708 963 


12 352 113 


36 735 742 


25 330 060 


June 7, " . 


103 643 849 


640*582 


13 454 661 


38 491 446 


25 292 157 


July 12, " 


102,633,048 


3,140'676 


9 595 668 


34 ? 85l'745 


2s'335'701 


Aug. 2, " . 


102 528 844 


2 577 538 


10 574 694 


35 797 308 


25 9 30 893 


Sept 6 " ... 


103,904,545 


1 715 563 


11 792 519 


37 041 045 


25 202 271 


Oct. 4 " . 


105 289 208 


652 197 


1 2 *7fi7 004. 


QC ftfiO 8Q4- 


O QO1 A.RA. 


Nov. I, " 


103 410 990 


1 363 721 


11 711 185 


55 oin OCA 


25 321 519 


Dec. <J, " 


103 953 810 


1 990 720 


n'fi'zq'lOY 


37 34-2 225 


25'355's64 















THE BANKS OF PHILADELPHIA IN THE YEAR 1869. 
Thirty in Number. Capital, $16,155,150. 



YEARS. 


Legal Tenders. 


Loans. 


Specie. 


Circulation. 


Deposits. 


Aug. 8,1867... 


$16,733,198 
16,782,432 
16,443,153 
13,210,397 
14,296,570 
13,010,508 
12,169,221 
14,220,871 
15,378,388 
14,031,449 
13,618,911 
13,073,705 
13,335,858 
13,104,244 
12,991,489 


$53,427,840 
52,002,304 
53,653,471 
50,716,999 
52,632,813 
52,251,351 
50,499,865 
51,510,982 
52,826,357 
53,937,521 
51,953,853 
51,931,372 
52,105,010 
51,532,214 
51,968,040 


$302,055 
.235,912 
233,996 
352,483 
302,782 
256,933 
189,003 
201,758 
169,316 
303,621 
384,869 
247,358 
177,303 
354,845 
932,4S8 


-$10,635,925 
10,639,000 
10,625,426 
10,593,719 
10,593,351 
10,458,546 
10,622,896 
10,617,315 
10,619,898 
10,618,846 
10,610,233 
10,611,673 
10,598,934 
10,597,973 
10,603,252 


$38,094,543 
36,621,274 
44,824,398 
38,121,023 
39,677,943 
37,735,205 
35,395,854 
38,971,281 
42,390,330 
41,321,537 
39,717,126 
39,212,588 
38,485,284 
37,965,411 
38,878,533 


Jan. 4,1868 , 


July 6, " 


Jan. 4,1869... 


Feb. 1 " . 


March 1, < . 


April 5 . 


May 3; < .:::: 


June 7, * . 


July 6 * . 


Aug. 2, * . 


Sept. ... 


Oct. 4 :::; 


Nov. l " 


Dec. 6, " 





BANKS, EUROPEAN. 



61 



THE BANK OF ENGLAND FOR FIFTEEN YEARS. 

Circulation, Deposits, Loan?, and Bullion, at the dose of each Tear, 1854-1868. 



YEARS. 




LIABILITIES. 






ASSETS. 






Notes in Circulation. 


Deposits. 


Total. 


Securities. 


Bullion. 


TotaL 


1854 


21,008,000 


14,758,000 


35,761,000 


25,328,000 


13,619,000 


38 947 000 


1855 


20,430 000 


16 257 000 


36,687,000 


28,620,000 


11,301,000 


39 ? 921 000 


1856 


20,728,000 


15,601,000 


36,329,000 


29,484,000 


10,105,000 


39'589'000 


1857 
1858 


21,070,000 
21,435,000 


19,296,000 
20,490,000 


40,366,000 
41,925,000 


35,025,000 
26,098,000 


8,788,000 
18,985,000 


43,813,000 
45 083 000 


1859 


22 413 000 


21,516,000 


43,929,000 


30,117,000 


17,002,000 


47 119 000 


1860. . . 


21,482,000 


18,750,000 


40,232,000 


29,433,000 


14,009,000 


43.442'000 


1861... 


21,180,000 


18,124,000 


39,304,000 


27,993,000 


14,653,000 


42,646.000 


1862 


21,129,000 


21,985,000 


43,114,000 


30,961,000 


15,351,000 


46,312,000 


1863 


21,730,000 


20,805,000 


42 535,000 


31,777,000 


13,934,000 


45 711,000 


1864 


20 771 000 


19070000 


39 841 000 


29,570,000 


13,636,000 


43 206 000 


1865 


21 819 000 


18 365 000 


40 184 000 


30 613 000 


13 601 000 


44 214 000 


1866 


23,728,000 


22,740,000 


46,468,000 


33,110,000 


17,478,000 


50,588,000 


1867 


24,706,000 


23 850 000 


48 556 000 


29,960,000 


22,561,000 


52,521,000 


1868 


24,336,000 


2^409,000 


46,745,000 


33,935,000 


18,981,000 


52,916,000 



THE BANK-NOTE CIRCULATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. 

Average aggregate amount of Notes payable to Bearer on Demand, in circulation in England and Wales, 
Scotland and Ireland, at the close of each Fear, 1854-1868. 





ENGLAND AND WALKS. 


SCOTLAND. 


IRELAND. 


TOTAL 


YEARS. 


Bank 
of 


Country Banks. 


Chartered, 
Private, and 


Bank 


Private 
and 


FOR 
UNITED 




England. 


Private Banks. 


Joint Stock Banks. 


Total. 


Joint Stock 
Banks. 


Ireland. 


Joint Stock 
Banks. 




1854. . . 
1855.... 
1856.... 

1857. . . 
1858... 


20,298,000 
19,554,000 
19,808,000 
21,398,000 
20,910,000 


3,848,896 
8,842,755 
3,696,543 
3,200,715 
3,327,369 


3,072,727 
3,058,159 
3,044,&45 
2,602,310 

2,877,253 


6,921,623 
6,900,914 
6,741,388 
5,803,025 
6,204,622 


4,316,095 
4,400,763 
4,349,383 
4,305,251 
4,355,438 


3,260,275 
3,424,025 
3,529,600 
3,302,500 
3,309,750 


3,462,374 
3,619,254 
3,777,703 
2,773,223 
3,447,139 


38,258,367 
37,898,956 
38,206,074 
37,581,999 
38,226,949 


1859. . . 


21,886,000 


3,480,734 


3,017,551 


6,498,285 


4,591,058 


3,569,350 


3,834,441 


40,379,134 


1860... 


20,812,000 


3,338,891 


2,974,096 


6,312,987 


4,688,839 


3,212,225 


3,&35,375 


38,861,426 


1861... 


20,789,000 


8,354,244 


2,908,936 


6,263,180 


4,647,725 


2,873,275 


3,533,974 


38,107,154 


1862. . . 


20,607,000 


3,205,026 


2,875,211 


6,080,237 


4,572,937 


2,570,525 


3,272,243 


87,102,942 


1863... 


21,355,000 


3,220,086 


2,899,560 


6,119,596 


4,639,664 


2,528,500 


3,411,753 


38,054,513 


1864... 


20,330,000 


3,058,931 


2,754,068 


5,812,999 


4,626,796 


2,491,000 


3,381,706 


36,642,501 


1865. . . 


21,294,000 


2,977,264 


2,789,654 


5,766,918 


4,903,980 


2,744,950 


3,946,290 


38,656,138 


1866. . . 


23,404,000 


2,766,878 


2,334,127 


5,101,005 


4,967,168 


2,648,175 


3,803,855 


39,924,203 


1867... 


24,447,000 


2,854,611 


2,332,414 


5,187,025 


5,055,794 


2,713.400 


3,702,901 


41,106,120 


1868 


24,128,000 


2,792,450 


2,305,524 


5,097,974 


5,139,060 


2,997,975 


4,057,658 


41,420,667 



THE BANK OF FRANCE IN 1867, 1868, AND 1869. 
Comparative condition of the Bank of France, in January, 1867, 1868, and November, 1869. 



LIABILITIES. 


Jan. 8, 1867. 


Jan. 8, 1868. 


Jan. 8, 1869. 


Nov. 85, 1869. 


Capital of the Bank . .. 


182500000 


182 500000 


182 500 000 


182 500 000 


Profits^n addition to capital 


7 044 776 


7' 044' 776 


7*044'776 


7 044 776 


Reserve of the Bank 


22,105'750 


22'l05'750 


22' 105' 750 


22'l05'750 


New reserve 


4yOOOOOO 


4 000000 


4 000 000 


4'000 000 


Not-fif* In r.irfynln.tinn 


1 016 558 625 


1 186 653 475 


1 371 '732 250 


1 362'67'800 


Drafts outstanding 


16 578 406 


33 618 884 


' 33737'413 


48 715 100 


Treasury account 


185,033,312 


93'l53'263 


154 393 198 


24l'46'479 


Accounts current 


240 039 320 


360 987 432 


270 906 510 


314'063'991 


" in the provinces 
Dividends payable 


39,844,905 
12 398 251 


47,000,645 
9 513 968 


45,016,198 
6 411 114 


46,226^102 
918 241 


Various discounts 


1 088,037 


'786^196 


l'238'365 


8 018'542 


Re-discounts 


1 574 256 


930 377 


933791 


'991 '661 


Sundries 


ll!919,127 


7,140,855 


19,455,844 


9,707^,959 


Total liabilities, francs 


1,740,684,765 


1,955,435,621 


2,119,475,209 


2,247,-e86,401 


RESOURCES. 


Jan., 1867. 


Jan., 1868. 


Jan., 1869. 


Nov., 1869. 


Coin and bullion... . 


675,053,965 


983 082,245 


1,080.232,773 


1,234 840 626 


Commercial bills overdue 


527,209 


4 686 373 


292948 


180 858 


" in Paris... 
" in the branches . . 
Advances on bullion. . . . 


336,902,178 
368.323,362 
33,943,300 


279,324^908 
272,209,465 
57034000 


326,675,327 
301,365,105 
40,826,100 


319,822'421 
295,968,399 
18 815 100 


" " in the provinces 


8 224 400 


11 511 577 


4038 100 


2 581 380 


public securities 
in the provinces, 
railway shares, &c 


14,125,400 
7,828,700 
37 606 200 


12,477,600 
28,084,250 
37224800 


13,251,900 
6,873,700 
37 156 400 


19 ? ,058',300 
8,965,600 
39 988 700 


" in the provinces, 
the Credit Foncier. 


26,034,900 
743600 


7,722,800 
990300 


28,920,700 
962 200 


33,083,150 
1 097 600 


" in the provinces, 
to the State 
Government stock 


613,050 
60,000,000 
12 980 750 


942,450 
60,000,000 
12 980 750 


883,700 
60,000,000 
12 980 750 


1,960,'600 

60,000,000 
12 980 750 


Other securities 


36 065 237 


35 988 737 


80 633 437 


8o'595'l87 


Securities held 


100 000 000 


loo'ooo'ooo 


100 000 000 


loo'ooo'ooo 


Bank buildings 


S'304'097 


8 274 805 


8'956'249 


9 187 784 


Expenses 


s'sio 


' 43 '934 




2 123 069 


Sundries 


13,403407 


42,856,627 


15.418,599 


7,430,877 













62 



BAPTISTS. 



BAPTISTS. I. REGULAR BAPTISTS IN AMER- 
ICA. The following are the statistics of the 
Regular Baptists in the United States, as given 
in the American Baptist Year Book, for 1869 : 



STATES. 


j 


| 


Mi outers. 


1 




30 


572 


390 


54,773 




23 


424 


219 


15,160 


California 


2 


42 


32 


2,326 


Colorado 




5 




180 




7 


112 


98 


18,934 


Delaware 




5 


8 





District of Columbia 
Florida 


*5 


16 
106 


26 
63 


5,131 




43 


1,193 


658 


92,287 








1 




Illinois 


41 


see 


732 


58,536 




31 


505 


348 


32,664 






9 









17 


303 


234 


17,395 




4 


66 


31 


2,536 




39 


1,000 


500 


100,000 




12 


256 


36 


16,785 




13 


260 


182 


19,833 


Man-land 


1 


39 


36 


5,134 




14 


264 


303 


39,457 




14 


264 


211 


17,062 




7 


114 


61 


3,040 




24 


73 


40 


44,042 




43 


100 


600 


39,195 


Nebraska 


2 


19 


9 


697 




7 


85 


90 


7,815 




5 


100 


155 


23,599 


New York 


46 


820 


708 


96,703 


North Carolina 


44 


393 


162 


67,904 


Ohio 


32 


512 


364 


37,522 


Oregon 


4 


40 


35 


1,580 


Pennsylvania 


18 


448 


335 


50,497 


Rhode Island 


8 


59 


64 


9,243 


South Carolina 


9,0 


488 


253 


51,343 


Tennessee . . . 


24 


669 


343 


50,563 


Texas . 


27 


550 


306 


22,590 


Vermont . 
Virginia 


7 
22 


111 

690 


104 
396 


8,433 
87,244 




8 


249 


116 


14,692 


\Visconsin 


19, 


171 


120 


9,989 












Total in the U. States. 


651 


12,011 


8,695 


1,121,988 



The number of baptisms during the year 
was reported as 60,787. 

Some of these returns, especially those from 
the South, are pronounced very imperfect, 
through failure of clerks and others, upon 
whom compilers are dependent, to make full 
returns. The table is therefore unsafe for 
purposes of comparison, and places the gains 
of the denomination very much below what 
they really are. 

Thirty-five periodicals are enumerated in 
the American Baptist Year Boole, as published 
in the United States, of which twenty-one are 
weekly, twelve monthly, and two quarterly. 
Two of these are published in the German, 
and one in the Welsh language. Four weekly 
periodicals are published in the British Prov- 
inces. There are twenty-five Baptist colleges 
in the United States, and one in Nova Scotia. 
The number of theological seminaries and the- 
ological departments is fourteen. 



The anniversaries of the (Northern) Baptist 
Societies were held in May, in Boston. The 
fifty-fifth anniversary of the American Bap- 
tist Missionary Union occurred on May 18th. A 
summary of this report shows that the whole 
number of the missions is 13, the increase being 
one in the African mission during the year. 
In the Asiatic mission there are 19 stations 
where American missionaries reside, 328 out- 
stations, and 315 churches, having an aggregate 
of 15,974 members, and the baptisms during 
the year were 1,295. The whole number of 
Americans connected with this mission, includ- 
ing those under appointment, is 101, of whom 
47 are males and 54 are females. The native 
teachers, preachers, and colporteurs, number 
423, of whom 74 are ordained. Taking those 
churches in Burmah not immediately under its 
supervision, the Union has 427 out-stations, 
414 churches, with a membership of 20,193, 
and 1,528 baptisms during the year. The na- 
tive helpers number 512, of whom 80 are or- 
dained. The tables from France and Sweden 
represent 301 churches, with 24,388 members, 
300 preachers and colporteurs, and 678 bap- 
tisms during the year. Combining the missions 
in Europe and Asia, there are 715 churches, 
with 44,581 members, and there have been 
during the year 2,207 baptisms. The report 
of the Secretary of the Home Department 
showed that the total receipts for the year 
were $196,897. The total expenditures, in- 
cluding the debt of the year previous, were 
$210,273, leaving a balance of $13,376 against 
the treasury on the 1st of April last. The 
amount received from donations was $168,363, 
an increase of $11,317 over the year previous ; 
and the legacies of the year were $17,980, 
against $6,406 the year before. The following 
amounts were received from foreign mission 
fields : Assam, $838 ; Burmah, $25 ; Madras, $20 ; 
China, $866; France, $457; Germany, $187. 
The treasurer's report further showed that the 
invested funds of the Union amount to $56,303, 
and that, of the $180,137 expended, all was for 
foreign missions except $573 for the Cherokees, 
$3,712 for publications, $15,412 for agents, and 
$12,575 for rent, salaries, and other office ex- 
penses. The anniversary of the American Bap- 
tist Publication Society was held May 20th. 
The receipts amounted to $272,160.63. Of this 
sum $227,083.88 were received in the business, 
and $45,076.75 in the missionary department. 
The increase over last year in the business is 
$35,973.31. The increase in the missionary 
work is $1,774.69. The total gain of the two 
departments over the receipts of the previous 
year is $37,748. Branch houses ha-ve been 
opened in New York, St. Louis, and Chicago. 
Sixty-five colporteurs and Sunday-school mis- 
sionaries have been at work. Number of days 
of service, 12,991; miles travelled, 195,618; 
volumes sold, 50,859; volumes given away, 
9,521; pages of tracts distributed, 514,170; 
sermons preached, 5,160; prayer-meetings 
held, 3,548; persons baptized, 980; families 



BAPTISTS. 



63 



visited, 32,948; families found without the 
Bible, 1,730; families supplied with the Bi- 
ble, 2,188 ; Sunday-schools organized, 250 ; 
churches constituted, 48; visits on vessels, 
3,371 ; Bibles given to seamen, 48. The num- 
ber of copies of new publications issued during 
the year has been 161,500 ; new editions of old 
publications, 451,000 ; tracts, 820,000 copies ; 
Young Reaper, 3,075,940 copies; total pages, 
222,845,020, an excess of more than 40,000,000 
over last year. Gratuitously distributed by 
missionaries, etc., 9,521 books, and 514,170 
pages of tracts. Forty-seven white and twenty- 
eight colored preachers have been provided 
with small libraries, and 250 students and 
others have been supplied with one or two 
books each. Money value of such grants, 
$12,566. The society accepted the basis of 
union with the Bible Society unanimously. 
The thirty-seventh anniversary business meet- 
ing of the American and Foreign Bible So- 
ciety was held May 20th. The receipts for the 
year were reported at $30,186.46 ; expendi- 
tures, $29,629.82; balance, $556.64. From 
the beginning, the gross receipts have been, 
from all sources, $1,106,580.92, and the society 
has put into circulation 2,230,583 volumes of 
Scripture at home and abroad. The report, in 
favor of union with the American Baptist 
Publication Society, was adopted. It trans- 
fers the entire Bible work to the Publication 
Society ; the name of the .joint organization to 
be selected after union. The consummation of 
the union is dependent upon action of the New 
York Legislature to amend the charter of. the 
Bible Society. Subsequently, there was a joint 
meeting of the two societies, in commemo- 
ration of the anticipated completion of the 
union. The thirty-seventh anniversary of the 
American Baptist Home Mission Society was 
held in Boston, May 29th. The report of the 
Executive Board showed that, six years ago, 
less than $36,000 constituted the total annual 
receipts of the society, while during the past 
year more than $144,000 has been paid into 
the treasury. The number of missionaries 
then employed was 96, now there are 276. 
The embarrassing debt that hung over the so- 
ciety two years ago has been liquidated. 
Thirty-two States and Territories are repre- 
sented in the contributions to the funds this 
year. One-third of the missionary force is 
employed in the South. Secular education has 
been prosecuted there to the extent of specific 
contributions for that purpose, and the prepa- 
ration of colored preachers has been carried 
on with energy. The Indian missions are re- 
covering from the hindrances of the late war, 
and the work among the foreigners in the West 
has been vigorously carried on with good re- 
sults. The church edifice fund has been in- 
creased $30,000 by the will of the late Tracy 
H. Harris. There are demands for increased 
effort in the Northwest, along the line of the 
Pacific Railway, on the Pacific coast, among 
the Southern freedmen, and in the Republic of 



Mexico, and the Board is profoundly impressed 
with the importance that every lawful and 
possible agency should be employed to draw 
forth larger offerings. 

The anniversary of the American Baptist 
Free Mission Society was held in Richmond, 
Ya., in May. The cash receipts were reported 
at $17,222.54, and the expenses at $16,603.88. 
Twenty-four missionaries have been employed 
in the home work ; eleven in Virginia and the 
District of Columbia; the rest in the Gulf 
States. Of the foreign missions, the number 
of members in the Bassein mission is stated at 
5,883, or more than one-fourth of all the 
Christians in Burinah ; and of those in the in- 
dependent Vintore and Luther's mission, at 
2,416, with over one thousand pupils under in- 
struction. The former mission contributes 
nearly 9,000 rupees annually, and the latter 
over that sum. The ministers of the Japanese 
mission are engaged in translating and print- 
ing the Bible in Japanese. The society decided 
in favor of cooperation with the Consolidated 
Convention and Home Mission Society. 

The anniversary of-the National Theological 
Institute was held on the 20th of May. The 
report showed that 90 students were obtaining 
an education at the Washington school, thirty 
of whom were in the theological department. 
The Richmond school has 195 pupils, with two 
Latin and two Greek classes. These, with the 
schools at St. Helena, S. 0., and Augusta, Ga,, 
are in a thriving condition. Special instruction 
has been given by Rev. Dr. Parker to 588 
colored teachers and preachers in several 
places. The receipts were reported at $14,615. 
A resolution was adopted concurring in the 
unification of the work under the direction 
and control of the Baptist Home Missionary- 
Society, and recommending that the institute 
at Washington, D. 0., be adopted and sustained 
by the society. 

The Southern Baptist Convention met at 
Macon, Georgia, on the 6th of May. The 
condition of the colored people was a promi- 
nent subject of consideration. The mind and 
intention of the convention were expressed by 
the adoption of resolutions recognizing the 
high and sacred duty of giving a pure gos- 
pel and enlightened ministry to the colored 
population, and recommending district and 
State associations to pay especial attention to 
their religious instruction and spiritual in- 
terests. The Domestic Mission Board is prose- 
cuting its work among them, as well as in the 
German and Indian missions, with all the en- 
ergy in its power, but suffers from the lack of 
money. Similar reports were made from the 
Sunday-school Board and other agencies of the 
Church. A favorable report was given of the 
conferences with the American Baptist Home 
Missionary Society. The foreign missions were 
represented in a progressive condition. An in- 
teresting feature of the sessions of the conven- 
tion was the presence of Mr. Broadus, as a 
delegate of the Worth Street Baptist Church 



BAPTISTS. 



of Tung Chan, China, who read a letter which 
was written by a native deacon and clerk, 
without aid or suggestion from the missionary. 
The theological seminary was represented as 
in improved condition and prospects, having 
had during the year forty-six students the 
highest number in any Baptist seminary on the 
continent. The means of obtaining more funds 
and a greater number of laborers to carry out 
the enterprises of the Church received a prom- 
inent share of attention. 

The number of Regular Baptists in the 
British Provinces of America is as follows : 



PROVINCES. 


j 


| 


3 

a 




1 


Nova Scotia 


3 


159 


87 


17,163 


New Brunswick 
Ontario and Quebec 


2 

10 


66 
234 


69 
216 


9,472 

14,886 


West Indies 








22,000 


Total 


15 


509 


372 


63,501 



The number of baptisms in the British 
Provinces was 2,435. 

II. FBEE-WILL BAPTISTS. The following are 
the statistics of this denomination as given in 
the Free-Will Baptist Register for 1870 : 



YEARLY MEETINGS. 


No. of Quarterly 

Meetings. 


No of 
Churches. 


No. of 
Ordained 
Preachers. 


No. of 
Communicants. 


New Hampshire 


g 


133 


130 


9338 


Maine Western 


4 


70 


58 


4 377 


Maine Central 


5 


100 


95 


e'iss 


Penobscot 


10 


114 


76 


3 986 


Vermont. 


6 


62 


49 


2864 


Rhode Island & Massachusetts 
Holland Purchase 


3 

5 


45 

41 


45 
39 


5,262 
1 968 


Oeneaee 


5 


31 


22 


1 517 


Snsqnehanna 


5 


40 


28 


1 426 


New York and Pennsylvania. . 
Central New York 
St. Lawrence 


4 
5 
2 


44 
43 
14 


28 
86 
16 


1^078 

19,88 
661 


Union 


3 


12 


13 


580 


Ohio and Pennsylvania 


4 


34 


22 


1 484 


Pennsylvania 


5 


21 


14 


1 195 


Ohio Northern... 


4 


15 


12 


549 


Ohio 


2 


8 


10 


700 


Ohio River 


5 


47 


29 


2 528 


Marioii, Ohio 


3 


18 


11 


'880 


Indiana 


2 


10 


3 


39 


MMiL'nn .. 


11 


102 


91 


3 784 


St. Joseph's Valley 


4 


20 


19 


688 


Illinois. 


^ 


66 


52 


2 fiQ4 


Wisconsin 


g 


67 


68 


2 RH7 


Iowa 


3 


23 


19 




Iowa Northern 


5 


33 


30 


1 126 


Canada West 


3 


17 


13 


fi4R 


Minnesota 


4 


22 


19 


R74. 


Kansas 


2 


7 


4 




Minnesota Southern 


1 


13 


7 


304 


Liberty Association 




27 


20 


1 788 


Ohio Association 




16 




fiirt 


Quarterly Meetings not con- f 
nected \ 


6 


30 


32 


897 


Churches not connected 




4 


4 


54 












Total, 33 Yearly Meetings.. 


150 


1,375 


1,141 


66,691 



The number of " licensed " preachers is 133. 
The increase is 97 churches, 26 ministers, and 
5,447 members. 

The literary institutions of the Free-Will 
Baptists are Bates College, at Lewistown, 



Me.; Hillsdale College, at Hillsdale, Mich.; 
West Virginia College, at Flemington, W. Va., 
and Kidgeville College, at Eidgeville, Ind. 
There are thirteen seminaries, academies, etc., 
and a Society for the Promotion of Education 
in the South. 

III. OTHER BAPTIST DENOMINATIONS INAMEE- 
ICA. The fifty-fifth session of the Seventh-day 
Baptist General Conference met in Shiloh, 
Cumberland County, N. C., on the 29th of 
September. The new constitution, proposed 
at the previous General Conference, was de- 
clared not adopted, two-thirds of the churches 
not having voted in favor of it. The vote was 
28 for it, 18 against it, 8 not voting. The 
reports exhibited a condition of solid growth, 
both in the churches and in the Sunday- 
schools. A communication of a fraternal 
character was received from the Second Ad- 
ventists, and responded to in a like spirit, 
though with a qualification against committing 
the Conference to the importance in which the 
doctrine of the immediate second coming of 
Christ is held by that denomination. 

The twenty-seventh anniversary of the 
Seventh-day Baptist Missionary Society was 
held during the session of the General Confer- 
ence. It has missions in the home field, and 
at Shanghae, China. It 'has a special fund of 
six thousand, dollars, of which the annual 
interest is applied to current expenses, and 
the principal is reserved for a " future emer- 
gency," like the reenforcement of the China 
mission, or the establishment of some other 
mission. 

The Seventh-day Baptists have 75 churches 
in the United States, with a total membership 
of 7,129. The oldest church is that at New- 
port, K. I., founded in 1671. They have a 
flourishing university at Alfred, N". Y. 

The number of Mennonite churches in the 
United States is said to be about 400, with 250 
ministers and a membership of about 60,000. 
This estimate does not include the Mennonites 
of Canada, where the denomination is quite 
numerous. The estimate of ministers is no 
doubt far below the actual number, as there 
are few churches that are not supplied with 
at least one minister, and a large number of 
churches have more. 

The Menonnites publish an English paper at 
Elkhart, Ind., and two German at the same 
place, and at Milford Square, Pa. ; two Mennon- 
nite almanacs, one in the English and one in 
the German language, are published likewise 
at Elkhart. 

IV. BAPTISTS IN GEE AT BEITAIN. The Bap- 
tists in England have been classified into four 
divisions on the question of communion. The 
union churches are composed of Baptists and 
Pedo-Baptists. They employ a Baptist pas- 
tor when the Baptists are in the majority, and 
v ice versa. Another class are the Open-member- 
ship ^ Baptist Churches, in which persons are 
admitted to membership on a simple basis of 
personal piety, and are afterward baptized if 



BATES, EDWARD. 



BAVARIA. 



65 



they wish to be. Of this class are such 
churches as those of Dr. Landells, Dr. Broek, 
Baptiste Noel, Stowell Brown, etc. The third 
class are open communion, with restricted 
membership. Thus, Mr. Spurgeon holds that 
adult immersion is the indispensable requisite 
for church membership, but that all Christian 
believers may be invited to the communion. 
A fourth class are the regular strict-communion 
Baptists, who exclude the unimmersed both 
from the Lord's table and from membership. Dr. 
Stork is a representative minister of this class. 
The Baptist Manual for 1869 reported the 
statistics of the Baptists 'in Great Britain as 
follows : 



COUNTRIES. 


Number of 
Churches. 


Number of 
Chapels. 


4 


Sunday-school 
Scholars. 


England 


1,840 
475 
100 
32 

2,447 


2,038 
527 
108 
84 

2,707 


168,285 
55,012 
6,855 
1,354 


219,565 
43,763 
3,146 
922 


Wales, etc 


Scotland 


Ireland . . 


Total, Great Britain and Ireland, 


231,506 


267,396 



Increase of membership in reporting church- 
es, 9,972. 

BATES, EDWAED, LL. D., an eminent states- 
man and jurist, born in Goochland County, 
Ya., September 4, 1T93 ; died at- St. Louis, 
Mo., March 25, 1869. He descended from a 
family of "Friends" of some distinction, who 
had lost their position in that connection, by 
reason of their having borne arms in the Rev- 
olutionary War, and was educated under the 
supervision of Benjamin Bates, a relative of 
cultivated literary tastes. "While still young, 
he served in the Virginia militia, at Norfolk, 
for six months. His elder brother, Frederick 
Bates, having been appointed Secretary of the 
new Territory of Missouri, Edward emigrated 
thither, and under his auspices soon entered 
upon the practice of the law. As early as 
1816 he was appointed Prosecuting Attorney 
for the St. Louis Circuit, and in 1820 had so 
gained the confidence of the community as to 
be elected a delegate to the State Constitu- 
tional Convention. Toward the close of the 
same year, he was appointed Attorney-Gen- 
eral of the new State of Missouri, which office 
he held for two years. In 1822 he was elected 
to the lower branch of the State Legislature, 
but in 1824 he abandoned this to accept the 
appointment, tendered him by President Mon- 
roe, of State Attorney for the Missouri Dis- 
trict. Active political life still enticed him, 
and in 1826, while yet quite a young man, he 
was elected a representative in Congress, serv- 
ing but one term. Soon afterward he was re- 
turned to the State Senate of Missouri. The 
condition of his private fortune now compelled 
him definitely to abandon all idea of a further 
active political career, and, with occasional ex- 
ceptions in the way of services in the State Le- 
gislature, he devoted himself for the next twen- 
ty-five or thirty years almost exclusively to the 
VOL. ix. 5. A 



practice of his profession. In 1847 Mr. Bates 
was sent as a delegate to the Convention for In- 
ternal Improvement, held in Chicago, and here 
made a favorable impression upon the country 
at large. In 1850 Mr. Fillmore offered him the 
position of Secretary of War, which he de- 
clined. Three years later he accepted the 
office of Judge of the St. Louis Land Court. 
In 1856 he presided over the Whig Conven- 
tion held in Baltimore, and four years later 
became a prominent candidate for the presi- 
dency. Up to this period Mr. Bates had been 
known solely as a Whig, having been in full 
sympathy with the most important movements 
of that party ; but, when the question of the re- 
peal of the Missouri Compromise was agitated, 
he earnestly opposed it ; and thus, although 
his habits of mind and tastes were eminently 
conservative, he became identified with the 
" Free-Labor " party in Missouri, and was 
reckoned by them an ally, not only in measures 
of State policy, but also in hostility to the ad- 
mission of Kansas under the Lecompton Con- 
stitution. With the growth of antislavery 
principles in Missouri, he gradually became 
more prominent as one of the men who were 
valued for the high personal character they 
brought to the movement, till, in 1859, when 
men began to cast about them for a Western 
candidate for the presidency, to be selected by 
the Republican party, Mr. Bates's name was 
prominently mentioned. For a time it seemed 
probable, or at least possible, that the opposi- 
tion to Governor Seward might concentrate 
upon him. The State of Missouri warmly sup- 
ported him, and his prospects were at one 
time thought to be excellent. When, however, 
the convention assembled at Chicago had cast 
several ballots, and it was apparent that Mr. 
Lincoln was the favorite Republican candi- 
date, Mr. Bates's name was withdrawn by his 
friends. When Mr. Lincoln, after his election, 
decided upon selecting the leading men of the 
Republican party, including those who had 
been his principal competitors, for his Cabinet, 
the eminent reputation of Mr. Bates as a 
lawyer induced his assignment to the office 
of Attorney-General. In the Cabinet he played 
a dignified, safe, and faithful, but not conspicu- 
ous part. In 1864 he resigned his position, 
and returned to the quiet of a retired domestic 
life at his home in St. Louis. From this time 
he never again entered into active politics. 

BAVARIA, a kingdom in South Germany. 
King, Ludwig II., born August 25, 1815 ; suc- 
ceeded his father, Maximilian II., on March 10, 
1864. Prime minister (since January 1, 1867), 
Prince Clovis von Hohenlohe-SchiUingsfurst. 
Bavaria has an area of 29,373 square miles, 
and, according to the census of 1867, a popula- 
tion of 4,824,421,* of whom 3,441,029 were 
Roman Catholics ; 1,325,446 Protestants; 49,- 
840 Jews ; 3,267 Reformed ; 143 Greeks ; and 

* For the population of each of the eight provinces in 
1867, see AMERICAN ANNUAL CYCLOPEDIA, for 1868 ; also 
for a statement of the army. 



66 



BEERIZING PROCESS. 



4,696 Mennonites, Baptists, and German Catho- 
lics. The population of the principal towns 
of the kingdom, in 1867, was as follows : 

Landshut 14,554 

Hof 14,397 

Passau 13,883 

Anspach 13,018 

Amberg 12,312 

Erlangcn 11,546 

Straubing 11,419 



Munich 170,688 

Nuremberg 77,895 

Augsburg 50,067 

Wurzburg 42,185 

Ratisbon 30,357 

Bamberg 25,972 

Furtb. 22,496 

BaireutU 19,464 

Ingolstadt 17,684 

Kaiserslautern.... 15,289 
Spires 14,806 



Landau 11,081 

Kempten 10,998 

Aschaftenburg.... 10,288 
Germersheim 10,181 



The public debt, in November, 1868, amount- 
ed to 168,197,384 florins. The annual revenue 
and expenditures during the ninth financial 
period (1868 and 1869) is estimated at 87,144,- 
006 florins. 

A new election of the Second Chamber took 
place on May 12th. Three parties were in the 
field, the k 'Fortschrittspartei" (party of prog- 
ress), which in the German question sympa- 
thized with the National Liberals in Northern 
Germany, and desired the. speedy entrance of 
Bavaria into the North-German Confederation ; 
the " Mittelpartei " (middle party), which sup- 
ported the ministry, and advocated intimate 
alliance, but no political union with Northern 
Germany ; and the " Patriotische Partei " 
(patriotic party), which made the entire inde- 
pendence of Bavaria its prominent principle 
and fused with the Catholic party. The elec- 
tion resulted in giving about one-half of the 
new deputies to the patriotic party, most of 
the other half to the party of progress, and 
only a small number to the middle party. On 
the meeting of the Second Chamber, the two 
latter parties united in voting for the same 
candidate for president of the Chamber, when 
it was found that each candidate received 71 
votes. As it was found impossible to arrive at 
a compromise and thus at an election, the Gov- 
ernment dissolved the Chamber and ordered a 
new election, which took place in November. 
Though the Government had so changed the 
electoral districts as to improve the chances of 
the liberal candidates, the result was a victory 
of the patriotic party. Prince Hohenlohe, 
therefore, tendered to the King his resignation, 
which, however, was not accepted. 

BEERIZING PROCESS, THE. This recent- 
ly-patented process consists simply in treating 
wood with a boiling solution of borax in water, 
which easily and effectually removes the sap, 
or all perishable substances, without injuri- 
ously affecting the woody fibre ; that, on the 
contrary, becomes harder, impenetrable by 
and impregnable to water, vermin-proof, in- 
different to the moisture or dryness of the at- 
mosphere, and almost incombustible. 

No wood is fit to be used for building, or in 
the arts and trades, in the green state in which 
it is felled. The tissues, being then distended 
with sap, contract when the water in the sap 
evaporates ; and, if green wood .is placed in a 
confined situation, the sap rapidly decomposes, 



and induces the decomposition of the wood. 
All wood, therefore, has to undergo some pro- 
cess commonly called "seasoning" before 
it can be worked up. The ordinary process of 
seasoning consists in exposing the green lum- 
ber to the action of the air, " to dry the sap 
out.' 1 ' 1 Its well-known deficiencies are slow 
and imperfect drying, and considerable loss on 
shaky, split, and warped lumber. 

An excellent way of seasoning wood, which 
was extensively used in former ages, when 
lumber was cheap and time no object, con- 
sisted in washing the sap out of the wood be- 
fore it was dried, by placing it, while green, 
under running water. For the French, and 
partly for the English Navy, the timber is so 
prepared. But the slow penetration of wood 
by water renders this method impracticable 
and too expensive for general use. 

Steaming of wood is another variation, tried 
and still used, to remove sap by mere action 
of water. But, while cold water dissolves- sap, 
hot water or steam does not. It coagulates 
albumen, fills up the pores, and impedes the 
removal of the sap from inside. The uneven 
action renders lumber very shaky, and natu- 
rally the more so the thicker it is. Still more 
destructive to the fibre is the fermentation 
which takes place by steaming, which, being 
uncontrollable, varies in effect, sometimes hon- 
eycombing the lumber, and sometimes sinking 
it in with concaved outsides. The loss on dam- 
aged lumber by steaming varies, but is very 
considerable. 

The method of Beerizing is as follows : In 
square tanks 12 feet long x 6 high, and 7 wide, 
or of other suitable size, with pierced steam- 
pipes running along the inner side of the bot- 
tom, 18 to 20 inches apart from each other, are 
the boards to be prepared, put close to each 
other without intermediate space; the wood 
is then fastened on top to prevent it from float- 
ing thereafter, but a space of one or two inches 
is left to its expansion. 

A solution of borax in water, containing 
about ten pounds of borax to each one thou- 
sand feet of lumber to be treated, is then ad- 
mitted till covering the wood, and the whole 
heated to boiling. The boiling is continued 
for about four hours and then the whole left 
to cool, boiled again for about two hours and 
the liquid then removed and clean water sub- 
stituted, in which the lumber is boiled for 
about two hours. This washing in water may 
be repeated, according to the quality of lum- 
ber and its exposure. If for mere seasoning 
dark lumber, no washing is needed, while 
white lumber must be repeatedly washed till 
the water remains nearly colorless thereby, if 
its light color is desirable. 

For preserving wood, the operation with the 
borax solution may be repeated after the first 
or second washing ; and even the washing in 
water may be repeated, according to the expos- 
ure and quality of the lumber. The borax 
used in this process is not crystallized, but pre- 



BEEPJZ1NG PROCESS. 



BELGIUM. 



pared in solution, by adding cautiously, to a 
boiling solution of one hundred and twenty 
pounds of sal-soda, one hundred pounds of 
Italian boracic-acid. When the lumber is taken 
out it is placed in a drying-room, heated by a 
current of hot air, at from 100 to 180 Fahr. 
The dissolved sap may be precipitated by alum 
or otherwise, and the clear liquid treated with 
a small quantity of lime or soda, or both, and 
the precipitate may be used as a color or for 
manure, etc., while the liquid may be used over 
again, with some additional borax. 

Experience and science agree that the most 
impeding deficiencies to the purity, strength, 
and lasting durability of wood result from the 
sap, which remains therein, after the trees 
have been felled. The sap, being destined by 
Nature to absorb and retain a sufficient quan- 
tity of water for the subsistence of the living 
tree and to provide all parts of the plant with 
the proper nourishment, is fully endowed with 
properties beneficent thereto. Consisting 
mainly of albuminous substances dissolved in 
water, it is extremely deliquescent and very 
prone to spontaneous decomposition. Its 
quantity in green wood amounts to over fifty 
per cent, in weight. 

The borax acts as a solvent in the most 
neutral and indifferent manner, neither decom- 
posing itself, nor the wood, nor the soluble 
matter, which it keeps dissolved, like sugar in 
water, and can, therefore, always be reworked 
and used over and over again without any ma- 
terial loss. 

Spruce-wood cut for sounding-boards was 
carefully seasoned, first in the air and then in 
the heated dry-room of one of our first piano- 
manufactories, and considered well dried. It 
was then Beerized, when it was found to have 
still shrunk more than one inch on every foot 
in width across the grains and very percepti- 
bly lengthwise. The increased density was 
easily observed with the naked eye, the knife 
proved increased hardness, and other trials 
showed increased strength. 

We know that the sap substances, which 
unprepared wood contains, are of a deliques- 
cent nature, and that timber, therefore, never 
can be perfectly dried or kept in that condition 
by mere exposure to action of the air. Scien- 
tific researches prove that beams and other tim- 
ber, after having been kept in a dry place for a 
century, retain still from twenty to twenty- 
five per cent, of water, and that wood, when 
rendered perfectly dry by the aid of heat, re- 
absorbs a certain quantity of water, when again 
exposed at common temperature to the atmos- 
phere in its ordinary state of humidity. 

The whole quantity of invisible sap-liquid 
present in apparently dry wood can, therefore, 
be not less than twenty-five per cent., which 
acts upon the wooden substance in the same 
manner as a deliquescent liquid affects paper, 
that is to say, it expands the wood consider- 
ably and diminishes its cohesion, tenacity, and 
strength. 



We have not here the space to enumerate 
the various advantages consequent to the im- 
proved quality wood experiences by its purity, 
perfect dryness, and complete protection from 
decay. The chemist will, hereafter, be re- 
lieved from many very tedious and still de- 
fective operations, he has had thus for to re- 
sort to, in getting the wooden substance chem- 
ically pure and freed from its soluble portion. 

The skilful mechanic will use such prepared 
wood with admirable success for clock pen- 
dules and a thousand other purposes, where 
the deficiencies of the common wood fail to 
answer. Other properties of the prepared 
wood, which may be more generally useful, are 
the perfect dryness which enables it, in spite 
of its increased compactness, to readily and 
thoroughly absorb any oily, resinous, or like 
matter, with which it may be easily saturated 
to form a durable, water-tight material. This 
circumstance, in connection with the absence 
of all albuminous or putrescible matter, makes 
such wood highly adaptable to street-pave- 
ments. By merely varnishing the prepared 
wood, the durability and brilliancy of the sur- 
face are greatly increased. 

In cases where dry wood is objectionable 
and a surplus quantity of water in the wood is 
necessary in order to obtain constant plia- 
bility, as, for instance, in manufacturing wood- 
hangings, any deliquescent matter, such as 
glycerine, chloride of calcium, etc., has to be 
added to the last water used in the process to 
extract the borax absorbed by the wood. 

In such cases the Beerizing is necessary to 
protect the wood from decay. 

The sound of Beerized wood is materially 
improved by its purity and compactness, and 
still more strikingly by traces of borax re- 
maining in the sounding-boards, which con- 
tribute considerably to its hardness and elevate 
its resonant power wonderfully. 

The increased hardness consequent on this 
process results from the same cause from which 
stale bread becomes harder than fresh bread. 
But, as hinted above, traces of borax left in the 
wood increase its hardness very considerably. 

A reduction of its inflammability and com- 
bustibility by Beerizing wood may easily be 
obtained by not washing out all the borax used. 
Mere traces of this fire-proof body will prevent 
the wood from burning too readily and render 
its combustibility difficult; the access of air 
being impeded by the film of fused borax. 
This process is the invention of Sigismund 
Beer, of New York. 

BELGIUM, a kingdom of Europe. King, 
Leopold II., born April 9, 1835; succeeded his 
father, Leopold L, on December 10, 1865. 
Heir-apparent, the brother of the King, Count 
Philip of Flanders, born March 24, 1837; mar- 
ried April 25, 1867, to Princess Maria of 
Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen ; has one son, Bald- 
win Leopold, born June 3, 1869. 

The area of Belgium is 11,373 square miles. 
The population, according to the census of 



68 



BELGIUM. 



December 31, 1866, was 4,829,320; and on 
December 31, 1867, was estimated at 4,897,794. 
According to an official statement of July 1, 
1868, there were at that time, in Belgium, 
4,928,814 Roman Catholics, 8,193 Protestants, 
1,522 Jews, and 1,844 connected with other 
ecclesiastical denominations. The Catholic 
clergy received from the state, on salaries, 
3,800,000 francs. The Protestant (inclusive of 
the Anglican), 60,000 francs, and the Eabbis 
25,000 francs. As regards nationality, the 
Flemish part of the population in the northern 
provinces is estimated at 58 per cent, of the 
total population; and the Walloon, in the 
southern provinces, at 42 per cent. In the 
eastern districts of the provinces of Luxem- 
burg and Liege there are about 30,000 Ger- 
mans. 

The ministry* remained during the year 
without change. The budget for 1869, as 
approved by the Chambers, fixed the revenue 
at 174,691,700 francs, and the expenditure at 
176,163,041 francs. 

The exports and imports of Belgium, in 
1866 and 1867 were as follows (value in mil- 
lions of francs) : 



COUNTRIES. 


Exports. 


Imports. 


Europe 


1866. 

579.27 
157.78 
8.92 
1.38 


1867. 

613.78 
149.93 
9.08 
2.45 


1866. 

611.36 
29.94 
0.51 
1.29 
0.10 


1867. 

567.86 
28.56 
0.36 
0.53 


America 


\ 8 i a 


Africa 


Australia 












747.351 775.24 


643.20 


597.31 



The Belgian Government and Chambers 
placed an interdict npon the transfer of the 
"Great Luxemburg Railway" to the "Eastern 
Company " of France. Considering the part 
which railways now play in warlike opera- 
tions, and the geographical situation of the 
Luxemburg line, the Belgians discovered in 
the proposed transfer a possible menace to 
their independence. Besides, by a recent 
decree, all French railways are placed under 
the direct control of the Minister of War, and, 
if the Eastern Company had been allowed to 
buy up the Luxemburg Railway, the result 
would have been to give the French War 
Office authority over an important branch of 
the international communications of Belgium. 
In putting a veto on this bargain, the Belgian 
Parliament only availed itself of a discretion- 
ary power which is both claimed and exercised 
by the governing power of every other state in 
Europe. The negotiations relative to this 
matter resulted in a triumph for Belgium, the 
French Government being obliged to with- 
draw its pretensions. The contracting parties 
agreed that the Great Eastern of France and 
the Luxemburg of Belgium might conclude 
conventions for traffic with each other. The 
Eastern Railway may henceforward run 

* See the namea of the ministers in the AHEBICAN AN- 
KXTAL CYCLOPEDIA for 1868. 



through-trains between Antwerp and Basle, 
the management of which, while upon Belgian 
territory, will be in the sole charge of Belgian 
railway officers. Reductions in the tariff may 
be made between stations in France and 
stations in Belgium, provided that such re- 
ductions are not inconsistent with the tariff of 
the Belgian line. No reduction is to take 
place in the rates between Switzerland and 
Holland, which might induce Swiss shippers 
to send their goods to Dutch ports rather than 
to those of Belgium. 

The following convention was agreed upon 
between the United States and Belgium, on 
the subject of naturalization, and signed at 
Brussels, November 16, 1868 : 

The President of the United States of America and 
his Majesty the King of the Belgians, led by the 
wish to regulate the citizenship of those persons who 
emigrate from the United States of America to Bel- 
gium and from Belgium to the United States of 
America, have resolved to make a convention on 
this subject, and have appointed for their plenipoten- 
tiaries, namely : The President of the United States 
of America, Henry Shelton Sanford, a citizen of the 
United States, their minister resident near his 
Majesty the King of the Belgians ; and his Majesty 
the King of the Belgians, the Sieur Jules Vander 
Stichelen, Grand Cross of the Order of the Dutch 
Lion, etc., his Minister of Foreign Afiairs; who, 
after having communicated to each other their full 
powers, found to be in good and proper form, have 
agreed upon the following articles : 

ARTICLE 1. Citizens of the United States who may 
or shall have been naturalized in Belgium will be 
considered by the United States as citizens of Bel- 
gium. Reciprocally, Belgians who may or shall 
nave been naturalized in the United States will be 
considered by Belgium as citizens of the United 
States. 

ART. 2. Citizens of either contracting party, in case 
of their return to their original country, can be pros- 
ecuted there for crimes or misdemeanors committed 
before naturalization, saving to them such limita- 
tions as are established by tne laws of their original 
country. 

ART. 3. Naturalized citizens of either contracting 
party, who shall have resided five years in the 
country which has naturalized them ; cannot be held 
to the obligation of military service in their original 
country or to incidental obligation resulting there- 
from in the event of their return to it, except in cases 
of desertion from organized and embodied military 
or naval service, or those that may be assimilated 
thereto by the laws of that country. 

ART. 4. Citizens of the United States naturalized 
in Belgium shall be considered by Belgium as citi- 
zens of the United States when they shall have 
recovered their character as citizens of the United 
States, according to the laws of the United States. 
Eeciprocally, Belgians naturalized in the United 
States shall be considered as Belgians by the United 
States when they shall have recovered their charac- 
ter as Belgians, according to the laws of Belgium. 

ART. 5. The present convention shall enter into t 
execution immediately after the exchange of ratifica- 
tions, and shall remain in force for ten years. If at the 
expiration of that period neither of the contracting par- 
ties shall have given notice six months in advance of 
its intention to terminate the same, it shall continue 
in force until the end of twelve months after one of 
the contracting parties shall have given notice to the 
other of such intention. 

ART. 6. The present convention shall be ratified by 
the President of the United States, by and with the 
advice and consent of the Senate, and by his Majesty 



BELGIUM. 



BELL, JOHN. 



69 



the King of the Belgians, with the consent of the 
Parliament ; and the ratifications shall be exchanged 
at Brussels within twelve months from the date 
hereof, or sooner if possible. 

In witness whereof, the respective plenipoten- 
tiaries have signed the same and affixed thereto their 
seals. 

Made in duplicate at Brussels the sixteenth of 
November, one thousand eight hundred and 
sixty-eight. 

JULES VANDER STICHELEN. 
H. S. SANFORD. 

An additional article to the treaty of com- 
merce and navigation of July 17, 1858, be- 
tween the same contracting parties, was signed 
December 20, 1868, and is as follows : 

The President of the United States of America 
and his Majesty the King of the Belgians, deeming it 
advisable that 'there should be an additional article 
to the treaty of commerce and navigation between 
them, of July 17, 1858, have for this purpose named 
as their plenipotentiaries, namely : The President 
of the United States, Henry Shelton Sanford, a citi- 
zen of the United States, and minister resident near 
his Majesty the King of the Belgians ; and his Majesty 
the King of the Belgians, the Sieur Jules Vander 
Stichelen, Grand Cross of the Order of the Dutch 
Lion, etc., his Minister of Foreign Affairs ; who, after 
having communicated to each other their full powers, 
have agreed to and signed the following additional 
article : 

The high contracting parties, desiring to secure 
complete and efficient protection to the manufactur- 
ing industry of their respective citizens, agree that 
any counterfeiting in one of the two countries of the 
trade-marks affixed in the other on merchandise, to 
show its origin and quality, shall be strictly prohib- 
ited and shall give ground for an action of damages 
in favor of the injured party, to be prosecuted in the 
courts of the country in which the counterfeit shall 
be proven. 

The trade-marks in which the citizens of one of 
the two countries may wish to secure the right of 
property in the other must be lodged, to wit : The 
marks of citizens of the United States at Brussels, in 
the office of the clerk of the Tribunal of Commerce, 
and the marks of Belgian citizens at the Patent-Office 
in Washington. 

It is understood that, if a trade-mark has become 
public property in the country of its origin, it shall be 
equally free to all in the other country. 

This additional article shall have the same duration 
as the before-mentioned treaty of the 17th July, 1858, 
to which it is an addition. The ratifications thereof 
shall be exchanged in the delay of six months, or 
sooner if possible. 

In faith whereof, the respective plenipotentiaries 
have signed the same and affixed thereto their seals. 

Done at Brussels, in duplicate, the twentieth of 
December, eighteen hundred and sixty-eight. 
H. S. SANFORD. 
JULES VANDER STICHELEN. 

The Belgian Chambers adopted the bill for 
the abolition of imprisonment for debt, by a 
large majority, and refused to exempt from 
the benefit of its provisions even editors 
unable to pay their fines. 

The young Prince Eoyal died, after a linger- 
ing and distressing illness at Brussels, on 
January 22d. By his decease, the Count de 
Flanders, brother of the King, became heir- 
apparent to the throne, and as such took his 
seat in the Senate. 

The import and export trade of Belgium 
represented before 1830 an annual average of 



300,000,000 francs, or 12,000,000. Thence 
up to 1840 it fluctuated between 300,000,000 
francs and 400,000,000 francs ; between 1840 
and 1850 it increased to an average of about 
900,000,000 francs, or 36,000,000; between 
1850 and 1860 the average reached 1,700,000,- 
000 francs; and a report presented to the 
King by the Minister of Foreign Affairs es- 
timates that, for the period between 1860 and 
1870, it will reach an annual average of 3,000,- 
000,000 francs, or 120,000,000. The minister, 
however, remarks in his report that the direct 
trade between Belgium and countries out of 
Europe is tardy in its developement ; that the 
Belgian, though apt at manufacture, is slow in 
finding new markets. The Belgian Govern- 
ment, as a stimulus to foreign trade, has ap- 
pointed a consul in the Danubian Principal- 
ities under the orders of the Belgian legation 
at Constantinople, a consul-general at Odessa, 
and a consul-general at Tauris ; and a gentle- 
man well versed in commercial matters has 
been attached to the Belgian legation at 
Washington, who is to have no fixed residence, 
but is to move about the United States in 
order to report where there may be an opening 
for Belgian trade. Mr. Hugh "Wyndham, 
second secretary of the British legation at Brus- 
sels, sending these statements in his last re- 
port to the Foreign Office, observes that 
Belgium has no trade at all with California, 
and but little with China and Japan ; whereas 
Holland and Switzerland, both small states, 
are actively fostering their commerce with 
those distant regions. 

BELL, JOHN, a statesman of Tennessee, born 
near Nashville, Tenn., February 15, 1797; died 
at Cumberland Iron Works, Tenn., September 
10, 1869. His father was a farmer in fair cir- 
cumstances, who bestowed upon him a good 
education, and at so early a period that he was 
graduated at Cumberland College (now the 
University of Nashville) at the age of seven- 
teen. Devoting himself to the study of the 
law, he began his professional career at nine- 
teen. A year later, and when he was not of 
age, he was chosen a member of the Senate of 
Tennessee; and, though he remained through 
the term, he would not accept a reelection, 
hut adhered to his profession until 1826, when 
he was nominated for Congress, in opposition 
to the well-known Felix Grundy, over whom 
he triumphed, after an animated contest, by a 
thousand majority. He was a Democrat at 
that time, though General Jackson opposed his 
election ; and he must be classed with the Cal- 
houn branch of the Jackson party. He was so 
popular that the Jacksonians concluded to over- 
look his independence ; and he was reflected 
six times, serving in the House of Kepresenta- 
tives until 1841, or fourteen years. Long he- 
fore the expiration of these years he had left 
the Democratic party. Opposing the nullifiers, 
he was separated from Mr. Calhoun ; and he 
parted from President Jackson on the question 
of the removal of the deposits from the United 



70 



BELL, JOHN. 



States Bank, and virtually became one of the 
founders of the Whig party, in 1834. That 
year Mr. Stevenson left the office of Speaker 
of the House of Representatives, to become min- 
ister to England ; and the candidates for the 
vacant chair were Mr. Bell and Mr. Polk. The 
former was supported by all the Whigs, and by 
those Democratic members who were opposed 
to Mr. Van Buren, and he was elected. He 
joined with Judge White in the anti-Van Bu- 
ren movement in Tennessee, which completed 
his sins in the estimation of President Jackson, 
who could not, however, prevent his return to 
Congress, as his popularity in his district re- 
mained unshaken. When General Harrison 
became President of the United States, in 1841, 
lie appointed Mr. Bell Secretary of War, in 
which office he was continued by President 
Tyler ; but, when Mr. Tyler vetoed the bill for 
creating a third United States Bank, Mr. Bell re- 
signed office, as did all the members of the Cab- 
inet, except Mr. Webster. The Tennessee Le- 
gislature then offered him the place of United 
States Senator, which he refused to accept, on 
the ground that it ought to be bestowed on Mr. 
Foster, an eminent Whig. He remained in re- 
tirement six years, save that he was chosen a 
member of the State Senate, in 1847. The 
same year he was elected to the national Sen- 
ate, to which he was reflected in 1853, thus 
serving two full terms in that body. His en- 
tire congressional life extended to twenty-six 
years. As a member of Congress, Mr. Bell is 
entitled to honorable mention and remembrance, 
for he was one of the very few Southern men 
whose course was really national in its charac- 
ter. When petitions for the abolition of sla- 
very in the District of Columbia were first pre- 
sented to the House of Representatives, he did 
not join with those who were for suppressing 
the irrepressible, but voted for their recep- 
tion. He also opposed " the Atherton gag." 
For thus acting, he encountered opposition at 
home ; but his constituents invariably sustained 
him. He pursued the same course when in the 
Senate, though the slavery question had then 
become all-important. It is true he supported 
the compromises of 1850, but it is not easy to see 
how he could have done otherwise, when even 
Mr. Webster was their advocate, and when 
many other Northern men gave them their 
voices and their votes. When the Kansas-Ne- 
braska Bill was brought forward, in 1854, Mr. 
Bell opposed its passage with all his power, 
taking a position among its most decided oppo- 
nents, not only as violating the Missouri com- 
pact, to which the honor of the South was 
pledged, but as unsettling the compromise of 
1850, to which both the great parties had sol- 
emnly subscribed. Four years later, he was 
equally earnest in his opposition to the Lecomp- 
ton constitution that had been framed for Kan- 
sas. In 1860, Mr. Bell was nominated for the 
presidency by the " Constitutional Union par- 
ty," Mr. Everett receiving the nomination for 
the vice-presidency. This ticket had no chance 



BENTON, NATHANIEL. 

of success, but it was well supported. After 
the election of Mr. Lincoln, Mr. Bell was dis- 
posed to support his Administration, seeing in 
his success no reason at all for secession on 
the part of the South. For some time he re- 
mained firmly in this position, but at length he 
was induced " to go with his State." His after- 
life was without incidents. 

BENTON, NATHANIEL S., an active politi- 
cian and political leader for many years in 
New York, born in Cheshire County, New 
Hampshire, February 19, 1792; died at Little 
Falls, N. Y., June 29, 1869. He was educated 
at the Fryeburg Academy, Maine, having for 
one of his instructors at one time Daniel 
Webster, who was principal of the institution. 
During the War of 1812 he served first as 
private in the Thirty-fourth U. S. Infantry, 
then as ensign, lieutenant, and adjutant, act- 
ing on two occasions as Judge-Advocate-Gen- 
eral at Plattsburg. At the conclusion of the 
war he studied law, and was admitted to prac- 
tice. In 1816 he removed from New Hamp- 
shire to Little Falls in this State. In 1821 he 
was appointed Surrogate of Herkimer County, 
which office he held until 1828, when he re- 
signed, in order to take his seat in the State 
Senate. He remained in the Senate three 
years and four months, when he resigned to ac- 
cept the position of United States District At- 
torney for Northern New York. This office he 
held until removed by President Harrison in 
1841. During this period, in 1832, he was ap- 
pointed first Judge of Herkimer County by 
Governor Marcy. In 1845 he was elected Sec- 
retary of State by the Legislature, which office 
beheld until 1848, when the new constitution 
went into effect. At that time the State Su- 
perintendency of Public Schools was an ex 
officio duty of the Secretary of State, but gen- 
erally devolved mainly on a deputy. Mr. Ben- 
ton had for his efficient deputy Hon. S. S v 
Randall, since and now Superintendent of 
Schools in the city of New York, but he gave 
more personal attention to this department 
than his predecessors had done. From 1848 
to 1856 Mr. Benton was not in office, though 
he had transferred his allegiance to the " Amer- 
ican party," and was their candidate at one 
time for Canal Commissioner, and at another 
for Lieutenant-Governor. In 1855 that party 
was successful in carrying the State, and in 
electing a majority of the Canal Board. At 
that time the Auditor of the Canal Department 
was chosen by the votes of the Canal Board, 
and Mr. Benton was elected to that office in 
1856. He soon began to add to the duties and 
powers of the office, by securing the passage 
of certain legislative enactments. One of his 
first steps was to have the appointment of the 
Auditor transferred to the Governor and Sen- 
ate, to fix its duration for three years, and to 
make the salary $2,500. Other acts were sub- 
sequently passed increasing the power of the 
office, and among them was one making the 
Auditor a member of the Contracting Board. 



BERLIOZ, LOUIS H. 



With the demise of the "American party," 
Mr. Benton allied his fortunes with the Re- 
publicans. He held the office of Auditor until 
1868, a period of twelve years, when he was 
succeeded by James A. Bell, the present 
incumbent. Mr. Benton was a man of great 
industry, strict integrity, and strong will. He, 
took great pains to impress his ideas of canal 
management upon the canal policy of the 
State. His reports were ably written, and 
his arguments clearly stated. 

BERLIOZ, Louis HECTOE, a distinguished 
French musician, composer, and author, born 
at C6te-Saint- Andre, Department of Isere, 
France, December 11, 1803; died in Paris, 
March 9, 1869. He was the son of a phy- 
sician of distinction, who, with the inten- 
tion of educating him for his own profes- 
sion, sent him, at an early age, to pursue a 
course of medical study at Paris, but his pas- 
sion for music led him, at the age of twenty- 
three, to desert his college, and enter the Con- 
servatoire. Under the instruction of Lesueur, 
and of Reicha, the influence of whose peculiar 
teachings has always been more or less percep- 
tible in his works, Berlioz advanced so rapidly 
as to gain, in 1828, the second prize, and in 
1830 the first prize, for musical composition. 
During his four years at the Conservatoire, he 
wrote a Mass for four voices, chorus and or- 
chestra, the "Waverley" overture, a "Sym- 
phonie Fantastique," a "Fantaisie sur la Tem- 
pete," a second "Fantaisie," entitled "Scenes 
de Faust," the cantata of "Sardanapale," and 
a "Symphonie Funebre et Triomphale," in 
commemoration of the revolutionary events of 
July. These works were highly valued by 
musicians, mainly, it would seem, on account 
of the technical proficiency and the remarka- 
ble skill in orchestration which they exhibited ; 
but it does not appear that they attracted any 
degree of popular attention. In 1830 Berlioz 
visited Italy, not so much for purposes of study 
as of recreation. "While at Rome, he composed 
"Lelio, ou le Retour & la Vie," a monodrame;- 
"La Ballade du Pecheur " (words by Goethe) ; 
" Le Chreur des Ombres " (suggested by " Ham- 
let ")j and two overtures, "King Lear" and 
"Rob Roy." Upon his return to Paris, in 
1832, he became a regular contributor to the 
Gazette Musicale and the Journal des Debats, 
his writings in which were models of elo- 
quence, force, and perspicuity. It is probable 
that he won more adherents by strength of 
argument than his musical works, unaided, 
could ever have obtained for him. He became 
the centre of a little group of enthusiasts, 
whose united power was sufficient to induce 
operatic and other managers to give him a 
hearing, though not to persuade the public to 
tolerate him. His first opera, " Benvenuto 
Cellini," produced in 1838, was a disastrous 
failure, and was condemned by every voice in 
Paris except those of Berlioz and his friends, 
the composer himself endeavoring to justify 
the work in a series of essays, than which 



nothing more brilliant and spirited has been 
known in musical literature. The world ad- 
mired the writer, but refused to admit the 
claims of the composer. The disappointment 
and the mortification brought on a severe fit 
of illness, a circumstance which called forth a 
remarkable and unprecedented action on the 
part of the violinist Paganini. He communi- 
cated his sympathy in the form of a present of 
twenty thousand francs, and his admiration by 
a bold statement that the erratic French com- 
poser was the equal of Beethoven. Although 
unfortunate with his opera, Berlioz enjoyed a 
certain success, about this period, with one or 
two symphonies. "Harold" and " Romeo et 
Juliette," both, we believe, inspired by Paga- 
nini, were readily accepted and applauded. 
His Requiem Mass, the most remarkable, in 
respect of instrumentation at least, of all his 
works, was performed, in 1837, at the obse- 
quies of General Damremont, and, if not en- 
thusiastically welcomed, was not condemned. 
The year 1843 he devoted to a series of con- 
certs in Belgium and Germany, for which he 
composed the lively overture, "Le Carnaval 
Remain," and by means of which he laid the 
foundation of his fortune. At the Industrial 
Exhibition of 1844 he enjoyed, for the first 
time, the opportunity of presenting one of his 
works on a scale of magnitude commensurate 
with his designs. This was the " Hymne d la 
France," which was executed by an orchestra 
and chorus of one thousand musicians. In 
1846 he produced, at the Op6ra Comique, a 
"legend in four parts," entitled "La Damna- 
tion de Faust," which met with a most flatter- 
ing reception. "L'Enfance du Christ," a "sa- 
cred trilogy," soon followed, and was well 
received, though not so heartily as its imme- 
diate predecessor. Between 1855 and 1863 
he brought out a number of symphonies, all 
avowedly intended to exemplify and elucidate 
his special theories and convictions, and all ex- 
hibiting his talents in their worthiest aspect. 
His last composition of importance was a he- 
roic opera, "Les Troyens," performed at the 
Theatre Lyrique in 1863, a work regarded by 
critics with great interest. While denied the 
public acknowledgments which he craved, Ber- 
lioz was not left wholly without personal 
marks of recognition. In 1839 he received 
the decoration of the Legion of Honor, and 
the office of librarian of the Conservatoire; 
and in 1856 he was appointed to the seat in the 
Institute left vacant by the death of Adolphe 
Adam. He was also an active member of the 
juries on Musical Instruments, at the Interna- 
tional Exhibitions of London and Paris. By 
his literary works he acquired hosts of friends 
and admirers in quarters where his musical 
achievements would never have given him a 
footing; and even the hostility of those who 
were opposed to his aesthetic theories was dis- 
armed by his masterly " Treatise upon Modern 
Instrumentation, etc.," a work the value of 
which to students, and to practising musicians 



72 



BOLIVIA. 



as well, cannot be too highly rated. His or- 
chestral compositions far excel those of any 
other writer, and, in his development of the re- 
sources of instrumentation, he was thoroughly 
original. The last years of his life were passed 
in comparative retirement, although he came 
indirectly before the public ten years ago, 
when "Alceste" was revived at the Grand 
Opera. The managers of that institution fixed 
upon him as the man most capable of any in 
France to restore the traditions and recall the 
exact spirit of Gluck's noble work. " Alceste " 
was superbly produced, under his exclusive di- 
rection. Aside from the Treatise on Instru- 
mentation, already mentioned, M. Berlioz's 
principal literary works were: "A Musical 
Tour hi Germany and Italy: Studies of Bee- 
thoven, Gluck, and Weber," 2 vols., 8vo, 1845 ; 
" Orchestral Soir6es," 18mo, 1854; and "Musi- 
cal Comicalities," 18mo, 1859. 

BOLIVIA, a republic in South America. 
President, in consequence of the successful rev- 
olution of December, 1864, Mariano Melgarejo 
dictator, after the abolition of the constitution 
in February, 1869. The ministry, in Septem- 
ber, 1869, was composed as follows: M. D. 
Mufioz, head of the Cabinet, Minister of State and 
of External Affairs ; M. de la Lastra, Minister 
of Finances ; M. J. Ribera, Minister of Justice 
and Public Instruction; General G. Lanza, 
Minister of War; M. Montero, Minister of 
Worship and Industry. The area of the re- 
public is estimated at from 22,500 to 30,000 
geographical square miles (1 geographical 
square mile=21.26 English square miles). The 
republic is divided into eleven departments, 
which had, in 1858, 1,742,352 inhabitants, to 
which must be added about 245,000 Indians, 
giving a total population of 1,987,352. Later 
statements give the population, exclusive of 
Indians, as 1,811,368. In point of ecclesias- 
tical jurisdiction the republic is divided into 
the archdiocese La Plata or Charcas (embracing 
the departments of Chuquisaca, Potosi, Oruro, 
Tarija, Atacama), and the dioceses La Paz 
(departments of La Paz, Megillones), Santa Cruz 
(departments of Santa Cruz, Beni), and Cocha- 
bamba (departments of Oochabamba, Melga- 
rija). The standing army, consisting of 31 
generals, 359 officers of higher grade, 654 sub- 
altern officers, and 3,034 men, annually costs 
the republic two million pesos. 

Bolivia is, on the west, almost cut off from 
the Pacific, while on the east Brazil interposes 
a vast territory between her and the Atlantic. 
The great chain of the Andes here branches 
out into mighty parallel ridges. A great ele- 
vated table-land, about 13,000 feet high, and held 
between the two grand ridges of the Andes, ex- 
tends almost from the northern confine of the 
Argentine Republic northwest to the frontier 
of Peru. All the water-courses to the east of 
this table-land flow into the Atlantic. The 
three larger streams are affluents of the river 
Madeira; their names are the Beni, Mamore, 
and Gnapore. The Mamore, nearly 900 miles 



long, flows through the very heart of Bolivia. 
The Guapore, forming the boundary-line be- 
tween Brazil and Bolivia, has its head- waters 
almost in sight of the head- waters of the Rio 
de la Plata. The aggregate length of the afflu- 
ents of the Madeira with their tributaries can- 
.not fall short of 5,000 miles, for at least 4,000 
of which it is suited to steamboat navigation. 
The banks of these rivers afford excellent nat- 
ural landing-places. All travellers attest to 
the climate being one of the healthiest in the 
world. 

The population is in great part upon the 
Amazon slope. Many populous centres are 
found upon the banks of the rivers far in the 
east and northeast. Among these towns are 
Santa Cruz, containing some 12,000 inhab- 
itants, and Trinidad, capital of the great Beni 
province, having 6,000. Cochabamba is a city 
of 35,000 inhabitants; it is already the trade 
centre of 500,000 people, and will eventually 
become the great commercial emporium of 
Bolivia, furnishing La Paz, with its 83,000 in- 
habitants, Chuquisaca, with its 36,000, and 
Potosi, with its 40,000, the luxuries of other 
nations. The canoe-trade, which has sprung 
up since Brazil opened the Amazon, is aston- 
ishing. The Indian canoemen are tough, do- 
cile, and of great endurance. 

The people may be divided into two great 
sections mining and agricultural. One-half 
of the people are of the Quichua and Aymara 
Indian races. The latter have their centre of 
population at La Paz. The Spanish is the 
dominant race, and is gradually gaining ground 
over the Indian. The Bolivian people are 
among the most hardy, energetic, and indus- 
trious, of Spanish South America. 

The most valuable products are the potato, 
banana, Indian corn, wheat, barley, and rice, 
and almost every variety of fruit. The finest 
Peruvian bark is cut in northwest Bolivia, and 
three-fourths of the entire crop of the world 
come from this district. Cinnamon of excel- 
lent quality grows wild in great abundance. 
Tobacco is extensively grown. Cocoa or betel 
is sold in the La Paz market to the amount of 
about $4,000,000 annually. The chocolate of 
the Beni has no superior in the world. Coffee 
is largely cultivated for home use. Sugar is 
produced and largely manufactured from the 
cane in the Santa Cruz district ; its quality is 
excellent. Cotton grows wild in great abun- 
dance ; it is of two kinds white and yellow 
both of a fine, long staple. With the vast wild- 
indigo fields it covers an immense extent of 
the Bolivian territory. Dye-woods and dyes 
are numerous. The cochineal is found in its 
native state, and abundant. Vanilla, wild sar- 
saparilla, wild almonds, saffron, laurel, and 
white wax, yellow and black beeswax, rhu- 
barb, gentian, jalap, aloes, and ipecacuanha, 
are also abundant. A great variety of balsams 
are found. Sixty-four different kinds of forest- 
trees are counted on the banks of the great 
rivers. Vast herds of cattle and horses roam 



BOLIVIA. 



BOTTS, JOHN M. 



73 



in the Beni and Chiquitos provinces. On the 
higher lands are found the llama, the sheep, 
goat, and the vicuna. The mineral wealth of 
Bolivia is fabulous. Besides silver, there are 
found gold, lead, tin, copper, iron, coal, and 
fossil salts. The gold washings of the head- 
waters of the affluents of the Madeira are 
celebrated, and from the single silver mountain 
of Potosi nearly enough silver has been taken 
to pay our national debt. 

The foreign trade passes through the Peru- 
vian port of Arica. The foreign European 
trade in imports amounts to about $3,000,000 
annually. This is offset in exports of Peruvian 
bark, guano, copper, etc. The balance of trade 
against the country is paid for by a part of her 
silver product, which is about $2,500,000 an- 
nually. 

Bolivia made, in March, 1867, a treaty of 
limits, commerce, and navigation, with Brazil. 
This was, late in 1868, ratified by both nations, 
and the party favorable to the treaty hope that 
it will open the way to steam communication, 
via the Amazon, with the world. On the other 
hand, discontent with it still prevails. 

There is an internal trade in Bolivia amount- 
ing to about $50,000,000 annually. 

The revolution prevailing in 1867 was ended in 
the beginning of 1868, by the revolutionary lead- 
ers emigrating to the Argentine Republic. Pres- 
ident Melgarejo caused his first cousin, Colonel 
Lozada, one of the bravest officers in the army, 
to be shot for having attempting to raise a coun- 
ter-revolution. The despotic act excited great 
indignation ; but Melgarejo had the army per- 
fectly under his control. The general dissatis- 
faction with President Melgarejo continued, 
however, and the President proclaimed himself, 
in February, 1869, again dictator of the republic. 
His Cabinet approved unanimously of this step. 
In May he issued a decree restoring the consti- 
tution, and ordered elections for Congressmen 
and Senators. The people received this return 
of their constitutional rights with enthusiasm. 
He continued, however, to exercise full control. 

The Government recognized, in June, the 
belligerent rights of Cuba by the following 
decree : 

To His Excellency the Minister of Foreign A fairs of 
the Provisional Government of Cuba : 

Sm: I have the honor to transmit herewith to 
your Excellency a copy of the decree by which Bolivia 
recognizes the belligerent rights of the Cuban patriots 
and the legitimacy of the Provisional Government 
which they have organized. The cause espoused by 
General Cespedes is thoroughly American, seeking 
for independence and the destruction of Spanish 
despotism. God and right sustain its justice, and 
the prayers of the Continent are offered for its suc- 
cess. I have the honor, etc. 

MARIANO DC-NATO MUNOZ. 

LA PAZ, June 10, 1869. 

Mariano Melgarejo, Provisional President of Bo- 
livia, decrees : 

1. That the Government of Bolivia recognizes the 
Cuban patriots as belligerents, and the legitimacy of 
the government organized by them. 

2. Bolivia sends her heart-felt sympathy to the 
noble upholders of such a sacred cause, and to 



General Cespedes, as a first homage to his American 
spirit and heroic efforts for the liberty and indepen- 
dence of his country. 

A new revolutionary movement against Mel- 
garejo was begun at the close of October, by 
General Morales, consul of Bolivia at Callao, 
who a few years since attempted the overthrow 
of President Belzu. He appeared upon the fron- 
tier of the country with three hundred muskets 
and rallied a number of adherents to his stand- 
ard; but the movement was speedily crushed. 

The Government continues to make great 
efforts to develop the resources of the Amazon 
Valley. On October 1, 1869, it gave to Mr. 
A. D. Piper, a citizen of California, a conces- 
sion of a vast tract of land. Mr. Piper, who 
represents a California company, contracted, 
on the other hand, to introduce 1,000 families 
for each five years during twenty-five years. 
A great impulse to Bolivian commerce is also 
expected from the new railroads which the Ar- 
gentine Republic, Brazil, and Peru, expect to 
build to the Bolivian frontier. 

BOTTS, JOHN MINOE, a Virginian politician 
and statesman, born in Dumfries, Prince Wil- 
liam County, Va., September 16, 1802 ; died 
at his residence in Culpepper, Va., January 7, 
1869. Soon after his birth his parents removed 
to Fredericksburg, and from thence to Rich- 
mond, where they perished in the great theatre 
fire in 1811. Young Botts received a good 
school education notwithstanding the loss of 
his parents during his youth, and so thorough 
a preparation for the law, which was the pro- 
fession of his choice, that he was admitted to 
the bar at the age of eighteen. After he had 
practised law for about six years, he retired to 
a farm in Henrico County, and established 
himself as a Virginia country gentleman. He 
did not long remain in quiet, however, for, in 
1833, he was elected to represent his county 
in the Legislature of the State. He at once 
took a prominent position among the leading 
members of this body, and soon became one 
of the most active politicians in Virginia, 
working with the Whig party. He was sev- 
eral times reflected to the Legislature. In 
1839 he was elected to Congress, and there 
stood earnestly and ably by Henry Clay, zeal- 
ously advocating most of the points of the great 
leader's programme a national bank, a pro- 
tective tariff, and the distribution among the 
States of the proceeds of the public lands. 
After serving two terms he was defeated by 
Mr. Seddon, but, in 1847, succeeded in gaining 
a reelection. In 1839 he was a delegate to the 
National Whig Convention, which nominated 
Harrison and Tyler. He had been a warm 
personal friend of John Tyler, elected Vice- 
President in November, 1840, and who, by the 
death of General Harrison, in April, 1841, be- 
came President of the United States ; but, soon 
after Mr. Tyler's accession to office, Mr. Botts, 
in a conversation with him, learned his intention 
of seceding from the party which had elected 
him, and he at once denounced him, and pro- 



74 



BRADY, JAMES T. 



claimed open war with him, which he carried 
on as long as Mr. Tyler was President. In 
the presidential campaign of 1844 he labored 
earnestly and indefatigably for the election of 
Mr. Clay. In 1852 Mr. Botts resumed the 
practice" of his profession in Richmond, and 
speedily met with the large success to which 
his great talents and high legal ability entitled 
him. On the disruption of the Whig party, 
he joined the American party, and in 1859 an 
attempt was made by that political organiza- 
tion to nominate him for the presidency, but 
it proved a failure. He continued his practice 
and remained in Richmond till the commence- 
ment of the war, but, being devoted to the 
Union, and having used all his efforts, with- 
out avail, to prevent Virginia from taking 
the suicidal step of secession, he retired to 
his farm near Culpepper Court-House, where 
he remained most of the time during the war, 
hated yet respected by the enemy. He was, 
however, subjected to a great deal of trial and 
inconvenience. One night in March, 1862, a 
squad of a hundred men, under the orders of 
General Winder, came to his house, took ^him 
from his bed, and carried him to prison, 
where he was held in solitary confinement 
for eight weeks. His arrest was caused by 
the well-founded suspicion that he was writ- 
ing a secret history of the war. Search was 
made for the manuscript, but nothing was 
found. After the close of the war, this miss- 
ing manuscript (of which a portion had been 
in 1862 confided to the Count de Mercier, 
French minister at Washington), formed the 
basis of a volume prepared by Mr. Botts, 
and published in New York by Messrs. Har- 
per & Brothers, with the title of "The 
Great Rebellion, its Secret History, Rise, Prog- 
ress, and Disastrous Failure ! " The work 
was too much of the nature of a personal nar- 
rative, and was published in a time too thickly 
crowded with great events, to have any very 
considerable sale, and was, perhaps, less im- 
portant in its revelations than the author 
deemed it. After his release from prison Mr. 
Botts returned to his home at Culpepper. 
Here he was continually persecuted by the 
enemy. His farm, too, was repeatedly over- 
run by both armies, and dug over, time and 
again, for military operations. When the 
war had closed, Mr. Botts again took a deep 
interest in political matters. He labored ear- 
nestly for the early restoration of his State to 
the Union, but without success. He was a 
delegate to the National Convention of South- 
ern Loyalists in Philadelphia in 1866, and in 
1867 signed his name on the bail-bonds of 
Jefferson Davis. From that time his energies 
steadily declined. He declared his intention 
to take the stump during the last canvass, for 
General Grant, but was unable to do so, or 
take any active part in the contest, on account 
of his failing health. 

BRADY, JAMES TOPHAM, a learned, accom- 
plished, and eloquent advocate and political 



leader, born in New York City, April 9, 1815 ; 
died there, February 9, 1869. His father, 
Thomas S. Brady, an accomplished scholar, had 
emigrated with his family from Ireland in 1812, 
and, after teaching a classical school for some 
years, entered the legal profession, and died in 
the prime of life, a Judge of the District Court, 
leaving eight children to the care of this son. 
James T. Brady was educated mostly by his 
father, in his school, and subsequently in his 
office ; and, at the early age of sixteen, such 
was his thorough mastery of the law, that he 
acted the part of junior counsel to his father. 
He was admitted to the bar in 1835, when but 
twenty years of age, and though " there were 
giants " among the members of the New York 
bar "in those days," men like Graham, San- 
ford, Lord, Blunt, ; George Wood, and Ogden 
Hoffman, he, almost at a bound, sprang into 
the front rank of the profession, and main- 
tained his place there ever after, sustained by 
his profound knowledge of the law, his ready 
tact, his extraordinary eloquence, and his genial 
and courteous manners. He was conspicuous 
for his ability in all departments of the law, 
winning verdicts from judges and jurors, alike 
in great patent cases, like that of Goodyear vs. 
Day ; cases involving questions of medical ju- 
risprudence, like the Allaire and Parish will 
cases, and the moral-insanity plea in the case 
of the forger Huntington or the homicide Cole ; 
divorce cases, like that of Mrs. Edwin Forrest, 
and, indeed, in civil cases of all sorts ; but his 
special power was seen to the best advantage 
in criminal cases, where he usually undertook 
the defence. At one time he successfully de- 
fended four clients, charged with murder, in a 
single week, and all without fee or reward. His 
defence of Daniel E. Sickles, at Washington, in 
1859, was one of his most splendid achieve- 
ments as a great criminal lawyer. In most of 
the remarkable civil or criminal causes of the 
past thirty years he had been retained on one 
side or the other. His success as an advocate 
was not due to any chicanery, not even to any of 
the generally considered admissible advantages 
taken by many members of the profession. He 
was clear, frank, and honest, in the statement 
of his cases, skilful and almost invariably cour- 
teous in his cross-examination of witnesses, 
but his arguments were put with such tact, 
his statement of facts was so lucid and candid, 
and his appeals were so eloquent and impres- 
sive, that he almost invariably carried judge 
and jury with him. It was said of him that he 
never lost a case in which he was before a jury 
for more than a week ; by that time they saw , 
every thing through his eyes. With -his rare 
gifts of quick insight and brilliant eloquence 
he was necessarily a political leader-; but no 
man was ever more thoroughly free from per- 
sonal aspiration for office. He would have 
nothing to do with any office which was out 
of the line of his profession. He did not desire 
any higher honor than that of being a great 
lawyer ; yet, as a Democrat, he was one of the 



BRADY, JAMES T. 



BRAZIL. 



most thoroughly-trusted and trustworthy mem- 
bers of his party. As a politician, Mr. Brady 
was of what might he called a conservative 
turn of mind, hut his impulses and his acute 
sense of justice often overbalanced these ten- 
dencies. He never held office except once, 
when he was Corporation Counsel; he con- 
sented to accept this position because it was 
in the line of his profession, and while oc- 
cupying the place he made many important 
improvements in the administration of muni- 
cipal law. Before the war he was an ultra 
States-Rights man. In 1860 he had supported 
Breckinridge, and even carried his support so 
far as to discourage fusion on the electoral 
ticket between the two Democratic presiden- 
tial candidates, while he consented to be a can- 
didate for Governor himself on the Hard ticket, 
against William Kelly, the Soft candidate, in 
order to uphold a principle. If there had been 
any chance of his election, he would not have 
been a candidate. But, while supporting the 
war measures of Lincoln's Administration, on 
one point, and only one, he differed with the 
Government. He did not believe in the doc- 
trine of military necessity as applied to North- 
ern States or without the hostile lines of 
the enemy. Politics, however, never entered 
into his professional life, and one of his 
greatest cases was his defence of the spy 
executed at Governor's Island. No man ever 
adhered to a determination not to accept office 
outside of the line of his profession more firmly 
than Mr. Brady. Nearly every place in the 
gift of the Democracy of New York was offered 
to him, and declined by him. He was pressed 
to accept a seat in the Legislature and in Con- 
gress, but he steadily refused, and in 1861 he 
peremptorily declined the Tammany nomination 
for Mayor. During the period that intervened 
between this action on his part and the close of 
the war, he made many speeches on national 
questions, some of which produced a profound 
impression upon the country. In October, 
1862, he "was induced to address the Seymour 
Association of New York, and in his remarks 
on that occasion he boldly said, u The South, in 
leaving us at the particular time she did, did 
so without the slightest pretext of justification 
or excuse." These speeches were followed up 
by other and bolder efforts. In March, 1864, 
he had the satisfaction of addressing a war- 
meeting in Tammany Hall. Near the close of 
the war Mr. Brady was appointed a member 
of a commission, of which General "William F. 
Smith was chief, to inquire into the adminis- 
tration of the Department of the Gulf under 
General Butler and General Banks. The com- 
mission discharged the duties of their appoint- 
ment, and made their report to the Secretary 
of War, but there the matter ended. The 
report has never been published, notwith- 
standing the public interest felt in the subject 
of their inquiry, both at the time and since. 
Outside of professional and political life Mr. 
Brady was peculiarly amiable, and he was 



exceedingly fond of social enjoyments. He 
idolized the children of his sisters, and was 
always happy in winning the confidence and 
esteem of the little ones. But he could readily 
turn away from social pleasures to the duties 
of the office and court. To his social accom- 
plishments and legal attainments must be add- 
ed an excellent literary taste. In the brilliant 
days of the old Knickerbocker Magazine he 
was a frequent contributor, and he wrote be- 
sides for other periodicals. One of the most 
beautiful of these waifs, "A Christmas Dream," 
originally contributed by him to Park Benja- 
min's literary paper, The New World, in 1846, 
was subsequently, by one of his friends, put 
into a little Christmas volume, exquisitely illus- 
trated, and for years formed one of the most 
beautiful of the minor holiday books. High- 
minded, generous, prodigal to a fault, hating 
meanness in every form, delicate in the matter 
of fees from his clients, taking whatever was 
given him oftener than what he might have 
asked, so averse to even the appearance of evil 
that he never took a case in the court of which 
his brother was the Judge, he went down to 
the grave with a record such as few men leave 
behind them. 

BRAZIL,* an empire in South America. Em- 
peror, Pedro II., born December 2, 1825; suc- 
ceeded his father April 7, 1831 ; has two daugh- 
ters : Isabella, married to the Count d'Eu, son 
of the Duke de Nemours ; and Leopoldina, mar- 
ried to Duke Augustus of Saxe-Coburg Gotha ; 
eldest son of the latter, Pedro, born March 19, 
1866. The conservative ministry, appointed 
July 15, 1868, remained in power throughout 
the year 1869. Area, 3,231,000 square miles. 
Strength of the army 73,784; the army of 
operation in Paraguay was estimated in Jan- 
uary, 1868, at 42,817 men. The total pop- 
ulation was (1867) estimated at 11,280,000, 
1,400,000 of whom are slaves. The wild In- 
dians, not included in the total population, are 
said to number 500,000. 

The number of immigrants landed at Rio 
Janeiro, during 1868, was 8,355, to which 
must be added about 3,500 landed in the south- 
ern provinces, making the total immigration 
for the year, throughout the empire, not 
more than 12,000 at the outside. More than 
half of the immigrants were Portuguese ; the 
Germans rank second in point of numbers ; 
and the English (with whom are included the 
Scotch and the Irish) come next. Spaniards 
are few, but there is a respectable number of 
French and Italians. Of the French, there 
were several families from Algiers, hardy, ro- 
bust farmers, who left their homes on account 
of a terrible drought which reigned in that 
country. They settled in the province of 
Parana, where they have since been joined by 
nearly a hundred of their countrymen, who 
sailed directly from Marseilles for Brazil. The 

* See AMERICAN ANNUAL CTCLOP^DIA for 1868, for the 
names of the ministers, a fuller account of the Brazilian 
army, and commercial and navigation statistics. 



76 



BRAZIL. 



number of North Americans is put down at 
405. About 250 of these were from the South- 
ern States, of whom more than half went to 
Brazil at their own expense, and nearly all had 
friends or relatives already settled in the em- 
pire. The German immigration has augmented 
rapidly in the last few years, owing to the 
good management of the Brazilian immigration 
agent in Germany. 

A table is given showing the emigration 
from the port of Rio Janeiro, from which it 
appears that the immigration exceeded the 
outgoings by 4,196. No fewer than 338 North 
Americans left the country during the year- 
convincing proof of the failure of the scheme 
tor establishing an American colony in Brazil. 
With 405 arrivals and 338 departures, the rem- 
nant is seen to be very small. Of the 338 who 
left, about 100 were immigrants from the South- 
ern States. 

The Brazilian Government, in its anxiety to 
promote immigration to its shores, has made 
liberal arrangements to assist in paying the 
passages of immigrants to Brazil. During the 
year 1868 the aggregate number of those who 
received " assisted passages " was 1,236. More 
than half this number were British subjects ; 
385 were Germans ; 132 North Americans, and 
only two Portuguese. This is remarkable, con- 
sidering that more than one-half of the total 
of immigrants of the year were Portuguese. 
During the year, 55 vessels, of variou snation- 
alities, arrived at Rio Janeiro with immigrants. 
Brazil has a Passengers' Act intended to pro- 
tect immigrants on board the ships which take 
them to its shores. This law applies to all 
ships carrying four passengers in the steerage 
to every hundred tons of burden. Its execu- 
tion is confided to the Official Agent of Colo- 
nization, who visits the ship immediately on 
its arrival in port, makes minute inquiries 
with regard to the treatment which the immi- 
grants received on their voyage, proceeds at 
once to an investigation, if the complaints are 
sufficient to warrant it, and imposes such a fine 
on the vessel as he may deem just, if those 
complaints prove to be well-founded. It is 
claimed that, owing to these excellent regula- 
tions, which are rigidly carried out, emigrants 
to Rio Janeiro are better protected than even 
those to New York. The great majority of 
the emigrants going to Brazil are laborers and 
agriculturists. 

The Brazilian navy now consists of sixteen 
monitors and casemates, and one building in 
Rio, forty wooden steamers, eight transport 
steamers, two auxiliary propeller Bailing-cor- 
vettes, and eleven sailing-vessels of various 
kinds. These mount 298 cannon the heavi- 
est one-hnndred-and-fifty-pounder rifles are 
manned by 7,353 men, and the sixty-five steam- 
ers have engines of 7,299 horse-power ; fifteen 
iron-clads, seventeen steam gunboats, two 
steam corvettes, and four other vessels, form 
the squadron in Paraguay, to which are at- 
tached two transports and a host of chartered 



steamers and sailing-craft. The squadron 
mounts 151 cannon, and is manned by 4,227 
men. Other vessels are posted at Montevideo 
and on the Uruguay. Twelve small iron steam- 
ers were being built in Europe for service 
on the Amazon, and a gunboat was building 
at Para. An extraordinary credit of over 
$6,000,000 was opened to the Minister of Ma- 
rine for extraordinary expenses. 

According to the budget brought forward 
by the Minister of Finance for the year 
1870-'71, the revenue was estimated at $28,- 
100,000, and the ordinary expenditure $32,- 
090,500, leaving a deficit of nearly $4,000,000. 
This deficit the minister proposed to meet 
by increased import duties, and in accord- 
ance with his views the House Committee re- 
ported a bill adding 40 per cent, to the pres- 
ent duties on foreign goods entered for con- 
sumption (abolishing the collection of 15 per 
cent, in gold), and raising the duties on free 
goods to 5 per cent, besides placing 5 per cent, 
of " additional " duties on the goods not charge- 
able with such. It was also proposed to levy 
landing and shipping dues in the custom-house, 
and to charge for warehouse rent therein from 
the day of landing the goods. The distressing 
condition of the Treasury, which was without 
means to satisfy the exigencies of the war, or 
meet its obligations with the creditors of the 
state, compelled the Government, previous to 
the meeting of the legislature, to resolve on 
a decree authorizing a fresh issue of paper 
money. 

According to the Treasury return published, 
the ascertained indebtedness of the nation, ex- 
clusive of the foreign debt, which is about 
14,000,000, was, on September 30, 1869, as 
follows : 

Milreis. 

Bonds payable in currency 180,015,700 

Bonds payable in gold 30,000,000 

Paper-money in circulation 181,054,735 

Treasury bills bearing interest 69,859,900 

Of the above, 35,279,700 milreis have been 
added since the 28th of February, 1869, viz. : 
Bonds, 24,249,900; paper money, 6,140,000; 
interest - bearing treasury bills, 4,889,900. 
Adding the foreign debt to the internal 
debt, the total of the Brazilian debt becomes, 
taking the foreign debt at the present rate 
of exchange, about 643,000,000 milreis, or 
$321,500,000 currency. Of this total, 181,054,- 
735 milreis bears no interest. The charges of 
the debt are estimated by the Minister of Fi- 
nance at 29,000,000 milreis, but it is expected 
that next year they will be 36,000,000, owing 
to the further expenses of the war, which will 
require the borrowing of 60,000,000 to 70,000,- 
000 more milreis. 

The exports, during 1868, are valued at $52,- 
376,000. The exports of coffee from Rio Ja- 
neiro show a falling off of 337,028 sacks dur- 
ing the first nine months of 1868 as compared 
with the same period of 1867, when 1,583,163 
sacks were exported. The exports to the 
United States show a decrease this year of 



BRAZIL. 



77 



22,000 sacks, having been only 344,154 against 
366,192 in the first nine months of 1867. A 
part of the deficiency is, however, made up by 
an increased stock on hand, namely, 189,000 
sacks against 59,000 sacks October 1, 1867. It 
is notable that a cycle of about five years ap- 
pears to obtain in regard to the coffee crop of 
Brazil, a very large crop being usually fol- 
lowed by .crops successively decreasing to the 
third year, after which it rises gradually to an- 
other extraordinary crop about the fifth or 
sixth year. It is said, however, that, if the cof- 
fee plantations be ploughed, the yield is toler- 
ably regular and the average much increased. 

The movement of the liberal party toward 
carrying through much-needed reforms has 
been gaining ground in the nation. The ne- 
cessity of depriving the authorities of some 
part of their excessive power is deeply felt. The 
great wants of Brazil are independent courts to 
protect the people from illegal oppression, 
for at present the judicial power is wholly 
subordinate to and dependent on the execu- 
tive. The Emperor is a ruler of enlightened 
views ; but Brazil has a constitutional Govern- 
ment, with ministerial responsibility, and the 
present conservative ministers are opposed to 
liberal reforms. The accession of the conser- 
vative party to power has given a serious check 
to the emancipation movement. The liberal 
part of the press is, however, bold in denun- 
ciation of a policy which compromises the na- 
tion in the eyes of the whole civilized world. 
In fact, the day of independence was in gen- 
eral kept in the provinces with a freeing of 
slave children by societies already formed. 

Brazil was, during 1869, still actively engaged 
in her war with Paraguay. The return of the 
chief commander of the Brazilian forces, Marshal 
Oaixas, in the beginning of 1869, without ask- 
ing leave, enraged the people and embarrassed 
the government. The army had lost within a 
month one-third to one-half its number, and 
an extraordinary proportion of its general of- 
ficers ; in fact, the whole army was in need of 
immediate reorganization. When the mar- 
shal's departure became known in the army, 
it almost produced a disbandment. The com- 
mand was turned over to Marshal Souza, who 
knew nothing of the details of his command. 
In March, Count d'Eu, son-in-law of the Em- 
peror, was appointed commander-in-chief. (See 
PABAGUAY.) 

Owing to the demand of the American 
Government (dating as far back as 1857) for 
indemnity in the case of the American whale- 
ship Canada, which demand was renewed in 
November, 1868, a rupture of diplomatic re- 
lations between Brazil and the United States 
took place in May, 1869. General Webb, the 
United States minister at Rio Janeiro, had been 
authorized to propose to the Brazilian Govern- 
ment the payment of $70,000 as a full satisfac- 
tion for the claim. The Brazilian Government, 
however, declined this proposition, declaring 
that, u inasmuch as the minister from Brazil in 



the United States lias not advised this Govern- 
ment that he has been informed by Mr. 
Seward of his having issued renewed instruc- 
tions to the United States minister in Brazil, 
no action can be taken upon such instructions 
until such advice has been received from our 
minister, informing this Government that the 
matter has again been referred to this lega- 
tion." Against this decision General Webb re- 
monstrated, stating that, if such a course was 
persisted in, he would resent the offence to his 
Government and demand his passports. On 
the 1st of May, General Webb received a dis- 
patch from the Foreign Office, in which he was 
again officially told that "The American Gov- 
ernment not having announced to the Brazilian 
minister in Washington the result of the prom- 
ised reconsideration, nor of the issue of re- 
newed and modified instructions to General 
Webb, keeps this Government in the same state 
of uncertainty that it was in before ; and from 
which it cannot depart, except in such man- 
ner as shall have full consideration for the 
respect due to our minister, and from one 
Government to the other." 

To this General Webb replied in a note, 
dated the 3d of May, in which he employed 
very strong language of indignation and re- 
proof, stating that he did not consider it any 
honor to be present and flattered at his 
country's expense, and concluding in the fol- 
lowing terms : 

The undersigned, in closing his mission of- now 
nearly eight years' duration, nas the satisfaction to 
reflect that he has on all occasions, under all circum- 
stances, and at no inconsiderable personal sacrifice, 
proved himself a very sincere friend of Brazil and of 
the Brazilian people. That friendship will not yield 
to the injustices so recklessly done him and his 
Government; attributable, as it is, to a conserva- 
tism and a contempt for republics and republican 
institutions which, belong to another age. 

This note was returned to General Webb by 
Baron Cotegipe, with the remark, " it wound- 
ed not only General Webb's own dignity, but 
also that of the Government and the country, 
and could not be preserved in the archives of 
the Brazilian ministry." At the same time 
the passports for which the general had asked 
were sent him, with the assurance that " not 
the least obstacle would be placed in the 
custom-house to the embarkation of his ef- 
fects." 

This rupture produced great excitement and 
alarm among all classes of the population. 
Commercial men dreaded the worst conse- 
quences, not only to the general trade of the 
country, but to the credit of Brazil in Europe. 
Public opinion turned decidedly against the 
Government, and compelled it to yield. The 
diplomatic relations were restored, and all was 
granted that General Webb had demanded. 

The opening of the Amazon, in 1867, has 
proved a great benefit to the bordering His- 
pano-American republics, and to the mari- 
time nations of the earth. The exports and 
imports of Para for October and November, 



78 



BREMEN. 



1867, were double those of 1866. This is but the 
beginning. It already becomes apparent that 
it is cheaper for all Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, 
and Colombia east of the Andes, to receive 
their goods from and to export their India rub- 
ber, cinchona, etc., to the United States and 
Europe via the great water high way which dis- 
charges into the Atlantic, than by the long 
circuitous route of Cape Horn, or the trans- 
Isthmian route of Panama. The Purus and 
Madeira are hereafter to be navigated by 
steamers. The valley of the Amazon in Brazil 
is as large as the area of the United States east 
of Colorado, while the whole valley of the 
Amazon in and out of Brazil is equal to all the 
United States east of California, Oregon, and 
Washington Territory, and yet the population 
is not equal to the single city of Bio de Janeiro, 
or the combined inhabitants of Boston and 
Chicago. It is estimated that a larger popula- 
tion can be sustained in the valley of the Ama- 
zon than elsewhere on the globe. The total 
value of exports in 1866 amounted to 799,983 
sterling. The imports at Para for the same 
year were 510,429 sterling. Ten large Brazil 
steamers are plying on the Amazon proper, while 
smaller steamboats ascend to Peru and Ecuador. 
In 1865 the Brazil packets transported, between 
Para and Manaos, goods to the value of 800,000 
sterling, according to their returns made to the 
Brazilian Government. In fifteen years, count- 
ing from 1850, the commerce tripled even 
under the restrictive rule which characterized 
it. The city of Para has a population of 
36,000. Its imports and exports in 1868 were 
over 1,500,000 sterling. The opening of the 
Amazon has given a new impulse to the ex- 
ploration of its affluents. The little steamer, 
in which Dr. Conto de Magalhaens set off to 
attempt the ascent of the Tocantins rapids, had 
successfully reached the Araguaya, thus prov- 
ing the practicability of running a steamboat line 
from the Amazon to within 200 miles of the 
navigable waters of the Paraguay. A decree 
was issued, extending to the end of 1869 the 
permission conceded to foreign vessels to 
engage in transport between Brazilian ports 
possessing custom-houses. 

The ratifications of the powers accorded in 
the international telegraph concession made 
to Ballestrini having been exchanged, Brazil 
should, by the terms of the concession, be 
placed in telegraphic communication with 
Europe and the United States within three 
years, by laying a cable from Para to one of 
the French Antilles, to which the European 
cable will be laid, and from which the commu- 
nication with the United States will pass by 
Hayti and St. Thomas. The parties to the con- 
vention are Brazil, Denmark, France, Hayti, 
Italy, and Portugal. 

BREMEN,* a republic belonging to the 
North-German Confederation. Burgomasters, 

For farther Information, see the article GERMANY in 
this volume, and article BREMEN in the AMERICAN AN- 
KTJAI. CYCLOPAEDIA for 1868. 



BROUGHTON, JOHN C. H. 

Johann David Meyer (1867-'7l), President 
of the Senate for the year 1870 ; Arnold Duck- 
witz (1865-'69), President of the Senate for the 
year 1869. Area, 74 square miles ; population 
of the republic in 1867, 109,572 ; of the city of 
Bremen, 74,945. In the budget for 1869, the 
revenue is estimated at 2,220,114 thalers; the 
expenditure at 2,162,406 thalers ; surplus, 57,- 
708 thalers. The imports, in 1868, were valued 
at 52,680,000 thalers (gold) ; the exports at 
69,490,000 thalers. The merchant navy, at the 
close of the year 1868, consisted of 307 vessels, 
together of 122,356 lasts (one last 4,000 Ibs.). 
The statistics of emigration from the port of 
Bremen, in 1867 and 1868, were as follows : 



EMIGRANTS FROM 


186?. 


1868. 


North-German Confederation. 
South Germany 


38,666 
16,199 


42,370 
12,382 




15,303 


7,398 


Other Countries 


3,833 


4,263 








Total 


74 001 


66 413 


Of whom went to the United ) 
States... .. f 


70,951 


64,663 



BROUGHTON", Sir JOHN CAM HOBHOTJSE, 
first Baron, G. C. B., F. R. S., an English lib- 
eral statesman and cabinet officer, born near 
Bristol, Eng., June 27, 1786 ; died in London, 
June 3, 1869. He was the eldest son of Sir 
Benjamin Hobhouse, a wealthy manufacturer 
of Bristol, and was educated at "Westminster, 
and at Trinity College, Cambridge, taking his 
degree at Cambridge in 1808. While at the 
university, he contracted an intimacy with 
Lord Byron, and in 1809 accompanied the poet 
in his travels in Turkey and Greece, and other 
parts of Southern Europe, and subsequently in 
Switzerland and Italy ; and, after his return to 
England, he published an account of these 
travels in a book which he called " A Journey 
through Albania and other Provinces of Tur- 
key, with Lord Byron," London, 1812, which 
was highly commended. He also appended 
some notes, over his own signature, to Byron's 
" Childe Harold," the fourth canto of which 
the poet dedicated to him. This, however, 
was not his first work, for in 1809 appeared, 
with his name, a collection of compositions, 
under the title of " Imitations and Translations 
from the Classics, with Original Poems." Four 
years after the publication of his " Journey," he 
appeared again before the public with an elabo- 
rate work, entitled " The Last Reign of Napo- 
leon." This was in two volumes, and gave a 
complete and entertaining description of the 
eventful "hundred days," of which he was an 
intensely interested eye-witness. He also pub- 
lished " Historical Illustrations of the Fourth 
Canto of Childe Harold," and was a frequent 
contributor to Blaclcwood, Froze^s, the West- 
minster Review, and other periodicals. He 
first became conspicuous in political life in 
1819,^ by the publication of his "Letters to an 
Englishman," which were tinged with strong 
radical opinions, and contained such a severe 
attack on the House of Commons, that he was 



BRUNSWICK. 



CALIFORNIA. 



imprisoned in Newgate on a charge of having 
committed a breach of privilege. These letters 
and his imprisonment brought him prominently 
before the public, and, upon his release, he was 
taken up by the electors of Westminster, who, 
feeling that he had been unfairly treated, in 
spite of the strenuous and animated opposition 
of the Whigs, returned him to Parliament after 
a memorable contest. In Parliament he 
showed himself an able speaker and an ener- 
getic reformer, but his radical opinions became 
BO far modified that in 1831 he entered the 
Cabinet of Earl Grey as Secretary of War. In 
1833 he was made Secretary of State for Ire- 
land, but was defeated in his canvass for a re- 
election before the Westminster electors. The 
next year he was returned from Nottingham, 
which he represented till 1847 ; and he sat for 
Harwich for a few years previous to his eleva- 



tion to the peerage as Lord Broughton, Baron 
Broughton of Gyford, in 1851. In the Cabinet 
of Lord Melbourne he was president- of the 
Board of Control, and Chief Commissioner of 
Woods and Forests ; and in the Russell Admin- 
istration in 1846-'52 he again held the former 
position. In 1853 he was for a short time a 
member of the Coalition Cabinet, but with that 
exception had taken no active part in public 
affairs after his elevation to the peerage. He 
received at that time the grand cross of the 
Order of the Bath, and was soon after named 
one of her majesty's Privy Council. Lord 
Broughton retained his intellectual faculties in 
great perfection till the close of life. 

BRUNSWICK, a duchy belonging to the 
North-German Confederation. Duke, Wilhelm 
I., born April 25, 1806 ; succeeded his brother, 
Duke Karl, in 1830. (See GEBMANY.) 



C 



CALIFORNIA, one of the Pacific States of 
the American Union, bounded by Oregon on 
the north, by Nevada and Arizona on the east, 
Lower California on the south, and the Pacific 
Ocean on the west. Area, 188,981 square miles. 
Its population in 1866 was 470,597, and in 1869 
was estimated at somewhat more than 600,000. 
(For the various nationalities of which this 
population is composed, see ANNUAL CYCLO- 
PEDIA for 1868.) The State is said to contain 
120,947,841 acres of land, of which it is esti- 
mated that 89,000,000 can be devoted to 
profitable husbandry. The election which oc- 
curred on the 20th of October, 1869, was for 
eighty members of Assembly ; one-half (twenty) 
members of the State Senate, eight or ten of 
the fourteen District Judges, and two Associate 
Judges of the Supreme Court. The term of 
office of the other State officers does not expire 
till 1871. The two parties held their conven- 
tions in June, and, among other topics, both 
considered the subject of Chinese immigration. 

The Republican Convention nominated Lo- 
renzo Sawyer and O. C. Pratt for Judges of the 
Supreme Court, and passed resolutions pledg- 
ing support to the Republican party and in- 
dorsing the Administration ; asserting that the 
negro question has ceased to be an element of 
American politics, and declaring that the rati- 
fication of the Fifteenth Amendment should 
be followed by an act of universal amnesty and 
enfranchisement to the Southern people; re- 
garding with satisfaction the immigration to 
the State from the Atlantic States and Europe, 
but, while giving preference to the people of our 
own race, holds inoffensive immigrants from 
China entitled to full protection, but opposing 
suffrage to the Chinese in any form, and any 
change in the naturalization laws of the United 
States ; recognizing the power of the General 
Government to restrict or prevent Chinese im- 
migration by terminating our commercial re- 



lations with China, but believing that the 
closing of our ports at present against the 
Chinese would be injurious to the national in- 
terests and cast reproach upon the intelligence 
of the American people, as being contrary to 
the spirit of the age ; approving of the eight- 
hour law ; indorsing the action of Congress 
respecting the Alabama treaty, and considering 
it the duty of the General Government to de- 
mand full reparation for the injury inflicted by 
the British Government and people upon our 
commerce during the rebellion; favoring the 
equalization of taxation of all kinds of property 
in the States; and approving the grants of 
State aid to railroads. 

The Democratic Convention nominated Jo- 
seph B. Crockett and William T. Wallace for 
Justices of the Supreme Court, and passed 
resolutions declaring their confidence in the 
intelligence, patriotism, and ability of the 
white people of the country to administer and 
control their government without the aid of 
either negroes or Chinese; expressing their 
alarm at the attempts of the unscrupulous 
majority in Congress to absorb the powers of 
the Executive and Judicial departments of the 
Federal Government, and to annihilate the 
rights of the State governments ; declared the 
subjection of the whites of the South to a mass 
of ignorant negroes and their disfranchisement, 
etc., an unparalleled outrage and wrong; op- 
posed the policy of lending the credit of the State 
to railway and other corporations ; advocated 
the eight-hour law and the rights of the work- 
ing-men ; opposed the adoption of the Fifteenth 
Constitutional Amendment, for a variety of 
reasons, among which were the influence it 
would exert in favor of Chinese immigration, 
the probability of their being allowed to vote 
and hold office, and the consequent creation 
of an aristocratic class, created and maintained 
by Chinese votes ; opposing the admission of 



80 



CALIFORNIA. 



the Chinese into the State, and their competi- 
tion with white laborers ; arraigning the Radi- 
cal party for its profligacy, tyranny, extortion, 
disfranchisement, and contempt of constitu- 
tional obligations, and for its appointment of 
healthy and able-bodied negroes to office, while 
capable white citizens were suffering for the 
common necessaries of life ; and approved of 
the economy and efficiency of the Democratic 
State government. 

At the election the Democratic candidates 
were elected ; Wallace by a majority of 5,756 
votes, and Crockett by a majority of 10,292 
votes, and the now Legislature stood as fol- 
lows: Senate, 26 Democrats, 11 Republicans, 
and 8 Independents. House of Representa- 
tives, 6T Democrats, 10 Republicans, and 3 In- 
dependents. Of the District Judges elected, 
all were Democrats. 

The railroad enterprises in California have 
made great progress during the year 1869. 
The Central Pacific, which had at the begin- 
ning of the year passed her borders, was, in 
May, united to the Union Pacific at Ogden, 
and a continuous railway line bound together 
the Atlantic and Pacific coasts; quickening 
immensely the commerce and the mechanical, 
manufacturing, mining, and agricultural inter- 
ests of the State, and giving it at once a posi- 
tion of equality with the older States of the 
East. Of this Central Pacific road, 138 miles 
only are within the bounds of California ; but 
aside from this there are twenty-three other 
railroads in progress, or completed in the State, 
with a total finished length on the 1st of Novem- 
ber, 1869, of 672 miles, and a projected extent 
of about 2,500 miles. The roads already com- 
pleted have cost, in round numbers, $46,650,- 
000, and those in progress will undoubtedly 
require $80,000,000 for their cost of roadway 
and equipment. 

The amount of gold mined in the State, in 
1869, is not accurately known, considerable 
sums having been sent to San Francisco from 
adjacent gold-producing territories, while a 
portion of the State product, since the opening 
of the Pacific Railway, finds its way eastward 
without going to San Francisco. From the 
best data, however, there is reason to believe 
that it did not vary greatly from the aggregate 
of the previous year; new processes, and 
greater care and labor, having made up for the 
less abundant yield of some of the mines. For 
the first six months of the year, $21,046,000 in 
coin and bullion were exported from San Fran- 
cisco. The exports of merchandise from the 
same port from September, 1868, to July 
1869, were $21,844,000; one-half of which 
was of flour and wheat ; quicksilver, $921,000 
fnra, $987,000; wool, $2,378,000; and wine 
$800,000. 

The time has passed when the products of 
the gold-mines of the State will constitute her 
greatest source of weal th or of exports. While 
the export of gold and silver will probably not 
vary much from $40,000,000 (not wholly from 



her own territory), merchandise, including 
quicksilver, wheat and flour, wines, silk, both in 
cocoons and manufactured, fruits, in which the 
traffic since the opening of the Pacific Railroad 
is large, wool and woollen manufactures, in 
some of which the State greatly excels, barley, 
esculent roots, olives and olive-oil, figs, etc., 
etc., will speedily equal and surpass her exports 
of treasure. Her manufactures at the begin- 
ning of 1869 exceeded $35,000,000, and during 
the year took a great step forward, especially 
in wine and silk. The agricultural products of 
the State at the same time exceeded $36,000,- 
000, and every year is bringing larger quanti- 
ties of new land into cultivation, and in the 
districts hitherto affected by drought is accom- 
plishing almost miraculous results by means of 
irrigation. The swamp or tule lands, over- 
flown hitherto by the rivers in the rainy 
season, have to a considerable extent been 
drained and diked, and, the tule rushes having 
been burnt, reveal a soil of the most wonderful 
fertility, yielding in the case of the Suisun Bay 
Islands 83.5 bushels of wheat to the acre, 
and 112 bushels of barley to the acre, without 
ploughing. New articles of cultivation are 
constantly introduced; during the past year 
colonies of Japanese have taken up lands in the 
State, and commenced the culture of tea and the 
rearing of silk-worms, according to their cus- 
toms. The orange, fig, pomegranate, and olive, 
are coming extensively into cultivation in the 
southern part of the State, and the production 
of wheat (the Californian wheat being in great 
demand from its peculiarly nutritious char- 
acter) increases largely with each year. The 
culture of the grape in California, both for wine 
and brandy, and as a table-fruit, has become 
unprecedented in extent. It is estimated that 
there are sixty millions of vines now growing 
in the State, and most of them bearing. Over 
one hundred and fifty varieties of the grape 
are cultivated, including the choicest Euro- 
pean kinds, which do better in that climate and 
soil than they ever did in their native region. 
California wines are now a staple article of 
commerce, and the demand for them is in- 
creasing fully as fast as the supply. It is said 
that large quantities of spurious wines are manu- 
factured in San Francisco, and shipped to the 
Eastern States; but the genuine product of 
the California vineyards in 1869 was over 
10,000,000 gallons. The silk culture, it was 
estimated, would reach a production of sixty 
million cocoons during 1869, with a very much 
greater increase in the coming years, the only 
difficulty now experienced being that of pro^ 
viding sufficient food for the silk-worms. Thfc 
assessed value of real and personal estate for 
1869 (the assessed value never exceeding 50 
per cent, of the real value, and often falling be- 
low it) was above $250,000,000, to which were 
tojbe added about $23,000,000 exempt from tax- 
ation. Of this assessed valuation one-half was 
of property in San Francisco County. 
The wool product of California has been 



CALIFOKNIA. 



81 



steadily and rapidly increasing for several 
years. The product of the Pacific coast in 
1868 was 16,036,656 Ibs., of which 706,800 Ibs. 
were from Oregon, Washington Territory, and 
British Columbia; in 1869 the product of the 
coast was a little more than twenty million 
pounds, of which nineteen million pounds were 
from California. About three million pounds 
were consumed by the woollen-mills of the 
State, and the remainder was shipped to New 
York and Boston. The refining of sugar and 
the cultivation of both the sugar-cane and sor- 
ghum are making very great progress. The 
cultivation of the sugar-beet for sugar has not 
yet, we believe, been attempted to any great 
extent in the State, but in the deep, rich soil 
and the long, rainless season of California, it 
could not fail to be followed with greater suc- 
cess than has attended it elsewhere. 

The iron and steel manufactories and the foun- 
deries, and machine and locomotive works, the 
greater part of them located in San Francisco, 
are constantly increasing and enlarging their 
facilities for work. The greater part of the 
locomotives, and most of the cars for supplying 
the twenty-one railroads finished or in progress 
in the State, are manufactured in that city ; as 
are also the arastras, quartz-crushers, steam- 
engines, and other machinery required both in 
quartz and hydraulic mining in California, Ne- 
vada, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, 
and Arizona. "This business seems to admit of 
an almost indefinite extension, and the iron and 
copper of the State furnish supplies of the 
raw material for a considerable portion of the 
work. We have alluded to the culture of fruit, 
as a specialty in which California would un- 
doubtedly excel any other State of the Union. 
The fruits are generally larger and finer than 
those of other sections of the country, and the 
trees commence bearing earlier and yield more 
profusely. It is said that some of the* fruits, and 
especially apples, plums, and apricots, have not 
so fine a flavor as those of the Eastern States, 
but the pear, the peach, and the cherry, are un- 
rivalled both in size and quality. The follow- 
ing table shows the number of fruit-trees and 
fruit-bearing plants which were reported in the 
State in 1867. The most intelligent agricul- 
turists of the State say that the number has 
been more than doubled since that time, and, 
in the case of the fig, lemon, orange, and olive 
trees, quadrupled. The quantity of small fruits 
has also been more than quadrupled : 



Fruit-trees, Vines, etc. 

Apple-trees 1 

Peach " 

Pear " 

Plum " 

Cherry " 

Nectarine-trees 

Quince 

Apricot 

sfi - 

Lemon 

Orange 

Olive ' 

VOL. ix. 6. A 



,217,790 

969,692 

302,392 

195,896 

93,998 

43,999 

40,404 

52,308 

33,924 

3,712 

17,281 

14,838 



Prune-trees 6 527 

Almond" 25319 

Walnut 15 ; 614 

Gooseberry-bushes 172 783 

Easpbeny " 1,336,048 

Strawberry-vines 9,981,575 

The mulberry-trees, reported in 1868 as 
1,175,000, had reached over two millions in 
July of 1869, and were being put out as fast as 
slips could be obtained. Mr. Prevost, the 
pioneer of the. silk culture, reports, in Los 
Angeles County, the growth of single shoots, 
fourteen feet in length in one year, and that 
cuttings planted in the spring, or, rather, in 
February, furnished abundant food for the silk- 
worms of the second crop, in August following. 
The cultivation of sumac for tanning pur- 
poses has been commenced on a large scale on 
the foot-hills of the Sierra Nevada and on the 
sterile plains, which have been hitherto re- 
garded as utterly worthless. It is said to yield 
from one to two tons to the acre, and to be 
very easily cultivated. This quality of sumac 
brings in the New York market from $100 to 
$120 per ton. 

The timber and lumber product of California 
itself is diminishing ; the redwood, their prin- 
cipal and best forest-tree for these purposes, 
being confined to the fog belt of the Pacific 
slope of the Sierra Nevada, and being so sus- 
ceptible of climatic changes, that where it is cut 
off it does not make a second growth, but is 
replaced by other hardier, but less valuable 
woods ; but the supply of timber and lumber 
from Oregon, Washington, and British Colum- 
bia, is apparently inexhaustible, and this in- 
sures lumber to California at low prices. The 
Central Pacific Eailroad has consumed im- 
mense quantities of lumber and timber, not 
only in the construction of the road, but in the 
erection of its miles of snow-sheds and its sta- 
tions. 

The immigration to California, since the com- 
pletion of the Pacific Eailroad, has been very 
large, both by that road and by the steamships. 
Much of this immigration is from Europe, 
though the tide is also setting strongly toward 
its shores from China and Japan, and there is 
a certainty of the speedy settlement of large 
colonies of Japanese, to engage in agriculture 
in the State. The southern portion of the 
State, which had long been somewhat neglected, 
has, for two or three years past, attracted the 
attention of immigrants, and the population 
of the southern counties has in that time more 
than doubled. The climate of this part of the 
State is said to be salubrious and delightful, 
well adapted to the relief of invalids suffering 
from pulmonary diseases, and the subtropical 
fruits, the fig, orange, lemon, pomegranate, 
banana, and the more delicate varieties of 
grapes, grow there in great profusion. 

Education in California is making excellent 
progress. The schools of the cities and larger 
towns are unsurpassed by those of any section 
of the country, and the academies and schools 



82 



CARLETON, WILLIAM. 



for higher education take rank with the best 
in the country. The University of California 
has, in the autumn of 1869, opened its doors to 
all comers who can pass its preliminary exami- 
nations, without fee of any kind for tuition, 
being the first absolutely free college in the 
world. The advantages it offers, though of 
course not in all respects equal to those of the 
older and more am ply-endowed universities of 
the East, are yet of such a character that the 
student, who is in earnest to acquire an educa- 
tion, will find the facilities for attaining it 
above the average of our younger colleges. 

CANDIA, or CRETE. See TURKEY. 

CARLETON, WILLIAM, an Irish novelist of 
remarkable ability, born in Clogher (or, accord- 
ing to Chambers, Prillisk), County Tyrone, Ire- 
land, in 1798 ; died in Dublin, January 30, 1869. 
He was the son of a tenant farmer in comfort- 
able circumstances, a man of more than ordi- 
nary intelligence, and remarkably familiar with 
the prejudices, the sympathies, superstitions, 
and legends of the Irish peasantry. The early 
education of young Carleton was meagre and 
desultory, being obtained in part from his 
father's teachings, and in part from a hedge- 
school, but his father was desirous to have him 
educated for the priesthood, and he was ac- 
cordingly sent at the age of seventeen to a 
school at Glasslough, kept by a relative who 
was a priest. Here, while acting as an usher, 
he picked up a tolerable acquaintance with 
Latin, and a considerable acquaintance with 
English literature. At the age of nineteen, he 
left this school, and after leading a sort of 
vagabond life for some years, writing occasion- 
ally for the papers, and having abandoned all 
idea of the priesthood, and all regard for Catholi- 
cism, he repaired to Dublin with but three shil- 
lings in his pocket, and sought to obtain a live- 
lihood by his pen. He wrote first a contro- 
versial story, published by a Protestant society, 
which gained him some fame ; but his " Traits 
and Stories of the Irish Peasantry," the first 
series of which appeared in 1830, gave him his 
first considerable reputation. Their freshness 
of style pleased the public and won the favor 
of the critics. A second series, equally popular 
with the first, appeared in 1832, and Carleton 
became thenceforth for some years a regular 
contributor to the Dublin University Maga- 
zine, the Dublin Penny Journal, and other 
periodicals. His "Fardorougha the Miser," 
one of his most powerful novels, appeared in 
1839, and in 1841 he published three volumes 
of stories, mostly of pathetic interest, but in- 
cluding his fine humorous sketch of "The 
Misfortunes of Barney Branagan," which was 
very popular. In 1845 appeared his " Valen- 
tine McClutchy," a half-political novel, defend- 
ing the Irish Catholic clergy, and advocating 
the repeal of the Union. To this followed 
" Rody the Rover," 1846 ; " The Black Proph- 
,et," 184T; "The Tithe Proctor," all politi- 
cal and partisan novels, but exhibiting in a 
marked degree his genius. " Willy Reilly," in 



CENTRAL AMERICA. 

three volumes, was published in 1855, and 
" The Evil Eye " in 1860. While other writers 
have been more or less successful in depicting 
many phases of Irish life, William Carleton is 
the only writer who has presented with exact- 
ness, and a thorough insight into its peculiari- 
ties, the real character of the Irish peasant, 
with whom he seemed to be in perfect sym- 

Sathy. His merits as a writer, notwithstand- 
ig his partisanship, were so thoroughly appre- 
ciated by the British Government, that he was 
awarded a literary pension of 200 a year. For 
some years past he had been unable to write. 

CENTRAL AMERICA. There are at pres- 
ent in Central America five independent re- 
publics: Costa Rica, Guatemala, San Salva- 
dor, Nicaragua, and Honduras. 

The area and population of the five repub- 
lics, in 1869, were as follows : 



REPUBLICS. 


Area. 


Population. 


CAPITALS. 


Popula- 
tion of 
Capital*. 


Costa Rica, 
Guatemala 
San Salvador... 
Nicaragua 
Honduras 


21,400 
44,800 
7,300 
58,100 
47,100 


135.000 
1.180,000 
600,000 
400,000 
350,000 


San Jose 
Guatemala . . . 
San Salvador. 
Managua 
Comayagua . . 


25,000 

40,000 
20.000 
10,000 
8,000 












Total 


178,700 


2,665,000 







1. Costa Rica. This republic is one of the 
best governed in Central America. The in- 
habitants are industrious and prosperous, and 
internal strife, the curse of Spanish America, 
is less known than in most of the other States. 
Its new constitution seems to be quite a liberal 
one, except in relation to the law on liberty of 
the press. Jesus Jimenez has been elected to 
the presidency for the term 1869 to 1872. The 
Government has entered into a contract with 
several citizens of the United States for the 
construction (of an interoceanic railroad from 
Simon Bay to the Gulf of Nicoya. The capital 
was to be $10,000,000, divided into shares of 
$100 each. The company was to commence 
work within three months after the ratification 
of the contract ; the first thirty miles of the 
road were to be completed eighteen months 
from the date of the ratification, and the re- 
mainder in five years. The Government, in 
aid of the enterprise, was to issue bonds, pay- 
able forty years after the completion of the 
road, in United States currency, drawing an 
annual interest of eight per cent. 

2. Guatemala. The industrial and agricul- 
tural interests of Guatemala are highly pros- 
perous, owing to the peace and tranquillity 
which this republic has so long enjoyed. The 
cultivation of indigo and sugar has received 
the special attention of the Government. 

A very large commerce is carried on with 
San Francisco, and an effort is being made to 
establish a line of steamers between the ports 
of Central America and California. The re- 
duction of ten per cent, on the dues on foreign 
merchandise imported through the ports of 
Izabal and Santo Thomas will be continued 
for six years longer. 



CENTRAL AMERICA. 



83 



Peace prevailed throughout the republic, 
with unimportant exceptions. There was an 
attempt at revolution on the Mexican frontier, 
headed by Serapio Cruz, who, for two years 
past, was constantly trying to disturb the 
peace. He and his band secreted themselves in 
the mountains, and made occasional raids in 
the surrounding country. On the 6th of De- 
cember, 1869, a severe fight took place be- 
tween the forces of Serapio Cruz and those of 
the Government, in the town of Huehuete- 
nango. The Government forces to the num- 
ber of 200, under the command of Captain 
Calonge, were intrenched in the plaza, behind 
barricades, which were defended by two small 
pieces of artillery. Cruz had 1,000 of all arms, 
a majority of whom were Indians, under his 
command. He endeavored to take the place 
by assailing it simultaneously at all available 
points, and at the same time setting fire to the 
houses in different parts. The firing lasted 
twenty -five hours, at the end of which Cruz re- 
tired with the loss of 100 killed and 150 wound- 
ed, besides war material lost in the retreat. 

President Cerna granted full pardon to all 
prisoners undergoing punishment for crimes, 
who rendered useful service during the late 
epidemic in Escuintla. He was, in 1869, re- 
elected to the presidency, for the period from 
May 24, 1869, to December 31, 1872. 

3. San Salvador. The President Duefias, 
who was reflected to the presidency .for the pe- 
riod from 1868 to 1873, draws in his message 
to Congress, in January, a cheerful picture of 
the condition of this little republic. 

The indigo crop of 1868 was estimated at 
14,000 ceroons. Several large sugar-machines 
were imported, and have given a new impulse 
to the growth of sugar-cane. Coffee and cotton 
are the next most important articles of export. 
The official report of the income and expenses 
of the Government for 1868 shows a balance 
in favor of the State of $59,988. The revenue 
for the same year has been $938,412, being 
$106,251 over 1867, showing how the coun- 
try is progressing under the management of 
the present Government. The reports from 
Acajutla, the most northern port, shaw a great 
increase in the export of coffee and sugar. 
The value of the exports for the nine months, 
ending September 30th, amounted to $739,680. 

4. Nicaragua. President Guzman enjoys 
the confidence and esteem of the republic. 
When an attempt was made by some of his 
political enemies to poison him and his family, 
the greatest sympathy was expressed for him 
throughout the country. Had the attempt 
succeeded, probably a general revolution would 
have been the consequence. Some serious 
charges having been made in and out of Con- 
gress against the President, he made known 
his intention to resign, when Congress passed, 
on the 19th of March, a resolution approving all 
his acts and those of his ministers ; for all that 
he sent in his resignation in a message termi- 
nating in these words : " I am resolved to re- 



tain no longer a position wherein I have only 
reaped ^ deceptions, bitterness, and miserable 
disappointment." Congress returned an answer 
full of praise and satisfaction, refused to accept 
the resignation, and amid much apparent re- 
joicing succeeded in prevailing upon him to re- 
tain power. 

The contract made by Mr. Ay on, minister 
of Nicaragua at Paris, in October, 1868, with 
the French Senator, Chevalier, for the opening 
of a canal across Nicaragua, was ratified by 
the Senate, and Senator Montealegre was ap- 
pointed special envoy to the Republic of Costa 
Rica to enter upon negotiations. Treaties of 
friendship, and commerce with Costa Rica and 
San Salvador were likewise confirmed by the 
Senate. 

Congress authorized the Government to 
establish at the most convenient place a hospital 
for lepers. By another decree, approved by 
the President, Frederick H. Alberding and his 
copartners are granted the privilege to intro- 
duce Chinese coolies, engaged voluntarily in 
their own country or elsewhere, and brought 
directly to Nicaragua. The privilege is for ten 
years, the coolie contracts to be for eight years, 
after which they shall be free. Vessels bring- 
ing coolies are to be exempt from anchorage 
and tonnage dues ; the said Alberding & Co. to 
pay fifty cents for each coolie brought to the 
hospital at Leon. 

Nicaragua has not enjoyed peace throughout 
the year 1869. There was, however, a mutual 
desire to settle pending questions without shed- 
ding much blood. An armistice was agreed 
to between the Government and the insurgents, 
which was followed by an agreement signed 
October 25, 1869. The terms of peace are 
briefly as follows : 

" 1. That the Government will in no way 
persecute those who have taken part in the 
revolution, who shall have entire liberty to 
leave or return to the republic. 2. That the 
Government will nominate General Sebastian 
Gutierrez as Governor of Leon. 3. That the 
Government will, within six months, convoke 
a Constituent Assembly. 4. That this Assem- 
bly shall decide in what manner the debt cre- 
ated by the revolution shall be paid. 5. That 
all arms and munitions of war in the power of 
the revolutionary forces shall be warehoused 
in Leon and handed over to a person to be 
nominated by the commander-in-chief (the 
United 'States minister was the person subse- 
quently so nominated) ; clauses 6 and 7 guar- 
antee liberty in the elections, and arrange for 
the appointment of civil officers ; and, finally, 
the eighth article stipulates for the punctual 
observance of the foregoing clauses." 

Immediately afterward a general disarma- 
ment commenced in Leon, the previous head- 
quarters of the revolutionary party. The 
President, with his troops, entered Leon on 
the 30th October. Of the revolutionary leaders, 
General Martinez went to San Salvador, and 
General Jerez to Costa Rica. Great credit is due 



84 



CHEMISTRY. 




restoring peace 

hostilities were renewed, and some engage- 
ments took place, resulting in favor of the 
Government party, and in the suppression 
of the insurrection. In December, 1869, the 
President issued a decree, appointing January 
1st as the day on which martial law should 
cease, and convoking the Congress of the re- 
public for the same day. 

The Government issued a decree exempting 
from import dues many articles applicable to 
manufacturing and agricultural purposes, as fol- 
lows: 
The Citizen President of the Republic to Us Inhabitants : 

Whereas, in the decree of the 31st of March last, 
setting forth the internal dues to be levied upon the 



aniline is heated with mercuric chloride, this 
substance is produced in considerable quanti- 
ties, besides the ordinary formation of aniline 
red.' His mode of obtaining it is as follows : 
The crude mass resulting from the heating of 
aniline with mercuric chloride is dissolved in 
dilute hydrochloric acid ; ammonia is then 
added in excess, and a final washing-out 
given with ether. The ethereal solution thus 
obtained must be repeatedly washed with 
water until the washings cease to acquire a 
pink color. Thus purified, it has a greenish- 
yellow color, and exhibits a green fluorescence. 
When evaporated to dryness spontaneously, 
the residue consists of two amorphous sub- 



origmaf value'of merchandise imported into the re- stances, one red and the other orange, the 
public, nothing is said in relation to articles exempt fluorescence being apparently due to the latter, 
from duties, in order to avoid embarrassments to the W j 1 j c } 1 ex ists in the proportion of ab 



prompt dispatch of business at custom-houses, in 
the exercise of his powers, he decrees : 
ARTICLE 1. No import duty whatever shall accrue 



about 10 per 



cent, of the amount of aniline red. Fluorani 
line is almost insoluble in water when cold, 

at any of "the ports of the republic upon the folio wing but slightly soluble in hot water, being pre- 

articles : Quicksilver, ploughs, large hammers, wool- dpitated as the water cools. It is soluble in 

cards, weed-hooks, scythes, grinding and winnowing 

machines, shovels, yokes, hand-pumps for cisterns, 

rautA* of ncrriciiltural implements, tmininer-shears and 



cases of agricultural implements, pruning-shears an 
tar, empty barrels, hydraulic pumps and pitch ; drays, 
hand-carts, children's carriages, cultivators, geograph- 
ical charts, crucibles for melting metals, copper 
nails for vessels, bags or sacks of all kinds, and Ro- 



man cement ; barrel staves or shooks, surgical and 
mathematical instruments, and oakum ; guano and 
any other matter for manuring lands, and globes for 
geographical instruction ; flour and grains of all 
kinds, printing-presses, astronomical, physical, hy- 
draulic, and chemical instruments, not already speci- 
fied ; printed books and printing-type, cotton duck 
for vessels' sails, and manta drill, when imported by 
owners of ships or vessels ; organs for churches, and 
gold coined or in bullion, mills for pulverizing coffee 
or any other grain, machetes, or large knives, and 
"macanas;" maguey cords for rigging, when im- 
ported for their own use by the owners of ships ; sil- 
ver in plate or coined, ruled paper for music, areom- 
eters, millstones, pieces of machinery for all indus- 
trial purposes ; corrosive sublimate, and seeds of all 
giants, lumber for house-building, poisons prepared 
lor the preservation of skins and hides, and spirits 
of turpentine. 

ABT. 2. The invoice value of the principal of the 
articles expressed will be deducted by the adminis- 
tration of the customs at the time of effecting the 
liquidations. 

ABT. 3. The present law will commence to have 
effect forty days from and after this date. 

Given at Managua, the 2d of November, 1869. 
PEDRO JOAQUIN CHAMORRO. 

RAMON SAENZ, Secretary of the Treasury. 

In December, a decree was published with 
reference to customs regulations, providing 
that all shippers of goods to Nicaraguan ports 
should produce to the Nicaraguan Consul, for 
his signature, in the port from which they are 
shipped, an invoice in duplicate, expressing the 
quantity and description of the merchandise, 
the number, weight, and measurement of the 
packages, without which goods entering the 
ports of the republic will be liable to seizure. 

CHEMISTRY (see, 



New Fluorescent 



also, HYDROGENIUM). A 
Substance. Mr. John Par- 



dilute hydrochloric, nitric, sulphuric, and acetic 
acids, giving fluorescent solutions ; is not af- 
fected by sulphide of ammonium, and but 
slightly by hypochlorite of calcium. When a 
beam of sunlight, made conical by a quartz lens, 
is projected on a concentrated ethereal solu- 
tion of fluoraniline, all the rays capable of de- 
veloping fluorescence are absorbed at the sur- 
face, so that no cone of light is visible in the 
solution ; but with a dilute solution a brilliant 
green cone is produced. The colors of the 
ethereal solution and its fluorescence bear a re- 
markable resemblance to those of uranium, 
but with this difference, that when the fluores- 
cent light is examined in the spectroscope, 
while the fluorescent spectrum of uranium is 
discontinuous, that of fluoraniline is contin- 
uous. The author has also discovered, in the 
aniline red made from stannic chloride, another 
fluorescent substance associated with fluorani- 
line, of which the fluorescent spectrum con- 
sists of red, a very bright-green band, and 
some blue only. To the unassisted eye, the 
fluorescence has a cold blue tint. 

Ammonium Alloys and Nascent- Hydrogen 
Tests. In a paper communicated to the Phil- 
osophical Magazine for July, Albert H. Galla- 
tin, M. D., of New York, throws some light on 
the vexed question of the existence of the 
metal ammonium, as determined from its al- 
loys. He starts out with the proposition that 
if hydrogen escaping from an ammoniacal 
amalgam can be shown to be in a nascent 
state, it would be evidence that it had just 
been in chemical combination with the am- 
monia in other words, that metallic am- 
monium existed in the amalgam. This he 
claims to have established as follows : Some 
pellets of sodium were placed in contact with 
some particles of the transparent variety of 
phosphorus,