America, the Ancient Races of, G. P. Thruston, 457; History of the Huguenot Emigration to, noticed, 508.
American Archæology, the Roman- tic School in, 409. American Episcopal Church, his- tory of, noticed, 604. American Indians, the Cave Myth of the. George S. Jones, 552. American Presbyterianism, History of, noticed, 510. American Revolution, British troops and ships at Gardiner's Island, 20, 21; Count de Vergennes, his influence on America, 31; letters of Gen. Burgoyne to Gen Heath, 89, Gen. Gates to Gen. Stark, 90, Gen. Heath to Gen. Philips, 90, 91, Gen. Philips to Gen. Heath, 91, John Hancock to the Board of War. 92, John Adams to Thomas Barclay, 92, Gen. Ward to Com- mittee of Supplies, 93; Benedict Arnold's march to Canada, 141; André's landing-place at Haver- straw, 173; the Tory postmaster of the, 194; peace negotiations of 1782-1783, 213; sermon by Rev. Joab Trout on the eve of the bat- tle of Brandywine, 281, 600; prayer of the, 281; hand-bill of the news of the battle of Bunker Hill, 282; the strategical relations of N. J. to the, 305; Maj. Sher- burne's certificate of character from Gen. Gates, 405; the sermon credited to Rev. Joab Trout, spu- rious, 407, 503; sketch of Gen. Moultrie, 416; the fallacy of 1776, 445: Gen. Roger Enos, a fost chapter of Arnold's Expedition to Canada, 1775, 463; unpublished letters of Gen. Burgoyne to Gen. Heath, 1777-1778, 482; letter of Col. Kingston to Gen. Heath, rela- tive to the correspondence of the former, 486; extracts from the VOL. XIII.-No. 6.-40
correspondence of Gen. Washing- ton, 487; the Sackville papers, 490; a relic of the, 600. Americanisms. Political, Ledyard Norton, II., 98; III., 199; IV., 295; V., 394; VI, 495. Ames, Fisher, letter to William Ely, in regard to pear-trees, 278. Andover Theological Seminary, His- tory of, noticed, 309.
André, Maj. John, at Gardiner's Isl- and, exchanges wine-glasses with Col. Gardiner, 21; landing-place at Haverstraw, Lavalette Wilson,
Andrews, E. B., the Founding of the English State, 601. Archæology, the romantic school in American, 409.
Arnold, Benedict, his march to Can- ada, William Howard Mills, 143; a lost chapter of the expedition of, to Canada, 1775, 463. Arnold, Isaac N., life of Abraham Lincoln, noticed, 310. Armstrong, Col. Henry B., sketch of, James Grant Wilson, 102. Aryan Order of America, object of, officers, 212; proposed summer meeting at Portland, Me., 413. Astor, John Jacob, organizes the Pacific Fur Company, 269; char- acter of, 408.
Astoria, Oregon, the story of, with a sketch of the Pacific Fur Com- pany, P. Koch, 269, 407. Athens, Greece, in the age of Peri- cles, 308.
Axson, Joseph, interpreter at the Cherokee treaty, 1759, ancestry of, 598.
ACHE, Richard, portrait, 127. Baird, Rev Charles W.,History of the Huguenot Emigration to America, noticed, 508. Baker, W. S., Medallic Portraits of, noticed, 414.
Baldwin, Abraham, delegate from Georgia to the Federal conven- tion, 1787, 330; portrait, 331. Ballard, Harlan H., Hand-Book of Blunders, noticed, 111. Ballooning, first voyage across the English Channel, 66. Bancroft, George, History of U. S., revised edition, Vol. V., noticed, 213; Vol. VI., 415. Bandelier, Adolph F., the Romantic School in American Archæology,
Barry, Rev. William, sketch of, Daniel Goodwin, Jr., 283. Bassett, Richard, delegate from Delaware to the Federal conven- tion, 1787, 325..
Bayard, Col. John, sketch of, 404; noticed, 511,
Beal, Samuel, Buddhist Records of the Western World, noticed, 110. Bedford, Gunning, Jr., delegate from Delaware to the Federal convention, 1787, 325. Bedlow's Island, N. Y., 406, 503. Beers, Henry A., Life of N. P. Willis, noticed, 608.
Belle-Isle, Monsieur de, the Advent- ure of, Charles Dimitry, 249. Bellingham, Richard, sketch of, E. H. Goss, 262; petition of the Min- isters in Boston, 1709, in regard to the will of, 391. Bellomont, Earl, and Rasle in 1699, Charles W. Parsons, 346; two let- ters of the former, relative to pi- rates, 350, 351.
Benjamin, S. G. W., cruise of the Alice May, noticed, 109.. Bernard, Gov. Francis, vísits Prince- ton College, 1758, 300. Bienville. Jean Baptiste Lemoine, colonial governor of La., portrait,
Biography, Dictionary of National, noticed, 311.
Blair, John, delegate from Va. to the Federal Convention, 1787, 321; portrait, 323.
Blount, William,delegate from North Carolina to the Federal Conven- tion, 1787, 328.
Blunders, Hand-Book of, noticed,
Bobolition and Bobolitionist, the phrases, 496.
Book Notices.-January.-Ridlon's History of the ancient Ryedales, 109; Archives of Maryland, 1666- 1676, 109; Benjamin's Cruise of the Alice May, 109: Rideing's Boys Coastwise, 109; Kirby's Vocal and Action Language, 110; Beal's Translation of the Buddhist Rec- ords of the Western World, by Hiuen Tsiang, 110; Shaler's Ken- tucky, 110; Sims's Life of Sims, 111; Ballard's Hand-Book of Blun- ers, ; Stiles's Kings County, N. Y., 111; Taylor's Life and Let-
February.-Bancroft's United States, revised edition, Vol. V., 213; Jay's Peace Negotiations, 1782- 1783, 213; Richards' Science in Song, 214; Hammond's Doctor Grattan, 214; Fish and Fisheries of U. S., 214 Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, 214;
Plunkett's Women, Plumbers, and Doctors, 215; Melville's In the Lena Delta, 215; Stoddard's Abra- ham Lincoln, 216.
March.-Woods' Andover Theo- logical Seminary, 309; Farmer's Detroit and Michigan, 309; Ar- nold's Life of Lincoln, 310; Apple- ton's Money-Makers, 311; Mc- Cook's Tenants of anOld Farm,311; Mottelay'sSoldier in our Civil War, 311; U. S. Publications, No. I., 311; Stephen's National Biography, 311; MacArthur's Education in its Re- lation to Manual Industry, 312; Stevens's Who Spoils our New English Books, 312.
April.-Baker's Medallic Por- traits of Washington, 414; Rey- nolds' St. Augustine, 414; Hearn's Creole Proverbs, 416; Ludlow's Concentric Chart of History, 414; Nash's Weymouth, Mass., 415; Bancroft's United States, revised edition, Vol. VI., 415; Hovey's Mind Reading and Beyond, 416; Cooke's Pocahontas, 416; Desaus- sure's Gen. Moultrie, 416.
May.-Baird's Huguenot Emi- gration to America, 508; Chamber- lain's Authentication of the Dec- laration of Independence, 508; Morse's John Adams. 508; Ma- gruder's John Marshall. 508; Par- sons's Colonial Jetons, 509; Lamb- ing's Fort Duquesne, 510; Brin- ton's Lenâpé and their Legends, 510; Oneida Historical Society Transactions, 510; Briggs' Ameri- can Presbyterianism, 510; Trum- bull's Banking and Paper Money in New England, 511; Wilson's Col. John Bayard, 511; Cole's Rockland Co. N. Y., 511; Guern- sey and Davis's Health at Home,
June. Perry's American Epis- copal Church, 604; Jenkins's His- torical Collections of Gwynedd, Pa., 605; Wilson's Congressional Government, 605; Hutton's Liter- ary Landmarks of London, 605; Tales from many Sources, 605, Bunce's Adventures of Timias Terrystone, 606; Marvin's Rus- sians at the Gates of Herat, 606; Stepniak's Russia under the Tzars, 606; O'Neill's Virginia Vetusta, 607; Moore's Witchcraft in Mass., 607, Robertson's the attempts to separate the West from the Union, 608; Southwick's Policy of Mass. towards Quakers, 608; Beers' Life of N. P. Willis, 608. Boston, Mass., first fort erected at, 5: colonial post-office, 203; Ferry between Charlestown and, 1631, 265 Capt. Kidd arrested in, 349; petition of the ministers in 1709,
Bulkley, J. M., Antiquities in the Western States, 547. Bull-Dose, the phrase, 98. Bummer, the phrase, 98. Bunce, Oliver Bell, Adventures of Timias Terrystone, noticed, 606. Buncome, the phrase, 98. Bungtown coppers, 206, 304. Bunker-Hill, hand bill of the news of the battle of, 282. Bunkum, the phrase, 98. Burgoo, the phrase, 98. Burgoyne, Gen. John, letter to Gen.
Heath, 89, unpublished letters of, to Gen. Heath, 1777-1778, 482. Burrage, H. S., the voyage of Wey- mouth, 1602, 212.
Burrites, the phrase, 98. Bushnell, C. S., letter to the Editor, in regard to the building of the ship Monitor, 181. Bushwhacker, the phrase, 99. Butler, James D., the four lakes of
Wisconsin, 302; French fort at Prairie Du Chien, 502.
Butler, Pierce, delegate from South Carolina to the Federal conven- tion, 1787, 331.333. Butternuts, the phrase, 99. Byrne, P., quill manufacturer and pen cutter to Congress, 1820, 102.
CESARISM, the phrase, 00:
Caldwell, Augustine, William Hubbard and his parish at Ips- wich, 602. Canada, Benedict Arnold's march to, 143, a lost chapter of Arnold's Expedition to, 1775, 463.. Cape Palmas, Liberia, Maryland establishes a colony at, 410. Carpet-Bagger, the phrase, 99. Carrington, Gen. H. B., the Strate- gical Relations of N. J. to the War for American Independence, 305. Carroll, Daniel, delegate from Maryland to the Federal conven- tion, 1787, 340. Caucus, the phrase, 99. Celeron, the leaden plate deposited by, in the Ohio river, 1749, 503. Centralization, the phrase, 99.
Chamberlain, Mellen, the Authen- tication of the Declaration of In- dependence, noticed, 508. Channing, Edward, did the Fore- fathers land on Plymouth rock on Forefathers' Day? 103, some recent School Books, 185, the Sackville papers, 490.
Chapman, T. J., early Virginia claims in Pa., 155. Charles I., portrait, 217.
Charlestown, Mass., ferry between Boston and, 1631, 265. Chicago Historical Society, annual meeting, election of officers, re- ports, 106; January meeting, ne- crology, 412.
Chicago, Ill., Ancient, W. Barrows, 360.
Chivalry, the phrase, 99.
Church of England, established in N. Y., 45; in Newburgh, N. Y., prior to the Revolution, 211. Cincinnati, Order of, 209. Cipher Dispatches, the phrase, 99. Civil Service Reform, the term, 99. Clap, Thomas, letter of, in regard to the contribution of money for the Indians, 96.
Clason, A. W., the Fallacy of 1776,
Clay, Henry, nickname of, 201, 296. Claypole, E. W., report on fossils
found near Wilkesbarre, Pa., 211. Clement, Samuel, letter to a gentle- man in N. Y.. regarding the hos- tility of the Creek Indians, 582. Cleveland Family, 499. Cleveland, Grover, the magic square "Cleveland is our Presi- dent," 404.
Clinton, George, letter to James Hamilton, 1750, on the designs of the French, 277; letter to Gov. Hamilton in regard to the leaden plate of Celeron, 503. Clymer, George, delegate from Pa. to the Federal convention, 314; signer of the Declaration of Inde- pendence, personal description of, 318; portrait, 319.
Cock, Townsend D., unpublished letter of Samuel Clement, contrib- uted by, 582.
Cole, David, History of Rockland Co., N. Y., noticed, 511. Columbus, Christopher, the dress of, 204.
Congress, publications of Contin- ental, 105.
Connecticut, first white child born in, 7; delegates from, to the Fed- eral convention, 1787. 336; run- away negro from, 1760, described, 498. Constable, James, letter to Gouver- neur Morris, in regard to letter of credit of Duke of Orleans, 582. Constitution, the Framers of the, Mrs. Martha J. Lamb, 313, 411. Continental Congress, publications of the, 105.
Conventions, the term, 99. Cooke, John Esten, did Pocahontas really rescue Captain Smith, 398; My Lady Pocahontas, noticed, 416.
Coons, the phrase, 99. Coop, the phrase, 99.
Cooper, Daniel, a centenarian, death of, 405.
Copperhead, the phrase, 99.
Cowboy, the phrase, 199. Crawfish, the phrase, 199. Crédit Mobilier, the phrase, 199. Creek Indians, hostility and massa- cre by the, 582.
Creole Proverbs, Dictionary, no- ticed, 414..
Crow, the phrase, to eat, 199. Custis, George Washington Parke, letter to Thomas Carberry, rela- tive to a proposed statue of Wash- ington, 583.
DALY CHARLES P., Char-
les O'Conor, his professional Life and Character, 513. Daniel. P. V., Jr., Historical errors corrected, 1589.
Darling, Gen. C. W., unpublished letter of John A. Dix, contributed by, 585.
Davenport, Rev. John, one of the
founders of New Haven, Conn., 4. Davie, William Richardson, dele-
gate from North Carolina to the Federal convention, 1787, 328; portrait, 329.
Davis, Irenæus P., Health at Home, noticed, 512.
Dayton, Jonathan, delegate from
New Jersey to the Federal con- vention, 1787, 338, 349.
Dean, Charles, Pocahontas and Captain Smith, 492.
Deane, John G., memoir of, 212. Declaration of Independence, the authentication of the, noticed, 508. Deerfield, Mass., early history of, 307.
Delaware, delegates from, to the Federal convention, 1787, 325; first to ratify the Federal con- stitution, 328.
De Long, Lieut.-Commander, Nar rative of the search tor, noticed, 215.
Democrats, origin of the word, 199. Denton, Richard, fourth Puritan
minister in N. Y., settles on Long Island, 42.
De Saille, Baptist Point, negro, settles on the site of Chicago, 362. Desaussure. Wilmot G., sketch of Gen. William Moultrie, noticed, 416.
Detroit, Michigan, History of, noticed, 309.
Dexter, Franklin B., Diary of Rev. Ezra Stiles, 108, 306. Dickinson, John, delegate from Delaware to the Federal conven- tion, 1787, 325: portrait. 327; op- poses and refuses to sign the De- claration of Independence, 328. Dimitry, Charles, the adventure of Monsieur de Belle-Isle, 249; the heart of Louisiana, 436. Dirt, phrase, to eat, 199, Dixen, J., Washington's Ancestry, 587.
Dix, Gen. John A., letter to Charles A. Mann relative to Congress and slavery, 1850, 585.
Doctor Grattan, a novel, noticed,
Education, its relation to manual industry, noticed. 312. Electoral Commission, the, 199. Elizabeth, England's Sovereign from 1558-1603, 563.. Ellsworth, Oliver, delegate from Conn., to the Federal convention, 336, 337; portrait, 339. Elwell. Edward L., the Aborigines of Maine, 212; the newspaper press in. 212.
Emmet, Thomas Addis, counsel for St. Peter's Church, 520; mention- ed, 522.
Emory, George F., the voice of Maine as heard in the formation of our Federal Government, 212. Emory, Rufus, the Church of Eng- land in Newburgh and vicinity prior to the Revolution, 211. English Books, who spoils our, no- ticed, 312.
Enos, Gen. Roger, a lost chapter of Arnold's expedition to Canada, 1775, Horace Edwin Hayden, 463. Episcopal Church, established in N. Y., 45
Ericsson, Capt. John, inventor of the ship Monitor, 59; letter of, on the origin of the name Monitor,
Erving, George W., ancestry of, 408. Estabrook, C., Bungtown coppers,
Ewell, Col. B. S., the river Tiber in Washington, 183.
Ewing, Thomas, nickname of, 394.
FFVS., the phrase, 200.
Fairfax Family, the, of York- shire and Virgínia, Richard Wheatley, 217; Steeton Hall, home of the, 221; Theodore W. Dwight, 397.
Fairfax, Lady, portrait, 223. Fairfax, Lord Thomas, portrait, 218. Fairfax, Lord Thomas, Third, fac- simile of the monogram signature, 224; equestrian portrait, 225; resi- dence of, 227; chair of, 228; tomb and coat-of-arms, 229. Fairfax, Col. T. F., portrait, 235- Fairfax, Sir William, inventory of the property of, 219. Farmer, Silas, History of Detroit and Michigan, noticed, 309. Favorite Son, the phrase, 200. Feering, Gen. B. D., war of 1861 reminiscences, 291.
Federalists, origin of the, 200. Fence, the phrase. 200. Few, William, delegate from Geor- gia to the Federal convention, 1787, 330.
Fifty-Four-Forty or Fight, the phrase, 200.
Filibuster, the phrase, 200. Finlay, Hugh, inspects the post- offices of North America, 194.
Fire-Eater, the phrase, 200. Fitzsimmons, Thomas, delegate from Pa. to the Federal conven- tion, 314; sketch of, 319. Fogg, John S. H., unpublished letters of Gen. Burgoyne to Gen. Heath, contributed by, 482. Fort Dearborn, Ill., erection of, 363. Fort Duquesne, Register of, no- ticed, 510.
Fort Stanwix, N. Y., first men- tioned, 107.
Franklin, Benjamin. delegate from Pa. to the Federal convention, 1787, 314; influence of, 498. Free Masons, established in St. Domingo, 1774, 254.
Fremont, Gen. John C., called the Pathfinder, 297.
Free Soilers, the phrase, 200. Fuss and Feathers, nickname of Gen. Scott, 200.
Gardiner, David Johnson, eleventh proprietor of Gardiner's Island, transfers his rights of the Island to his brother, 29. Gardiner Family, former and present coat of arms, 18; families inter- married in the, 27. Gardiner, J., mourning ring, 18. Gardiner, John, third lord of the manor of Gardiner's Island, fac- simile of impression from the signet ring of, his death, 16. Gardiner, John, fifth lord of the
manor of Gardiner's Island, 19; his widow marries Gen. Putnam,
Gardiner, John Griswold, ninth proprietor of Gardiner's Island,
Gardiner, John Lyon, seventh pro- prietor of Gardiner's Island, marries Sarah Griswold, 23; portrait, 27; his death, 28. Gardiner, John Lyon, twelfth pro- prietor of Gardiner's Island, 30. Gardiner, Lion, purchases Gardi- ner's Island from the Indians, 1; founder of the manor of Gardi- ner's Island, 2; silver button worn by. 4; marries Mary Wilemsen, 5; arrives in Boston, 5; assists in the erection of a fort at Boston, 6; fac-simile of signature and seal of, 6; defends Saybrook fort from the Indians, 8; secures an island
which he called Isle of Wight, 11; the latter name changed to Gardi- ner's Island, 12; his influence with the Indians,12; one of the founders of Easthampton, L. I., 15; his death, 16.
Gardiner, Mary, wife of Lion Gar- diner, extract from the will of, 16. Gardiner, Mary, daughter of John Gardiner, fifth lord of the manor of Gardiner's Island, extravagance of, in dress, 19; marries the Rev. Mr. Blake, and secondly the Rev. Stephen Johnson, 25. Gardiner, Samuel Buell, tenth pro- prietor of Gardiner's Island, 28 ; portrait, 29.
Gardiner, Mrs. Sarah, portrait, 26. Gardiner's Island, the Manor of, Mrs. Martha J. Lamb, 1;. view of wood scene on, 3; the Manor house at, 5; drawing-room of the Manor house, 11; map of, 13. Gates, Gen. Horatio, letter to Gen. Stark, relating to campaign in Canada, 90. Gayarré, Charles, the character of
Andrew Jackson, illustrated through private letters, 161. Georgia, delegates from, to the Federal convention, 1787, 330. Georgia Historical Society, January meeting, 210; February meeting, election of officers, 603. Gerry, Elbridge, delegate from Mass. to the Federal convention, 1787, 334, 335.
Gerrymander, the phrase, 200. Gilman, Nicholas, delegate from N. H. to the Federal convention, 1787; portrait, 334.
Give 'em Jessie, the phrase, 201,
Golden Circle, Knights of, 201. Goodwin, Daniel, Jr., sketch of Rev. William Benny, 283. Gordon, William, extracts from the correspondence of Gen. Washing- ton, 487.
Gorham, Nathaniel, delegate from Mass. to the Federal convention, 1787, 334, 335. Goss, E. H., about Richard Belling- ham, 262 petition of the minis- ters in Boston, 1790, contributed by, 391; the hungry Pilgrims, 477. Grangers, secret society, 201. Gravier, Charles, see Vergennes, Count de.
Gray-Court, origin of the name, 207. Greely Relief Expedition, noticed,
Green, Samuel A., early use of the word ticket, 596. Greenback, origin of the term, 201. Greenway Court, Va., manor-house of Lord Fairfax, 231. Grey-Court, origin of the name, 103. Gricourt, origin of the name, 302. Griffis, William Elliot, Arendt Van Curler, founder of Schenectady, 107; Commodore Matthew Cal- braith Perry, 417. Griswold, John, portrait, 22. Griswold, John A., one of the con- tractors for the construction of the ship Monitor, 61, 181. Griswold, Sarah, ancestry of, mar. ries John Lyon Gardiner, 23. Guernsey, A. H., Health at Home, noticed, 512.
Gwynedd, Pa., Historical Collec- tions relating to, noticed, 605.
Half-Breed, the phrase, 201. Hamilton, Alexander, delegate from New York to the Federal conven- tion, 1787, 340. 342; advertisement concerning, 405.
Hammond, William A., Doctor Grattan, a novel, noticed, 214; personal recollections of Brig. Gen. Nathaniel Lyon, 237. Hancock, John, letter to the Board of War, relating to the condition of the Carolina negroes, 92. Hards, the phrase, 201 Harkness, Albert, Athens in the age of Pericles, 308. Harrison, William Henry, nickname of, 396.
Harvey, Arthur, the Discovery of
Lake Superior, a study from the Jesuits' journals, 573.
Harvey, Oscar J., an old Masonic Charter, 254.
Haverstraw, N. Y., Major André's landing place at, 173; map of, 174. Hayden, Horace' Edwin, Gen. Roger Enos, a lost chapter of Ar- nold's Expedition to Canada, 1775: 463.
Hay-Ward, the phrase, 201. Hazard, Ebenezer, Postmaster and Postmaster-General, 106, 113; portrait, 117.
Health at Home, noticed, 512. Hearn, Lafcadio, Dictionary of
Creole Proverbs, noticed, 414. Heath, Maj.-General William, let- ters to Gen. Philips, in regard to movement of troops, 90, 91. Heelers, phrase, 201.. Hempstead, L. I., Richard Denton settles at, 42.
Henry, Patrick, "Junior" added to his name, 598. Herkimer, origin of the name, 300. Hickory, emblematic tree of the Democratic party, nickname of Gen. Jackson, 201.
High Minded Federalists, the phrase, 201.
Historical errors corrected, 589, Historical Study, the sweets of, 196. Hopkinson, Francis, Revolutionary Statesman and Satirist, 601. Houston, William C., delegate from New Jersey to the Federal con- vention, 1787, 338. Houstoun, William. delegate from
Georgia to the Federal conven- tion, 1787, 330.
Hovey, William A., Mind Reading and Beyond. noticed, 416. Hubbard William, and his parish at Ipswich, 602.
Hughes, Rev. John, Archbishop of N. Y., opposed to slavery, 530. Huguenot Society of America, sec- ond anniversary meeting, election of officers, paper on the Huge- nots on the Hackensack, by David D. Demorest, 507. Huguenots, the, settle on the Hack- ensack River, 507; History of Huguenot Emigration to America, noticed, 508.
Hunkers, the phrase, 201. Hurd, Ebenezer, colonial post rider, 118, 206
Hutton, Laurence, Literary Land- marks of London, noticed, 605. Hyde, Thomas A., National Stand- ards, 308.
ILLINOIS Land Company, pur- chase land of the Indians, 361. Independence, the Authentication of the Declaration of, noticed, 508. Indians, attack Saybrook, Conn., 8; hostility of the Long Island, 13, 15; money collected for the, 95; the Dutch peace policy with the, 107; life and work among the Six Nations, 131; fac-simile signatures of the Seneca, to the peace treaty, 1764, 195; the Pocomtuck, 307; the cave myth of the American, 552; massacre by the Creek, 582. Ingersoll, Jared, delegate from Pa. to the Federal convention, 3:4; sketch of, 320.
Ipswich, Mass., William Hubbard and his parish at, 602. Iroquois Indians, the Dutch peace policy with the, 107.
Isle of Wight. former name for Gardiner's Island, 11, 12.
Jay, John, Count de Vergennes, 30; Peace Negotiations of 1782-1783, noticed, 213.
Jeffries, B. Joy First Aerial Voyage across the English Channel, 66. Jeffries, John, journal of the first aerial voyage across the English channel, 66; portrait, 1768, 67; 1785, 69; 1815, 74.
Jefferson, Thomas, as a Naturalist, Frederic N. Luther, 379. Jenifer, Daniel, of St. Thomas, cele- gate from Maryland to the Fed- eral convention, 1787, 340. Jenkins, Howard M., Historical collections of Gwynedd, Pa., no- ticed, 605.
Jesuit Missionaries, at Lake Supe- rior, 573.
Jetons, the colonial, noticed, 509. Jewett, David, sketch of, 255. Johnson, George H. M., Mohawk chief, portrait, 113; his life and work among the Six Nations, Horatio Hale, 131; view of the home of, 133; portrait in citizen's dress, 139.
Johnson, Rev. Jacob, ancestry of,
Kennedy, Archibald, pur- chases Bedlow's Island, N.Y., 502. Kennedy, Jane, epitaph on tomb- stone of, 287.
Kentucky, a Pioneer Common- wealth, noticed, 110. Kicker, the phrase, 202.
Kidd, Captain William, buries treas- ures on Gardiner's Island, 16; appointed to the command of a ship by Earl Bellomont to capture privateers, becomes pirate, 347; arrest of, at Boston, 349; trial and execution. 352. Kilby, Christopher, Colonial post- master of New Haven, 195. King, Horatio, unpublished letter of George Washington Parke Custis, contributed by, 583. King, Rufus, delegate from Mass to the Federal Convention, 1787, 334, 336.
King's County, History of, noticed,
La Vengeance, capture of the French ship, 257.
Lehigh University, Pa., Asa Packer and the, 56.
Leitch, D. Kellogg, political Ameri- canisms, 12.
Lena Delta, in the, noticed, 215. Lenapé, the, and their Legends, no- ticed, 510.
Letters.-Gen. Burgoyne to Gen. Heath, 89; Gen. Gates to Gen. Stark, 90; Gen. Heath to Gen. Philips, 90, 91; Gen. Philips to Gen. Heath, 91; John Hancock to the Board of War, 92; John Adams to Thomas Barclay, 92:
Gen. Ward to Committee on Sup- plies, 93; John Brainard to V. B.
Thomas Clap and James Pierpoint, in regard to con- tribution of money for the In- dians, 96; James Duane to George Clinton, relative to Indian affairs, 177; C. S. Bushnell to the Editor regarding the ship Monitor, 181; J. Ericsson on the origin of the name Monitor, 182; George Clin- ton to James Hamilton, 1750, on the designs of the French, 277; Henry Laurens to James Lowell, introducing a friend, 277; Fisher Ames to William Ely, on agricult- ure, 278; Gen. de Rottenburg to Gen. Dearborn, on army affairs, 1813, 279; Judge Peters to Robert Vaux on the Penn dinner, 1825, 280; Earl Bellomont to Father Rasle in regard to pirates, 350; Theodore W. Dwight to the Edi- tor, on the Fairfax family,397; Col. Roger Enos to to Gen. Wash- ington, on the expedition to Cana- da, 1775, 468; the court-martial of Col. Enos. 472; Herbert B. Adams to E. H. Goss, on the Pilgrims, 481; extracts from the, of Gen. Washington, 487; Robert Morris to his son William, 581 ; James Constable to Gouverneur Morris, 582; Samuel Clement to a gentle- man in N. Y., 582; George Wash- ington Parke Custis to Thomas Carberry, 583; Gen. John A. Dix to Charles A. Mann, 585; Gen. Washington to Gen. Armstrong, 586.
Lewis and Clarke's Expedition, a memento of, 193.
Lewisites, the phrase, 202. Liberal, the political term, 202. Lincoln, Abraham, called the rail-
splitter, 298; Life of, noticed, 310. Lippard, George, author of the spu-
rious sermon on the battle of the Brandywine, 407.
Little Giant, nickname of Stephen A. Douglas, 202.
Little Mac, army nickname of Gen. McClellan, 202.
Little Van, nickname of Martin Van Buren, 295.
Livingston, William, delegate from New Jersey to the Federal con- vention, 1787, 338; the portrait of,
Lobby, the phrase, 202. Loco-Foco, the phrase, 295. Log-Cabin and Hard Cider, the po- litical term, 295.
Log-Rolling, the phrase. 295. London, England, Literary Land- marks of, noticed, 605. Long, Maj. Stephen H., journal of, 406.
Louisiana, the Heart of, Charles Dimitry, 436; swamp scene in, 437-
Louis Philippe, his residence in Philadelphia, 285. Ludlow, James M., Concentric Chart of History, noticed, 415. Luther, Frederic N., Jefferson as a Naturalist, 379.
Lyon, Brig.-Gen., Nathaniel, per- sonal recollections, William A. Hammond, 237; portrait, 238.
MAC ARTHUR, ARTHUR, Education in its Relation to Manual Industry, noticed, 312.
McClellan, Gen., George B., army nickname of, 202.
McClurg, James, delegate from Va. to the Federal convention, 1787,
McCook, Henry C., Tenants of an old Farm, noticed, 311. McHenry, James, delegate from Maryland to the Federal conven- tion, 1787, 340; portrait, 342. Machine, the political phrase, 295. Madison, James, delegate from Va. to the Federal convention, 1787, 321.
Magruder, Allan B., Life of John Marshall, noticed, 508. Mahonist, the phrase, 295. Maine, the Aborigines of, 212; the voice of, in the formation of the Federal Government, 212; origin and growth of the newspaper press in, 212. Maine Historical Society, January meeting, papers on the Aborigines of Maine, and the voyage of Wey- mouth in 1602; by Edward L. El- well, and H. S. Burrage, the voice of Maine as heard in the formation of our Federal Government, the origin and growth of the_news- paper press in Maine, by George F. Emory and Edward H. Elwell,
Marshall, John, life of, noticed, 508. Martin, Alexander, delegate from North Carolina to the Federal convention, 1787, 328. Martin, Luther,delegate from Mary- land to the Federal convention, 1787, 340; portrait, 341. Marvin, Charles. the Russians at the gates of Herat, noticed, 606. Maryland, Archives of, 1666–1676, noticed, 109; delegates from, to the Federal convention, 1787, 340; establishes a colony in Libería, 410. Maryland Historical Society, Dec. meeting, paper on the Order of the Cincinnati, by J. G. Morris, 209; March meeting, paper on an omitted episode in Maryland history, by John H. B. Latrobe, 410; February 24th, meeting, paper on the influence of the Crusades in European history, 412; April 7th, meeting, memoir of Isaac Miles Bull, 506; April 21st, meet- ing, paper on the Founding of the English State, by E. B. Andrews,
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