Corn, Indian, in United States, iii, 64; in Mexico, 492.
Cornell University Library, i, 8, ii, 10. Cornwallis, Marquis, Correspondence, ii, 19, 618; in the Carolinas and Virginia, 606- 608; THE CAPITULATION OF YORK- TOWN, 615-618.
Coronado, expedition, i, 60-64. Corporations, beneficial effects, iv, 660. Correspondence, committees of, attitude toward Tories, ii, 470-472.
Cortez, Hernando, in Mexico, i, 49-53. Corwin, Thomas, AN OPPONENT OF THE WAR, iv, 24-26.
Cosby, William, A GOVERNOR'S PLEA FOR PATRONAGE, ii, 153-154; libelled, 193-194.
Cotton, introduced, iii, 67; gin, 71; method of cultivation, 71-72; in Mexico, 492; reliance of South on, iv, 451; planting after Civil War, 451-452. Cotton, John, Norton's life of, i, 23, 335-339; relations with Antinomians, 385. Councils, records of, as sources, i, 5, ii, 6; Council for Foreign Plantations, i, 184- 186; Maryland, Proceedings, 261; Council for New England, MEETINGS OF A COLO- NIZATION COMPANY, 175-178; REASONS FOR THE SURRENDER OF THE NEW ENGLAND CHARTER, 444-447; His Maj- esty's Council in New Jersey, CON- CERNING THE RIOTS & INSURRECTIONS IN NEW JERSEY, ii, 80-84; business of a council, 175-179; Mayor, Recorder, Al- dermen, and Common Council of Albany, RECORDS OF A CITY GOVERNMENT, 208- 211. See also Government.
Country Porcupine, NORTHERN OPINION OF THE VIRGINIA RESOLUTIONS, iii, 329-331.
County, on the Delaware, ii, 72-74; juries, 188-189; court, 205-208.
County Court of Middlesex, THE PENALTY
FOR NOT GOING TO CHURCH, i, 487-488. Courcel, Alphonse de, BERING SEA ARBI- TRATION, iv, 564-567. Courts, colonial, records of, i, 5, ii, 6; judg ments valid in other colonies, Court of Perquimans, RECOR PRECINCT COURT, ii, 191-192;
tion, 192-199; appointment of ju
defects, 203-204: need of court of appeal and equity, 204; business of a county court, 205-208; admiralty, 396-397.- See also Government, Juries, Missouri, Su- preme Court, Trials.
Coxe, Tench, INDUSTRIES OF THE UNITED STATES, iii, 62-66; View, 66. Cradock, Matthew, house, i, 2; governor of Massachusetts, 178.
Cranston, Samuel, AN EXPLANATION BY RHODE ISLAND, ii, 49-52.
Crawford, Samuel Wylie, CRISIS IN SOUTH CAROLINA, iv, 182-186; Genesis of the Civil War, 186.
Credit, public, iii, 255-257.- See also Finances, Money.
Creditors, American and British, ii, 624. Crèvecœur, Hector St. John, Letters, iii, 11, 22; ARCADIA IN NANTUCKET, 18-22. Crittenden, John Jordan, EXPLANATION OF THE CRITTENDEN COMPROMISE, iv, 209-210.
Cuba, negotiations concerning, iii, 502-506; a southern notice of, 507-508; concern of United States in insurrection in, iv, 557- 561; intervention threatened, 560; reasons for war, 573-575; condition in 1898, 576; message on, 576; independence recognized, 577; control of, disavowed, 577; Santiago campaign, 586-588; Spanish sovereignty relinquished, 589; American government in, 601-603. - See also Spain.
Cumberland (ship), destroyed by the Merri- mac, iv, 329-333.
Currency, continental, ii, 601-603; power over, iii, 178; Hamilton on, 276-281; State, 441-445: Sherman on proper use of, iv, 532; Sherman Act, 533-536; re- demption of, 540.-See also Finances, Money.
Curtis, B. R., Decisions in the Supreme Court, iii, 9, 450, iv, 8.
Curtis, G. T., History of the Constitution, ii,
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Cushing, Caleb, COMMERCIAL EFFECTS OF THE WAR [of 1812], iii, 430-433; His- tory of Newburyport, 433. Cutler, Manasseh, Life, etc., iii, 109. Cutts, J. M., Brief Treatise, iv, 100.
ALE, SIR THOMAS, in Virginia, i, 216.
Dana, Charles Anderson, IN THE WIL- DERNESS, iv, 412-415; Recollections of the Civil War, 415.
Dana, Richard Henry, ON THE COAST OF CALIFORNIA, iv, 11-15; Two Years before the Mast, 15; ATTACK ON A UNITED STATES COURT-HOUSE, 87-91. Dancing, sermon on, iii, 510-511. Dane, Nathan, THE NORTHWEST ORDI- NANCE, iii, 154-158.
Danforth, Thomas, THE REVOLUTION AGAINST ANDROS, i, 463-466. Dankers, Jaspar, A GODLESS EMIGRANT SHIP, i, 197-199; Journal, 199, 501, 590; TWO DUTCHMEN IN BOSTON, 496-501; CONDITION OF NEW YORK IN 1679, 586-590.
Danvers, General Gage's house at, ii, 2. Dartmouth, Earl of, A REPRIMAND TO A COLONIAL GOVERNOR, ii, 169–170. Dates, use of, i, 17, ii, 24.
Davenport, John, A DEFENCE OF THEOC- RACY, 1, 330-333; Discourse about Civil Government, 333; founder of New Haven,
Davis, Charles Augustus, JACKSON'S POLITICAL SPECTACLES, iii, 540-544; Letters of Major Jack Downing, 544. Davis, Jefferson, PRINCIPLES OF THE CONFEDERACY, iv, 189-192; satire on, 229-230; criticism of, 255; SUPPLIES FOR THE CONFEDERACY, 319-323: Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government, 323. Davis, John C. B., United States Reports, iii, 9, iv, 8.
Davis, Reuben, Recollections of Mississippi, iv, 9, 182, 243; SECESSION SPIRIT IN MISSISSIPPI, 180-182; IN THE CONFED- ERATE CONGRESS, 240-243.
y, William Rufus, ULTIMATUM IN THE EGOTIATION OF PEACE, iv, 588-590. e, Charles, Documentary History of e, i, 160, 430.
DeBow, J. D. B., Marquette and Joliet's Voyage to the Mississippi, i, 140.
Debt, national, state of, ii, 598-600; Jefferson on, iii, 286; Anti-Federalists on, 293.- See also Finances.
Declaration of Independence, facsimile, ii, II; debates on, 537-539.
Dedham Historical Register, ii, 272, iii, 339- De Kalb, Baron, in America, ii, 585. Delano, Alonzo, A FORTY-NINER, iv, 43- 48; Life on the Plains, 48.
Delaware, De Vries in, i, 521; Swedish set- tlements, 548-551; New Haven settle- ments, 551-553: Penn's settlement, 554- 557: Jersey boundary, 570; separation from Pennsylvania, ii, 72-74. Delaware River, navigable, i, 555, 560. Democracy, spirit of, iii, 86-89. Democratic party, principles of, iii, 73-75. 344-347; slavery necessary to, iv, 143; split in 1860, 151-155; satire on, 224-227; a peace Democrat's views, 402-405; con- trol in the South, 501-504; Blaine on, 508- 511; effect of success in 1884, 511-512.- See also Politics, Republican Party. De Monts, Pierre, in America, i, 118-121. Department of State, Correspondence con- cerning American Commercial Rights in China, iv, 618.
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De Soto, Fernando, expedition, i, 57-59. Destiny, manifest. See Manifest Destiny. De Vries, D. P., voyage to America, i, 18; A DUTCH TRADER, 520-525; Voyages from Holland to America, 525.
Dew, Thomas R., THE PRO-SLAVERY ARGUMENT, iii, 597-602; Review of the Virginia Debate of 1831, 602.
Dewey, George, BATTLE OF MANILA BAY, iv, 579-581.
Diaries as sources, i, 2, ii, 2, 7-8; lists, ii, 18, iii, 10, iv, 8.
Dibdin, Charles, Collection of Songs, iii, 328. Dickens, Charles, American Notes, iii, 11,
571; DELIGHTS OF TRAVEL, 567–571. Dickinson, Anna Elizabeth, THE DRAFT RIOT, iv, 376-381; What Answer? 381. Dickinson, John, Farmer's Letters, ii, 2, 426; Writings, 21; THE PENNSYLVANIA FARMER'S REMEDY, 423-426; letter to Congress, iii, 198; character, 208; in Federal Convention, 212, 219.
Dinwiddie, Robert, CHARGE TO A GRAND JURY, ii, 189-191; Official Records, 191. Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States, ii, 8, 172.
Directory, French, iii, 322-326.
Disallowance, of a paper-money bill, ii, 183-
184; of a slave act, 297-298. Discoverers, value of narratives, i, 5, 19; accounts of, 28-144-
Dissenters, in New England, ii, 52-53.— See also Religion.
Disunion, Jefferson on, iii, 288; Calhoun on, 438, iv, 48-51; Weed on, iv, 194. See also Secession.
Dix, John Adams, Speeches and Occasional Addresses, iv, 10; IF ANY ONE ATTEMPTS TO HAUL DOWN THE AMERICAN FLAG, 204.
Dix, Morgan, Memoirs of John Adams Dix, iv, 204.
Documents, collections of, i, 9, ii, 11-13, iii, 7-9, iv, 6-7; Documents relative to New York, i, 10, 14, 15, 186, 520, 541, 549, 551, ii, 13, 17, 21, 79, 131, 154, 162, 164, 170, 184, 247, 250, 253, 290, 334, 339, 356, 357, 367, 387, 412; Documentary History of Maine, 1, 160, 430; Documentary History of New York, 544; Documents relating to New Jersey, 566, 569, ii, 13, 21, 84, 161, 166, 179, 181, 254, 289, 298, 302, 351. See also Sources. Doddridge, Joseph, shows hardship of fron- tier life, ii, 25; THE SETTLEMENT OF THE WESTERN COUNTRY, 387-391; Notes on the Settlement of the Western Parts of Virginia & Pennsylvania, 391. Domestic life, among the Indians, ii, 327- 330; in the Ohio River settlements, 387- 391; on the frontiers, 392-393. - See also Colonies.
Donck, Junker Adriaen van der, and ten others, OF THE REASONS AND CAUSES WHY AND HOW NEW NETHERLAND IS SO DECAYED, i, 532–537.
Donelson, Fort, capture of, iv, 324-328. Dongan, Thomas, CONDITION OF NEW YORK IN 1687, i, 542-544. Donne, W. Bodham, Correspondence of George the Third, ii, 453, 620. Dormer, Sir C. C., and John Adams, iii, 172.
Dorset, Duke of, WHY ENGLAND WOULD NOT TREAT, iii, 171–172. Doughtie, Thomas, executed by Drake, i, 82. Douglas, Stephen Arnold, Defence of THE KANSAS-NEBRASKA BILL, iv, 97- 100; Lincoln on, 137-138; support in convention of 1860, 153-154. Douglass, Frederick, LIFE WITH A SLAVE- BREAKER, iii, 579-583; Life, 583. Douglass, William, Summary of the First Planting of the British Settlements, ii, 21, 143; views tinged and descriptions poor, 31; VARIOUS KINDS OF COLONIAL GOV- ERNMENT, 141-143.
Doyle, J. A., English in America, i, 16, 21, 27. Draft riot, in New York, iv, 376-381. Drake, Sir Francis, voyage round the world, 1, 81-88; PIETY OF A SEA Rover, 88; at the Huguenot colony, 115; dis- covery of New Albion, 314.
Drake, Samuel G., The Old Indian Chron- icle, i, 461.
Drayton, William Henry, prejudiced, ii, 31; THE TYRANNY OF KINg George THIRD, 449-451.
Dred Scott case, papers in, iv, 122-124; statement of case, 122; Supreme Court decision, 126-131; Benton on, 132-135; Lincoln on, 136-138.
Drowne, Solomon, LIFE ON A PRIVATEER, ii, 497-499; Journal, 499.
Duane, James, THE STATE OF THE NATIONAL DEBT, ii, 598-600.
Dummer, Jeremiah, DEFENCE OF THE NEW-ENGLAND CHARTERS, ii, 4, 133-
Dunmore, Earl of, narratives colored by rumors, ii, 31; COLD WATER ON AN OHIO COLONY, 386-387; ENFORCE- MENT OF THE ASSOCIATION, 439-441. Dunne, Finley Peter, THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE, iv, 639-641; Mr. Dooley's Phi- losophy, 641.
Dunning, W. A., Essays on the Civil War and Reconstruction, iv, 2.
Dunster, Henry, knowledge of Indian tongue, i, 320; president of Harvard, 468. Dutch, and New Englanders, i, 25; English statement of claims, 164-166; workmen sent to Virginia, 171; opinion of New England, 334-335; Plymouth opinion of,
355; on the Connecticut, 410-412; rela- tions with Pequot War, 444; complaints against, 449 visitors to Boston, 496; trading company, 517-520; trader, 520- 525; colony of New Netherland, 529- 541; relations with Swedish colonies, 549-551, 554; settlements in Jersey, 569, 573; Michaelius's experience, 576-579; New England opinion of, 579–585; on the Delaware, 580-581; schoolmasters' duties, 585-586; under English domination, 586- 590.- See also Holland, New Netherland, New York.
Dutch West India Company, i, 165. Duties, plea for protective, ii, 247-248; in United States, iii, 62; in Mexico, 492.- See also Finances, Politics, Tariff.
Du Vall, Gabriel, PROCEEDINGS OF A REVOLUTIONARY CONVENTION, ii, 519-
Duvall, J. P., colonel in Texan army, iii, 638. Duyckinck, E. A., and Long, George, Cyclo- pædia of American Literature, ii, 12. Dwight, Mrs. E. A. W., Life and Letters of Wilder Dwight, iv, 265.
Dwight, Theodore, Journal of Madam Knight, ii, 229.
Dwight, Timothy, COLUMBIA, COLUMBIA,
TO GLORY ARISE, ii, 465-467; Travels, iii, 11, 518; GOOD ADVICE IN BAD VERSE, 200-203; FASHIONABLE EDU- CATION, 514-518.
Dwight, Wilder, THE ROUGH SIDE OF CAMPAIGNING, iv, 263-265. Dyer, Mary, value of her record, i, 3; THE JUSTIFICATION OF A CONDEMNED QUAKERESS, 479-481.
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Eddis, William, THE WRETCHEDNESS OF WHITE SERVANTS, ii, 308-310; Letters from America, 310.
Eden, Richard, crabbed English, i, 20; translator of papal bull, 20. Edenton, Bond house at, ii, 4. Edinburgh Review, iii, 514.
Education, value of sources to, i, 2, ii, 3. iii, 1, iv, 1; at William and Mary College, 310-312; at Harvard College, 467-472; schools, 493-494; in New Netherland, 536; value of, iii, 96; fash- ionable, 514-518; of free negroes, 585-587: universal, iv, 658.- See also Colleges,
Edwards, Pierrepont, ADVICE ON REMOV- ALS, iii, 349-351.
Eggleston, Edward, History for Schools, i, 26, ii, 33; Beginners of a Nation, i, 26. Eggleston, George Cary, WHEN MONEY WAS EASY, iv, 247-251; A Rebel's Recol- lections, 251.
El Dorado, Ralegh's search for, i, 96. Election, in Massachusetts, i, 373-382; a
colonial, ii, 171-172; of a selectman, 220- 222; of 1796, iii, 300-301; of 1800-1801, 333-336; of 1860, iv, 157-163, result no excuse for secession, 163, 164-166, violent campaign, 180; of 1874 in Alabama, 501- 504; of 1876-1877, 504-507; of 1884, 511- 512. -See also Government, Politics. Elgin, Lord James Bruce, negotiates reci- procity treaty, iv, 542.
Eliot, Charles William, WHY THE RE- PUBLIC MAY ENDURE, iv, 658-663; American Contributions to Civilization, 663.
Eliot, John, A SHEAF OF SACRED SONG, i, 472-476; Dutch visitors to, 497; Indian Bible, 498.
Elizabeth, Ralegh's compliments to, i, 96-
Elliot, Jonathan, Debates on the Federal Constitution, iii, 8, 130, 213, 221, 228, 232, 246, 249, 254.
Elliott, Charles Burke, NORTHEASTERN FISHERY QUESTION, iv, 542-546; United States and the Northeastern Fisheries, 546.
Ellsworth, Miss, and S. F. B. Morse, iii, 572. Ellsworth, Oliver, character, ii, 206; in
Federal Convention, 217; in Congress, 258.
Elvas, Gentleman of, FROM THE OCEAN TO THE MISSISSIPPI, i, 57-59. Emancipation, Jefferson on, iii, 18; in Vir- ginia Constitutional Convention, 574-579; sentiment in favor of, iv, 233; slaves as contraband of war, 390-391; Garrison on, 396-397; Greeley on demand for, 397- 398; Lincoln on, 399-401; cabinet dis- cussion, 401-402; Vallandigham on, 402- 405.- -See also Abolitionists, Freedmen, Reconstruction, Slavery. Emancipator, iii, 612.
Embargo, argument for, iii, 403-406; Story on repeal of, 407–409.
Emigration, accounts of, i, 7; incitements
to, 25; forbidden, 175, 183; licenses, 183; Higginson's voyage, 190-195; reasons for leaving England, 195; Dankers and Sluy- ter's voyage, 197-199; instructions to colonists, 247-252; John Cotton on, 337; Johnson's reasons, 366-368; to Rhode Island, 408; to the Connecticut, 410; to New York, 543. 576; of Palatines, ii, 77-79; of Salzburgers, 114-116; from east to west, iii, 153; French, 304; to Kansas, iv, 104–114. Endicott, John, comes over, i, 369; AN EXCULPATORY ADDRESS ΤΟ KING CHARLES II, 454-457. England, archives, i, 9, ii, 10; raciness of sources, i, 20; method of teaching history, 21, ii, 27; captives in Mexico, i, 65-68; dis- coveries, 70-144; first slave-trader, 73; con- ditions in 1586, 145; title to America, 153; claims to North America, 164-167; Pil- grim exodus, 167-170; commissioners to Rhode Island, 405; in New Netherland, 523; capture of New Netherland, 537-541; dislikes arbitrary government, ii, 131-132; fears Mississippi settlements, 316-320; French and fur trade, 320-324; massacre at Schenectady, 323, 337-339; conflicts with the Spanish, 340-344; expedition against Louisburg, 346-349; Spanish pri- vateers, 349-351; claims to the Ohio River, 354-356; to resist the French, 356-357; removes Acadians, 360-365; defeat of Braddock, 365-367; fears French influ- ence on the continent, 367-369; capture
of Quebec, 369-372; question of Ohio settlement, 386-387; protest against taxa- tion in America, 404-407; army, 500-518; jealous of German troops, 506-507; mili- tary prisons, 508-511; breach with the colonies, 519-539; campaigns, 546-590, 606-618; surrender at Vincennes, 579- 582; conciliation, 586-587; peace, 623- 625; restrictions on American commerce, iii, 167-170; refusal to negotiate, 171; disposition toward the United States, 175; and Anti-Federalists, 291, 297: Jay Treaty, 315-319; Jefferson on alliance, 364; Orders in Council, 400-402; Calhoun on policy toward slavery, 649-652; views on Civil War, iv, 296-298; Trent affair, 298- 301; fishery question, 542-546; desire for Alaska, 549; Geneva award, 550-556; Bering Sea arbitration, 564-567; Monroe Doctrine and Venezuelan boundary dis- pute, 567-572; as an ally, 615; as an American power, 626.- See also Army (English), Colonies, Revolution, United States, and Tables of Contents. Enlistments, in Revolution, ii, 457, 481-483. 586; in Civil War, iv, 256-259. - See also Army.
Episcopacy, fear of, in the colonies, ii, 418- 420. See also Bishops. Epuremei (Guiana), gold of, i, 100-101. Eric the Red, i, 28.
Ericsson, Leif, i, 29-30.
Erlendsson, Hauk, NORSE DISCOVERIES OF GREENLAND AND WINELAND THE GOOD, i, 28-34.
Escaped Slaves, GRATITUDE OF UNDER- GROUND RAILROAD PASSENGERS, iv, 91-93.
Evangelist, in Georgia, ii, 283-287. - See also Religion.
Evarts, William Maxwell, ISSUE IN THE IMPEACHMENT OF THE PRESIDENT, iv, 489-492.
Everett, Alexander Hill, DESIGNS ON CUBA, iii, 502–506.
Everett, Edward, STAND FOR THE UNION, iv, 237-239; Orations and Speeches, 239. Examinations, college, skit on, ii, 272-275. Excise law, Jefferson on, iii, 286. - See also
Taxation. Executive, power of, iii, 548-553; Lincoln
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