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Aires. Segunda parte.

2 v. in one. 1905, 1906. Buenos Aires, Imp. de la Bibl. nac. (3), 97 p. [79 Condensed report of the Public records commission of Maryland for the years 1904-05. 15 p. n. p., 1906?

[80 Condensed account of 2000-page report on mss. in state and county archives.

Biennial report of Commission of the Land office, Md., 1905.

Conger, John L. Report on the public archives of Michigan. AM. HIST. ASSOC. REP., 1905, I, 369–376.

[81

Connor, R. D. W. A state [North Carolina] library building and department of archives and records. Raleigh. 20 p. (Reprint from N. C. booklet.)

[82 Points out the bad state of archives and the necessity of adequately caring for them. Contributions from the Library of the U. S. military academy. [Copies of military manuscripts.] ARMY AND NAVY LIFE, VIII (June) 37-40; IX (July) 45-48, (Aug.) 45-49, (Sept.-Dec.) 263-268, 377384, 476-479, 632-635. [83

Contents: Memorial of officers of the Army, 1784; Letter respecting the brevet commission of General Grant, 1851; Unpublished letter of General R. E. Lee, 1861; Unpublished letter from General William T. Sherman to Governor Thomas A. Moore, 1861; Early history of West Point-Moore's house, 1779; General Green's orders: Arnold's treason-André's execution, 1780; Form of discharge of Revolutionary soldiers, 1783; Letter from Captain William Eaton, consul at Tunis, 1799; The Association of Graduates, U. S. M. A.-Letter of Colonel [S.] Thayer, 1869; Letter from_ Gen. Winfield Scott to Gen. J. G. Swift, 1814; Letter of Gen. Henry Knox, 1790; Retirement_of President Washington, 1797-letter of Lt. Col. Stephen Rochefontaine; Letter from Thomas Jefferson, 1808; Letter from John Quincy Adams, 1819; Letter of Andrew Jackson, 1819; Letter of Martin Van Buren, 1825; Letter from James Monroe, 1829; Historical note referring to the U. S. M. A. and the Army, 1837; Letter from Professor D. H. Mahan, U. S. M. A. to Hon. Gouverneur Kemble, 1864; Letter from General Sherman to General Grant, 1865; Letter of General James Wilkinson, 1785; Memorandum of general orders etc. now in the Library; Rough list of Americana; Letter from General Morgan Lewis to Hon. Gouverneur Kemble, 1837; Letter from General William T. Sherman to Governor Moore, 1861; Cost of uniforms, 1835; Letter of General Israel Putnam, 1778; Extracts from a MS. orderly book kept at West Point, N. Y., July and August, 1779; Notes on Lieut. Col. Hitchcock's application made to the Secretary of War for withdrawing the_3d Infantry from Florida and sending it to Jefferson Barracks, 1842; Letter from Gen. Nathaniel Greene to his wife, 1780; The form of dress parades first established by orders at West Point, 1799.

[84

Fish, Carl Russell. Report on the public archives of Wisconsin. AM. HIST. ASSOC. REP., 1905, I, 377-419. Foster, William. The English factories in India, 1618-1621. A calendar of documents in the India office, British Museum, and Public record office. Oxford, Clarendon press. xlvii, 379.

[85

"The student of American exploration and history will find much to interest him where perhaps he scarce may expect it. Here he can

find further light on the character of Sir Thomas Dale, trace the later voyages of Martin Pring or learn the work of William Baffin in the tropics. Here he can investigate the pioneer missionary work of the Rev. Patrick Copland who was also to collect money in the East for a free school in Virginia, or get indication of the origin of the quarrel between St. Thomas Smyth and Lord Robert Rich, which was later to lead to the election of Sir Edwin Sandys as treasurer of the Virginia Company."

Rev. in: Am. hist. rev., XII (July, 1907) 879-881.

[Great Britain] historical manuscripts commission. Report on American manuscripts in the Royal Institution of Great Britain. Vol. II. Dublin, Printed by John Falconer, 53 Upper Sackville Street. vi, 604, x p.

[86

August, 1779 to June, 1782. Rev. in: Am. hist rev., XII (Jan. 1907) 428-429. Humbert, Jules. Les documents des archives du Guipuzcoa relatifs à la colonisation espagnole en Amerique. BULL. DE GÉOG. HIST. ET DESCRIP., XXI, no. 3, 383-387.

[87

Brief description of the character of the documents relating to the Basque emigration to America, contained in the archives at Tolosa, Saint-Sébastien, Pasages.

Lewis, Virgil A. First biennial report of the Department of archives and history of the state of West Virginia. Charleston, W. Va., Tribune print. co. 271 p. [88

Includes a brief historical sketch of the historical societies of the state, and of the Department of archives; a list of the printed archives of the state, p. 36-58; a list of the newspapers, p. 58-61; a catalogue of the flags of West Virginia; a select list of documents relating to West Virginia, p. 92-143; ten sketches relating to the history of the region before the War of the Revolution; etc. MacDonald, William. The Jackson and Van Buren papers. [In the Library of Congress.] AM. ANTIQ. SOC. PROC., n. s. XVII (Oct. 21, 1905) 231-238. McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham. Report on the diplomatic archives of the Department of state, 1789-1840. Revised ed. Washington, Carnegie institution of Washington. 73 p. (Papers of Bureau

[89

of historical research, Carnegie institution of Washington [no. 3].) [90-99 Richardson, Hester Dorsey. Report of the public records commission of Maryland. AM. HIST. ASSOC. REP., 1905, I, 367–368.

[100

Some unpublished Revolutionary manuscripts. [From the originals in the collection of William Nelson.] N. Y. HIST. SOC. PROC., 3rd ser. III (Apr.-July) 118123, 180-184.

[101 South Carolina. Historical commission. Report to the General Assembly of South

Carolina at the regular session of 1906. [Columbia], Gonzales and Bryan.

21 P.

[102

Pp. 13-19 contain a brief account of the archives. State historical society of Wisconsin. Descriptive list of manuscript collections of the society, together with reports on other collections of manuscript material for American history in adjacent states. Edited by Reuben Gold Thwaites. Madison, Pub. by the soc. viii, 197 p. port., maps, facsims. [103 Swan, Robert T. [Commissioner.] Eighteenth report of the custody and condition of the public records of parishes, towns, and counties. [Massachusetts] public document No. 52. Boston, Wright & Potter print. co., State printers. 36 p. [104

Torres Lanzas, Pedro. Relación descriptiva de los mapas, planos, etc., del virreinato del Perú (Perú y Chile) existentes en el Archivo general de Indias (Sevilla). Barcelona. [105

Torres Lanzas, Pedro. Relación descriptiva de los mapas, planos, etc., de las antiguas audiencias de Panama, Santa Fe y Quito, existentes en el Archivo general de Indias. Madrid, Tip. de la Revista de Archivos. 185 p.

[106 U. S. Library of Congress. Division of manuscripts. Calendar of the correspondence of George Washington, commander in chief of the Continental army, with the Continental congress. Prepared from the original manuscripts in the Library of Congress by John C. Fitzpatrick. Washington, Gov. print. off. 741 p. front., facsims. [107 Rev. in: Am. hist. rev., XII (July 1907) 930931.

U. S. Library of Congress. Report of the Librarian of Congress, 1906. Washington, Gov. print. off. 175 p. [108

Important accessions of mss., p. 20-38-Van Buren papers; James Brown papers; Savannah custom-house records [1861-1864]; Lyman Trumbull papers; Thomas Corwin papers, 18501853; mss. from the State Dept.; Stevens catalogue index of mss. in the archives of England, France, Holland and Spain relating to America, 1763-1783. Itemized list, p. 127

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Historiography, Methodology,

Study and Teaching.

American historical association. Provisional report on a course of study in history. Committee of eight. J. A. James, H. E. Bourne, E. C. Brooks, Wilbur F. Gordy, Mabel Hill, Julius Sachs, H. W. Thurston, J. H. Van Sickle. [n. p., 1906?]. [110

39 p. American peace society. The teaching of history in the public schools, with reference to war and peace. Report of a committee of three. Boston, American peace society. 27 p. [111

Signed Homer B. Sprague and others. Brown, William Garrott. The persistence of personal force in American history. INDEP., LX (May 10) 1081-1085. [112 Croll, P. C. Prof. Israel Daniel Rupp. [1803-1878.] PA.-GERMAN, VII (Jan.) [113

3-7. Foster, William E. The point of view in history. AM. ANTIQ. SOC. PROC., n. s. XVII (Apr. 25, 1906) 349-420. [114

Garner, James W. Relations of political science. AM. JOUR. SOCIOL., XII (Nov.) 341-366. [115

Chapter III, p. 348-351, treats of the relation of political science to history. Haskell, H. J. The bread-and-butter theory of history. OUTLOOK, LXXXIV (Oct. [116 20) 422-426.

The economic interpretation of history. Haskins, Charles H. Report of the conference on the first year of college work in history. AM. HIST. ASSOC. REP., 1905, I, 147-174. [117

Preceptorial system at Princeton. International congress of arts and science, St. Louis, 1904. Congress of arts and science, Universal expos. St. Louis, 1904; ed. by Howard J. Rogers. Boston and N. Y., Houghton, 1905-07. Vols. IIVII-1906. [118

Contains bibliographies.

Vol. II contains: The relation of American history to other fields of historical study, by Edward Gaylord Bourne, p. 172-182; Problems in American history, by Frederick Jackson Turner, p. 183-194.

Rev. in: Am. pol. sci. rev., I, no. 2 (Feb. 1907) 302-306.

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Contains an address before the Buffalo historical society in May 1906, on School-reading versus school-teaching of history, 161-187 p. McCarthy, Charles H. The presentation of American history. CATH. UNIV. BUL., XII (Jan.) 38-42. [122 Müller, Wilhelm. Auf den Pfaden deutschamerikanischer Geschichtsforscher. DEUTSCH-AM. GESCHICHTSBLÄTTER, VI (Jan.) 2-3.

[123 Schaper, W. A. What do students know about American government before taking college courses in political science? AM. POL. SCI. ASSOC. PROC., II, 207-228. [124 Schuller, Rodolfo R. Novus orbis. ¿ De A. Montanus o de O. Dapper? Santiago de Chile, Impr. Cervantes, 1906? 18 p. pl. [125

An attempt to show that the compilation entitled "De Nieuwe en onbekende weereld: of Beschryving van America beschreeven door Arnoldus Montanus," Amsterdam, 1671, should be credited to Dr. Ölfert Dapper, who published at Amsterdam in 1673 a German translation of the work mentioned, under title: "Die unbekante Neue welt, oder Beschreibung des welt-teils Amerika. Durch Dr. O. D." Sloane, William Milligan. Proportions and values in American history; an address delivered before the N. Y. historical society on its one hundred and second anniversary, Tuesday, November 20, 1906. N. Y., Printed for the soc. 35 p. [126 Proceedings of the society": p. [29]-35. Smith, Theodore Clark. The scientific historian and our colonial period. ATLANTIC, XCVIII (Nov.) 702-711. [127 Thayer, William R. Holidays and history. ATLANTIC, XCVII (May) 666-670. [128 Thayer, William R. The outlook in history. MASS. HIST. SOC. PROC., ser. 2, XIX (May) 279–287. [129 Trent, William Peterfield. The relations of history and literature. VA. MAG. HIST., XIII (Apr.) 451-472.

66

[130

AMERICA IN GENERAL. Aboriginal America-Antiquities.

Barnard, W. C. Another ancient flint quarry near Seneca, Missouri. RECORDS OF PAST, V (Mar.) 89-90. [131 Brower, Charles De Wolfe. The shell heaps of Florida. RECORDS OF PAST, V (Nov.) 331-338. [132 Bushnell, David I., jr. North American ethnographical material in Italian collections. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Apr.June) 243-255. Bushnell, David I., jr. The Sloan collection in the British Museum. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Oct.-Dec.) 671-685. [134

[133

Description of the specimens from the American colonies.

[Davis, Chas. H. S.]

Sculptured pipes.

[135

[Aboriginal.] AM. ANTIQ., XXVIII (Mar. and Apr.) 113-128. Fewkes, J. Walter. Hopi ceremonial frames from Cañon de Chelly, Arizona. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Oct.-Dec.) 664670. [136 Fewkes, J. Walter. Hopi shrines near the East mesa, Arizona. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Apr.-June) 346-375.

[137 Fewkes, J. Walter. The sun's influence on the form of Hopi pueblos. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Jan.-Mar.) 88-100. [138 Gates. Horatio. Green Lake (Minn.) and its mounds. RECORDS OF PAST, V (Sept.) 271-281. [139

Harris, Hugh H. Pajarito ruins-their accessibility. RECORDS OF PAST, V (Oct.) 291-295.

[140

Herrmann, Richard. Mound builders of the Mississippi Valley. RECORDS OF PAST, V (Aug., Nov.) 236-239, 365-367. [141 Hewett, Edgar Lee. Antiquities of the Jemez Plateau, New Mexico. Washington, Gov. print. off. 55 p., illus., plans, pls., fold. map. (Smithsonian institution. Bureau of American ethnology. Bulletin 32.) [142 Hewett, Edgar Lee. Preservation of American antiquities; Progress during the last year; Needed legislation. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII, 109-114.

[143

Holmes, W. H. Certain notched or scalloped stone tablets of the mound-builders. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Jan.Mar.) 101-108. [144 Holmes, W. H. Contributions of American archeology to human history. INTERNAT. AMER.-KONG., XIV, STUTTGART 1904, 345-354. [145 Hough, Walter. Sacred springs in the southwest. RECORDS OF PAST, V (June) 163-169. McGee, W J. Prehistoric North America, by WJ McGee and Cyrus Thomas. Phila., Barrie and sons. xxviii, 485 P. plates, map, plans. (The history of North America, [ed. byl Francis Newton Thorpe [v. 19].) [147 Mills, William C. Baum prehistoric village. O. ARCHAEOL. AND HIST. SOC. PUB., XV (Jan.) 45-136. [148

[146

The site of the village is in Twin township, Ross county, Ohio.

Mills, William C. Prehistoric village site, Ross county, Ohio. RECORDS OF PAST, V (Oct.-Nov.) 303-313, 342-352. [149

Baum prehistoric village site.

[152

Montgomery, Henry. Remains of prehistoric man in the Dakotas. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Oct.-Dec.) 640-651. [150 Moorehead, Warren King. A narrative of explorations in New Mexico, Arizona, Indiana, etc. Together with a brief history of the department. Andover, Mass., Andover press. 179, (19) p. illus., plates, fold. plan. (Phillips academy, Andover, Massachusetts. Department of archaeology. Bulletin III.) [151 Nielsen, Yngvar. Die ältesten Verbindungen zwischen Norwegen und Amerika. INTERNAT. AMER-KONG., XIV, STUTTGART 1904, 91-99. Peabody, Charles, and W. K. Moorehead. The so-called "gorgets." Andover, Mass., Andover press. 100 p., plates. (Phillips academy, A..dover, Mass. Department of archaeology. Bulletin II.) [153 Peet, Stephen D. [American aboriginal] Pottery in its distribution and variety. AM. ANTIQ., XXVIII (Sept.-Oct.) 277292. [154 Peet, Stephen D. The copper age in America. AM. ANTIQ., XXVÏÏI, 149-164. [155 Peet, Stephen D. Copper relics among the Mounds. AM. ANTIQ., XXVIII, 213-228. [156

Use of copper among the Mound Builders. Peet, Stephen D. The distribution of precious metals. AM. ANTIQ., XXVIII (Nov. and Dec.) 339-354. [157

Use of metal in America at the time of the discovery.

Peterson, Cyrus A., and Clark McAdams. The Cahokia mounds, Madison and St. Clair cos., Ill. St. Louis, Mo., April, 1906. Broadside, 19 x 24 in. [158

A plan of the celebrated group of 69 mounds with illustrations and brief description. Prudden, Theophil Mitchell. On the great American plateau; wanderings among canyons and buttes, in the land of the cliff-dweller, and the Indian of to-day. Illustrated with photographs, and with original drawings by Edward Leaming. N. Y. and London, Putnam. viii, (2), 243 p. illus., pl., fold. map.

[159

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Reeder, John T. Evidences of prehistoric man on Lake Superior. MICH. HIST. SOC. COLL., XXX, 110-118. [163 Reynolds, John Hugh. Aboriginal and Indian remains. [In Arkansas.] ARK. HIST. ASSOC. PUB., I, 274-277. [164 Ridgeway, William. Note on the motives carved on some Haida totem spoons and pipes. MAN, VI (Oct.) 145-148. [165 Robinson, Charles H. Did primitive man of Iowa have manufacturing plants? AM. IOWA, 3d ser., VII (Oct.) 538-542. [166 The serpent mound, Adams county, Ohio. RECORDS OF PAST, V (Apr.) 119-128. [167 Smith, Harlan I. The data of the archaeology of the Dakotas. No. DAK. HIST. SOC. COLL., I, 74-88.

[168 Smith, Harlan I. Noteworthy archaeological specimens from lower Columbia Valley. AM. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Apr.June) 298-307. [169 Smith, Harlan I. Recent archaeological discoveries in Northwestern America. AM. GEOG. SOC. BUL., XXXVIII (May) 287295. [170 Stoddard, H. L. Intercommunication and transmission of symbols between Asia and America. ARK. HIST. ASSOC. PUB., I, 455[171

465. Upham, Warren. The origin and antiquity of man. RECORDS OF PAST, V (May) 137[172

141.

[173

With special reference to the progenitors of the American race. Wardle, H. Newell. The treasures of prehistoric Moundville [Alabama]. HARPER'S, CXII (Jan.) 200-210. Wilson, John Howard. The glacial history of Nantucket and Cape Cod; with an argument for a fourth centre of glacial dispersion in North America. N. Y., Columbia univ., Macmillan, agents; [etc., etc.]. x, 90 p. illus., xxxviii pl., maps. (Columbia univ. geological series. I.)

[174 Wintemberg, W. J. Bone and horn harpoon heads of the Ontario Indians. ANN. ARCHÆOL, REP., 1905, 33-56. [175 Wolkenhauer, August. War die magnetische Deklination vor Kolumbus erster Reise nach Amerika tatsächlich unbekannt? INTERNAT. AMER.-KONG., XIV, STUTTGART 1904, 11-29. [176

Aboriginal America-Indians

(See also Antiquities).

Aldrich, Charles. Recollections of the Senecas. ANN. IOWA, 3d ser., VII (Apr.) 380-384. [177

Bagley, Clarence B. Our first Indian war. [In the Northwest.] WASH. HIST. QUAR., Ì (Oct.) 34-49.

[178

The Cayuse war begun in 1847. Barrett, S. A. A composite myth of the Pomo Indians. JOUR. AM. FOLK-LORE, XIX (Jan.) 37-51. [179 "Shows some of the characteristics of Pomo mythology."

Belt, Robert V. The Sac and Fox Indians of the Mississippi, in Iowa, claimants, vs. the Sac and Fox Indians of the Mississippi, in Oklahoma, and the United States, defendants. For the adjustment of claims arising from unequal apportionment of the annuities of the confederated tribes of Sac and Fox Indians of the Mississippi, between the two branches of the tribes. Brief on behalf of the claimant Indians and answer to defendants' brief, by R. V. Belt, attorney for Sac and Fox Indians in Iowa. Washington, D. C. 61 p. [180

Berlin, Alfred F. A bit of Lehigh county [Penn.] Indian history. LEHIGH CO. HIST. SOC. PROC., I, no. I, 1-4. [180a

Also in Pa.-German, VII (Sept.) 227-231. Berlin, A[lfred] F. A few notes on the Lenni Lenape or Delaware tribe of Indians. LEHIGH CO. HIST. SOC. PROC., I, no. 2, [2]-[6]. [181

[182

Boas, Franz. Der Einfluss der sozialen Gliederung der Kwakiutl auf deren Kultur. INTERNAT. AMER.-KONG., XIV, STUTTGART 1904, 141-148. Bogoras, Waldemar. Religious ideas of primitive man, from Chukchee material. INTERNAT. AMER.-KONG., XIV, STUTTGART 1904, 129-135. [183

Bourne, Edward Gaylord. Columbus, Ramon Pane and the beginnings of American anthropology. AM. ANTIQ. SOC. PROC., n. s. XVII (Apr. 25, 1906) 310-348. [184

Contains: Treatise of Friar Ramon on the antiquity of the Indians which he as one who knows their language diligently collected by command of the admiral; An epitome of the treatise of Friar Ramon inserted by Peter Martyr in his De Rebus Oceanicis et Novo Orbe.

Boyle, David. The Iroquois.
The Iroquois. ANN. AR-
CHEOL. REP., 1905, 146–158.
[185

Burrows, Ethelbert Dudley. The Pueblos
of America. So. WORKM., XXXV (Feb.)
78-87.
[186
Bushnell, D. I., jr. The use of buffalo hair
by the North American Indians. MAN,
VI (Dec.) 177-180.
[187
Campbell, B. U. Early Christian missions
among the Indians of Maryland. MD.
HIST. MAG., I (Dec.) 293-316. [188
Chamberlain, Alexander F. Acquisition of
written language by primitive peoples.

AM. JOUR. PSYCHOL., XVII (Jan.) 6980. [189 Attempts by missionaries and others to enable certain American Indian peoples to read and write their own tongues.

Cringan, A. T. Indian music. ANN. ARCHEOL. REP., 1905, 158-161. [190 Currier, Charles Warren. Indian languages in the United States. INTERNAT. AMER.KONG., XIV, STUTTGART 1904, 149-157.

[191 Curtis, E. S. Vanishing Indian types. SCRIBNER'S, XXXIX (May-June) 513529, 657-671. [192

I. The tribes of the southwest. II. The tribes of the northwest plains. Deland. Charles E. The aborigines of South Dakota. In two parts. Part I. Editorial notes by Doane Robinson. So. DAK. HIST. COLL., III, 266-586. [193 Devitt, Edward I., comp. Letters of Father Joseph Mosley, S. J., and some extracts from his diary. [1757-1786.] AM. CATH. HIST. REC., XVII (June-Sept.) 180-210, 289-311. [194

Mosley was in charge of the Mission of St. Joseph's in Md.

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Dorsey, George A. Pawnee war tales. Aм. ANTHROP., n. s. VIII (Apr.-June) 337345. [199

The defeat of the Pawnee by the Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Comanche. Peace between the Pawnee and the Comanche.

Du Bois, Constance Goddard. Mythology of the Mission Indians. JOUR. AM. FOLKLORE, XIX (Jan.) 52-60, 145-164. [200 Du Bois, Constance Goddard. The primitive Indian as an agriculturist. So. WORKM., XXXV (Sept.) 500-503. [201

Dugas, G. Défense héroique de soixantesept. Métis contre deux mille Sioux. NOUV. FRANCE, V (Feb.) 63-74. [202 An incident of life in the great west in the year 1851. Eastman, Charles A. Rain-in-the-Face. The story of a Sioux warrior. OUTLOOK, LXXXIV (Oct. 27) 507-512. [203

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