BIBLIOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN HISTORICAL SOCIETIES.
By APPLETON PRENTISS CLARK GRIFFIN.
No. 1. Secretary's Report of the Organization and Proceedings, Saratoga, September 9, 10, 1884, pp. 5-44.
No. 2. On Studies in General History and the History of Civilization, by Andrew D. White, president of the Association, pp. 1–28 [45-72].
No. 3. History and Management of Land Grants for Education in the North-
west Territory, by George W. Knight, pp. 1-175 [73-247].
No. 4. The Louisiana Purchase in its influence upon the American System, by
the Right Rev. C. F. Robertson, D. D., Bishop of Missouri, pp. 1-42 [249-290].
No. 5. History of the Appointing Power of the President, by Lucy M. Salmon,
pp. 1-129 [291–419].
No. 6. Report of the Proceedings of the American Historical Association, Sec-
ond Annual meeting, Saratoga, September 8-10, 1885, by Herbert B. Adams,
secretary of the Association, pp. 1-73 [421-493]; Index, pp. 75-82 [495-502].
(1
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. Papers of the American Historical Asso-
ciation. Vol. II. New York and London, 1888.
8vo, pp. iv, 565.
No. 1. Report of the Proceedings of the American Historical Association at Washington, D. C., April 27-29, 1886, Third Annual Meeting, by Herbert B. Adams, secretary of the Association, pp. 1-104. Includes abstracts of the fol- lowing papers: Columbus, by Gen. James Grant Wilson; Graphic Methods of Illustrating History, by Dr. Albert Bushnell Hart; The Neglect and Destruction of Historical Materials in this Country, by Prof. Moses Coit Tyler; New Views of Early Virginia History, 1606-1619, by Alexander Brown; The Part taken by Virginia under the Leadership of Patrick Henry in Establishing Religious Liberty as a Foundation of American Government, by Hon. William Wirt Henry; The Causes of the Revolution, by Dr. Edward Channing; The Development of Municipal Government in Massachusetts, by T. Jefferson Coolidge, jr.; The March
of the Spaniards Across Illinois, by Edward G. Mason;
tory, its Ordinance and its Government, by Dr. Israel W. Andrews; Did the
The Northwest Terri-
Louisiana Purchase Include Oregon? by William A. Mowry; The Settlement of the Lower St. Lawrence, by Eben Greenough Scott; The Origin of the Highest Functions of the American Judiciary, by Prof. Austin Scott; Jefferson's Use of the Executive l'atronage, by J. M. Merriam; The Early Protective Movement and the Tariff of 1828, by F. W. Taussig; The Attack on Washington City in 1814, by Maj. Gen. George W. Cullum; Confederate and Federal Strategy in the Pope Campaign before Washington in 1862, by Col. William Allan; The State- Rights Theory: Its Evolution and Involution in American Politics, by James C. Welling; The Reconstruction of History, by Dr. George E. Ellis; William Usselinx, by J. F. Jameson; Franklin in France, by Dr. Edward Everett Hale: Historical Studies in Canada, by George Stewart, jr.
No. 2. A History of the Doctrine of Comets, by Andrew D. White, president of
the Association, pp. 1-43 [105-147].
No. 3. William Usselinx, Founder of the Dutch and Swedish West India Com-
panies, by J. Franklin Jameson, Ph. D., pp. 1-234 [149-382].
No. 4. Church and State in the United States; or, the American Idea of
Religious Liberty and its Practical Effects, by Philip Schaff, D. D., LL. D., pp.
1-161 [383-543]: Index, [546-565].
(2
CONTENTS.
No. 1. Report of the Proceedings at Boston and Cambridge, May 21-24, 1887,
Fourth Annual Meeting, by Herbert B. Adams, secretary of the Association;
Manuscript Sources of American History-The Conspicuous Collections Extant,
by Justin Winsor, pp. 9-27; Diplomatic Prelude to the Seven Years' War, by
Herbert Elmer Mills, pp. 29-40; A Short Account of the Life and Times of Silas
Deane, by Charles Isham, pp. 40-47; Historical Grouping, by James Schouler,
pp. 48-52: The Constitutional Relations of the American Colonies to the English
Government at the Commencement of the Revolution, by Mellen Chamberlain,
pp. 52-74; On the Peace Negotiations of 1782-83 as illustrated by the Secret
Correspondence of France and England, by John Jay, pp. 79-100; Biographical
Sketch of Leopold von Ranke, with an Account of Ranke and the Historical
Commission of the Bavarian Academy of Science, and Bibliographical Notes on
Leopold von Ranke, by Herbert B. Adams, pp. 101-133; A Reminiscence of
Ranke, by Frederic A. Bancroft, pp. 121-124; The Parliamentary Experiment in
Germany, by Kuno Francke, pp. 133-146; A Study in Swiss History, by John
Martin Vincent, pp. 146-164; The Spaniard in New Mexico, by W. W. H. Davis,
pp. 164-176; Abstract of Paper by Prof. Moses Coit Tyler; The Historic Name of
Our Country, pp. 176-178; The Biography of a River and Harbor Bill, by Dr.
Albert Bushnell Hart, pp. 180-197; Extracts from a Paper by Col. Carroll D.
Wright on the Study of Statistics in American Colleges, pp. 197-202; Abstract
of a Paper by Prof. Arthur M. Wheeler on The Government of London, pp. 203-
205; Religious Liberty in Virginia, and Patrick Henry, by Charles J. Stillé, pp.
205-211; Abstract of a Paper by Philip Schaff on the American Chapter in
Church History, pp. 211-213; Notes on Historical Studies in Canada, by George
Stewart, jr., pp. 213-215; A letter written in 1500 from Hispaniola by a Fran-
ciscan Missionary, pp. 215-219; Necrology: Calvin Holmes Carter and James
Carson Brevoort, pp. 223-227; List of Members of the American Historical
Association, pp. 229-238.
No. 2. Report of the Proceedings, Washington, D. C., December 26-28, 1888,
Fifth Annual Meeting, by Herbert B. Adams, secretary of the Association, pp. 1-30 [245-274]; The Early Northwest, inaugural address by William F. Poole, LL. D., president of the Association, pp. 31-56 [275-300]; Remarks by Hon. George B. Loring on Dr. Poole's Address, pp. 56-64 [300-308]; The Influence of Governor Cass on the Development of the Northwest, by Prof. A. C. McLaughlin, pp. 65-83 [309–327]; The place of the Northwest in General History, by William F. Allen, pp. 85-104 [329-348]; Internal Improvements in Ohio, 1825-1850, by Charles N. Morris, pp. 105-136 [349-380]; The Old Federal Court of Appeal, by Prof. J. Franklin Jameson, pp. 137-148 [381-392]; Canadian Archives, by Douglas Brymner, pp. 149-163 [393-407]; The States'-Rights Conflict over the Public Lands, by James C. Welling, LL. D., pp. 165-188 [409-432]; The Martyr- dom of San Pedro Arbués, by Henry Charles Lea, pp. 189-209 [433-453]; A
Part 1, January, 1890. Report of the Proceedings of the American Historical
Association at the Sixth Annual Meeting, Washington, D. C., December 28-31,
1889, by Herbert B. Adams, secretary of the Association, pp. 1-21; List of Mem-
bers, pp. 23-34; Report of the Treasurer, Clarence W. Bowen, p. 35; Recent His-
torical Work in the Colleges and Universities of Europe and America, inau-
gural address of President Charles Kendall Adams, LL. D., pp. 37-65; A Cate-
chism of the Revolutionary Reaction, by Andrew D. White, pp. 67-92.
Part 2, April, 1890. The Origin of the National Scientific and Educational
Institutions of the United States, by G. Brown Goode, Ph. D., LL. D., pp. 3–112
[93-202].
Part 3, July, 1890. The Mutual Obligation of the Ethnologist and the Histo-
rian, by Otis T. Mason, pp. 3-12 [203-212]; Historicals Survivals in Morocco, by
Talcott Williams, pp. 13-34 [213–234]; The Literature of Witchcraft, by Prof.
George L. Burr, pp. 35-66 [235–266]; The Development of International Law as
to Newly Discovered Territory, by Walter B. Scaife, Ph. D., pp. 67-93 [267–293];
The Spirit of Historical Research, by James Schouler, pp. 95-106 [295-306]; A
Defense of Congressional Government, by Dr. Freeman Snow, pp. 107-128 [307-
328].
Part 4, October, 1890. Materials for the History of the Government of the
Southern Confederacy, by John Osborne Sumner, pp. 3-19 [329-345]; The Con-
stitutional Aspect of Kentucky's Struggle for Autonomy, 1784-1792, by Ethelbert
D. Warfield, pp. 21-39 [347-365]; The Pelham Papers-Loss of Oswego, by
William Henry Smith, pp. 41-53 [367-379]; Notes on the Outlook for Historical
Studies in the South, by Prof. William P. Trent, pp. 55-65 [381-391]; Economic
and Social History of New England, 1620-1789, by William B. Weeden, pp. 67-
78 [393-404]; The Early History of the Ballot in Connecticut, by Prof. Simeon
E. Baldwin, pp. 79–96 [407-422]; Bibliography of the American Historical Asso-
ciation, [note] by Paul Leicester Ford, pp. 97-103 [423-429]; Brief notes on the
Present Condition of Historical Studies in Canada, by George Stewart, jr., D. C. L.,
LL. D., pp. 105-109 [433-435]; The Trial and Execution of John Brown, by
Gen. Marcus J. Wright, pp. 111-126 [437-452]; A Few Facts from the Records
of William and Mary College, by President Lyon G. Tyler, pp. 127-141 [453-
467] The Impeachment and Trial of President Johnson, by Dr. William A. Dun-
ning, pp. 143-177 [469-503]; Committees, Historical Societies, Index, 179-211 [505-537]. (4
Parts 1-2, January and April, 1891. Reports of the Proceedings of the Asso- ciation at the Seventh Annual Meeting, Washington, D. C., December 29-31, 1890, by Herbert B. Adams, secretary of the Association, pp. 1-16; The Demand for Education in American History; Inaugural Address of John Jay, LL. D., president of the Association, pp. 19-43; The Theory of the Village Community, by Charles M. Andrews, pp. 47-61; Karl Follen and the German Liberal Movement (1815 to 1819), by Kuno Francke, pp. 65-81; Bismarck as the typical German, by Wil- liam G. Taylor, pp. 85-109; State Activities and Politics, by William F. Wil- loughby, pp. 113-127; Mirabeau's speech of May 20, 1790, by Fred Morrow Fling, pp. 131-139; The Organization of Historical Material, by W. H. Mace, pp. 143-161; The Origin of American Institutions, as illustrated in the history of the written ballot, by Douglas Campbell, pp. 165-186.
Part 3, July, 1891. The Fate of Dietrich Flade, by George L. Burr, pp. 3–57;
The Philosophic Aspects of History, by William T. Harris, pp. 61-68; Brief Notes on the Present Condition of Historical Studies in Canada, by George Stewart, pp. 71-74; Is History a Science? by R. H. Dabney, pp. 77-86; Canada and the United States: An Historical Retrospect, by John George Bourinot, pp. 89-147.
Part 4, October, 1891. Slavery in New York: The Status of the Slave Under
the English Colonial Government, by Edwin Vernon Morgan, pp. 3-16; Amend-
ments to the Constitution of the United States, by Herman V. Ames, pp. 19-29;
Congressional demands upon the Executive for information, by Edward Campbell
Mason, pp. 33-41; A Plea for Reform in the Study of English Municipal History,
by Charles Gross, pp. 45-58; The Yazoo land companies, by Charles H. Haskins,
pp. 61-103; The Lost Colony of Roanoke: Its fate and survival, by Stephen B.
Weeks, pp. 107-146; Index, pp. 481-503. (5
8vo, pp. viii, 427.
Transmitted by the secretary of the Association to the Secretary of the Smith- sonian Institution and submitted to Congress in accordance with the act of incorporation of the Association. Printed as Senate Miscellaneous Document No. 170 of the Fifty-first Congress (first session).
8vo, pp. x, 310. Price, bound, $4; paper covers, $3.
Transmitted by the secretary of the Association to the Secretary of the Smith-
sonian Institution and submitted to Congress in accordance with the act of incorporation of the Association. Printed as Senate Miscellaneous Document No. 83 of the Fifty-first Congress (second session).
An author's edition of each article is also issued in pamphlet form.
Contents: Report of Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Meeting of the Amer- ican Historical Association, held in Washington, D. C., December 29-31, 1890, by Herbert B. Adams, pp. 3-12; The Demand for Education in American History, Inaugural Address by Hon. John Jay, LL. D., pp. 15-36. The following refer- ences are abstracts of papers read by the persons named: Canada and the United States from Historical Points of View, by J. G. Bourinot, C. M. G., LL. D., pp. 39, 40; New England Settlements in Acadia, by Benjamin Rand, Ph. D., pp. 41, 42; The Legislative Work of the First Parliament of Upper Canada, by William Houston, M. A., pp. 43, 44; The Fate of Dietrich Flade, by Prof. George L. Burr, p. 47; Theory of Village Community, by Dr. Charles M. Andrews, pp. 49, 50; A. I'lea for Reform in the Study of English Municipal History, by Dr. Charles Gross, pp. 51, 52; Mirabeau's Speech of May 20, 1790, by Dr. Frederick M. Fling, pp. 53, 54; The Formation of the French Constitution, by Prof. Adolphe Cohn, pp. 55, 56; Karl Follen and the Liberal Movement in Germany, by Prof. Kuno Francke, pp. 57, 58; Bismarck, the Typical German, by William G. Taylor, p. 59; How the Written Ballot came into the United States, by Douglas Campbell, pp. 63-65; A Virginia Bill of Attainder-The Case of Josiah Philips, by Prof. William P. Trent. pp. 67, 68; Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, by Herman V. Ames, pp. 69-70; Congressional Demands upon the Executive for Information, by Edward Campbell Mason, pp. 71, 72; Responsible Government in Canada, by J. G. Bourinot, LL. D., pp. 73, 74; Bills of Rights in State Constitutions, by Gen. R. D. Mussey, pp. 75-77: The Historical Develop- ment of the Budget in the United States, by Dr. Ephraim D. Adams, p. 81; The Yazoo Land Companies, by Dr. Charles H. Haskins, p. 83; State Activities and
Politics, by William F. Willoughby, pp. 85, 86; Slavery in New York-The Status
of the Slave under the English Colonial Government, by Edwin Vernon Morgan,
A. B., pp. 87, 88; Slavery in the District of Columbia-The Policy of Congress
and the Struggle for Abolition, by Mary Tremain, A. M., pp. 89-91; Remarks on
Miss Tremain's Paper, by William Birney, pp. 91-93; Raleigh's Settlements on
Roanoke Island-An Historical Survival, by Dr. Stephen B. Weeks, pp. 97, 98;
The Political Ideas of the Puritans, by Dr. Herbert L. Osgood, pp. 99, 100; State
Historical Societies, by Gen. C. W. Darling, pp. 101, 102; Organization of His-
torical Material, by W. H. Mace, A. M., pp. 103-107; Is History a Science? by
Prof. A. H. Dabney, Ph. D., p. 109; Webster's Seventh of March Speech, by
James Schouler, pp. 111, 112; The Border Land betwen the Historian and the
Archæologist, by Prof. Otis T. Mason, p. 113; Bibliography of the Writings of
the Members of the American Historical Association for the year 1890, by Paul
Leicester Ford and A. Howard Clark, pp. 117-160; Bibliography of the Histor-
ical Societies of the United States, by Appleton Prentiss Clark Griffin, pp. 161-
267; Index, pp. 269-310. (7
Svo, pp. ix, 499. Price, bound, $4; paper covers, $3.
Transmitted by the Secretary of the Association to the Secretary of the Smith-
sonian Institution, and submitted to Congress in accordance with the act of
incorporation of the Association. Printed as Senate Miscellaneous Document
No. 173 of the Fifty-second Congress (first session).
[An author's edition of each article is also issued in pamphlet form.]
Contents: Report of Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Meeting of the
American Historical Association, held in Washington, D. C., December 29-31,
1891, by Herbert B. Adams, pp. 3-11; Inaugural Address of Hon. William
Wirt Henry, LL. D., President of the Association, on the Causes which produced
the Virginia of the Revolutionary Period, pp. 15-29; The Expenditures of For-
eign Governments in Behalf of History, by Prof. J. Franklin Jameson, pp.
33-61; The United States and International Arbitration, by Prof. John Bassett
Moore, pp. 65-85; Some recent Discoveries concerning Columbus, by President
Charles Kendall Adams, pp. 89-99; The History and Determination of the
Line of Demarcation established by Pope Alexander VI, between the Spanish
and Portuguese Fields of Discovery and Colonization, by Prof. Edward G.
Bourne, pp. 103-130; Slavery in the Territories, by President James C. Welling,
pp. 133-160; The Enforcement of the Slave-Trade Laws, by W. E. B. Du Bois,
pp. 163-174; State Sovereignty in Wisconsin, by Albert H. Sanford, pp. 177-195;
The Earliest Texas, by Mrs. Lee C. Harby, pp. 199-205; Governor William
Leete and the Absorption of New Haven Colony by Connecticut, by Dr. Bernard
C. Steiner, pp. 209-222; The Visitorial Statutes of Andover Seminary, by Prof.
Simeon E. Baldwin, LL. D., pp. 225-241; Some Neglected Characteristics of
the New England Puritans, by Prof. Barrett Wendell, pp. 245-253; Henry Clay
as Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, by Mary Parker
Follett, pp. 257-265; Lord Lovelace and the second Canadian Campaign, 1708-
1710, by Gen. James Grant Wilson, pp. 269-297; Commerce and Industry of
Florence during the Renaissance, by Walter B. Scaife, Ph. D., pp. 301–308 ;
Parliamentary Government in Canada-A Constitutional and Historical Study,
by J. G. Bourinot, LL. D., D. C. L., pp. 311-407; Bibliography of Published
Writings of Members of the American Historical Association for 1891, by A.
Howard Clark, pp. 411-463; Index, pp. 465-499. (8
AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. Annual Report of the American Historical
Association for the year 1892. Washington: Government Printing Office,
1893.
8vo. pp. vii, 698. Price, bound, $4; paper covers, $3.
Transmitted by the secretary of the Association to the Secretary of the Smith-
sonian Institution, and submitted to Congress in accordance with the act of incorporation of the Association. Printed as Senate Miscellaneous Document No. 57, Fifty-second Congress (second session).
[An author's edition of each article is also issued in pamphlet form.]
Contents: Summary of the Work of the American Historical Association during the year 1892, by Herbert B. Adams, secretary, pp. 1 16; Copy of Tracts Relating to America (Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries) found in the
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