[640] Russell, Charles Edward, “Behind the Propaganda Scenes,” Columbia, September, 1922, p. 5 et seq. Mr. Russell declares that the undertaking was financed by Andrew Carnegie.

[641] William Allen Neilson, president of Smith College, in an address before the English-Speaking Union, May 16, 1920. The Christian Science Monitor, May 17, 1920; also Bulletin No. 7, June, 1923, of the English-Speaking Union (345 Madison Avenue, New York). Agencies for Anglo-American friendship assert they have made no attempts to combat present-day efforts of anti-English groups. (Letters to the author under date of June 26, 1923, from the Secretary of the Sulgrave Institution, and under date of July 6, 1923, from the Secretary of the English-Speaking Union.)

[642] Eagleton, Clyde, “The Attitude of Our Textbooks Toward England,” Educational Review, Vol. LVI (December, 1918), pp. 424-429.

[643] Schuyler, Robert Livingston, “History and Public Opinion,” Educational Review, Vol. LV (March, 1918), pp. 181-190.

[644] Chicago Herald and Examiner, July 3, 1921.

[645] In Chicago Herald and Examiner, July 3, 1921, and October 15, 1922. The latter was not the last article written, however.

[646] Ibid., January 14, 1923.

[647] Ibid., July 3, 1921. In O’Hara’s History of the United States, thirteen lines are given to Patrick Henry’s opposition to the Stamp Act, over four of which are devoted to the words by Henry: “‘Tarquin and Caesar each had his Brutus; Charles I his Cromwell; and George III—(here cries of “Treason! Treason!” from the Speaker and others were heard)—may profit by their example. If this be treason make the most of it.’” pp. 124-125. On the other hand, six lines are allotted to a discussion of Pitt’s reaction toward the repeal of the Stamp Act, and approximately three lines to direct quotation from him. (“When the question of repeal came up in the House of Commons, Pitt ‘rejoiced that America had resisted.’ He was glad that Americans were not ‘so dead to all the feelings of liberty as voluntarily to submit to be slaves.’”) p. 126. (O’Hara, John P., History of the United States, New York, 1919). There has been only one edition of this history textbook.

[648] Ibid.

[649] Ibid., July 17, 1921.