BIBLIOGRAPHY
In addition to sources previously cited see the Miscellaneous Series of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, numbers 15, 38, 63, 78, 106, etc., giving details of foreign trade by countries. On the subject of gold movement, foreign exchange and international finance reference must be made to reports of the Secretary of the Treasury, Director of the Mint, and Bulletins of the Federal Reserve Board. References given under chapter 54 are also applicable here. A monograph on Depreciated exchange and international trade was issued by the U. S. Tariff Commission, Washington, 1922.
The student should relate the history of commerce during the war to the military and political history of the period, and should have in mind the narrative as presented in general accounts such as those by Charles Seymour, **Woodrow Wilson, 1921; J. S. Bassett, **Our war with Germany, 1919; J. B. McMaster, *The U. S. in the World War, 1918; F. L. Paxson, *Recent history of U. S., 1921, chap. 44-56.
The most complete account of industrial and commercial activity organized for the conduct of war will be found in Benedict Crowell and R. F. Wilson, **How America went to war, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1921, 6 vols.: The giant hand (mobilization and control of industry and natural resources); The road to France, 2 vols.; The armies of industry, 2 vols.; Demobilization. The subject of shipping is covered by E. N. Hurley, *The new merchant marine, N. Y., 1920, and W. C. Mattox, Building the emergency fleet, Cleveland, 1920. On the various problems of reconstruction see the symposium edited by E. M. Friedman, American problems of reconstruction, N. Y., 1918, and Isaac Lippincott, Problems of reconstruction, N. Y., 1919. Many special topics of commerce, industry and finance are treated in periodicals, in reports of banks (e.g., Foreign commerce series of National City Bank) and in government reports (e.g., dyestuffs in Bureau of For. and Dom. Commerce, Special Agents Series, numbers 96, 11, and 121).
TITLES OF BOOKS CITED BY ABBREVIATIONS
Note.—Books of which the full titles have already been given are not, in most cases, included in the following list, which is supplementary to the bibliographies and by no means a substitute for them. The list includes only titles of those books which have been cited so many times that a repetition of the full title would waste space, and which have been cited in so many different places that the reader’s time would be wasted in hunting for the entry of the full title. I have thought it unnecessary to give full titles of standard narrative histories, of current manuals in the allied subjects of history and economics, and of local sources in the history of the United States.
Adams, Charles F., Jr. Railroads, their origin and problems. N. Y., no date.
Adams, George B. Civilization during the Middle Ages. N. Y., Scribner, 1894.
A. L. A. (American Library Association) Catalogue. Washington, 1904, and later editions.
American railway, The. N. Y., Scribner, 1897.