[65]. Vol. 26, p. 326.

[66]. “An Excursion through the United States and Canada,” pp. 233–236. (M.) An extended extract is given in the following chapter on p. [79].

[67]. pp. 291, 292. A more extended extract is given in the following chapter on p. [81].

[68]. C. A. Hanna: “The Scotch-Irish” (1902), p. 60.

[69]. C. A. Hanna: “The Scotch-Irish” (1902), p. 60.

[70]. New Hampshire Provincial Papers, VI, 262–266. (M.)

[71]. W. H. Smith: “The St. Clair Papers” (1882), II, 351, 374, 376, 396–397. (M.)

[72]. New Jersey Archives (1897), XIX, 225–226. (M.)

[73]. New Jersey Archives (1897), XIX, 326–327. New York Gazette, December 31, 1753. (M.) This is the earliest use of the word regulate in connection with illegal punishment for corrective purposes that has come to the writer’s notice.

[74]. See monograph on “The Regulators of North Carolina,” by Professor John S. Bassett of Trinity College, N. C., for a full and complete account of this organization. It was published in the Annual Report of the American Historical Association for 1894.