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[INDEX]

Aberdeen, [136].
Abolitionists, [210].
Acadia, [308], [309].
"Acadie" (Nova Scotia), [308].
Achæans, invasions into Greece, [26];
Nordics in West as, [39];
Osco-Umbrians, kin to, [39].
Africa, Negro slaves in, [9];
Christianity in, [14];
(Ethiopia) early races in, [19], [20].
Alabama, settlement in, [183], [184];
heart of Cotton Kingdom, [184];
Scotch and English blood in, [184];
1930 census native population, [242].
Alans, the, [44], [45], [46].
Alaska, [90].
Albanians, [36].
Albany (N.Y.), [102], [110], [168];
Ulster Scots in, [108];
increase in Negroes in, [237].
Albemarle, [138].
Alberta, [314], [318].
Alemanni, the, [42], [51], [52].
Alemannish dialect, [79], [166].
Alexander the Great, [23].
Alien Act of 1798, [268].
Aliens, public sentiment in America, [1];
attitude toward, [268];
restrictions of, [269];
opposition to restrictions of, [269];
literacy test for, [269];
Quota Act of 1921, [270], [271];
National Origins Act, [272], [274], [278].
Alleghanies, Ulster Scots west of, [123];
"poor whites" in, [135].
Allentown (Pa.), [121].
Alpine race, characteristics of, [29], [30];
origin of, [29];
similarity to Mongols, [29];
extent of domain, [31];
Turanians, [31], [32];
Armenians, [32];
increase in Central Europe, [33];
in United States, [153].
Alpine Slavs, [15].
Alsace, [50], [116].
Amazonian Basin, [335].
America, Catholics in, [4];
Jews in, 4, [224]-227;
South Germans in, [8];
relative diminution of Anglo-Saxon blood in, [10];
whites and blacks in, [12], [13];
origin of American Indians in, [19];
Norman element in, [55];
Ulster Scots in, [60];
sentiment for France in, [71];
naval war with France in 1798, [71];
motive of early settlers in, [65];
migration from Leinster to, [76];
"Scotch Irish" of, [92];
emigration from Ireland to, [93];
Huguenot migration to, [96];
North German Nordics in, [143];
opportunities for British race in, [156];
migration toward Pacific Coast, [158];
emigration of Scottish farmers to, [159];
emigration of Southern England farmers to, [159];
emigration of Irish to, [159];
emigration of Germans to, [161], [162];
South Irish Catholics in, [218];
freedom of speech and press in, [219];
waste in, [221];
ratio of criminals in, [224];
alien invasion in, [223]-234;
migration following the Revolution, [256];
migration with panic of 1819, [256];
migration at time of land speculation by Andrew Jackson, [256];
minority of women among recent immigration groups in, [275];
solutions of Negro elimination in, [285] ff.
See also under United States.
American colonies, Nordics in, [77].
American Indians, Mongols and Alpines ancestors of, [30];
Mongolian blood in, [37].
American Protective Association, [313].
American Revolution, the influence of Massachusetts during, [99];
loss of population during, [100];
increase in migration following, [101];
New York State after, [108];
migration after, [109];
troops from New York and Massachusetts, [111];
Calvinistic, [121].
Amerinds, [26], [27].
Amish, [79].
Andalusia, [188], [333].
Andover, [94].
Angles, the, [59].
Anglicans, Quakers become, [121].
Angora, [41].
Annapolis, [127].
Apache Indians, [291].
Apennines, the, [41], [51].
Appalachian valleys, [74], [78];
lawlessness in, [67].
Apulia, [39].
Arabia, [22], [27];
the Mediterraneans of, [24].
Arabs, in Spain, [46], [49];
race mixture among, [49];
period of expansion, [49];
ruined by Negro women, [49]
Aral Sea, [34].
Argentina, [338];
racial composition of, [339], [340].
Argonauts, the, [216].
Argyllshire, [159].
Arians, [46].
Arius, [46].
Arizona, [152], [213], [214];
Mexicans in, [162], [262];
separated from New Mexico, [262];
Mormons in, [262];
Texans in, [263];
Indians in, [289].
Arkansas, [243];
settlement in, [189], [190];
growth of, [190];
British stock in, [190].
Arkansas River, [189].
Armenians, [32].
Armorican language, [58].
Aryan language, Centum group, [24]-25;
Satem group, [24]-25.
Ashkanazim Jews, [225].
Asia, Christianity in, [14];
Mongoloid tribes of northeastern, [19];
expansion of civilization in southeastern, [23].
Asia Minor, Nordic Gauls in, [41];
Turks in, [50].
Asiatics, [356].
Assyria, [22].
Assyrians, cruelty of, [156].
"Asylum for the Oppressed," [268].
Atlas Mountains, [45].
Attila, [44], [51].
Aurora (N.Y.), [110].
Austin, Moses, [209].
Australia, [20], [303], [353], [354];
Negroids in, [28];
racial tangle in, [28].
Australoids, the, [20], [21], [28];
compared to Alpines, [30].
Austria, [116].
Austrian Empire, languages in old, [5].
Aztecs, the, [324].
Babylonia, [22].
Bactria, [23].
Bahamas, the, [345].
Baltic Sea, [35], [56].
Baltimore (Md.), growth of, [129];
cosmopolitan population in, [239].
Baltimore, Lord, [125], [126], [128].
Barbadoes, [85], [86], [345].
Basques, [340].
Bath (N.Y.), [110].
Baton Rouge (La.), [187], [245].
Bavaria, Alpines in, [36].
Bay of Chaleurs, [296].
Beaker Makers, [57].
Belcher, Thomas, [105].
Belfast, [95].
Belgæ, the, [41], [42], [43], [58].
Belgium, languages in, 5;
the Flemings of, [52].
Beothics, the, [307].
Berbers, the, [24];
in Atlas Mountains (North Africa), [39].
Berkeley, Governor (Virginia), [126], [132], [135].
Berkshire, [84].
Bermuda, [85], [345].
Bethlehem (Pa.), Moravians in, [117].
Bigot, [46].
Binghamton (N.Y.), [109].
Black Hawk Purchase, [198].
Black Hawk War, [198].
Black Hills, gold in, [254].
Blacks, the, [12], [20];
advance in America, [13]
Blue Ridge, the, [137], [138].
Bogotá, [334].
Bohemia, Czechish in, [5];
rise of nationalism in, [14];
Mongolian characters in, [37].
Bolivia, population of, [341].
"Bonnie Prince Charlie," [140].
Boone, Daniel, [123], [145].
Boone, Daniel Morgan, [200].
"Boone's Lick," [191].
Boston (Mass.), [71], [82], [101], [105];
Huguenots in, [97].
Braddock, General, [137].
Bradford (postmaster), [83].
Brandenburg, [181].
Branford (N.J.), [113].
Brattleboro (Vt.), [89].
Brazil, Portuguese in, [335];
European immigrants in, [336];
size of, [337].
Bristol, [307].
Britain, Celts in, [41];
invaded by Saxons, [59];
invaded by Angles and Jutes, [59];
Norman conquest in 1066, [60], [61].
British Columbia, [297], [354];
Asiatic problem in, [315], [316].
British Commonwealth, [303].
British Empire, abolition of slavery in, [11].
British Honduras, [331].
British Islands, mixture of Nordics and Mediterraneans in, [33].
British Isles, racial composition of, [57].
British West Indies, [345].
Brittany, Armorican language in, [58].
Bronze Age, [57];
Alpines in, [31].
Brooklyn (N.Y.), [105].
Brythons, the, [41], [42], [43], [58].
Buckingham, [84].
Buffalo (N.Y.), [177];
increase in Negroes in, [237].
Burgundians, the, [42], [46], [50].
Burlington (Iowa), [197].
Burlington (N.J.), [112].
Burma, Sanscrit in, [25];
English rule in, [355].
Burnett Act, [270].
Bushmen, the, [20].
Byrd, Colonel, [136].
Byzantine Empire, [54].
Cabot, John, [307].
Cæsar, Julius, [221];
campaigns in Gaul, [41].
Caithness, [55].
"Cajans," [6].
Calabria, [39].
Calhoun, John C., [168].
California, [152], [173];
Mexicans in, [162];
Indians and Spaniards in, [214];
annexed to United States, [215];
Spanish blood in, [215];
increase in Americans in, [215], [216];
gold in, [215], [263];
Chinese in, [216];
contrasted with other United States frontiers, [217];
foreigners in, [263]-267;
migration to, [263], [264];
Nordic element in, [264];
decline of Chinese in, [265];
vote against Chinese immigration, [265];
racial problems in, [265], [266];
Indians in, [289].
California gold rush, [199].
Camoens, [48].
Campbelltown, [139].
Canada, French language in, [ 5];
migration of Loyalists to, [100], [110];
annexed to the Union, [111];
divisions of, [296], [297];
Maritime Provinces, [296], [300];
Quebec, [297]-301;
Upper Canada, [297], [302];
inducements to immigrants, [302];
population in 1840, [304];
Irish Catholics in, [304];
population in 1871, [305];
British and French in, [305];
Mounted Police in, [305];
Indians in, [306];
migration from United States to, [316]-319;
British immigration in, [317];
"foreign stock" in, [317], [318];
Jews in, [317];
few Negroes in, [318];
Nordic element in, [318];
strength of Roman Catholic Church in, [318];
1921 census, [319].
Canandaigua (N.Y.), [109], [110].
Canary Islands, [188].
Cape Cod Bay, [82].
Cape Fear River, [139].
Cape May, [112].
Caribbean Sea, [12], [155], [348].
Caribs, [331].
Carlisle (Pa.), [122].
Carpathians, the, [31].
Carroll, Jesuit John, [151].
Carter, Colonel John, [137].
Caspian Sea, [34].
Caucasus, the, [44];
beauty of women in, [50].
Cayuga, [110].
Celtiberians, [40].
Celtic Nordics, [36];
conquest of Spain by, [40];
in British Isles, [40].
Celtic-speaking tribes, [42].
Celtic tribes, in Gaul and Britain, [40], [41];
"Q" and "P," [57], [58].
Central America, [294], [330] ff., [348].
Central Asia, [17], [44].
Central Pacific Railway, [265].
Cervantes, [48].
Chaldea, [22].
Chalons, [44];
Battle of, [52].
Champlain, [300], [301].
Charlemagne, [31];
the Franks under, [54];
conquest of Saxons, [54].
Charles I, [126], [135].
Charleston (S.C.), [41], [42];
Ulster Scots enter colonies through, [77], [78].
Charlestown (Mass.), [82].
Chesapeake Bay, [73].
Chester, [114].
Cheyenne (Wyo.), [259].
Chicago (Ill.), [196], [229].
Chickasaw Indians, [291].
Chile, white races in, [340].
China, rise of nationalism in, [14];
Mongols of, [19].

Chinese, the, [353];
in California, [265].
Choctaws, [291].
Christian Syrians, [339].
Christianity, Unitarian form of, [46];
orthodox, [46].
Christy, Howard Chandler, [3].
Cid Campeador, [48].
Cimbri, [42].
Cincinnati (Ohio), [161], [164], [248].
Circassians, the, [50].
Cisalpine Gaul, [41], [51].
City of Brotherly Love (Philadelphia), [114].
Civil War, [2], [3], [12], [138], [158], [169]-176, [193], [199], [200], [207], [212], [214], [220], [223], [229], [241], [254], [262], [267], [349];
Irish in, [161];
influence of "Solid South" after, [282].
Civilization, development of, [22] ff.
Clark, General George Rogers, [163], [167], [168], [171].
Clay, Henry, [87], [211].
Cleveland (Ohio), [165].
Coast cities, inhabitants richer than frontiersmen, [75].
Colbert, [299].
Coligny, [141], [192].
Coligny, Admiral, [96].
Collinson, Peter, [117].
Colombia, population of, [333].
Colonial times, racial population in, 2;
religion in, 4;
intermarriage during, 8.
Colonies, original racial complexion of, [75];
Ulster Scots in, [78].
Color, [26], [27].
Colorado, [173], [203];
Daniel Boone's grandson in, [123];
Southeastern, [213];
gold in, [258];
Nordics in, [259];
Mexican population in, [292].
Columbia River, [260].
Columbus, Christopher, [48], [56], [208].
Commonwealth, Puritans under the, [66].
Comstock Lode, [261].
Confederate Army, [260].
Congregationalists, hostile to Presbyterians, [94].
Conkling, Senator Roscoe (quoted), [288].
Connecticut, [94], [108];
early settlement of, [72], [86], [87];
growth of, [101];
Western Reserve of, [164], [165];
foreign-born in, [218];
1930 census native population, [236].
Connecticut River, [90];
migration to, [72].
Connecticut River Valley, [82];
"forts" of Dutch in, [104].
Constitution of the United States, [155].
Constitution of 1835, [177].
Continental Congress, religion of, [69].
Continentals, the, [139].
Convention of 1787, [7], [155].
Cornwall, [58].
Corsica, Vandals in, [45].
Costa Rica, population of, [332], [333];
Nordic infusion in, [333].
Creek Indians, [183].
Creeks, the, [246].
Crefeld, [116].
Creoles, French spoken by, [6].
Crete, [22].
Crimea, the, [44].
Cromwell, Oliver, [93], [125];
and Irish Rebellion, [133].
Crown Point, [108].
Crusades, the, [53].
Cuba, [211];
population of, [343].
Cumberland Gap, [145], [146]
Cumberland Presbyterian Church, [122].
Cymric, [58].
Dacia, [44].
Dacian Plains, [39].
Dakota, [197];
rush into, [253].
Dante, [48].
Danube, the, [44].
Da Vinci, Leonardo, [48].
Davis, John (quoted), [187], [188].
Dayton (Ohio), [164].
Declaration of Independence, [101];
religion of signers, [69].
Dedham, [81].
de Lapouge, Count, [33], [49].
Delaware, [73], [125];
1930 census native population, [239].
Delaware River, [111];
English settlers along, [73];
French Huguenots along, [73];
surrounding land colonized by Quakers, [112].
Democracy, [356].
Denmark, [22], [59], [345].
de Saussure, [141].
Detroit (Mich.), [176], [229].
Devonshire, [307].
Dippers, [115].
District of Columbia, residents of, [239];
Negroes in, [239], [240].
Dorchester (Mass.), [82], [87], [144].
Dorchester Society, [144].
Drummond, James, the Earl of Perth, [113].
Dubuque, John, [197].
Duke of Liegnitz, [53].
Duke of York, [125].
Dundas (Ontario), [312].
Dunkards, [79].
Dutch East India Company, [102].
Dutch settlement, [102] ff.
East Anglia, Puritan emigration from, [84].
East Jersey, [112];
stronghold of Scotch Presbyterians in, [113].
Ecuador, Indian tribes in, [343].
Edict of Nantes, [127], [139];
revocation of, [96].
Egypt, [22], [25];
rise of nationalism in, [14];
Libyans in, [39].
Elbe, the, [31], [54].
Electoral College, [282].
Elizabeth (N.J.), [77].
Elizabethtown (N.J.), [113].
Elizabethtown Association, the, [113].
Emigration Society Land Company, [212].
Emmet, Robert, [159].
Emmet, Thomas A., [159].
Empire Settlement Act, [317].
England, Norman element in, [55];
Norsemen in, [59];
Puritan emigration from, [82];
Palatines in, [107];
population at time of Revolution, [154].
English Quakers, [77].
English Whigs, [70].
Episcopalians, strength of, [69].
Ericson, Leif, [56].
Erie Canal, [105], [106], [110], [168], [172], [177].
Erse language, [57].
Eskimos, [307].
Ethiopia (Africa), [27];
early races in, [19], [20];
true Negroes in, [28].
Euphrates, Valley of the, [22].
Eurasia, [18], [19];
development of civilization in southwestern, [22];
racial groupings in, [27];
Negroids in, [27];
Negritos in, [28].
Europe, intermingling of peoples in, [21];
racial mixtures in, [36];
saved from Mongols, [53];
Nordics in, at time of discovery of America, [61];
monopoly of land ownership in, [65].
Evangeline (Longfellow), [186].
Fairfield (Conn.), [87].
Fall Line, the, [73].
Falmouth, [101].
Fayetteville, [139].
Federal Children's Bureau, [275].
Federal Government, [163].
Federal Supreme Court, [277].
Filipinos, [224], [294].
Finland, Ural-Altaic language in, [24].
Finlanders, [111].
Firbolgs, the, [62].
Flemings, in New York, [76].
Florida, [152];
Spanish in, [117];
South Carolinians in, [142];
settlement in, [192]-194;
ceded by Spain to England, [193];
second Nordic invasion of, [193];
slow development of, [193];
small population in, [193], [194];
Negroes in, [193];
1930 census native population, [241].
Forbes, General, [138].
Foreign missions, [355].
Fort Orange (N.Y.), [102].
Fort Schuyler (N.Y.), [110].
Fort Snelling, [196].
Fort Stanwix (N.Y.), [110].
Founders of the Republic, [237].
France, races in,[ 4], [5];
unity of national feeling in,[ 4];
Alpines in, [15];
decrease of Nordics in, [33], [49];
Alpines in, [42];
as a Nordic land, [42];
eldest son of the church, [46], [47];
(southern) Gothic names in, [48];
variety of names in, [49].
Franklin, Benjamin [84], [124];
(quoted), [118]-120.
Franks, the, [42], [46];
in Gaul and western Germany, [52];
had support of Roman Church, [52];
in Belgium, [52];
in northern France, [53];
conquer Franconia, [54];
seize northern Italy, under Charlemagne, [54].
Frederick County (Md.), [129].
Free State Catholics, [273].
Freehold (N.J.), [77], [112].
French, the Nordics and Alpines among the, [36];
in Quebec province, [301];
emigration from Quebec to New England, [301].
French Canadians, [355];
influence of Roman Catholic Church on, [311].
French Huguenots, in New England, [73];
in New York, [76];
in South Carolina, [80];
in North Carolina, [139].
Friesland, [116].
Frontier, the, character of, [68];
history of, [156], [157];
effect of Indians on, [157].
Gadsden Purchase, [210].
Gaelic, spoken in Scotland, [58];
spoken in Nova Scotia, [309].
Galatia, [41], [45];
Gothic blood in, [47].
Galatians, [41], [42].
Galena, [196].
Galicia, Mongolian characters in, [37].
Gallegos, the, [333].
Garvey, the Negro, [287].
Gaul, [221];
Celts in, [41];
remnant of Visigoths in, [46].
Gauls, the, [42].
Gelderland, [103].
Gendron, [141].
Geneva (N.Y.), [110].
Genoa, [48], [231].
"Genoese," [231], [264].
Genseric, [45].
"Gentiles," the, [261].
Georgia, racial complexion in, [80];
Palatines in, [116], [117];
settlement of, [143], [144];
benefited after Revolution, [145];
1930 census native population in, [241];
idle farming in, [243].
Georgians, the, [50], [145].
Gepidæ, the, [44].
German Jews, [226].
Germans, among Roman Catholics in the colonies, [70];
forced to the West, [73];
in Pennsylvania, [73];
in the colonies, [79].
Germantown (Pa.), founded by Mennonites, [115].
Germany, quota of immigrants from, 2;
races in, [4];
Nordics in eastern, [14];
Revolution of 1848, [161], [181];
immigrants in America, [161], [162];
peak of emigration in, [228], [229].
Gettysburg (Pa.), [122].
Ghetto population, [227].
Glenelg, [312].
Glengarry (Ontario), [108], [312].
Gloucestershire, [84].
Gobi desert, [23].
Goidelic, the, conquer the Neolithic Mediterraneans in Ireland, [62].
Goidels, [40], [57].
Gold, discovered in California, [215];
caused increase in California population, [216].
Gothia Septimania, [46].
Goths, the, [43], [250];
in South Russia, [44].
"Great American Desert," [155].
Great Britain, emigration from New England to, [86];
"White Man's Burden" in, [352], [354].
Great Lakes, the, [163].
Great Salt Lake, [204].
Great Wall of China, [34].
Greece, [22];
invasions of Achæans into, [26];
Nordic conquest of, [39].
Green Mountain Boys, [90].
Greenwich (Conn.), [104], [105].
Guadalquivir, the, [46].
Guarani Indians, [341].
Guatemala, population of, [330], [332].
Guiana (British), [334];
(Dutch), [334];
(French), [334], [335].
Guilford (N.J.), [113].
Gulf of California, [210], [211].
Gulf of Mexico, [12], [287].
Gulf of Saint Lawrence, [296].
Gulf States, extermination of Indians in, [291].
Habitants, the, origin of, [298];
physical type of, [299];
effect of decline in birthrate on, [302].
Haiti, [287];
loss of white control in, [11], [12];
barbarism in, [12];
Negro Republic, [345].
Hamitic language, [24].
Hamburg, [116].
Hampshire, [84], [159].
Hamptons, the, [105].
Hansen, Professor, [152].
Hartford (Conn.), [87].
Hawaii, [349];
Japanese element in, [295];
possible source of undesirable immigration, [295].
Hawaiians, [294].
Henry, Patrick, [136].
Henry VII, [307].
Highlands, the, mixture of races in, [61].
Hindus, the, [27], [353];
Aryan speech among, [27].
Hittites, [32], [39].

Holland, [103], [116];
Palatines in, [107].
Holland (Mich.), [178].
Holstein, [59].
Holston settlement, the, [148].
Homo sapiens, [20].
Honduras, population of, [331].
Hottentots, the, [20].
Hudson, Henry, [102].
Hudson (N.Y.), [109].
Hudson River, New Englanders and Germans along, [73];
Dutch settlements along, [102].
Hudson River valley, [110];
Dutch in, [102], [103], [105];
growth of towns in, [109].
Hudson's Bay Colony, [314].
Huger, [141].
Huguenot French, during the Revolution, [7].
Huguenots, migration to America, [96], [97].
Humboldt, [322].
Hungary, [50];
Ural-Altaic language in, [24].
Huns, [31], [44].
Hunter, Governor (N.Y.), [106].
Hussites, [79].
Iberian Peninsula, [333].
Iberians, [40], [61].
Iberville (French explorer), [291].
Idaho, first settlement in, [205];
part of Washington territory, [205];
growth during Civil War, [260];
Nordic strength in, [260].
Illinois, [149], [164], [175];
settlement of, [170]-176;
boom in, [171];
Erie Canal access to, [172];
lead mines in, [172];
dominated by Ulster Scots, [173];
population at beginning of Civil War, [173];
represented in Westward migration, [173];
Germans in, [175];
Irish in, [175], [176];
English in, [176];
Mormons in, [176];
Scandinavians in, [176];
Mexican population in, [293];
native population in, [249];
Negroes in, [249].
Illinois Central Railway, [174], [176].
Immigration Commission (1907), [269].
Incas, [341].
India, rise of nationalism in, [14];
Sanscrit in, [25];
Aryans in, [25];
passing of Nordics in, [26];
Pre-Dravidians of, [27];
English rule in, [355].
Indian War of 1855-1856, [207].
Indiana, [164];
Southerners in, [167];
Ulster Scots and Quakers in, [167];
"Underground Railroad" in, [167];
settlement of, [167]-170;
Nordic influence in, [169], [170];
population in, [169], [170];
influence of Germans in, [181];
native population in, [248], [249].
Indianapolis (Ind.), [169], [170].
Indians, American, [22], [66];
origin of, [19];
culture of, [19];
cruelty of, [156];
effect on the frontier, [157];
1930 population in United States, [289];
distribution in United States, [289];
on Pacific Coast, [290];
on Atlantic Coast, [291];
lived as hunters, [291], [292];
intermarriage with Whites, [292].
Indus, Valley of the, [25].
Inquisition, the, [227].
Inverness, [108], [312].
Inverness-shire, [159].
Invincible Armada, [208].
Iowa, [175], [195], [197];
delay in settlement, [198];
Southerners in, [198];
foreign immigrants in, [198];
entered Union as a State, [200];
Nordic and Anglo-Saxon, [200];
native population in, [252];
agricultural, [252].
Iranian, division of Aryan languages, [25];
distribution in Asia, [26].
Ireland, quota of immigrants from, [2];
Erse in, [5], [6], [57], [58];
potato famine in, [7];
rise of nationalism in, [14];
attacked by Norse and Danes, [55];
Norsemen in, [59];
Neolithic Mediterraneans in, [62];
the Goidelics in, [62];
Norse and Danes in, [62];
English language in, [63];
religion in, [63];
the Reformation in, [63];
Protestants in, [92], [93];
emigration to North America from, [159], [160].
Irish Free State, [273].
Irish Rebellion in 1652, [133].
Iroquois Five Nations, [300], [301].
Iroquois Indians, [73], [291].
Isle of Man, [58].
Italians, immigration in United States, [231];
high birthrate of, [276].
Italy, races in, [4];
invasions of Osco-Umbrians in, [26], [39];
Ostrogoths in, [44];
northern, [116];
emigration from, [231].
Jackson, Andrew, [70], [256].
Jamaica, [345];
results of abolition of slavery in, [11].
James I, [63], [92], [93].
James II, [127].
James River, [130].
Jamestown (Va.), settlement of, [130], [297];
Negroes in, [131].
Japan, Christianity in, [14];
"gentlemen's agreement" with United States, [266].
Japanese, in California, [266].
Jefferson, Thomas, [70], [208], [237], [245].
Jews, [46].
Johnson, Honorable Albert, [1] n.; [270].
Johnson, Sir John, [108], [312].
Johnson, Sir William, [108].
Johnston, Gabriel, [140].
Johnston, Sir Harry H., [6].
Jordanes, [43].
Judaism, [225].
Jutes, the, [59].
Jutland, [59].
Kansas, [173];
slavery in, [12];
Daniel Boone's son in, [123];
Kansas-Nebraska settlement, [200];
battleground for slavery and free-soil elements, [201];
few New England settlers in, [202];
increase in emigration from Free States, [202];
of British complexion, [202], [203];
native population in, [255];
settlement of, [256];
Mexican population in, [292].
Kassites, [39].
Kearney, Dennis, [265].
Kent, [84], [159].
Kentaro, Baron Keneko, [9].
Kentucky, [72], [157];
Boone in, [123];
settlement of, [145], [146];
growth of, [146];
English atmosphere in, [147];
admitted as a State, [147];
Alpines in, [153];
1930 census native population, [242].
Kenya Colony, [353].
Khozars (Alpine), [225].
King Philip's War, [88].
Kingston (Ontario), [110].
Kintail, [312].
Kirkhill, [312].
Klondike gold rush, [130], [305].
"Know Nothings," [218];
principle of, [219].
Knoydart, [312].
Korea, [31].
Krim, Götisch, [44].
Kurds, the, [50].
Labadists, the, [116].
Labrador, [308].
Lafayette, [12], [71].
Lake Champlain, [90], [109], [300].
Lake Erie, [110];
first steamboat on, [177].
Lake George, [108].
Lake Ontario, [110].
Lancaster (Pa.), [79], [121], [124].
Land Act (1818), [189].
Languages, in West Indies, [23], [24];
Hamitic, [24];
spoken by Alpines, [24];
Aryan, [24] ff.;
Erse, [57].
See also under various languages.
Lanier, [141].
La Plata, [337].
Latin America, [320], [321], [333], [334], [342], [346];
Amerinds in, [26];
Indians in, [321], [322];
Whites in, [322], [323].
Laud, Archbishop, [85].
Laurens, [141].
Law, John, [187].
League of Nations, [294].
Lebanon (Pa.), [121].
Lebanon, the, [339].
Lee, Richard, [135].
Lehigh Valley, Germans in, [120]-121.
Leicester, [84].
Leinster, [7], [63].
Leinster Protestants, [93].
LeSerrurier, [141].
Liberty Loans, [3].
Libyans, in Egypt, [39].
Liegnitz, Battle of, [53].
Lincolnshire, [83].
Literacy test, for aliens, vetoed by President Wilson, [269];
passed over veto, [270].
Lithuania, [236].
Lithuanian language, [25].
Liverpool, [204].
Lochiel, [312].
Lombards, [46], [50], [250];
in Italy, [51];
overthrown by Franks, [51].
London, Puritan emigration from, [84];
Imperial government in, [353].
Londonderry, [94].
Lone Star Republic, [211].
Long Island, [103], [105], [110].
Lord Baltimore, [80].
Los Angeles (Calif.), Mexicans in, [328].
Los Angeles County, Mexicans in, [328].
Louis XIV, [79], [106].
Louisiana, [152];
French language in, [6];
settlement in, [186]-189;
French in, [186];
Acadian refugees in, [186];
Nova Scotians in, [186], [187];
cosmopolitan population in, [243], [244];
religious groups in, [244];
illiteracy test, [244], [245].
Louisiana Purchase of 1803, [149], [152], [185], [187], [188], [189], [191], [195], [208].
Lower California, [210].
Loyalists, [65], [68], [108], [146], [158];
Episcopalians as, [69];
expulsion in the North, [69];
in Boston, [71];
leave colonies for Canada, England, and English West Indies, [71];
flee from colonies, [100];
migration from New York State after the Revolution, [110];
in New York State during the Revolution, [110];
Scotch Highlanders as, [139];
United Empire, [311].
Lynn (Mass.), [82].
Magna Græcia, [232].
Maine, [101];
scattered settlements on coast of, [87];
1930 census native population, [235].
Malay Peninsula, Negroids in, [28].
Malays, the, [30], [294];
in the Philippines, [31];
in Japan, [31].
Man, ancestry of, [17].
Manhattan, Negroes in, [237].
Manhattan Island, [102], [111].
Manitoba, [195];
Riel Rebellion in, [306];
settlement of, [313], [314];
Russians in, [318].
Mann, Elizabeth, [137].
Manx, [58].
Marcellus (N.Y.), [110].
Marietta (Ohio), established by New England Company, [164].
Maritime Provinces, [309], [315];
Nordic element in, [296];
population in, [300].
Maryland, [73], [127], [146];
settlement of, [80];
religious groups in, [127], [128];
Negroes in, [128];
Acadians in, [128];
population at time of Revolution, [129];
thoroughly Anglo-Saxon at time of first census, [129];
Alpines in, [153];
1930 census native population, [239];
attitude toward aliens, [268].
Mason and Dixon line, [172].
Massachusetts, first inhabitants of, [81];
expansion in, [84];
naming of cities in, [84], [85];
population pushed westward, [88];
as parent of all New England, [89];
settlement west of Connecticut River in, [89], [90];
influence during Revolution, [99];
loss of population in, [100];
growth in interior of, [101];
Revolutionary troops from, [111];
cosmopolitan population in 1930, [236];
attitude toward aliens, [268].
Massachusetts Bay, early permanent settlements around, [72];
Governor Winthrop's fleet in, [82].
Massachusetts Bay Colony, antecedents of, [82];
social status of English founders of, [83], [84].
Mather, Cotton, [94].
Maverick, Rev. John, [85].
Mayas, [341].
Maynard, Lord, [85].
Medford (Mass.), [82].
Mediterraneans, the, [24], [57], [59];
characteristics of, [29];
range of, [29];
in southern Italy, [39];
Celtic-speaking, [40];
on British Isles, [57].
Melanesia, Negroids in, [28];
racial tangle in, [28].
Mendoza, [322].
Mennonites, [79];
in Germantown, [115].
Mesopotamia, [22], [25], [39].
Mexican Indians, [327], [349].
Mexican revolution, in 1810, [326];
in 1910, [326], [327].
Mexican War, [165], [208], [213];
California annexed to United States as result of, [215].
Mexicans, in California, [216];
in Southwestern States, [292];

lack of intelligence, [327], [328];
in United States, [327]-330.
Mexico, [323], [348];
Nordics in, [209];
Spaniards in, [324], [325];
Indian blood in, [326].
Mexico City, [325], [328];
Humboldt in, [322].
Michaelangelo, [48].
Michigan, [164];
French atmosphere in, [177];
State Constitution, [177];
population in 1836, [177];
Dutchmen in, [178];
native population in, [250];
Canadians in, [250];
Indians in, [289];
Mexican population in, [293].
Micmacs, the, [307].
Middle Atlantic States, powerful section of America, [237].
Middlefield (Mass.), varied population in, [109].
Milan, [51].
Milford (N.J.), [113].
Milledgeville (Ala.), [183].
Milwaukee (Wis.), [161], [250], [251];
Germans in, [251].
Minnesota, [313];
settlement in, [195];
treaties with Indians, [195];
first official census in, [195];
Scandinavians in, [196], [251];
Germans in, [196];
Anglo-Saxon in character, [197];
Indians in, [289];
native population in, [238].
Miocene, [17].
Mississippi, heart of Cotton Kingdom, [184];
settlement in, [184]-189;
Negroes in, [185];
1930 census native population, [243].
Mississippi Bubble, [187].
Mississippi River, [73];
territories west of, [195]-207.
Mississippi Valley, [149];
Norway and Sweden immigration to, [229];
settlement of, [256].
Missouri, [87], [172], [175];
Boone in, [123];
settlement in, [190]-192, [201];
Kentuckians in, [191];
Nordic American stock in, [201];
native population in, [252];
Negroes in, [252].
Mitanni, [39].
Mobile (Ala.), [183].
Mohammedan Arabs, [45].
Mohammedanism, and the Negro, [49].
Mohawk River, [107], [108];
Loyalists and Scotch along the, [76].
Mohawk Valley, [109], [110].
Mohawks, the, [299].
Mohenjo-Daro, [25].
Mongolia, [23].
Mongoloid race, physical characteristics of, [37];
as distinguished from Alpine race, [37].
Mongoloid tribes, [19].
Mongoloids, the, [28], [64], [294].
Mongols, the, [21], [53];
similarity to Alpines, [29];
traits in, [30];
ancestors of American Indians, [30];
Asiatic, [31];
confront the Nordics, [356].
Monongahela country, [165].
Monroe, James, [136].
Montana, [254];
few settlers in, [205];
mining industry and growth of, [260];
admitted to statehood, [261];
foreign stock in, [261];
Indians in, [289].
Montcalm, overthrown at Quebec, [99].
Montgomery (Ala.), [183].
Moors, [49].
Moravia, [79];
Mongolian characters in, [37].
Moravian Brothers, in North Carolina, [80].
Moravians, in Georgia, [117], [144].
Mormon Church, [204].
Mormon Utah settlement, converts from England, [204].
Mormonism, [67].
Mormons, [176];
in Nebraska, [203];
in Utah, [203].
Morocco, [231].
Moscovia, [54].
Mulattoes, [131], [283];
in Virgin Islands, [11];
migration northward, [237];
intelligence of, [284].
Myjerka, [103].
"Myth of the Melting Pot," [1].
Naples (N.Y.), [110], [231].
Napoleonic Wars, [302], [312].
Nashville (Tenn.), [147].
Natchez (Ala.), [183].
Natchez (La.), [188].
National Origins Act, [272], [274], [278].
National Origins provision, 2.
National Origins Quota, [323].
Navajo Indians, [291].
Naval war in 1798, [71].
Neapolitan, the, [264].
Nebraska, [173];
settlement in, [203];
Mormons in, [203];
transients in, [203];
permanent settlers in, [203], [204];
attracted pioneers after Civil War, [254];
Bohemians in, [254];
Nordic influence in, [255].
Negrillos (or Pigmies), [20].
Negritos, [31];
in Eurasia, [28].
Negro slavery, [134], [144].
Negroes, the, [21];
in Virgin Islands, [11];
and Mohammedanism, [49];
among Roman Catholics in the colonies, [70];
increase in New York State, [237];
manual labor in South by, [281];
in United States according to census, [282];
in the North, [282];
treatment by Southerners, [282], [283];
in the North, [283];
tendency toward Communism, [283];
advantages of "white blood," [284];
in Central American countries, [330] ff.
Negroids, in Eurasia, [27];
in Melanesia, [28];
in Tasmania, [28].
Neolithic Mediterraneans, in Ireland, [62];
conquered by the Goidelic, [62].
Nevada, [254];
discovery of silver in, [205], [261];
growth of, [261];
admitted as a State, [262];
decrease in population, [262].
Nevis, [85].
New Amsterdam (Manhattan Island), [102].
New Bern, [139].
New Brunswick, Scottish population in, [309];
French-Canadians in, [310].
New Brunswick (N.J.), [113].
New Castle County (Del.), [116];
Scotch settlements in, [122].
New England, Pilgrim and Puritan migration to, [65];
early religions in, [67];
Episcopalians as Loyalists in, [69];
at war with France and Canadian Indians, [71];
early settlements in, [72];
natural increase in population of Whites in, [86];
emigration to Great Britain and West Indies from, [86];
Nordic character in, [90], [91];
Indian population of, [97], [98];
smallpox in, [98];
golden age of, [99];
vigor of Nordics in, [155];
French-Canadians in, [218];
increase of Anglo-Saxon stock in, [219], [220];
decline in white stock birth rate in, [220].
New England Company, [164].
New England Emigrant Aid Company, [201].
New Hampshire, [72], [94];
settlements in, [88], [89];
growth of, [101];
1930 census native population, [235].
New Iberia, [188].
New Jersey, [72];
settlement of, [77];
small Dutch element in, [77];
English in, [77], [111]-114;
East Jersey, [112];
West Jersey, [112];
population at time of Revolution, [114];
Alpines in, [153];
foreign-born in, [218];
1930 census native population, [238].
New London (Conn.), [87].
New Mexico, [152];
Spanish language in, [6];
native and Mexican Indians in, [213];
population in, [213], [214];
Mexicans in, [263];
Indians in, [289].
New Netherland, Dutch settlement of, [102].
New Orleans (La.), [168], [171], [186].
New Providence, [345].
New Rochelle (N.Y.), [76], [106].
New York City, [112];
inferiority of, at time of Revolution, [105];
beginning of commercial greatness of, [105], [106];
arrival of French Huguenots in, [106];
Puerto Ricans in, [344].
New York State, [72], [229];
small Dutch population in, [73];
French Huguenots in, [73], [76];
foreigners in, [75];
Flemings in, [76];
as unimportant colony, [105], [108];
New England colonization of, [105];
Palatines in, [107];
invasion of New Englanders after the Revolution, [108];
Ulster Scots in, [108];
Loyalist migration from New York State after the Revolution, [110];
large quantity of Revolutionary troops from, [111];
Alpines in, [153];
foreign-born in, [218];
increase in Negroes in, [237];
race mixture in, [237];
Indians in, [289].
New York Tribune (quoted), [216].
New Zealand, [303], [353], [354].
Newark (N.J.), [72], [113].
Newark Bay, [113].
Newfoundland, [296], [307], [308].
Newport (R.I.), [88].
Newton, [87].
Nicaragua, population of, [331], [332].
Niebelungenlied, the, [51].
Nile, valley of the, [22].
Nordic Frisians, [76].
Nordic race, peculiar characteristics of, [34], [35];
red-haired branch of, [35], [36];
importance in United States, [153];
necessity of close co-operation by, [357].
Nordics, [21];
jealousy of, [15];
originators of Aryan group of languages, [24], [26];
in India, [25];
and the caste system, [26];
passing of, in India and Persia, [26];
expansion of Alpines at expense of, [31];
development of, [33];
mixture with Mediterraneans in British Islands, [33];
question as to homeland of, [33], [34];
as aggressors, [34];
in Scandinavia, [35];
around Baltic and North Seas, [35];
Celtic, [36];
Teutonic, [36], [42], [46], [50];
in West as Achæans, [39];
in Mesopotamia, [39];
in Italy, [51];
in France, [52];
and the Crusades, [53];
Goidels, [57], [62];
in American colonies, [77];
weakened as a race, [150];
in Mexican territory, [209];
favored in Quota Act of [192]1, [271];
confronted by the Mongols, [356], [357].
Norfolk, [56];
the Angles in, [61].
Norman conquest in 1066, [60].
Normandy, religion in, [60].
Normans, the, [52].
Norse, [59];
in Scotland, [55].
Norsemen, [59], [60].
North, the Revolution in the, [69].
North Africa, the Berbers of, [24].
North Carolina, [134], [146];
extended to Mississippi River, [74];
Scots in, [74];
Moravian Brothers in, [80];
English and Ulster Scots in, [80];
Boone in, [123];
settlement of, [138];
varied races in, [138]-140;
1930 census native population, [240];
Indians in, [289].
North Dakota, native population, [238];
admitted as a State, [253];
Nordic element in, [253];
Indians in, [289].
North German Nordics, in America, [143].
North Sea, [35].
Northampton (England), [84].
Northamptonshire, [83].
Northern Abolitionists, [12].
Northern Pacific Railway, [253].
Northmen, the, in Scotland, [55];
as Danes, [55];
conquer Normandy, [55].
Northwest Territory (old), [163]-182;
French in, [162];
Mexicans in, [162];
Ohio, [164]-167;
Indiana, [167]-170;
Illinois, [170]-176;
Michigan, [176]-178;
Wisconsin, [178]-182.
Norwalk (Conn.), [87].
Nova Scotia, the French in, [308];
Loyalists in, [308];
Gaelic spoken in, [309].
Offnet race, [32].
Oglethorpe, Governor, [116], [143], [145].
Ohio, [150];
migration to, [109];
settled by New England Company, [164];
Pennsylvania emigration to, [165];
Nordics and Pennsylvania Dutch in, [166];
German and Irish immigrants in, [166];
settlers of northern Indiana in, [168];
native population in, [248];
Canadians in, [248].
Ohio Legislature, [165].
Ohio River, [145], [146], [164], [167], [168].
Oklahoma, pride of Indian blood in, [98];
cosmopolitan population in, [245], [246];
Indians in, [246], [289]-292;
Canadians in, [246].
Old Charles Town, [141].
Old Pretender, the, [139].
Oneida Community, [67].
Ontario, [303];
Roman Catholic Scotch Highlanders in, [108];
"United Empire Loyalists" in, [111];
French-Canadians in, [310];
Loyalist refugees in, [311];
increase in population, [312];
Nordic element in, [313];
Poles and Italians in, [318];
Russians in, [318].
Orange County, Ulster Scots in, [107].
Oregon, settlement in, [206], [207], [256];
native population in, [267].
Oregon Trail, [259].
Orient, revolt against European control in the, [15];
missionaries in, [15].
Osco-Umbrians, [39];
invasions into Italy, [26].
Ostrogoths, [44], [51].

Ottawa, French language in, [5].
Ottawa River, [297].
Pacific Coast, [155];
migration westward to, [158], [217], [218];
restless population on, [257];
Indian population on, [290];
immigration of Filipinos on, [293], [294].
Pacific States, America's future in, [354];
Philippines in, [354].
Palatinate, the, [116], [228].
Palatine Germans, along the Hudson River and Mohawk valleys, [76].
Palatines, the, [8], [106];
in Holland and England, [107];
in New York State, [107], [117];
in Pennsylvania, [107];
in Georgia, [116], [117].
Paleolithic Period, [32].
Palmer, [94].
Palmyra (N.Y.), [110].
Panama, population of, [333];
North American influence in, [333].
Panama Canal, [354].
Papua, racial tangle in, [28].
Paraguay, [321];
population of, [341], [342];
war with Brazil and Argentina, [341].
Paris, [186].
Peace of Paris, the, [99].
Pelham, [94].
Penn, William, [114], [115], [121], [123], [125].
Pennsylvania, [146];
French Huguenots in, [73];
settlement of, [77];
Germans in, [79];
Palatines in, [107];
religious denominations in, [115];
invasion of Palatinates in, [117], [122], [124];
English alarmed over Palatine invasion, [120];
Ulster Scots in, [121]-122;
increase in population, [123];
races in, at end of Colonial period, [124];
Delaware part of, [125];
foreign-born in, [218];
1930 census native population in, [238];
attitude toward aliens, [268].
Pennsylvania Dutch, [123], [124], [137].
Pennsylvanische Deutsche, [115].
Perpetual Emigrating Fund, [204].
Persia, passing of Nordics in, [26];
Negro admixture in, [27].
Persians, Islamized, [49].
Perth Amboy (N.J.), [77], [113].
Perthshire, [159].
Peru, Indian race in, [342].
Peruvian Indians, [342].
Philadelphia, [105], [112], [114], [155], [309];
English Quakers and Welsh around, [77];
Ulster Scots enter colonies through, [77];
strength of Church of England in, [121];
as metropolis of United States, [123].
Philippines, the, [294];
rise of nationalism in, [14];
American problem in, [353];
in Pacific States, [354];
United States should govern, [355], [356].
Phrygia, Nordic conquest of, [39].
Picts, [58], [61].
Piedmont, [173].
Piedmont (Italy), [143].
Pigmies (or Negrillos), [20].
Pike's Peak, [258], [259].
Pilgrim Fathers, [82].
Piscataqua (New Brunswick, N.J.), [113].
Pittsburgh, Ulster Scots in, [123].
Pleistocene glaciation, [34].
Plymouth, [98].
Plymouth colony, settlers of, [81];
antecedents in, [82].
Plymouth Rock, [82].
Po valley, as Cisalpine Gaul, [41].
Polaks, [355].
Poland, rise of nationalism in, [14];
migration of German Jews into, [225].
Polish Jews, [224]-226.
Polk, James K., [210].
Polygamy, as racial curse, [49], [50].
Polynesia, Malay blood in, [30].
Polynesian Islands, [353].
Pomerania, [181].
Port of New York, Dutch population outside, [77].
Portland (Maine), [101].
Portsmouth (R.I.), [88].
Portugal, [47], [48], [335], [336].
Portuguese, in Brazil, [335].
Prairie Provinces, [314].
Prince Edward Island, native population of, [309];
French-Canadians in, [310].
Princeton University, [113].
Protectorate, the, [133].
Protestant Episcopal Church, the, [69].
Protestant House of Orange, [127].
Providence (R.I.), [88];
Huguenots in, [97].
Prussia, [116], [170].
Pueblo Indians, revolt against Spanish, [291].
Puerto Ricans, [294].
Puerto Rico, [343], [349];
results of abolition of slavery in, [11];
population of, [343], [344].
Puget Sound, [267].
Puritan emigration, from England, [82].
Puritans, New England, [66];
as refugees in Virginia, [135].
Putnam, General Rufus, [164].
"Q" Celts, [62].
Quakers, [93], [125];
along Delaware River, [112];
become Anglicans, [121];
in Albemarle, [138].
Quebec, [229], [304];
French language in, 5;
"Habitat" French of, 8;
intermarriage of French and Indians, 9;
overthrow of Montcalm at, [99];
stronghold of French Canadians, [310];
Russians in, [318].
Quebec Province (Lower Canada), [301];
French settlement of, [297];
physical characteristics of settlers, [297], [298];
language in, [298];
domination of Jesuits in, [299];
centre of French population, [301].
Quota Act of 1921, [270], [271];
favored the European Nordic, [271].
Race, in United States during Colonial times, [2] ff.;
at present time, [6];
definition of, [21] ff., [36];
distinction between language and, [24];
Mediterranean, [28], [29];
Alpine, [28], [29];
Nordic, [29];
Alpine Slavs, [31];
Mongols, [36];
in Ireland, [62], [63].
See also under various races.
Railroads, [175].
Ravenal, [141].
Reading (Pa.), [121], [123].
Red River, steam navigation on, [313].
Red River Colony, [195], [313].
Red River country, [253].
Reformation, the, [42];
lack of hold on Ireland, [63].
"Refuge for the Oppressed," [227].
"Regulators," rebellion in North Carolina, [70].
Reuter, E.B., [284].
Revolution, the American, hatred in New England of mother country during, [68];
political and social, [70];
loss of Nordic blood in America during, [71];
and expulsion of Iroquois Indians, [76];
Germans unloyal during, [79];
Protestants in United States after, [152];
Nordic invasion of Florida during, [193];
migration following, [256].
Revolution (French), [179].
Revolution of 1689, [128].
Rhode Island, settlements in, [88];
source of colonization, [89];
1930 census native population, [236].
Richelieu River, [301].
Richmond (N.Y.), [110].
Richmond (Va.), [136].
Riel Rebellion, [306].
Rio Grande, the, [154], [320].
Robinson (clergyman), [83].
Rochester, increase in Negroes in, [237].
Rock Island and Pacific Railway, [196].
Rocky Mountain States, [257];
varying population in, [258].
Roderick, [46].
Roman Catholic church, growth in America, [162];
hostility of Know Nothing Party to, [219];
strength in Canada, [318].
Roman Catholics, population in the colonies, [69], [70];
Negroes and Germans among, [70];
many colonies legislated against, [70].
Rome, [22];
sacked by Gauls, [41].
Roosevelt, Theodore, [4], [269].
Roxbury (Mass.), [82].
Royalists, in Virginia, [135].
Russia, Varangians in, [56].
Sahara Desert, [26].
Saint Croix, [85].
Saint Kitts, [85], [86].
Saint Lawrence River, [300], [301].
Saint Louis (Mo.), [161], [171], [196];
as French outpost, [190];
marked German tinge in, [191], [192].
Saint Mary's (Md.), [126], [128].
Saladin, [50].
Salem, [112].
Salvador, population of, [331].
Salzburg, [144].
San Antonio (Texas), [212].
San Francisco (Calif.), [216];
Oriental laborers in, [265].
Sanscrit, in Burma, [25];
in India, [25].
Santo Domingo, [287], [345];
loss of white control in, [11], [12];
barbarism in, [12].
Saracens, at Tours, [53].
Saskatchewan, [314];
Russians in, [318].
Savannah (Ga.), [144].
Saxons, [41], [51];
invaded Britain, [59].
Scandinavia, [42];
first Nordics in, [35];
Nordic immigration from, [227], [229].
Schenectady, [103].
Schuylkill valley, Germans in, [121].
Schwankenfelders, [79].
Scituate, [82].
Scotch Highlanders, importation of Roman Catholics, [108].
"Scotch Irish," [63].
Scotch Rebellion of 1670, [133].
Scotland, [58];
Nordic population in, [59];
invaded by Danes, [59].
Scrooby, [82].
Sedgmoor, Battle of, [134].
Sedition Act of 1798, [268].
Selkirk, Lord, [313].
Seneca Falls (N.Y.), [110].
Seneca Lake, [110].
Sephardim, [227].
Seven Seas, the, [352].
Seven Years' War, [193].
Sevier, [141].
Shakers, [67].
Shawneetown, [172].
Shays's Rebellion, [70], [90].
Sheffield, [90].
Shenandoah Valley, [74], [137], [146];
Scotch Germans in, [122].
Sicily, [231], [232].
Sidonius, Appollonius, [51].
Sierra range, the, [155].
Silesia, [53].
Singapore, [354].
Sioux Indians, [291].
Skrellings, [98].
Slavery, [12];
results of abolition on British Empire, [11];
in South Africa, [11];
in Jamaica, [11];
in Puerto Rico, [11];
and the Civil War, [12], [13];
in South Carolina, [142].
Slavs, Alpine, [31].
Smith, Captain John, [90].
Société des Amis des Noirs, [12].
Sogdians, [23].
"Solid South," [282].
Somaliland, [29].
Somerset, [159].
South, the, religion in, [69];
decline of leadership in, [175].
South Africa, [353];
results of abolition of slavery in, [11].
South Carolina, [168];
racial complexion in, [80];
settlement of, [141];
large-scale agriculture in, [141];
Ulster Scots in, [142];
slavery question in, [142];
Nordics and loyalists in, [142];
Dorchester Society in, [144];
Negroes outnumbered whites, [185];
1930 census native population, [240], [241].
South Dakota, rush in 1876 in, [254];
Indians in, [289].
South Irish Catholics, 7.
South Italy, Negroid element in, 9.
South of Portugal, Negro slave element in, 9.
South Russia, Aryan language in, [24];
the Goths in, [44].
"South Sea," the, [162]
Southern frontiersman, religion of, [67].
Southwest, [183]-194;
Alabama, [183], [184];
Mississippi, [184]-189;
Louisiana, [185]-189;
Arkansas, [189]-190;
Missouri, [190]-192;
Florida, [192]-194.
Soviet Russia, Alpines in, [15].
Spain, conquered by Celtic Nordics, [40];
Visigoths in, [45];
ceded Florida to England, [193].
Spaniards, in Mexico, [324], [325].
Spanish Conquest, [324].
Spanish Main, the, [98].
Spencer, Herbert (quoted), [9], [10].
Stamford (Conn.), [87].
Statehood, [258], [261], [262].
Steamboat, first on Lake Erie, [177].
"Stony Mountains," [155].
Stormont (Ontario), [312].
Straits of Gibraltar, [45].
Stratford (Conn.), [87].
Suevi, the, [42], [45], [51].
Suffolk, the Angles in, [61].
Sumner, Senator, [288].
Surrey, [159].
Susquehanna River, [110].
Swabia, [228].
Sweden, [44], [45].
Swedes, [111].
Switzerland, [50];
national unity in, [5];
various languages in, [5].
Symmes, Judge T.C., [164].
Syracuse, increase in Negroes in, [237].
Syria, [231].
Tasmania, [20];
Negroids in, [28].
Taunton (Mass.), [82].
Tennessee, [72], [146], [157];
Scotch and Germans in, [122];
settlement of, [147]-149;
Alpines in, [153];

racial make-up of, [242].
Teutonic, branch of the Nordic race, [42];
as a term, [43].
Teutonic Nordics, [36], [42], [43].
Teutons, [42];
collapse of Roman Empire under, [43];
physical characteristics of, [43].
Texas, [152], [174];
Mexicans in, [162], [208];
American settlement in, [209];
importance as slave-holding territory, [209];
growth of population at time of Mexican War, [212];
Negroes in, [212];
German emigration (Alpines) in, [212];
foreign elements in, [246];
Nordic absorption of, [256].
The Chronicle, [260].
"The Land of Little Sticks," [316].
"The Provisional State of Deseret," [204].
"The Refuge of the Oppressed," [1].
Theodoric, [44].
Thirteen Colonies, the, [163].
Thirty Years War, [127].
Thomson, David, [88].
"Three Notch Road," [184].
Tioga River, [110].
Tokarian language, [25].
Toulouse, [48].
Tours, the Saracens at, [53].
Transcontinental Railway, [203].
Treaty of Paris, [163].
Trenton (N.J.), [115].
Troubadours, [48].
Tucson (Ariz.), [214].
Turanians, [31].
"Turco," [339].
Turkestan, Ural-Altaic language in, [24].
Turks, race mixture among, [50];
in Asia Minor, [50].
Ukraine, the, [54].
Ulster, [95];
Presbyterians in, [63].
Ulster Presbyterians, [93].
Ulster Scots, [7], [92], [93], [96];
in America, [60];
hatred of England, [67];
forced to the West, [73];
in North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee, [74];
in California, [78];
in Ireland, [78];
in Orange County, [107];
established church in Albany, [108];
west of Alleghanies, [123];
in Pittsburgh, [123];
in Maryland, [129];
in South Carolina, [142];
in Georgia, [144];
animosity during Revolution, [150].
Union, the, requirement for admission to, in 1818, [173].
Union Pacific Railway, [259].
Unitarian form of Christianity, [46].
"United Empire Loyalists," [111], [311], [313].
United Irishmen, [159].
United States, mixture of racial groups in, [2];
effect of sentimentalism on Nordic survival in, [12];
slavery in, [12];
first census, [49];
distribution of free land in, [65];
little Dutch blood in present population of, [104];
population at time of first census, [149], [152], [153];
Protestant majority in, [151], [154];
Catholic hierarchy in, [151], [152];
Nordic race in, [153];
Alpine race in, [153];
census of 1860, [158], [162];
German settlement in, [180], [181];
Nordics in, [220], [226], [234];
national unity in, [222];
Nordic immigration from Scandinavia, [227]-230;
Alpines in, [227], [228];
European immigration to, [228];
early Germans in, [228];
Norwegians in farming land of, [230];
immigration of English and Irish in, [230];
immigration of Italians, [231];
percentage of alien emigration and immigration in, [233];
"gentlemen's agreement" with Japan, [266];
white population in 1920, [278];
percentage of Protestants in, [279];
percentage of Nordics in, [279], [280];
loss of unity in, [281];
Negroes in, [282];
increase of electoral vote in the South, [282];
1930 Indian population, [289];
distribution of Indians in, [289];
Mexicans in, according to 1930 census, [293];
Hindu immigration prevented in, [295];
Irish Catholic migration from Canada to, [304];
Mexicans in, [324];
disadvantages of Mexican immigration to, [327], [329];
percentage of Nordics and Protestants in, [347];
immigration during last century, [347], [348];
restriction of immigration, [348] ff.;
aliens in, [350];
international affair, [352];
"White Man's Burden" in, [352], [357];
trouble with Philippines, [354];
should govern Philippines, [355].
Upland (Chester), [114].
Upper Canada, [297];
immigration from British Isles to, [302], [303];
increase in population, [312].
Ur, [25].
Ural mountains, [54].
Uruguay, white races in, [337];
cosmopolitan population in, [338].
Utah, Mormons in, [176], [204], [205], [256];
Nordic population in, [204], [205];
native population in, [261];
foreign stock in, [261].
Utica, increase in Negroes in, [237].
Vaal River, [11].
Valens, [44].
Valley of the Syr-Daria, [22].
Van Buren, Martin, [256].
Vandals, [45], [46].
Varangians, [56], [59].
Varini, the, [52].
Venezuela, population of, [334].
Vermont, dispute over ownership of, [72];
settlement of, [89];
as a frontier, [90];
migration from Massachusetts to, [90];
as an independent state, [90];
growth of, [101];
1930 census native population, [235].
Victorian Era, [281].
Vigot (or Bigot), [46].
Vincennes (Ind.), [149], [168].
Virgin Islands, [192];
Negroes and Mulattoes in, [11], [345].
Virginia, [116], [117], [146], [220];
early settlements, [72];
Mother of States in Colonial times, [73];
tidewater population, [73], [74];
extended to Mississippi River, [73];
English settlement, [80];
natural increase in population of whites, [86];
Pocahontas tradition in, [99];
as exploitation of adventurers, [130];
mixed classes of immigrants in, [132] ff.;
Cavaliers in, [133];
refuge of Puritans during Stuart period, [135];
Royalists in, [135];
Kentucky veterans in, [164];
1930 census native population, [240];
surplus population, [242].
Virginia City (Nevada), [261].
Visigoths, [46], [52];
in Gaul, [44];
in Spain, [45], [49].
Vistula, the, [44], [54].
Von Bismarck, chancellor, [282].
Waldenses, [143].
Wales, [58], [59];
Norsemen in, [59];
Iberians in, [61].
Walker's Law, [276].
Walla Walla Valley, [207].
Walloons, [102].
War of 1812, [166], [171], [177], [208], [312], [313];
causes of, [163].
Warwick (R.I.), [88].
Washington, [289];
an independent territory, [207];
native population, [267];
population increased by railways, [267];
Nordic element in, [267].
Washington (D.C.), [239].
Washington Bicentennial in 1932, [6].
Washington, George, [125], [148].
Watauga settlement, the, [148].
Watertown (Mass.), [81], [82], [87].
Welsh, in England, [41].
Wends, [31], [54].
Wessex, Puritan emigration from, [84].
West Central Asia, [64];
origin of civilization in, [22], [23].
West India Company, [103].
West Indies, [208], [294], [325], [343];
languages in, [23], [24];
Nordic settlement, [85], [86];
Negroes in, [86];
Loyalists flee to, [100];
South Carolinians in, [142];
fate of colonists in, [154], [155].
West Jersey, [112], [113].
West Scotland, high stature in, [62].
West Virginia, [138];
1930 census native population, [241], [242].
Wethersfield (Conn.), [87].
Whiskey Rebellion, [70], [125].
"White Man's Burden," [352], [354], [357].
Whites, the, [12], [20];
slaves injurious to, [13].
Whitesborough, [109].
Whitman, Marcus, [206].
Wilderness Road, [145].
William III, [63].
Williams, Roger, [88].
Wilmington (Del.), [115], [139].
Wilson, Woodrow, [14], [269], [270].
Wiltshire, [84].
Windsor (Conn.), [87].
Winnipeg, [313].
Winthrop, Governor, arrival of fleet in Massachusetts Bay, [82].
Wisconsin, [164], [175], [195];
lead mines in, [172], [178];
settlement of, [178]-182;
growth, [178], [179];
foreign element in, [179];
climate, soil, and forest lands, [179], [180];
Germans in, [179]-181;
non-Nordic population, [182];
native population, [238];
foreign element in, [250], [251];
waning of wheat industry, [254];
Indians in, [289].
Woodbridge (N.J.), [113].
Worcester, [94].
World, the, racially, [26] ff.
World War, [15], [116], [185], [212], [231], [246], [247], [252], [269], [283], [315], [336], [338], [340], [356];
immigration law as result of, 1, 2;
foreigners in draft list, [3];
immigration from Scandinavia since, [229].
Wright, J.K., (quoted), [40] n.
Wurtemberg, [268].
Wusuns, [34].
Wyoming, admitted to Union, [259];
native population, [259];
foreign stock in, [259].
Wyoming Valley of Pennsylvania, [101].
Yadkin valley, [123].
Yarmouth, [82].
Yiddish (language), [225].
York (Pa.), [79], [122].
Yorkshire, [82].
Young, Brigham, [204], [205].
Young Pretender, the, [139].
Zuyder Zee, [103].