A DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN AUTHORS
SUPPLEMENT
- A
- Aaron, Samuel. Pa., 1800-1865. A Baptist clergyman and educator of Mount Holly, New Jersey, prominent as an anti-slavery advocate. He published a number of popular text-books. Faithful Translation.
- Abbatt, William. N. Y., 1851- ——. An insurance clerk of New York city, who has contributed a number of historical papers to the press, and was at one time editor of The Interstate, an insurance periodical. The Crisis of the Revolution: the Story of Arnold and André; The Battle of Pell’s Point (or Pelham).
- Abbott, Alexander Creever. Md., 1860- ——. A physician, professor of hygiene in the University of Pennsylvania. The Principles of Bacteriology; Hygiene of Transmissible Diseases.
- Abbott, Ernest Hamlin. N. Y., 1870- ——. Son of Lyman Abbott ([page 2]). Religious Life in America: a Record of Personal Observation.
- Abbott, Frank Frost. Ct., 1860- ——. A professor of Latin in the University of Chicago. A History and Description of Roman Political Institutions. Gi.
- Abbott, Mrs. Mary Perkins [Ives]. Ms., 1851-1904. A journalist of Chicago. Alexia, a romance; The Beverleys, a story. Mg.
- Abbott, Russell Bigelow. Ind., 1823- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, president of Albert Lea College, Minnesota. Bible History; History of Winona Presbytery.
- Adams, Amos. Ms., 1728-1775. A Congregational clergyman of Roxbury, Massachusetts, who published A Concise Historical View of the Difficulties, Hardships, and Perils which Attended the Planting of New England, a work conceived in the true historical spirit.
- Adams, Andy. Ind., 18— - ——. A Colorado prospector whose early life was spent as a cowboy in Texas. The Log of a Cowboy; A Texas Matchmaker. Hou.
- Adams, Charles Josiah. O., 1850- ——. An Episcopal clergyman at Rossville, New York city. Where is My Dog? or, is Man Alone Immortal?; The Matterhorn Head, and Other Poems; Does Man Alone Reason?; How Baldy Won the County Seat, a novel.
- Adams, Cyrus Cornelius. Il., 1849- ——. An editor on the staff of the New York Sun. A Handbook of Commercial Geography; Elementary Commercial Geography.
- Adams, Francis Alexandre. N. Y., 1874- ——. A journalist of New York city. Who Rules America? Truths about Trusts; The Philippine Question; The Transgressors, a political novel.
- Adams, Frederick Upham. Ms., 1859- ——. An author and inventor. Atmospheric Resistance and its Relation to the Speed of Railway Trains; The Kidnapped Millionaires; John Burt. Lo.
- Adams, Frederick W. Vt., 1786-1858. A physician and violin-maker of Montpelier, Vermont. Theological Criticism, or Hints of the Philosophy of Man and Nature (1843).
- Adams, James Barton. O., 1843- ——. A Denver journalist. Breezy Western Verse.
- Adams, Mrs. Mary [Mathews]. I., 1840-1902. Wife of C. K. Adams ([page 3]). An educator and verse-writer of Madison, Wisconsin. The Choir Visible, a volume of verse; Sonnets and Songs; The Song at Midnight. Mg. Put.
- Adams, Washington Irving Lincoln. N. Y., 1865- ——. A manufacturer of photographic supplies. Amateur Photography; In Nature’s Image; Sunshine and Shadow, a book for photographers; Woodland and Meadow; Personalia. Ba.
- Addams, Jane. Il., 1860- ——. A Chicago writer and lecturer upon social reforms. Democracy and Social Ethics; The Function of the Social Settlement; Philanthropy and Social Progress (co-author). Mac.
- Addison, Daniel Dulany. W. Va., 1863- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Brookline, Massachusetts. Life of Lucy Larcom, supra; Life of Edward Bass, First Bishop of Massachusetts; The Clergy in American Life and Letters; The Episcopalians. Hou. Mac.
- Addums, Mozis. See Bagby, G. W.
- Adler, Cyrus. Ark., 1863- ——. A Washington archæologist. Told in the Coffee House: Turkish Tales (with A. Ramsay).
- Adler, Samuel. G., 1801-1891. A rabbi of New York city. Jewish Conference Papers; Benedictions; Kobez al Tad (Collections).
- Albee, Mrs. Helen [Ricker]. O., 1864- ——. Wife of J. Albee ([page 5]). Mountain Playmates. Hou.
- Alden, Carlos Coolidge. Il., 1866- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Abbott’s Forms of Pleading; Handbook of Code of Civil Procedure.
- Alden, Raymond Macdonald. N. Y., 1873- ——. Son of Mrs. Isabella Alden ([page 6]). A professor of English literature in Leland Stanford University. American Literature Papers; Greek Literature Papers; Roman Literature Papers; The Rise of Formal Satire in England; The Art of Debate; On Seeing an Elizabethan Play; English Verse.
- Alderman, Edwin Anderson. N. C., 1861- ——. An educator, president of the University of North Carolina, 1896-1900, Tulane University, New Orleans, 1900-04, and of the University of Virginia from 1904. Life of William Hooper, signer of the Declaration; School History of North Carolina.
- Alemany, Joseph Sadoc. Sp., 1814-1888. A Roman Catholic missionary of Spanish birth, who came to the United States in 1841, and was made Archbishop of San Francisco in 1853. He resigned his office in 1883 and returned to Spain. Life of Saint Dominic.
- Alexander, Archibald. 18— - ——. A professor of philosophy at Columbia University. Some Problems of Philosophy; Theories of the Will in the History of Philosophy; A Theory of Conduct. Scr.
- Alexander, De Alva Stanwood. Me., 1845- ——. A lawyer and genealogist of Buffalo. The Alexanders of Maine.
- Alexander, Esther Frances. “Francesca Alexander.” Ms., 184- - ——. An artist of Florence, Italy. The Story of Ida, edited by Ruskin; Christ’s Folk in the Apennine; The Hidden Servants. Mr. Ruskin at one time brought out a collection of Roadside Songs of Tuscany, collected, translated, and illustrated by Miss Alexander, and in 1897 a much more complete collection, with illustrations, was published under the title of Tuscan Songs. Hou. Lit.
- Alexander, Gross. Ky., 1852- ——. A Methodist clergyman of Louisville, Kentucky. History of the Methodist Episcopal Church South; The Beginnings of Methodism in the South; The Son of Man.
- Alexander, James Waddel. N. J., 1839- ——. Son of J. W. Alexander ([page 7]). A lawyer of New York city. Princeton, Old and New, a volume of recollections of undergraduate life. Scr.
- Alexander, William DeWitt. H. I., 1833- ——. Surveyor-general of the Hawaiian Islands, from 1872. A Brief History of the Hawaiian People; History of the Later Years of the Hawaiian Monarchy; Brief Hawaiian Grammar.
- Alger, Russell Alexander. O., 1836- ——. Secretary of war, 1897-99. The Spanish American War. Har.
- Allen, Alfred. N. Y., 1866- ——. A novelist and playwright of New York city. His novels include The Heart of Don Vega; Judge Lynch; The Cup of Victory (with R. Hovey, [page 197]); Chivalry; The Triumph of Todd (with T. B. Sayre). Plays: Jack the Giant-Killer; A Burglar Honeymoon; Playmates; The Head of the House.
- Allen, Charles. Ms., 1827- ——. A jurist of Boston. Notes on the Bacon-Shakespeare Question. Hou.
- Allen, Charles Dexter. Ct., 1865- ——. A journalist and banker of Hartford. American Book Plates; Ex Libris: Essays of a Collector.
- Allen, Charles Warrenne. N. J., 1854- ——. A New York physician. Practitioner’s Manual; Handy Book of Medical Progress.
- Allen, David Oliver. Ms., 1800-1883. A Congregational missionary in Bombay for many years. India, Ancient and Modern.
- Allen, Ethan. Ct., 1737-1789. A famous soldier, major-general in the colonial army during the American Revolution. Narrative of the Capture of Ticonderoga; Reason the Only Oracle of Man; A Vindication of the Inhabitants of Vermont. See Life by De Puy (1859).
- Allen, George. Vt., 1808-1876. A Roman Catholic educator, but prior to 1847 an Episcopal clergyman. Novena of Saint Anthony of Padua; Life of Philidor.
- Allen, Horace Newton. O., 1858- ——. A diplomatist, United States minister to Korea from 1897. Korean Tales; A Chronological Index of Chief Events in the Foreign Intercourse of Korea.
- Allen, James Lane. Ky., 1848- ——. A lawyer and littérateur of Chicago. Handbook of the Nebraska Code.
- Allen, Jonathan Adams. Vt., 1825-1890. A prominent physician and surgeon of Chicago. Essays on Mechanism of Nervous Action; Medical Examination for Life Insurance.
- Allen, Walter. Ms., 1840- ——. A Boston journalist. Governor Chamberlain’s Administration in South Carolina; Life of General Grant. Hou. Pa.
- Allin, Arthur. Ont., 1869-1903. A professor of psychology and pedagogy at Ohio University from 1896. The Psychology of Belief; The Psychology of Attention.
- Allston, Margaret. See Bergengren, Mrs.
- Alsop, George. E., 1638-16—? An Englishman who emigrated to Maryland in 1658, and in 16— published A Character of the Province of Maryland, a jocular, good-humoured description of that province. See Tyler’s American Literature.
- Altgeld, John Peter. G., 1847-1902. An Illinois politician, formerly governor of his State. Penal Machinery and its Victims; Live Questions; The Cost of Something for Nothing.
- Altsheler, Joseph Alexander. Ky., 1862- ——. A novelist and journalist of New York city. The Rainbow of Gold; The Hidden Mine; The Son of Saratoga; A Soldier of Manhattan; A Knight of Philadelphia; A Herald of the West; The Last Rebel; In Circling Camps; In Hostile Red; The Wilderness Road; My Captive; Before the Dawn. Ap. Dou. Lip.
- Ambauen, Andrew Joseph. Sd., 1847- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman of Dodgeville, Iowa. The Friend of Youth; Roses of Heaven; Guide to our Celestial Home; Devout Companion; Our Christian Duties; Floral Apostles.
- Ames, Azel. Ms., 1845- ——. A sanitary engineer. The Mayflower and her Log; Sex in Industry; Elementary Hygiene for the Tropics. Hou.
- Ames, Joseph Sweetman. Vt., 1864- ——. A professor of physics at Johns Hopkins University. The Theory of Physics; Elements of Physics; The Induction of Electric Currents.
- Anders, James M——. 185- - ——. A physician of Philadelphia. Text Book of the Practice of Medicine; House Plants as Sanitary Agents.
- Anderson, Edward L[owell]. O., 1842- ——. A lawyer of Cincinnati. Six Weeks in Norway; Soldier and Pioneer; How to Ride and School a Horse; A System of School Training for Horses; On Horseback in the School and on the Road; The Gallop; Modern Horsemanship; Vice in the Horse; Curb, Snaffle, and Spur. Clke. Lit.
- Anderson, Edward Pretot. N. Y., 1855- ——. A littérateur who has published The Ashmeads, or Scenes in Northern Europe; Christian Giving and Living.
- Anderson, Martin Brewer. Me., 1815-1890. An educator who was president of Rochester University, 1853-88. Papers and Addresses (1895).
- Andrews, Charles McLean. Ct., 1863- ——. A professor at Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, from 1889. The Historical Development of Modern Europe from the Congress of Vienna to the Present Time; River Towns of Connecticut; The Old English Manor. J. H. U. Put.
- Andrews, Launcelot Winchester. Ont., 1856- ——. A professor of chemistry in the University of Iowa from 1885. An Introduction to the Study of Qualitative Analysis.
- Andrews, William Page. Ms., 1848- ——. A littérateur of Salem, Massachusetts, who has edited the poems of Jones Very and published a number of translations from the German.
- Anthony, Alfred Williams. R. I., 1860- ——. A professor at Bates College, Lewiston, Maine. The Method of Jesus; Introduction to the Life of Jesus; The Sunday School: its progress in Method and Scope; The Higher Criticism in the New Testament. Sil.
- Antin, Mary. See Graubau, Mrs. Mary Antin.
- Antrobus, Suzanne. See Robinson, Mrs. Suzanne.
- Apgar, Austin C[raig]. N. J., 1838- ——. A scientist of Trenton, New Jersey, since 1866 an instructor in natural science at the State Normal School. Geographical Charts; Geographical Hand Book; Geographical Drawing Book; Geography of New Jersey; Plant Analysis; Mollusks of the Atlantic Coast; Pocket Key of Trees; Trees of the Northern United States; Pocket Key of Birds; Birds of the United States. Am.
- Appel, Theodore. Pa., 1823- ——. A German Reformed clergyman and educator in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. College Recollections; Beginnings of the Theological Seminary; Letters to Boys and Girls about the First Christmas at Bethlehem; Life of John Williamson Nevin, supra.
- Arbeely, Abraham Joseph. Sa., 1852- ——. A physician of New York city. A Complete Self-Teaching Manual of the Arabic and English Languages.
- Archer, Frederic. E., 1838-1901. An organist, of Pittsburg. The Organ and the College Organist.
- Archibald, Andrew Webster. N. Y., 1851- ——. A Congregational clergyman at Brockton, Massachusetts, from 1897. The Bible Verified; The Trend of the Centuries.
- Armstrong, Leroy. Ind., 1854- ——. A journalist of Lafayette, Indiana. An Indiana Man; The Outlaws; Washington Brown, Farmer.
- Arnold, Augusta Foote. N. Y., 1844- ——. A New York author. The Century Cook Book; The Sea Beach at Ebb Tide. Cent.
- Arnold, Birch. See Bartlett, Alice.
- Arnold, Howard Payson. Ms., 1831- ——. A Boston writer. Gleanings from Pontresina and the Upper Engadine; Historic Sidelights. Har. Hou.
- Arnold, Sarah Louise. Ms., 1859- ——. A Boston educator; dean of Simmons College. Waymarks for Teachers; Stepping Stones to Literature; Reading: how to Teach It; The Mother Tongue. Gi. Sil.
- Ashley, Barnas Freeman. N. S., 1833- ——. A Baptist clergyman who has written a number of books for boys, among which are Tan Pile Jim; Dick and Jack’s Adventures on Sable Island; Air Castle Don. Lai.
- Ashley, Roscoe Lewis. N. Y., 1872- ——. An educator in Los Angeles, California. The American Federal State; The American Government.
- Ashley, William James. E., 1860- ——. A writer on economics; professor of economic history at Harvard University, 1892-1903. James and Philip Van Artevelde; An Introduction to English Economic History and Theory: Book I.; From the Eleventh to the Fourteenth Century; What is Political Science?; Surveys, Historic and Economic. Lgs. Mac.
- Ashmore, Ruth. See Mallon, Mrs.
- Ashton, Laurence. Va., 1847- ——. A physician of Dallas, Texas. Puerperal Septicæmia.
- Aspinwall, Mrs. Alicia [Towne]. 18— - ——. A popular writer of juvenile tales, living in Brookline, Massachusetts. Short Stories for Short People; The Echo Maid, and Other Stories. Dut.
- Astor, John Jacob. N. Y., 1864- ——. Cousin of W. W. Astor ([page 12]). A Journey in Other Worlds, a scientific romance. Ap.
- Atherton, Mrs. Gertrude Franklin [Horn]. Cal., 1859- ——. A sensational novelist, for several years resident in London. The Doomswoman; American Wives and English Husbands; The Californians; Patience Sparhawk and her Time; Valiant Runaways; What Dreams may come; Hermia Suydam; Los Cerritos; His Fortunate Grace; Before the Gringo Came; A Whirl Asunder; A Daughter of the Vine; Senator North; The Aristocrats; The Conqueror; The Splendid Idle Forties. Rulers of Kings. Ap. Do. Har. Ll. Sto.
- Atkinson, George Francis. Mch., 1854- ——. A professor of botany at Cornell University. Biology of Ferns; Elementary Botany; Lessons in Botany; Studies of American Fungi. Ho. Mac.
- Atkinson, George Wesley. W. Va., 1845- ——. The governor of West Virginia, 1897-1901. History of Kanawha; West Virginia Pulpit; A. B. C. of the Tariff; Don’t, or Negative Chips from Blocks of Living Truths; Revenue Digest; Prominent Men of West Virginia; After the Moonshiners; Psychology Simplified.
- Atkinson, William Biddle. Pa., 1832- ——. A prominent Philadelphia physician. Hints in the Obstetric Procedure; Therapeutics of Gynecology and Obstetrics; Physicians and Surgeons of the United States.
- Atlee, Washington Lemuel. Pa., 1808-1878. A noted surgeon of Philadelphia. Ovarian Tumors and Ovariotomy.
- Atterbury, Anson Phelps. N. Y., 1854- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of New York city. Islam in Africa. Put.
- Audsley, George Ashdown. S., 1838- ——. A Scottish architect and art writer of note, now (1904) living in New York city. With his brother, William James Audsley, he has published Colour in Dress: a Manual for Ladies; Floral Decoration of Churches; Cottage, Lodge, and Village Architecture; Outlines of Ornament in the Leading Styles; Popular Dictionary of Architecture and the Allied Arts, in ten volumes; Polychromatic Decoration as applied to Buildings in the Mediæval Styles; and (with James Lord Bowes) The Keramic Art of Japan. His separate works include Guide to the Art of Illuminating and Missal Painting; Handbook of Christian Symbolism; The Art of Chromo-Lithography; Notes on Japanese Art; The Ornamental Arts of Japan; The Art of Organ-Building. Do.
- Austin, John Mather. N. Y., 1805- ——. A clergyman who published Arguments in Support of the Doctrine of Universal Salvation; Voice to Youth; Voice to the Married; Life of John Quincy Adams.
- Austin, John Osborne. R. I., 1849- ——. A wool merchant and genealogist of Providence. The Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island; Ancestry of Thirty-three Rhode Island Families; The Ancestral Dictionary; One Hundred and Sixty Allied Families.
- Austin, Mrs. Mary [Hunter]. Il., 1868- ——. An essayist and story-writer of California. The Land of Little Rain; The Basket Woman. Hou.
- Austin, Oscar Phelps. Il., 184- - ——. A journalist of Washington city, chief of the bureau of statistics from 1898. Uncle Sam’s Soldiers; Uncle Sam’s Secrets; Colonial Systems of the World; Colonial Administration; Great Canals of the World; Steps in the Expansion of Our Territory; etc. Ap.
- Avery, Elroy McKendree. Mch., 1844- ——. A prominent educator in Cleveland. Among his many school text-books are The Complete Chemist; School Physics; Modern Principles of Natural Philosophy; Modern Electricity and Magnetism; First Lessons in Physical Science; School Chemistry.
- Avery, Isaac Wheeler. Fl., 1837-1897. A lawyer and journalist of Atlanta. Digest of the Georgia Supreme Court Reports; History of Georgia.
- Ayer, Mrs. Harriet [Hubbard]. Il., 1854-1903. A New York journalist. Treatise on the Laws of Health and Beauty.
- Ayer, Joseph Cullen. Ms., 1866- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Sandwich, Massachusetts. Die Ethik Joseph Butlers: The Rise and Development of Christian Architecture.
- Ayers, Howard. Wash., 1859- ——. An educator, president of the University of Cincinnati from 1899. The Vertebrate Ear.
- Aylesworth, Barton Orville. Il., 1860- ——. A clergyman of the Christian (Disciples) denomination, president of the Colorado State College from 1900. Song and Fable; Thirteen and Twelve Others.
- Ayres, Samuel Gardiner. N. Y., 1865- ——. A librarian of Drew Theological Seminary at Madison, New Jersey, from 1888. Drew Seminary Record; Fifty Literary Evenings; History of the English Bible (with C. F. Sitterly, infra).
- B
- Babbitt, Edwin Dwight. N. Y., 1828- ——. A hygienic writer at Los Angeles. Principles of Light and Colour; Human Culture and Power; Health and Power.
- Babcock, Mrs. Bernie [Smade]. O., 1868- ——. A novelist of Little Rock, Arkansas. The Daughter of a Republican; The Martyr; Justice to the Woman; At the Mercy of the State; An Uncrowned Queen. Mg. Rev.
- Babcock, Maltbie Davenport. N. Y., 1858-1901. A Presbyterian clergyman of Baltimore. Thoughts for Everyday Living; Letters from Egypt and Palestine. Scr.
- Babcock, Rufus. Ct., 1798-1875. A Baptist clergyman of Paterson, New Jersey, among whose works are Making Light of Christ; Tales of Truth for the Young; Emigrants’ Mother; and several religious biographies.
- Babcock, William Henry. Mo., 1849- ——. A patent lawyer of Washington city. Lord Stirling’s Stand and other Poems; Lays from Over Sea; Cypress Beach; The Brides of the Tiger; An Invention of the Enemy; The Tower of Wye; Cian of the Chariots; Two Lost Centuries of Britain. Lip. Lo.
- Babson, John James. Ms., 1809-1886. A local historian. History of Gloucester, Cape Ann, including the Town of Rockport (1860); Notes and Additions; The Fisheries of Gloucester from the First Catch by the English in 1623, to 1876.
- Backus, Truman Jay. N. Y., 1842- ——. An educator, president of Packer Institute, Brooklyn. Great English Writers; Outlines of English Literature.
- Bacon, Alice Mabel. Ct., 1858- ——. A teacher in the Hampton Institute, Virginia. Japanese Girls and Women; A Japanese Interior. Hou.
- Bacon, Benjamin Wisner. Ct., 1860- ——. A professor of New Testament Criticism and Interpretation at Yale Divinity School; The Genesis of Genesis; Triple Tradition of the Exodus; The Story of St. Paul. Hou.
- Bacon, Edgar Mayhew. Bahamas, 1855- ——. A writer of Tarrytown, New York. The New Jamaica; The Pocket Piece; Chronicles of Tarrytown and Sleepy Hollow; The Hudson, from Ocean to Source. Put.
- Bacon, Mrs. Josephine Dodge Daskam. Ct., 1876- ——. A writer of Stamford, Connecticut. Smith College Stories; Sister’s Vacation and Other Girls’ Stories; Fables for the Fair; The Imp and the Angel; The Madness of Philip, and Other Stories; Whom the Gods Destroyed; Middle-Aged Love Stories; The Memoirs of a Baby. Scr.
- Bacon, Mrs. Louise Lee [Andrews]. Md., 1861- ——. Wife of H. Bacon ([page 14]). Our House Boat on the Nile.
- Badcock, Mrs. Winnifred [Eaton]. “Onoto Watanna,” Japan, 1879- ——. A New York writer. The Old Jinriksha; Miss Nume of Japan; A Japanese Nightingale; The Wooing of Wistaria; The Heart of Hyacinth; Daughters of Nijo. Har., Mac.
- Bagby, Albert Morris. Il., 1859- ——. A writer of New York city. Miss Träumerei: a Weimar Idyl, a popular musical novel.
- Bagby, George William. “Mozis Addums.” Va., 1828-1883. A Virginia journalist and lecturer, of some note as a humourist. John M. Daniel’s Latin Key; What I Did with My Fifty Millions; Meekins’s Twinses. See Hart’s American Literature.
- Bailey, Edgar Henry Summerfield. Ct., 1848- ——. A professor of chemistry in the University of Kansas. Qualitative Chemical Analysis.
- Bailey, Mrs. Florence Augusta [Merriam]. N. Y., 1863- ——. Wife of V. Bailey, infra. An ornithologist who published several books under her maiden name (see [page 253]). Birds of Village and Field; Handbook of Birds of the Western United States. Hou.
- Bailey, Pearce. N. Y., 1865- ——. A physician of New York city. Accident and Injury: their relation to Disease. Ap.
- Bailey, Mrs. Urania Locke [Stoughton]. “Una Locke.” Ms., 1820-1882. A Providence writer. The School at Elm Oak and the School of Life; The Crooked Tree; Dr. Plassid’s Patients; Star Flowers; Holiday Tales (with F. L. Pratt). She wrote the popular religious poem, “The Master has come over Jordan.”
- Bailey, Vernon. Mch., 1863- ——. A naturalist in government service. Spermophiles of the Mississippi Valley; Pocket Gophers of the Mississippi Valley; Revision of Voles of the Genus Evotomys; Mammals of the District of Columbia.
- Bailey, William Henry. N. C., 1831- ——. A prominent North Carolina lawyer whose later life has been passed in Houston, Texas. The Conflict of Judicial Decisions; Onus Probandi; Self-taught Law; The Detective Faculty; The Fifth North Carolina Digest (edited). Clke.
- Baines-Miller, Mrs. Minnie [Willis]. N. H., 1845- ——. A writer of Springfield, Ohio. The Silent Land; His Cousin, the Doctor; The Pilgrim’s Vision; Mrs. Cherry’s Sister.
- Baker, A—— George. Pa., 184— - ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Philadelphia, since 1887 in medical practice. History of the Germans in America; History of Knights of St. John of Malta; German-American Christianity and the Protestant Episcopal Church; Flora of Arabia and the Arabian Prophet; The Phonendoscope and its Practical Application.
- Baker, Charles Richard. Ms., 1842-1898. An Episcopal clergyman, rector of the Church of the Messiah, Brooklyn, 1873-98. The Apostles’ Creed Tested by Experience; Prayers for the Christian Year. Wh.
- Baker, Charles Whiting. Vt., 1865- ——. The managing editor of the Engineering News, New York city. Monopolies and the People. Put.
- Baker, James Hutchins. Me., 1848- ——. An educator, president of the University of Colorado from 1891. Elementary Psychology; Education and Life. Lgs.
- Baker, Moses Nelson. Vt., 1864- ——. Brother of C. W. Baker, supra, and associate editor of the Engineering News. Sewage Purification in America; Sewage Disposal in the United States; Sewerage and its Purification.
- Baker, Osman Cleander. N. H., 1812-1871. A Methodist bishop. Guide in the Administration of Discipline in the Methodist Episcopal Church; Last Witness. Meth.
- Baker, Ray Stannard. Mch., 1870- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Boys’ Book of Inventions; Our New Prosperity; Seen in Germany; Boys’ Second Book of Inventions.
- Baker, Mrs. Sarah Schoonmaker [Tuthill]. “Aunt Friendly.” Ct., 1824- ——. Daughter of Mrs. Tuthill ([page 342]). A popular writer of Sunday-school tales, among which are Poor Little Joe; The Orange Seed; The Fisherman’s Boy; Cheerily, Cheerily; Timid Lucy; The Boy Patriot; The Boy Friend; The Children on the Plains; The Swedish Twins; Nono or the Golden House; Fireside Sketches from Swedish Life. She has lived in Sweden from 1876.
- Baker, William Spohn. Pa., 1824-1897. A Philadelphian noted for his collections of Washingtoniana. Engraved Portraits of Washington; Medallic Portraits of Washington; Character Portraits of Washington; Washington’s Itinerary; Washington after the Revolution; Washington in Philadelphia; American Engravers and their Works; William Sharp, Engraver, and his Works; Origin and Antiquity of Engraving.
- Balch, Elizabeth. N. Y., 1845-1890. A writer whose life was spent mainly in Europe. Mustard Leaves, or a Glimpse of London Society; Zorah, a Love Tale of Modern Egypt; An Author’s Love, the answers to Prosper Mérimée’s “Letters to an Inconnue.” Mac.
- Baldwin, Foy Spencer. Mch., 1870- ——. A professor of economics in Boston University from 1895. History of Mining Legislation in England.
- Baldwin, George Colfax. N. J., 1817-1899. A Baptist clergyman of Troy, New York. Representative Men of the New Testament; Representative Women from Eve to Mary; Model Prayer; Notes of a Forty-one Years’ Pastorate. Bap.
- Baldwin, Joseph. 1827-1899. An educator in Missouri and Alabama. School Management; Elementary Psychology; Psychology Applied to Teaching; School Management and its Methods.
- Baldwin, Simeon Eben. Ct., 1840- ——. A Connecticut jurist, professor of constitutional law at Yale University from 1872. Baldwin’s Digest of the Connecticut Law Reports; Modern Political Institutions; Illustrative Cases on Railroad Law. Lit. Mac. West.
- Baldwin, Thomas. Ct., 1753-1825. A Baptist clergyman of Boston. Letters in which the Distinguishing Sentiments of the Baptists are Explained; Open Communion Examined.
- Ball, Thomas. Ms., 1819- ——. A sculptor of note. My Three Score Years and Ten, an Autobiography.
- Ballantine, William Gay. D. C., 1848- ——. A Congregational clergyman and educator, president of Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, 1891-96. Inductive Logic; Lectures on Job, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel. Gi.
- Ballard, Addison. Ms., 1822- ——. A Congregational clergyman, professor of logic in the University of New York. Arrows: or Teaching a Fine Art.
- Ballard, Harlan Hogue. O., 1853- ——. Son of A. Ballard, supra. A librarian of Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Three Kingdoms; Handbook of Blunders in Writing and Speaking; The World of Matter; The American Plant Book (with S. P. Thayer); Re-open Sesame; A Translation of the First Six Books of Virgil’s Æneid. Hou.
- Ballard, Mrs. Julia Perkins [Pratt]. O., 1828-1894. Wife of A. Ballard, supra. A writer of children’s books of notable excellence. Gathered Lilies; Lift a Little; Little Gold Keys; The Hole in the Bag and Other Stories; Insect Lives, revised and republished as Among the Moths and Butterflies. Put.
- Bancroft, Frederic. Il., 1860- ——. An historical writer of Washington. Life of William Henry Seward; The Negro in Politics; A History of the Confederates. Har.
- Bancroft, Wilder Dwight. R. I., 1867- ——. A professor of chemistry at Cornell University from 1895. The Phase Rule.
- Bangs, Lemuel Bolton. N. Y., 1842- ——. A physician and surgeon of New York city. An American Text Book of Genito-Urinary Diseases.
- Banks, Charles Eugene. Ia., 1852- ——. A journalist and verse-writer of Rockford, Illinois. A Child of the Sun; Sword and Cross, and Other Poems; Quiet Music; Where Brooks run Softly; Hampton Roads. Ra. S.
- Banta, David Demaree. Ind., 1833-1898. Local historian. Historical Sketch of Johnson County, Indiana, an unusually skilful performance of its kind.
- Barbee, William J——. Ky., 1816-1892. An educator and physician prominent at one time in Kentucky, and a clergyman in the Campbellite denomination. The Scriptural Doctrine of Confirmation; Physical and Moral Aspects of Geology; The Cotton Question; First Principles of Geology; Life of the Apostle Peter.
- Barber, Edwin Atlee. Md., 1851- ——. An archæologist of Philadelphia. Pottery and Porcelain of the United States; Anglo-American Pottery; Atlee and Barber genealogies.
- Barber, Gershom Morse. N. Y., 1823- ——. A jurist of Cleveland. The Book of the Law; Notaries’ Guide.
- Barbour, Mrs. A—— [Maynard]. N. Y., 18— - ——. A novelist of Helena, Montana. That Mainwaring Affair; Told in the Rockies; The Award of Justice; At the Time Appointed. Lip. Ra.
- Barbour, Ralph Henry. Ms., 1870- ——. Phyllis in Bohemia; The Half-back; For the Honor of the School; Captain of the Crew; The Land of Joy; School and College Sports. Ap.
- Bardeen, Charles Williams. Ms., 1847- ——. A school-book publisher of Syracuse. Roderick Hume; The Story of a New York Teacher; Verbal Pit-falls; A System of Rhetoric; Continuous Contracts for Teachers; Little Old Man; Teaching as a Business; Manual of Common School Law; Dictionary of Educational Biography.
- Barker, Mrs. Ellen [Blackmer] [Maxwell]. Pa., 185- - ——. A writer of Washington city; The Bishop’s Conversion; Three Old Maids in Hawaii; The Way of Fire.
- Barker, Jacob. Me., 1779-1871. A lawyer and financier. The Rebellion: its Consequences and the Congressional Committee.
- Barker, Lewellys Franklin. Ont., 1867- ——. An anatomist. The Nervous System and its Constitutional Neurones.
- Barnes, Charles Reid. Ind., 1858- ——. A professor of plant physiology in the University of Chicago from 1898. Handbook of Plant Dissection (with Arthur and Coulter); Keys to the Genera and Species of North American Mosses; Outlines of Plant Life; Plant Life. Ho.
- Barnum, Samuel Weed. N. Y., 1820-1891. A Congregational clergyman. Comprehensive Dictionary of the Bible; Romanism as It Is; A Vocabulary of English Rhymes.
- Barr, Granville Walter. O., 1866- ——. A physician and novelist of Keokuk, Iowa. Shacklett, a story of American politics; Idiosyncrasy and Drugs; Short Stories; Larry McNoogan’s Cow; In the Last Ditch.
- Barr, John Henry. Ind., 1861- ——. A mechanical engineer, professor of machine design at Sibley College, Cornell University from 1898. Kinematics of Machinery; Notes on Machine Design. Wil.
- Barrett, John. Vt., 1866- ——. A journalist, minister to Siam, 1894-98. Admiral George Dewey: a Sketch of the Man; The Far East and Japan.
- Barrows, Elijah Porter. Ct., 1805-1888. A clergyman, professor of Hebrew at Oberlin College from 1872. Memoir of Evertson Judson; Companion to the Bible; Sacred Geography and Antiquities.
- Barry, Ethelred Breeze. N. H., 1870- ——. An author and illustrator of Arlington, Massachusetts. Little Tong’s Mission; The Countess of the Tenements; Miss De Peyster’s Boy; Little Dick’s Christmas.
- Bartlett, Mrs. Alice Elinor [Bowen]. “Birch Arnold.” Wis., 1848- ——. A Detroit journalist. Until the Day Break; A New Aristocracy.
- Bartlett, Frederick Orin. Ms., 1876- ——. A novelist of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Joan of the Alley. Hou.
- Bartley, Elias Hudson. N. J., 1849- ——. A physician of Brooklyn. Textbook of Medical and Pharmaceutical Chemistry; Manual of Clinical Chemistry.
- Barton, William Eleazar. Il., 1861- ——. A Congregational clergyman, pastor in Boston from 1893 to 1899, and subsequently in Chicago. An associate editor of the Bibliotheca Sacra, and a writer of history, theology, and fiction. The Wind-Up of the Big Meetin’ on No Bus’ness; Life in the Hills of Kentucky; Early Ecclesiastical History of the Western Reserve; Sim Galloway’s Daughter-in-Law; The Truth about the Trouble at Roundstone; A Hero in Homespun: a Tale of the Loyal South; The Story of the Psalms; The Story of a Pumpkin Pie; How Boston Braved the King; Pine Knot; The Prairie Schooner; The Man with a Country; The Old World in the New Century; The Gospel of the Autumn Leaf; The Home of a Madonna; The Swaddling Clothes and the Star; Why I Believe the Bible. Ap. Pa. We.
- Bashford, Herbert. Ia., 1871- ——. The state librarian of Washington. Nature Studies of the Northwest; Songs from Puget Sea.
- Bashford, James Whitford. Wis., 1849- ——. A Methodist clergyman, president of Ohio Wesleyan University from 1889. The Science of Religion.
- Bashore, Harvey Brown. Pa., 1864- ——. A physician of West Fairview, Pennsylvania. Outlines of Rural Hygiene.
- Baskett, James Newton. Ky., 1849- ——. A writer on natural history, but earlier a civil engineer, whose home is at Mexico, Missouri. The Story of the Birds; The Story of the Fishes; The Story of the Mammals; The Story of the Amphibians and the Reptiles; At You-All’s House, a Missouri Nature Story; As the Light Led, a novel; Sweetbrier and Thistledown. Ap. Mac.
- Bassett, Mrs. Adelaide Florence [Samuels]. See Samuels, A. F.
- Bassett, John Spencer. N. C., 1867- ——. A professor at Trinity College at Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Constitutional Beginnings of North Carolina; Slavery and Servitude in the Colony of North Carolina; The War of the Regulation; Anti-Slavery Leaders of North Carolina. J. H. U.
- Bastin, Edson Sewell. Wis., 1843-1897. A botanist, professor of botany at the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. Elements of Botany; Vegetable Histology; College Botany; Questions on College Botany; Laboratory Exercises in Botany.
- Bates, Daniel M——. Del., c. 1849-1899. An Episcopal clergyman. The Apostolic Church; Translation into Wen-Li; Christ in Modern Thought.
- Bates, David. Pa., c. 1810-1870. A Philadelphia verse-writer, best known by his lyric, Speak Gently; The Æolian; Poetical Works (1870).
- Bates, Frank Green. 18— - ——. Rhode Island and the Formation of the Union. Mac.
- Bates, Herbert. Ms., 1868- ——. A verse-writer who has published Songs of Exile. Sm.
- Bates, Mrs. Josephine W——. 18— - ——. A Chicago novelist. A Blind Lead; Bunch Grass Stories. Lip.
- Bates, Mrs. Lindon. See Bates, Mrs. Josephine.
- Bates, Morgan. N. Y., 1848-1902. A journalist and playwright. Martin Brook, a novel. Har.
- Bates, William Wallace. Me., 1827- ——. A United States Commissioner of Navigation from 1889 to 1892. American Marine; American Navigation. Hou.
- Battenhall, Jesse Park. N. Y., 1851-1891. Adulteration of Food and Drink; Legal Chemistry, from the French of Naquet.
- Battershall, Fletcher Williams. N. J., 1866- ——. Son of W. W. Battershall, infra. A novelist of Albany. A Daughter of the World; Mists.
- Battershall, Walton Wesley. N. Y., 1840- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Albany, rector of St. Peter’s Church from 1874. Interpretations of Life and Religion. Bar.
- Battle, Kemp Plummer. N. C., 1831- ——. A professor of history in the University of North Carolina from 1891. History of the Supreme Court of North Carolina; History of Raleigh, North Carolina; History of the University of North Carolina; Trials and Judicial Proceedings of the New Testament; Life of General Jethro Sumner.
- Baum, Henry Mason. N. Y., 1848- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, editor of The Church Review from 1881. Rights and Duties of Rectors, Church Wardens, and Vestrymen; The Law of the Church in the United States.
- Baum, L[yman] Frank. N. Y., 1856- ——. A Chicago playwright and writer of juvenile literature. Mother Goose in Prose; By the Candelabra’s Glare, a collection of verse; Father Goose: his Book; The Wonderful Wizard of Oz; A New Wonderland; The Songs of Father Goose; American Fairy Tales; The Art of Decorating; The Army Alphabet; The Navy Alphabet; Dot and Tot of Merryland; The Master Key, an Electrical Fairy Tale; Life and Adventures of Santa Claus; The High Ki of Twi; The Magical Monarch of Mo. Among his plays are, The Maid of Arran; Matches; Kilmorne: The Wizard of Oz.
- Bausman [bŏwss´man], Benjamin. Pa., 1824- ——. A German Reformed clergyman, pastor at Reading, Pennsylvania from 1863. Sinai and Zion; Wayside Gleanings in Europe.
- Bayles, George James. N. Y., 1869- ——. An educator who has published Woman and the Law; Civil Church Law Cases. Cent.
- Bayliss, Mrs. Clara [Kern]. Mch., 1848- ——. A writer of Springfield, Illinois. In Brook and Bayou; Lolami, the Little Cliff Dweller; Lolami in Tusayan.
- Beach, Charles Fisk. N. Y., 1827- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, since 1897 a lawyer of Indianapolis. The Law of Trusts; Law of Monopolies in England and the United States; The American Probate Reports. Bo.
- Beach, Charles Fisk. Ky., 1854- ——. Son of the preceding. A lawyer, since 1896 resident in London, England, who has published treatises on The Law of Receivers; Wills; Railways; Private Corporations; Modern Equity Jurisprudence; Public Corporations; Insurance; Contributory Negligence; Inventions; Contracts.
- Beach, Harlan Page. N. J., 1864- ——. A missionary, formerly stationed in China. The Cross in the Land of the Trident; Knights of Labarum; Dawn on the Hills of T’ang. Rev.
- Beal, James Hartley. O., 1861- ——. A professor of pharmacy in Scio College, Ohio. Notes on Equation Writing and Chemical Arithmetic; Pharmaceutical Interpretations.
- Beale, Charles Willing. D. C., 1845- ——. A romance-writer of Arden, North Carolina. (His wife, Mrs. M. Beale, is mentioned on [page 22].) The Ghost of Guir House; The Secret of the Earth. Ne.
- Beale, Joseph Henry. Ms., 1861- ——. A lawyer, professor of law at Harvard from 1892, and at the University of Chicago from 1902. Cases on Criminal Law; Cases on Carriers; Cases on Damages; Criminal Pleadings and Practice; Cases on the Conflict of Laws; Cases on Public Service Corporations.
- Bean, Tarleton Hoffman. Pa., 1846- ——. A naturalist, director of the New York Aquarium from 1895. The Fishes of Pennsylvania; The Salmon and Salmon Fisheries; Oceanic Ichthyology (with G. B. Goode, [page 150]); The Fishes of Long Island.
- Beard, Daniel Carter. O., 1850-1900. An artist and illustrator of New York city. What to Do and How to Do It; The American Boys’ Handy Book; Six Feet of Romance; Moonlight; The American Boys’ Book of Sport; The Jack of All Trades. Scr.
- Beard, Oliver Thomas. N. Y., 1832- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Bristling with Thorns.
- Beard, Richard. Tn., 1799-1880. A Cumberland Presbyterian clergyman. Lectures on Theology; Why I am a Cumberland Presbyterian.
- Beard, William Holbrook. O., 1825-1900. An artist of New York city. Humour in Animals, a collection of sketches; Action in Art, a text-book.
- Beaton, David. S., 1848- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Chicago. Cyrus the Magician; Selfhood and Service. Rev.
- Beattie, Francis Robert. Ont., 1848- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Louisville, Kentucky. Utilitarian Theory of Morals; Methods of Theism; Radical Criticism; Presbyterian Standards; Apologetics; Calvinism and Modern Thought; Christianity and Modern Evolution.
- Beauchamp, William Martin. N. Y., 1830- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Syracuse. Iroquois Trail; Indian Names of New York; Aboriginal Occupation of New York.
- Beauregard, Pierre Gustave Toutant. La., 1818-1893. A noted brigadier-general in the Confederate army during the Civil War. Principles and Maxims of the History of War; Report of the Defence of Charleston; A Commentary on the Campaign and Battle of Manassas (1891).
- Beck, Carl. G., 1856- ——. A Chicago surgeon. Manual of Surgical Asepsis; Text-Book on Fractures.
- Bedford, Gunning S——. Md., 1806-1870. A physician of note in New York city. Diseases of Women and Children; Principles of the Practice of Obstetrics.
- Bedlow, Henry. R. I., 1821- ——. A former mayor of Newport, Rhode Island. The White Tsar, and Other Poems (1895).
- Beecher, Charles Emerson. N. Y., 1865-1904. A professor of historical geology at Yale University. Studies in Evolution; Brachiospongidæ. Scr.
- Behrends, Adolphus Julius Frederick. H., 1839-1900. A Congregational clergyman, pastor of the Central Church in Brooklyn from 1883. Socialism and Christianity; the Philosophy of Preaching; The World for Christ; The Old Testament under Fire. Fu. Scr.
- Belasco, David. Cal., 1858- ——. A playwright of New York city, among whose many plays are May Blossom; La Belle Russe; Hearts of Oak; The Heart of Maryland.
- Belden, Mrs. Jessie [Van Zile]. N. Y., 1857- ——. A novelist of Syracuse. Antonia; At the Sign of the Painters’ Arms; Fate at the Door; The King’s Ward. Pa.
- Belknap, George Washington. N. H., 1832-1903. A retired rear-admiral in the United States navy. Deep Sea Soundings.
- Bell, Agrippa Nelson. Va., 1820- ——. A prominent physician of New York city, author of Knowledge of Living Things; Climatology and Mineral Waters of the United States; beside many professional papers.
- Bell, Alexander Melville. S., 1819- ——. An educator of note, resident in the United States from 1881. Principles of Speech and Elocution.
- Bell, David Charles. S., 1817-1902. An educator who published A Reader’s Shakespeare; Theory of Elocution; Modern Reader and Speaker; The Standard Elocutionist. He was long a professor of literature at the University of Dublin, but from 1883 was a resident of Washington city.
- Bellows, Albert Jones. Ms., 1804-1869. A Boston physician. How not to be Sick; The Philosophy of Eating. Hou.
- Beman, Nathan Sidney Smith. N. Y., 1785-1871. A Presbyterian clergyman long settled in Troy, New York. The Old Ministry; The Influence of Freedom on Popular and National Education; Letters to John Hughes; Episcopacy Exclusive; Four Sermons on the Atonement.
- Beman, Wooster Woodruff. Ct., 1850- ——. A professor of mathematics at the University of Michigan from 1887. Plane and Solid Geometry (with D. E. Smith); Higher Arithmetic; Famous Problems of Elementary Geometry, from the German of Klein; Elements of Algebra. Gi.
- Bendire, Charles Emil. G., 1836-1897. An ornithologist of note, honorary curator of the department of oölogy in the United States National Museum, a captain and brevet-major in the United States army. Life Histories of North American Birds. See Science, February 12, 1897.
- Benedict, George Grenville. Vt., 1826- ——. A military historian of Burlington, Vermont. Vermont at Gettysburg; Vermont in the Civil War; Army Life in Virginia.
- Benjamin, Charles Henry. Me., 1856- ——. A professor of mechanical engineering at the Case School of Applied Science, Cleveland. Notes on Heat and Steam; Notes on Machine Design; Mechanical Laboratory Practice.
- Benjamin, Mrs. Elizabeth Dundas [Bedell]. Pa., 18— -1890. Sister of Bishop G. T. Bedell, 1817-1892 ([page 23]). A religious writer of Stratford, Connecticut. Eleven Months in Horeb; The Church in the Wilderness; Brightside; Questions on the National and Religious Education of the Israelites; Hilda and I, republished in London as The Two Victors and again in New York as Our Roman Palace; The Brightside Children; Jim the Parson; Mrs. Gregory; The Garden of God.
- Benjamin, Reuben Moore. N. Y., 1833- ——. An Illinois jurist, dean of the Bloomington Law School. Principles of Contract; Principles of Sales. Bo.
- Bennett, Alfred Allen. N. H., 1850- ——. A professor of chemistry at Iowa State College from 1885. Inorganic Chemistry.
- Bennett, Charles Edwin. R. I., 1858- ——. A classical philologist. A Latin Grammar and Appendix; Latin Composition; Foundations of Latin.
- Bennett, Frank Marion. Mch., 1857- ——. A lieutenant in the United States navy. The Monitor and the Navy under Steam; The Steam Navy of the United States. Hou.
- Bennett, John. O., 1865- ——. An author, of Charleston, South Carolina. Master Skylark; The Story of Barnaby Lee.
- Bennett, Mary E——. “Elizabeth Glover.” Ct., 1841- ——. An author of New Haven, Connecticut. Cyril Rivers; Six Boys; Asaph’s Ten Thousand; Talks About a Fine Art; Family Manners; The Children’s Wing; Jefferson Wildrider; The Gentle Art of Pleasing. Ba.
- Bennett, William Zebina. Vt., 1856- ——. A professor of chemistry at the University of Wooster, Ohio, from 1883. A Plant Analysis.
- Benton, Angelo Ames. Crete, 1837- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Pekin, Illinois. The Church Cyclopedia; The Tome of Saint Leo.
- Benton, Frank. Mch., 1852- ——. An entomologist in the service of the United States Department of Agriculture. The Honey Bee; Bee Keeping.
- Benton, James Gilchrist. N. H., 1820-1881. A soldier and inventor. A Course of Instruction in Ordnance and Gunnery.
- Berenson, Bernhard. Lithuania, 1865- ——. An art writer now (1898) living in Florence, Italy. The Venetian Painters of the Renaissance; Lorenzo Lotto: an Essay in Art Criticism; The Florentine Painters of the Renaissance; The Central Italian Painters of the Renaissance; The Drawings of the Florentine Painters; The Study and Criticism of Italian Art. Mac. Put.
- Bergen, Mrs. Fannie [Dickerson]. O., 1848- ——. Wife of J. Y. Bergen, infra. The Development Theory (with J. Y. Bergen); Glimpses at the Plant World; Animal and Plant Lore (compiled). Hou.
- Bergen, Joseph Young. Me., 1851- ——. An educator, of Boston. The Development Theory (with F. D. Bergen); The Study of Evolution Simplified; Elements of Botany; and a series of text-books on physics (with E. H. Hall). Gi.
- Bergengren, Mrs. Anna [Farquhar]. “Margaret Allston.” Ind., 1865- ——. Wife of R. Bergengren, infra. A Boston novelist. A Singer’s Heart; The Professor’s Daughter; Her Boston Experiences; The Devil’s Plough; Her Washington Experiences; An Evans of Suffolk. Pa.
- Bergengren, Ralph Wilhelm Alexis. Ms., 1871- ——. A journalist of Boston. In Case of Need.
- Bernadou, John Baptiste. Pa., 1858- ——. A United States naval officer in the employ of the naval department at Washington from 1888. A Trip through Northern Corea in 1883-84; Smokeless Powder, Nitrocellulose and Theory of the Cellulose Molecule. Wil.
- Bernstein, Herman. G., 1876- ——. A New York writer. In the Gates of Israel, a collection of stories of the ghetto.
- Betts, Samuel Rossiter. Ct., 1787-1868. A jurist of note. Admiralty Practice.
- Beutenmuller, William. N. J., 1864- ——. A scientist of New York city, curator of the American Museum of Natural History. Butterflies; Moths.
- Beveridge, Albert Jeremiah. Ind., 1862- ——. An Indiana orator and politician. The Russian Advance. Har.
- Bicknell, Anna Louisa. F., 183- - ——. The Story of Marie Antoinette; Life in the Tuileries under the Second Empire. Cent.
- Bicknell, Frank Martin. Ms., 1854- ——. A littérateur of Malden, Massachusetts. The City of Stories; The Apprentice Boy; Antælus; The Bicycle Highwayman; The Double Prince. Est.
- Bicknell, Thomas Williams. R. I., 1834- ——. A prominent educator of Rhode Island and Massachusetts. Memoir of William Lord Noyes; A History of Barrington, Rhode Island; John Myles and Religious Toleration in Massachusetts.
- Biddle, Arthur. Pa., 1852-1897. A lawyer of Philadelphia. Treatise on The Law of Stock Brokers (with G. Biddle); On the Law of Warranties in the Sale of Chattels; The Law of Insurance.
- Biddle, Horace. O., 1811-1900. A lawyer of Logansport, Indiana. The Musical Scale; Elements of Knowledge; Prose Miscellany; A Few Poems; Biddle’s Poems; American Boyhood (verse); Glances at the World (verse); Last Poems.
- Bierce, Ambrose. O, 1842- ——. A California littérateur. In the Midst of Life, first issued as Tales of Soldiers and Civilians; Can Such Things Be? Black Beetles in Amber; Fantastic Fables; The Monk and the Hangman’s Daughter (with A. Danziger). Cas. Put.
- Bigelow, Andrew. Ms., 1795-1877. A Unitarian clergyman of Boston. Leaves from a Journal; Travels in Malta and Sicily.
- Bigelow, Frank Hagar. Ms., 1851- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Washington city, and a meteorologist of note. Solar Corona; Barometry of the United States.
- Bigelow, Lafayette Jotham. N. Y., 1835-1870. A lawyer and journalist of Watertown, New York. Bench and Bar: a Digest of the Wit, Humor, and Asperities of the Law.
- Bigelow, Marshall Train. Ms., 1822-1902. A noted printer and proofreader, of Cambridge. Punctuation and Other Typographical Matters; Mistakes in Writing English and How to Avoid Them.
- Bill, Ledyard. Ct., 1836- ——. A former publisher of New York city, but from 1874 resident in Paxton, Massachusetts. Ten Pictures of the War: Lyrics; History of the Bill Family; A Winter in Florida; Minnesota: its Character and Climate; History of Paxton.
- Billings, Frank. Wis., 1854- ——. A physician, dean of Rush Medical College, Chicago, from 1898. Your Book of Medicine.
- Bingham, Caleb. Ct., 1757-1818. An educator and bookseller of Boston. Among his once noted compilations are: Young Lady’s Accidence; Child’s Companion; American Preceptor; Columbian Orator.
- Bingham, J[oel] Foote. Ct., 1827- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Hartford, Connecticut, prior to 1871 in the Congregational ministry. The Christian Marriage Ceremony; The Twin Sisters of Martigny, a Story of Italian Life; Francesca da Rimini, from the Italian of Silvio Pellico. Le. Ran.
- Bingham, William. Pa., 1751-1804. A Philadelphian of much note in his day and a member of the United States Senate, 1795-1801. Letter from an American on the Subject of the Restraining Proclamation (1784); A Description of Certain Tracts of Land in Maine.
- Bingham, William. N. C., 1835- ——. An educator of North Carolina. A Grammar of the Latin Language; A Grammar of the English Language.
- Birkmire, William Harvey. Pa., 1860- ——. An architect and engineer of New York. Construction of High Office Buildings; Skeleton Construction in Buildings; Architectural Iron and Steel; The Planning and Construction of American Theatres; Compound Riveted Girders. Wil.
- Birney, William. Al., 1819- ——. Son of J. G. Birney ([page 28]). A lawyer of Washington city. Life and Times of Joseph G. Birney; Plea for Civil and Religious Liberty.
- Bishop, Joseph Bucklin. Ms., 1847- ——. A journalist of New York city. Money in City Elections; Cheap Money Experiments.
- Bishop, Louis Faugeres. N. J., 1864- ——. A physician of New York city. Theory and Treatment of Rheumatism; Diagnosis and Treatment of Gout; Important Points in the Treatment of Pneumonia.
- Bishop, Seth Scott. Wis., 1852- ——. A Chicago physician. Diseases of the Ear, Nose, and Throat.
- Bispham, George Tucker. Pa., 1838- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. The Principles of Equity.
- Bittinger, Mrs. Lucy (Forney). O., 1859- ——. An historical writer of Sewickley, Pennsylvania. Memorials of Rev. J. B. Bittinger; History of the Forney Family of Hanover, Pennsylvania; The Germans in Colonial Times. Lip.
- Bjerrgaard, Carl Henry Andrew. Dk., 1845- ——. A librarian at the Astor Library, New York city, from 1879. Mysticism and Nature Worship; Being and the Philosophical History of the Subject.
- Black, Ebenezer Charlton. S., 1861- ——. A professor of English at Boston University from 1900 and resident in the United States from 1890. Minor Characters in Shakespeare; Recent Literary Developments.
- Black, Henry Campbell. N. Y., 1860- ——. A noted legal writer of Washington city. Constitutional Prohibitions against Legislation Impairing the Obligation of Contracts; Treatise on the Law of Tax Titles; A Dictionary of Law; A Treatise on the Law of Judgments; Treatise on the Laws Regulating the Manufacture and Sale of Intoxicating Liquors; Handbook of American Constitutional Law; Handbook on the Construction and Interpretation of Laws; Handbook of Bankruptcy Law. He has also edited revised editions of “Pomeroy on Water Rights,” and “Dillon on Removal of Causes.”
- Black, John Janvier. 18— - ——. A physician who published Forty Years in the Medical Profession. Lip.
- Black, Mrs. Margaret Horton (Potter). Ill., 1881- ——. A novelist of Chicago. A Social Lion; Uncanonized; The House of the Mailly; Istar of Babylon; The Flame Gatherers. Har. Mac.
- Black, William Murray. Pa., 1855- ——. An officer in the United States engineering corps. Improvement of Harbours; South Atlantic Coast; Public Works of the United States. Wil.
- Blackman, William Fremont. N. Y., 1855- ——. A professor of sociology at Yale University from 1893. The Making of Hawaii: a Sociological Study. Mac.
- Blackmar, Frank Wilson. Pa., 1854- ——. A professor of history in the University of Kansas from 1889. History of Federal and State Aid to Higher Education in the South West; The Study of History and Sociology; Spanish Institutions in the South West; Economics; The Story of Human Progress; Life of Charles Robinson, first Governor of Kansas. J. H. U.
- Blair, Henry William. N. H., 1834- ——. A lawyer and congressman of Manchester, New Hampshire. His wife, Mrs. E. N. Blair, is mentioned on [page 29]. The Temperance Movement, or the Conflict of Man with Alcohol.
- Blaisdell, Albert Franklin. N. H., 1847- ——. A retired physician and surgeon of Boston, whose later years have been given to educational writing. Outlines for the Study of English Classics; First Steps with English and American Authors; Our Bodies and How we Live; How to Keep Well; Child’s Book of Health; Stories of the Civil War; Readings from the Waverley Novels; Stories from English History; Practical Physiology; The Story of American History. Gi. Le.
- Blanchard, Amy Ella. Md., 1856- ——. A Philadelphia writer of juvenile tales. A Girl of ’76; An Independent Daughter; Kittyboy’s Christmas; Thy Friend Dorothy; Girls Together; As Others See Us; Betty of Wye; Taking a Stand; Miss Vanity; Life’s Little Actions; A Dear Little Girl; Three Pretty Maids; Two Girls; Twenty Little Maidens; A Sweet Little Maid; A Revolutionary Maid; Because of Conscience; Dimple Dallas; Her Very Best; Mabel’s Mishap; A Daughter of Freedom; A Heroine of 1812; A Loyal Lass. Lip. We.
- Blanchard, Rufus. N. H., 1821-1904. A cartographer of Chicago. History of Illinois; Political History of the United States; History of the Northwest and City of Chicago.
- Blashfield, Edwin Howland. N. Y., 1848- ——. An artist of New York city. Italian Cities (with E. W. Blashfield). Scr.
- Blatchford, Willis Stanley. Ct., 1859- ——. A naturalist, State geologist of Indiana, from 1894. Gleanings from Nature; A Nature Wooing.
- Bleecker, Mrs. Ann Eliza [Schuyler]. N. Y., 1752-1783. A verse-writer of New York city whose Posthumous Works in Prose and Verse were issued in 1793.
- Bliss, Edwin Munsell. Ty., 1848- ——. A Presbyterian theologian. Encyclopedia of Missions; The Turk in Armenia, Crete and Greece; Concise History of Missions.
- Bliss, Frederick Jones. Sa., 1859- ——. Son of D. Bliss (page 30). An explorer to the Palestine Exploration Fund. A Mound of Many Cities; Excavations at Jerusalem, 1894-97.
- Bliss, George. Ms., 1830-1897. A prominent lawyer of New York city. Treatise on the Law of Life Insurance; Annotated Edition of the New York Code of Civil Procedure, usually styled “Bliss’s Code.”
- Bliss, William Julian Albert. D. C., 1867- ——. A physicist, professor at Johns Hopkins University. A Manual of Experiments in Physics (with Ames).
- Blitz, Antonio (pseud.). E., 1810-1877. A once famous prestidigitateur whose home was in Philadelphia. Fifty Years in the Magic Circle.
- Block, Louis James. 1851- ——. A Chicago educator. Exile, a Dramatic Episode; Dramatic Sketches and Poems; The New World, with Other Verse; Capriccios. Put.
- Blodgett, Mrs. Mabel [Fuller]. Me., 1869- ——. A writer of Brookline, Massachusetts. The Aspen Shade, a novel; Fairy Tales; In Poppy Land, a book of fairy tales; At the Queen’s Mercy, a tale of adventure.
- Bloodgood, Freeman A——. Ia., 1867- ——. An Iowa Superintendent of Schools. Civil Government and School Law.
- Bloodgood, Simeon DeWitt. N. Y., 1799-1866. The Sexagenary, or Reminiscences of the American Revolution; Treatise of Roads.
- Bloomer, Mrs. Amelia [Jenks]. N. Y., 1818-1894. A noted reformer of Council Bluffs, long prominent in behalf of woman-suffrage. In 1895 the Life and Writings of Amelia Bloomer were published, edited by her husband.
- Bloomingdale, Charles. Pa., 1868- ——. A journalist of Philadelphia. Mr., Miss, and Mrs.; Whiffs from Bohemia; A Failure. Lip.
- Blossom, Henry Martyn. Mo., 1866- ——. A St. Louis littérateur. The Documents in Evidence; Checkers: a Hard Luck Story; Room 4: Stories.
- Blunt, Stanhope English. Ms., 1850- ——. A colonel in the ordnance department of the United States army. Firing Regulations for Small Arms; Instructions in Rifle and Carbine Firing in the United States Army. Scr.
- Boardman, George Nye. Vt., 1823- ——. A Congregational clergyman, professor of systematic theology at Chicago Seminary, 1871-93, and emeritus professor from 1893. Lectures on Natural Theology; The Will and Virtue; Congregationalism; A History of New England Theology; Regeneration. Ran.
- Boardman, William Henry. Il., 1846- ——. An editor and publisher of New York. The Lovers of the Woods.
- Boas, Franz. Wa., 1858- ——. An anthropologist. Baffin Land; The Central Eskimo.
- Bödecker, Carl Friedrich Wilhelm. G., 1846- ——. A dentist of New York city. The Anatomy and Pathology of the Teeth.
- Body, Charles William Edmund. E., 1851- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, of New York, professor of Old Testament literature in the General Theological Seminary from 1894. The Permanent Value of Genesis. Lgs.
- Bogart, Elizabeth. “Estelle.” N. Y., c. 1806-18—. A nearly forgotten verse-writer of New York city whose lines were very popular in their day. Her earliest poems appeared in 1825, and some thirty years later a volume of her fugitive verse was published entitled Driftings from the Stream of Life.
- Bogue, Mrs. Lilian [Bell]. See Bell, Lilian ([page 24]).
- Boies, Henry Martyn. Ms., 1837- ——. An inventor of Scranton, Pennsylvania. Prisoners and Paupers; The Science of Penology. Put.
- Boise (boiz), James Robinson. Ms., 1815-1895. A professor of Greek at Chicago University, 1868-95. Notes on the Greek Text of Paul’s Epistles to Ephesians, Colossians, Philemon, and Philippians; Notes to Greek Text of Galatians and Romans.
- Boise, Otis Bardwell. O., 1844- ——. A composer. Harmony Made Practical; Music and its Masters.
- Bolles, John Augustus. Ct., 1809-1878. A Boston lawyer. Treatise on Usury and Usury Laws; Essay on a Congress of Nations.
- Bolton, Charles Edward. Ms., 1841-1901. A lecturer, and writer upon economic reforms, long resident at Cleveland. His wife, Mrs. S. K. Bolton, is mentioned on [page 32], and his son, C. K. Bolton, on [page 30]. A Few Civic Problems; A Model Village and Other Papers.
- Bolton, Mrs. Ethel [Stanwood]. Ms., 1873- ——. Wife of C. K. Bolton ([page 31]) and daughter of E. Stanwood ([page 357]). A genealogist of Brookline, Massachusetts. History of the Stanwood Family (1899).
- Bombaugh, Charles Carroll. Pa., 1828- ——. A journalist of Baltimore, formerly a practising physician. Gleanings from the Harvest Fields of Literature; Book of Blunders (edited); The Literature of Kissing; Stratagems and Conspiracies to Defraud Insurance Companies.
- Bompiani, Mrs. Sophia Van Matre. O., 1835- ——. A writer long resident in Rome, Italy. Italian Explorers in Africa; A Short History of the Italian Waldenses.
- Bonsal, Stephen. Md., 1863- ——. A journalist of New York city, special correspondent of the New York Herald in Cuba and elsewhere, and secretary of the United States Legations in Peking, Madrid, and Tokio, 1890-95. Morocco as It Is; The Condition of Cuba; The Fight for Santiago; The Golden Horseshoe, a novel of the Philippine War. Dou. Har.
- Book, John William. Ind., 1850- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman of prominence in Indiana. Short Line to the Roman Catholic Church; Side Switches of the Short Line (with T. J. Jenkins); Thousand and One Objections to Secret Societies; Mollie’s Mistake, or Mixed Marriages; The Book of Books.
- Bookwalter, John Wesley. Ind., 1837- ——. A manufacturer at Springfield, Ohio. If not Silver, What? Siberia and Central Asia. Sto.
- Boone, Charles Theodore. Pa., 1838- ——. A lawyer of San Francisco. Law of Corporations; Law of Real Property; Law of Mortgages; Code Pleading; Banks and Banking; Test Book of Law and Practice.
- Boone, Richard Gause. Cincinnati superintendent of schools from 1899. Education in the United States; History of Education in Indiana.
- Booth, James Curtis. Pa., 1810-1888. A once noted chemist of Philadelphia, a smelting superintendent at the mint, 1849-88. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of the State of Delaware (1841); Recent Improvements in the Chemical Arts (1852); Encyclopædia of Chemistry (with others).
- Booth, Mrs. Maud Ballington [Charlesworth]. E., 1865- ——. An evangelist, who with her husband founded the Volunteers of America, a religious military organization, in 1898. Branded; Look Up and Hope; Sleepy-Time Stories; Lights of Childland. Put.
- Booth-Tucker, Frederick Saint George de Latour. E. I., 1853- ——. The commander of the Salvation Army in the United States. The Life of Catherine Booth; Life of General William Booth; In Darkest India and the Way Out.
- Bosworth, Francke Huntington. O., 1843- ——. A physician of New York city. Treatise on Diseases of the Nose and Throat; Text Book of Diseases of the Nose and Throat.
- Botsford, George Willis. Ia., 1862- ——. A former instructor in history at Harvard University. The Development of the Athenian Constitution; A History of Greece; The Story of Rome; An Ancient History for Beginners; A History of the Orient and Greece. Gi. Mac.
- Boucher, Jonathan. E., 1738-1804. An Episcopal clergyman of Annapolis whose outspoken loyalty to the mother country in 1775 caused his expulsion from the colonies. He returned to England and became vicar of Epsom. A View of the Causes and Consequences of the American Revolution (1797); Glossary of Archaic and Provincial Words (1833); A Cumberland Man. See Hawks’s Ecclesiastical History of the United States, vol. 2; Sprague’s Annals of the American Pulpit, vol. 5; Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 6; Lippincott’s Magazine, May, 1899; Tyler’s Literary History of the American Revolution, vol. 1.
- Bourne, Edward Gaylord. N. Y., 1860- ——. A professor of history at Yale University from 1895. The History of the Surplus Revenue of 1837; Essays in Historical Criticism; John Lothrop Motley. Hou. Scr.
- Bourne, George. E., 1780-1845. A clerical abolitionist of note. The Book and Slavery Irreconcilable; Lectures on Ecclesiastical History; Pictures of Quebec; Slavery Illustrated in its Effects upon Women.
- Boutell, Lewis Henry. Ms., 1826-1899. A Chicago lawyer who wrote a Life of Roger Sherman. Mg.
- Bouve, Mrs. Pauline Carrington [Rust]. Ark., 18— - ——. A Boston writer. Their Shadows Before.
- Bowden, John. I., 1751-1817. An Episcopal clergyman of prominence in his day, professor of belles-lettres at Columbia College, 1802-17. Essentials of Ordination; Apostolic Origin of Episcopacy; Observations on the Catholic Controversy.
- Bowdoin, William Goodrich. Ms., 1860- ——. A writer of New York City. A Step Across the Gulf of Cuba; The Rise of the Book Plate; James MacNeill Whistler: the Man and His Work.
- Bowen, Clarence Winthrop. N. Y., 1852- ——. A Brooklyn publisher, Boundary Disputes of Connecticut; Woodstock, an Historical Sketch.
- Bowen, Eliza Andrews. Ga., 1828-1898. Cousin of E. F. Andrews ([page 10]). A Georgia writer for periodicals and newspapers. Astronomy by Observation. Ap.
- Bowen, Herbert Wolcott. N. Y., 1856- ——. Brother of C. W. Bowen, supra. A New York lawyer. United States minister to Venezuela from 1901. Verses; Losing Ground; In Divers Tones, a collection of verse; De Genere Humano; International Law.
- Bowen, John Wesley Edward. La., 1855- ——. A Methodist clergyman, professor in Gammon Theological Seminary, Atlanta, from 1888. Africa and the American Negro; The Catholic Spirit of Methodism; The Theology and Psychology of the Negro Plantation Melodies; An Apology for the Higher Education of the Negro.
- Bowman, Edward Morris. Vt., 1848- ——. A professor of music at Vassar College from 1891. Harmony: Historic Points and Modern Methods; Formation of Piano Touch; Relation of Musicians to the Public.
- Bowser, Edward Albert. N. B., 1845- ——. A professor of mathematics and engineering in Rutgers College, New Brunswick, New Jersey, from 1870, and a mathematician of prominence. Analytic Geometry; Differential and Integral Calculus; Analytic Mechanics; Hydro-mechanics; Academic Algebra; College Algebra; Plane and Solid Geometry; Elements of Trigonometry; Treatise on Trigonometry; Logarithmic Tables; Treatise on Roofs and Bridges. He. Vn.
- Boyd, Ellen Wright. Vt., 1833- ——. An educator at Albany, principal of Saint Agnes’s School. Outlines of Religious Instruction; English Cathedrals; Famous Art Galleries.
- Boyer, Emanuel Roth. Pa., 1857-1900. A Chicago educator. Text Book on Elementary Biology. He.
- Boylan, Mrs. Grace [Duffie]. Mch., 1861- ——. A Chicago journalist. If Tam O’ Shanter’d Had a Wheel, and Other Poems; Kids of Many Colours; The Kiss of Glory, a novel; The Old House and Other Poems.
- Boyland, George Halsted. O., 1845- ——. A physician who served in the French Army during the Franco-Prussian war and published Six Months under the Red Cross with the French Army.
- Boynton, Charles Brandon. Ms., 1806-1883. A Presbyterian clergyman of Cincinnati. Journey Through Kansas (1855); The Russian Empire; The Four Great Powers; History of the American Navy During the Rebellion; Doctrines and Duties. Ap.
- Boynton, Henry Van Ness. Ms., 1835- ——. Son of C. B. Boynton, supra. A journalist of Washington city, brevetted brigadier-general for service in the Federal army during the Civil War. Sherman’s Historical Raid; Was General Thomas Slow at Nashville? The National Military Park; Chickamauga-Chattanooga. Clke.
- Boynton, Henry Walcott. Conn., 1869——. A writer of Andover, Massachusetts. Life of Washington Irving; The Golfer’s Rubáiyát; Journalism and Literature and Other Essays. Hou.
- Brace, De Witt Bristol. N. Y., 1859- ——. A professor of physics at the University of Nebraska from 1887. Laws of Radiation and Absorption.
- Braden, James Andrew. O., 1872- ——. A journalist of Akron, Ohio. Far Past the Frontier; Connecticut Boys in the Western Reserve.
- Bradford, Gamaliel. Ms., 1831- ——. A Boston writer on political science. The Lesson of Popular Government; Types of American Character. Mac.
- Bradford, Joseph. See Hunter, W. R.
- Bradley, John Edwin. Il., 1830- ——. An educator, president of Illinois College from 1892. Science and Industry; Work and Play: Talks with Students; School Incentives; Healthfulness of Intellectual Pursuits; Unconscious Education.
- Brady, Cyrus Townsend. Pa., 1861- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Philadelphia. For Love of Country, a novel; Stephen Decatur, a brief biography; For the Freedom of the Sea; Heroes of Our Early Wars; Under Tops’ls and Tents; When Blades are Out and Love’s Afield; The Quiberon Touch; American Fights and Fighters; Reuben James; Recollections of a Missionary in the Great West; Hohenzollern; A Hazing Interregnum; In the Wasp’s Nest; Woven with the Ship; The Southerners; The Conquest of the Southwest; The Bishop; Sir Henry Morgan, Buccaneer; A Doctor of Philosophy; A Little Traitor to the South; The Corner in Coffee; Indian Fights and Fighters; The Records. Dou. Lip. Scr. Sm.
- Bragg, William Chittenden. Mo., 1845- ——. A lawyer of Saint Louis. Digest of Missouri Court of Appeals; Missouri Masonic Laws.
- Brain, Belle M——. O., 1859- ——. An educator of Springfield, Ohio. Fuel for Missionary Fires; Weapons for Temperance Warfare; The Morning Watch; Quaint Thoughts of an Old Time Army Chaplain; The Transformation of Hawaii. Rev.
- Braine, Robert D——. O., 1861- ——. A musician of Springfield, Ohio. Messages from Mars, or the Strange Revelations of the Telescope Plant.
- Branch, Anna Hempstead. Ct., 18— - ——. A writer of New London, Connecticut; The Heart of the Road and Other Poems. Hou.
- Brandenburg, Edwin Charles. D. C., 1865- ——. A professor of law at Columbian University, Washington city. The Law of Bankruptcy; Digest of Bankruptcy Decisions. He is one of the editors of the supplement to the Revised Statutes of the United States.
- Brannon, Henry. W. Va., 1837- ——. A supreme court judge of West Virginia. Treatise on the Rights and Privileges Guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
- Brantley, William Theophilus. Ga., 1852- ——. A lawyer of Baltimore. The Law of Personal Property.
- Brayton, Alembert Winthrop. N. Y., 1848- ——. A mathematician of Indianapolis. Birds of Indiana; Mammals of Ohio; Fishes of the Southern Allegheny Region.
- Brearley, William Henry. Mch., 1846- ——. A journalist of Detroit, and subsequently of New York city. Recollections of the East Tennessee Campaign; Wanted, a Copyist; Leading Events of the American Revolution; King Washington (with A. Skeel, infra). Lip.
- Breckenridge, John. Ky., 1797-1841. A once noted Presbyterian clergyman. Roman Catholic Controversy (1836).
- Brent, Charles Henry. Ont., 1862- ——. The first Protestant Episcopal bishop of the Philippines. With God in the World; The Consolations of the Cross; With God in the Nation; With God in the Creed. Lgs.
- Brent, Henry Johnson. D. C., 1811-1880. A New York littérateur who founded the Knickerbocker Magazine with Lewis Gaylord Clark ([page 63]). Among his writings are Life almost Alone, a novel; Was it a Ghost?
- Brevoort, James Carson. N. Y., 1818-1887. A civil engineer of New York city. Verrazano the Navigator.
- Brewer, Daniel Chauncey. Ms., 1861- ——. A Boston lawyer who has published Madeleine, a Poem in Fragments.
- Brewer, David Josiah. A. M., 1837- ——. An associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1889. The Pew to the Pulpit; The Twentieth Century from Another View Point; American Citizenship. Rev. Scr.
- Brewster, Anne M—— Hampton. Pa., 1818-1892. A writer whose later life was passed in Rome. Compensation, or Always a Future; St. Martin’s Summer.
- Brewster, Charles Warren. N. H., 1812-1868. A journalist of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Fifty Years in a Printing Office; Rambles about Portsmouth.
- Brewster, Chauncey Bunce. Ct., 1848- ——. The fifth Protestant Episcopal bishop of Connecticut. Key of Life: Good Friday Addresses.
- Brewster, Frederick Carroll. Pa., 1825-1898. A jurist of Philadelphia, attorney-general of his state in 1869. Equity Practice in Pennsylvania; Treatise on Practice in the Pennsylvania Courts of Common Pleas; Molière in Outline; Life and Novels of Benjamin Disraeli.
- Bridge, Horatio. Me., 1806-1893. A United States naval officer. Journal of an African Cruiser.
- Bridge, Norman. Vt., 1844- ——. A physician long resident in Chicago, but more recently in Pasadena, California. The Penalties of Taste and Other Essays; The Rewards of Taste; Lectures on Tuberculosis. S.
- Bridgman, Elijah Cole. Ms., 1801-1861. A missionary to China. Chrestomathy in Canton Dialect, the first practical manual of that dialect prepared in China.
- Bridgman, Frederic Arthur. Al., 1847- ——. A noted painter of Oriental subjects. Winters in Algeria; Anarchy in Art; The Idol and the Ideal.
- Bridgman, Marcus Fayette. Vt., 1824-1899. A physician and verse-writer of Boston. Mosaics; Under the Pine; Tales at the Manse.
- Briggs, LeBaron Russell. Ms., 1855- ——. A professor of English at Harvard University from 1885, dean of the University from 1891, and president of Radcliffe College from 1903. Original Charades; School, College, and Character; Routine and Ideals. Hou. Scr.
- Brigham, Gershom Nelson. Vt., 1820-1886. A homœopathic physician of Grand Rapids, Michigan. Catarrhal Diseases; Pulmonary Consumption; Harvest Moon, a volume of verse.
- Brigham, Mrs. Sarah J—— [Lathbury]. N. Y., 1835- ——. A writer and illustrator for children. The Pleasant Land of Play; Under Blue Skies.
- Brigham, Sarah Prentice. Ms., 1833- ——. A writer for young people. Alice Field; The Stolen Gold Piece; The Forged Letter and Other Stories.
- Brimmer, Martin. Ms., 1829-1896. A once prominent citizen of Boston. Egypt: Three Essays on the History, Religion, and Art of Ancient Egypt. Hou.
- Brine, Mrs. Mary D[ow] [Northam]. N. Y., 18— - ——. A popular New York city writer of juvenile and other works, mainly in verse, among which Grandma’s Attic Treasures is best known. Others are Grandma’s Memories; Aunt Patience; The Mother’s Song; From Gold to Gray; Bessie and Bee; Bessie the Cash Girl; My Boy and I. Cas. Dut. Meth.
- Briscoe, Margaret Sutton. See Hopkins, Mrs. Margaret.
- Bristol, Frank Milton. N. Y., 1851- ——. A Methodist clergyman, long prominent in Chicago. Providential Epochs; The Ministry of Art; Shakespeare and America.
- Brittan, Harriette G——. 1823-1897. A missionary in India. Scenes and Incidents of Every-day Life in Africa; Kardoo, the Hindoo girl; Shoshie, the Indian Zenana Teacher; A Woman’s Talks about India.
- Brocklesby, John. E., 1811-1889. An educator, professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Trinity College, 1842-73, and of astronomy and natural philosophy, 1873-84. Elements of Meteorology; Views of the Microscopic World; Elements of Physical Geography; The Amateur Microscopist.
- Bronson, Walter Cochrane. Ms., 1862- ——. A professor of literature at Brown University from 1892. A Short History of American Literature. He.
- Brooks, Francis. Tn., 1867-1898. Margins; Complete Poems.
- Brooks, Fred Emerson. N. Y., 1850- ——. A popular writer of humorous verse. Pickett’s Charge and Other Poems; Old Ace and Other Poems.
- Brooks, Geraldine. Pa., 1875- ——. Daughter of E. S. Brooks ([page 38]). A writer of New York city. Dames and Daughters of Colonial Days; Dames and Daughters of the Young Republic; Romances of Colonial Days. Cr.
- Brooks, Henry S——. E., 183- - ——. A littérateur of New York city. The California Mountaineer; Doña Paula’s Treasure; A Catastrophe in Bohemia, and Other Stories.
- Brooks, Hildegard. Sxy., 1875- ——. A novelist of Newburgh, New York. Without a Warrant; The Master of Caxton; Daughters of Desperation. Scr.
- Brooks, John Graham. N. H., 1846- ——. A noted lecturer on economics, residing in Cambridge. The Social Unrest. Mac.
- Brower, Jacob Vradenburg. Mch., 1844- ——. A Minnesota explorer. The Mississippi River and its Utmost Source; Prehistoric Man at the Head Waters of the Mississippi; The Missouri River and its Sources; Quivira; Harakey; Mille Lac; Minnesota: Discovery of its Area, 1541-1665.
- Brown, Abbie Farwell. Ms., 18— - ——. A Boston writer for young people. A Pocketful of Posies; In the Days of Giants; The Book of Saints and Friendly Beasts; The Lonesomest Doll; The Curious Book of Birds; The Flower Princess. Hou.
- Brown, Calvin Smith. Tn., 1866- ——. An instructor in English in Rutgers College from 1901. The Later English Drama.
- Brown, Charles Reynolds. W. Va., 1862- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Oakland, California. Two Parables; The Main Points. Rev.
- Brown, Elmer Ellsworth. N. Y., 1861- ——. A professor of education in the University of California. The Making of Our Middle Schools. Lgs.
- Brown, Ernest William. E., 1866- ——. A professor of applied mathematics at Haverford College, Pennsylvania. Treatise on the Lunar Theory. Mac.
- Brown, Glenn. Va., 1854- ——. An architect of Washington city. Treatise on Water Closets; Healthy Foundations for Houses; History of the United States Capitol; European and Japanese Gardens.
- Brown, Howard Nicholson. N. Y., 1849- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Boston, rector of King’s Chapel from 1895. The Spiritual Life; Sunday Stories; Sermons in King’s Chapel.
- Brown, Hubert William. 18— - ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, for many years a missionary in Mexico. Latin America. Rev.
- Brown, John Howard. N. Y., 1840- ——. A Boston writer who has edited the Cyclopædia of American Biography. American Naval Heroes.
- Brown, John Newton. Ct., 1803-1868. A Baptist clergyman who edited an Encyclopædia of Religious Knowledge and was the author of Memorials of Baptist Martyrs; Poems; The New Hampshire Confession.
- Brown, Joseph Brownlee. S. C., 1824-1888. A thinker of transcendental tendencies, best remembered by his short poem, The Cry of the Ten Thousand.
- Brown, Katherine Louise. Ms., 1857- ——. An educator of Boston. Little People; The Plant Baby and its Friends; Alice and Tom.
- Brown, Marshall Stewart. N. H., 1870- ——. A professor of history and political science in New York University. Epoch-Making Papers in United States History; History of the Zeta Psi Fraternity.
- Brown, Moses True. N. H., 1827-1900. An elocutionist, long resident in Boston. The Synthetic Philosophy of Expression. Hou.
- Brown, Ray. Ct., 1865- ——. An illustrator of New York city. Book of Child’s Songs; Stage Lyrics; American Ships and Sailors. Do.
- Brown, Solyman. Ct., 1790-1876. A Swedenborgian minister of New York city. Essay on American Poetry (1814); Dentologia; Dental Hygeia.
- Brown, William Adams. N. Y., 1865- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of New York city, professor of systematic theology in Union Theological Seminary from 1898. Musical Instruments and Their Homes; The Essence of Christianity. Do. Scr.
- Brown, William Garrott. Al., 1868- ——. A librarian of Cambridge. A Short Life of Andrew Jackson; a similar Life of Stephen A. Douglas; The Lower South in American History; A History of Alabama; A Gentleman of the South; The Foe of Compromise, and Other Essays; The History of the United States since the Civil War; Selden: a Memory of the Black Belt; Golf. Hou. Mac.
- Brown, William Montgomery. O., 1855- ——. The fifth Protestant Episcopal bishop of Arkansas. The Church for Americans. Wh.
- Browne, Causten. D. C., 1828- ——. A lawyer of Boston. Treatise on the Construction of the Statute of Frauds. Lit.
- Browne, George Waldo. N. H., 1851- ——. A writer for young people who has published under his own name, A Daughter of Maryland; The Young Gunbearer; Two American Boys in Hawaii; The Hero of the Hills; The Paradise of the Pacific; The Hawaiian Islands; The Pearl of the Orient; The Philippine Islands, and other works; and under the pseudonym “Victor Saint Clair,” For Home and Honor; Zip the Acrobat; Break o’ Day Boys, and other juveniles. Est. Pa.
- Brownson, Henry Francis. Ms., 1835- ——. Son of O. A. Brownson ([page 41]). A lawyer of Detroit who served in the Federal army during the Civil War. He is the author of a Life of Orestes A. Brownson; Equality and Democracy; Faith and Science; and of a translation of Balme’s Fundamental Philosophy.
- Bruce, Henry [Goodnow]. 18— - ——. An historical writer. James Edward Oglethorpe and the Founding of the Georgia Colony; Samuel Houston and the Annexation of Texas. Do.
- Bruce, Philip Alexander. Va., 1856- ——. An historical writer of Richmond, Virginia. The Plantation Negro as a Freeman; The Economic History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century; Short History of the United States. Am. Mac. Put.
- Bruce, Saunders Dewees. Ky., 1825-1902. A New York journalist, editor of Turf, Field, and Farm from 1866. The American Stud Book; Horse-Breeder’s Guide; The Thoroughbred Horse.
- Brush, George Jarvis. L. I., 1831- ——. A mineralogist, professor of metallurgy in the Scientific School of Yale University. A Manual of Determinative Mineralogy.
- Bryan, William Jennings. Il., 1860- ——. A noted politician of Lincoln, Nebraska, prominent in 1896 and 1900 as the Democratic candidate for the Presidency. The First Battle: a Story of the Campaign of 1896.
- Bryant, Anna Burnham. N. H., 186- - ——. A writer of juvenile books, among which are Fussbudgett’s Folks; Wellspring Series; Holly Berry Series; The Christmas Cat.
- Buck, Albert Henry. N. Y., 1842- ——. Son of Gurdon Buck ([page 42]). A New York physician. Diseases of the Ear; Vest-pocket Medical Dictionary.
- Buck, Jirah Dewey. N. Y., 1838- ——. A homœopathic physician of Cincinnati. A Study of Man; Mystic Masonry; Paracelsus and Other Essays; Nature and Aim of Theosophy; Why I Am a Theosophist. Clke.
- Buckalew, Charles Rollin. Pa., 1821-1899. A prominent United States Senator from Pennsylvania. Proportional Representation; An Examination of the Constitution of Pennsylvania.
- Buckham, James. Vt., 1858- ——. The Heart of Life, a book of verse; Where Town and Country Meet.
- Buehler, Huber Gray. Pa., 1864- ——. An educator at Lakeville, Connecticut. Practical Exercises in English; Modern English Grammar.
- Buel, Clarence Clough. N. Y., 1856- ——. An assistant editor of the Century Magazine. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War.
- Buel, James William. Il., 1849- ——. An author of Philadelphia. Russian Nihilism and Exile Life in Siberia; The World’s Wonders; Sea and Land; The Beautiful Story; The Living World; The Story of Man; Heroes of the Dark Continent; America’s Wonderlands; The Magic City; Buel’s Manual of Self-Help; Beautiful Paris; The Great Operas; Great Achievements of the Century; Hero Tales.
- Buell, Augustus C——. N. Y., 1846-1904. A civil engineer of note. Paul Jones, a biography; Life of William Penn; History of Andrew Jackson; Sir William Johnson. Ap. Scr.
- Buell, Marcus Darius. N. Y., 1851- ——. A Methodist theologian, professor at Boston University from 1884. Studies in the Greek Text of the Gospel of Saint Mark.
- Bugg, Lelia Hardin. Mo., 18— - ——. A Roman Catholic writer of Wichita, Kansas. The People of Our Parish; The Correct Thing for Catholics; Orchids, a novel; The Prodigal’s Daughter; A Lady. Mar.
- Bulkeley, Lucius Duncan. N. Y., 1845- ——. A physician of New York city. Analysis of Eight Thousand Cases of Skin Diseases; Acne and its Treatment; Syphilis in the Innocent; Manual of Diseases of the Skin; Eczema and its Treatment.
- Bull, Charles Stedman. N. Y., 1846- ——. A noted oculist. Choroditis Following Cerebro-Spinal Meningitis; Influenza of the Fifth Nerve in Iritis and Choroditis; Symptomatology and Pathology of Intercranial Tumours.
- Bull, Mrs. Sara Chapman [Thorp]. 1850- ——. In 1870 she was married to Ole Bull, the famous Norwegian violinist, and in 1882 she wrote his life. Hou.
- Bullock, Charles Jesse. Ms., 1869- ——. An assistant professor in economics at Harvard University. Introduction to the Study of Economics; Finances of the United States from 1775 to 1789; Essay on the Monetary History of the United States. Mac.
- Bumpus, Hermon Carey. Me., 1862- ——. A professor of comparative anatomy in Brown University from 1892. A Laboratory Course in Invertebrate Zoölogy.
- Buntline, Ned. See Judson, Edward ([page 214]).
- Burdick, Francis Marion. N. Y., 1845- ——. A professor of law at Columbia University from 1891. Cases on Torts; Cases on Sales; The Law of Sales; Cases on Partnership; The Law of Partnership. Lit.
- Burgess, [Frank] Gelett. Ms., 1866- ——. A humorous writer of Boston, editor of The Lark at San Francisco, 1895-97, and subsequently of other humorous periodicals. Viviette, or the Memoirs of the Romance Association; Goop Babies: a Manual of Instruction for Polite Infants; The Lively City o’ Ligg; The Burgess Nonsense Book; A Gage of Youth; The Picaroons (with T. Irwin); The Reign of Queen Isyl. Cent. Dou. Scr. Sm. Sto.
- Burkett, Charles William. O., 1873- ——. A professor of agriculture in the New Hampshire Agricultural College. History of Ohio Agriculture; Feeding Farm Animals; Agriculture for Beginners (joint author). Gi.
- Burnham, Benjamin Franklin. Vt., 1831- ——. A Boston jurist. Leading in Law and Curious in Court; The Life of Lives; Elsmere Elsewhere; Records of Jesus Reviewed.
- Burnham, Sarah Maria. Vt., 1818-1901. An educator who taught in the schools of Cambridge, 1843-79. The Struggles of the Nations; Pleasant Memories of Foreign Travel; Roman Stories in the Time of Claudius I.; Precious Stones in Natural History and Literature; The History and Uses of Limestones and Marbles; Biographical Sketches of Some Ancient People.
- Burr, William Henry. N. Y., 1819- ——. A stenographer of Washington city. Self-Contradictions of the Bible; Revelations of Antichrist.
- Burrell, David James. Pa., 1849- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of New York city. The Religions of the World; Hints and Helps; The Gospel of Gladness; The Morning Cometh; The Religion of the Future; The Early Church; The Wondrous Cross; God and the People; The Spirit of the Age; For Christ’s Crown; The Golden Passional; The Unaccountable Man and Other Sermons; The Wonderful Teacher; The Church in the Fort; The Gospel of Certainty.
- Burrill, Thomas Jonathan. Ms., 1839- ——. A naturalist, vice-president of the University of Illinois from 1882. The Bacteria; Uredinæ, or Parasitic Fungi of Illinois.
- Burroughs, Stephen. N. H., 1765-1840. A once famous adventurer whose Memoirs of My Own Life (1811) were long popular. In his later years he was a successful and beloved educator in Canada.
- Burton, Nathaniel Judson. Ct., 1824-1887. A Congregational clergyman whose son, R. E. Burton, is mentioned on [page 46]. In Pulpit and Parish: Yale Lectures on Preaching, and Other Writings. C. P. S.
- Burton, Theodore Elijah. O., 1851- ——. A lawyer of Cleveland, member of Congress, 1889-91, and from 1895. Financial Crises and Periods of Industrial and Commercial Depression. Ap.
- Busey, Samuel Clagett. Md., 1823- ——. A Washington physician. Acquired Forms; Lymph Channels; Reminiscences; A Souvenir; Pictures of the City of Washington in the Past.
- Butler, Amos William. Ind., 1860- ——. A naturalist of Indianapolis. The Birds of Indiana.
- Butler, Benjamin Franklin. N. H., 1818-1893. A noted lawyer and politician of Lowell, Massachusetts, major-general in the Federal army during the Civil War. He published his Autobiography and Reminiscences in 1892.
- Butler, Charles Henry. 1859- ——. Son of W. A. Butler (page 47). A lawyer of New York city. The Voice of the Nation; Our Relations with Spain; Freedom of Private Property on the Sea; Cuba Must be Free; Treaty-Making Power of the United States.
- Butler, Howard Crosby. N. Y., 1872- ——. Scotland’s Ruined Abbeys; The Story of Athens; Architecture and Other Arts of Syria. Cas. Cent. Mac.
- Butler, James Davie. Vt., 1815- ——. A Wisconsin educator, in earlier life a Congregational clergyman, who has published many monographs of antiquarian and historical interest.
- Butler, William Morris. N. Y., 1850- ——. A physician of New York city. Home Care for the Insane.
- Butler, William Orlando. Ky., 1791-1880. A soldier and politician. The Boatman’s Horn and Other Poems. See Life by Blair, 1848.
- Butts, Edmund Luther. Min., 1868- ——. An army officer who has published a Manual of Physical Training for the United States Army. Ap.
- Byford, Henry Turman. Ind., 1853- ——. A surgeon of Chicago. Manual of Gynecology; Diseases of Women (with W. H. Byford, [page 48]); American Text Book of Gynecology.
- Byrne, Austin Thomas. Me., 1859- ——. A civil engineer. Highway Construction; Inspection of Materials and Workmanship Employed in Construction. Wil.
- Byrne, William. I., 1836- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman, vicar-general of the archdiocese of Boston. Catholic Doctrine; Devout Manual.
- Byrum, Enoch Edwin. Ind., 1861- ——. A clergyman of the Church of God denomination who has written The Secret of Salvation; Divine Healing; The Boy’s Companion; The Great Physician, and other works.
- C
- Cabell, James Branch. Va., 1879- ——. A novelist who has published The Eagles of Shadow.
- Cadwallader, Richard McCall. N. J., 1839- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. The Law of Ground Rents.
- Caffin, Charles Henry. E., 1854- ——. Art critic of the New York Sun from 1901. American Masters of Painting; Photography as a Fine Art.
- Caldwell, Joshua William. Tn., 1856- ——. A lawyer of Knoxville, Tennessee. Constitutional History of Tennessee; Bench and Bar of Tennessee.
- Call, Annie Payson. Ms., 1853- ——. A teacher of nerve training. Power through Repose; As a Matter of Course. Lit.
- Callahan, James Morton. Ind., 1864- ——. An historical lecturer at Johns Hopkins University. Neutrality of the American Lakes; Cuba and International Relations; American Relations in the Pacific and the Far East; Confederate Diplomacy; The American Expansion Policy; Introduction to American Foreign Policy; The United States and Canada. J. H. U.
- Callender, Edward Belcher. Ms., 1851- ——. A Boston lawyer, author of Thaddeus Stevens, Commoner.
- Callender, Guy Stevens. O., 1865- ——. An historical writer who published English Capital and American Resources in 1815-1860.
- Cameron, Archibald. S., 1771-1836. A Presbyterian clergyman of Kentucky. The Faithful Steward; An Appeal to the Scriptures; A Defence of the Doctrines of Grace; A Reply to Some Arminian Questions in Divine Predestination.
- Campbell, Floy. Mo., 1873- ——. Camp Arcady, a story for girls.
- Campbell, James M——. S., 1840- ——. A Congregational clergyman at Lombard, Illinois. Clerical Types; Unto the Uttermost; The Indwelling Christ; After Pentecost—What?; Bible Questions. Fu. Rev.
- Campbell, John. S., 1839- ——. A Brooklyn physician. The Land of Burns.
- Campbell, John Lorne. Ont., 1845- ——. A Baptist clergyman of Cambridge, pastor of the Central Square Baptist Church. Heavenly Recognition and Other Sermons; Sanctification.
- Campbell, John Tenbrook. Ind., 1833- ——. An Indiana civil engineer. National Finances; Labour Reform.
- Candee, Helen Churchill. L. I., 1861- ——. A novelist and journalist of New York city. An Oklahoma Romance; How Women May Earn a Living; Susan Truslow; Not on the Flag. Mac.
- Canfield, James Hulme. O., 1847- ——. An educator, president of Ohio State University, 1895-99, and librarian of Columbia University from 1899. Taxation; a Plain Talk for Plain People; Short History of Kansas; Local Government in Kansas; The College Student and his Problems. Mac.
- Cannon, George Lyman. N. Y., 1860- ——. An educator of Denver. The Geology of Denver; Quarternary of the Platte Valley; Nature Studies about Denver.
- Capps, Edward. Il., 1866- ——. A professor of Greek at the University of Chicago from 1892. From Homer to Theocritus. Scr.
- Carhart, Henry Smith. N. Y., 1844- ——. A professor of physics at the University of Michigan from 1886. Primary Batteries; Elements of Physics; University Physics; Electrical Measurements.
- Carpenter, Frank Oliver. Ms., 1858- ——. An educator of Boston. French Grammar for High Schools; Guide Book to the Franconia Notch.
- Carpenter, George Rice. Labrador, 1863- ——. A professor of rhetoric in Columbia University from 1893. Life of John Greenleaf Whittier; Elements of Rhetoric and English Composition; Principles of English Grammar; Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, a brief biography; The Teaching of English. Hou. Lip. Mac. Sm.
- Carpenter, Rolla Clinton. Mch., 1852- ——. A professor of engineering at Cornell University. Experimental Engineering; Heating and Ventilating Buildings: an elementary treatise. Wil.
- Carpenter, William. E., 1830-1896. An eccentric English printer and stenographer who removed from England to Baltimore in 1879. He strenuously advocated the theory that the earth is flat, revolving on a central axis with the sun stationary over the centre. Among his various writings are, The Earth not a Globe, by Common Sense; Sir Isaac Newton’s Theoretical Astronomy Examined and Refuted by Common Sense; Water not Convex; Proctor’s Planet Earth; Something about Spiritualism.
- Carpenter, William Henry. E., 1813-1899. A miscellaneous writer of Baltimore, who had resided in the United States for nearly seventy years. With T. S. Arthur ([page 12]), he wrote a series of state histories including History of Massachusetts; History of Georgia (1853); History of New Jersey (1858); History of Vermont (1853). Among his other works are Ruth Eversley; The Betrothed Maiden; the Regicide Daughter.
- Carroll, John Joseph. I., 1856- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman of Chicago, of prominence as a Gaelic scholar. Notes and Observations on the Aryan Race and Tongue; Pre-Christian Occupation of Ireland by the Gaelic Aryans; Tale of the Wanderings of the Red Lance.
- Carruth, Frances Weston. Ms., 1867- ——. A New York writer. Those Dale Girls; The Way of Belinda; Fictional Rambles in and about Boston. Mg.
- Carruth, Fred Hayden. Min., 1862- ——. A journalist of Poughkeepsie. The Adventures of Jones; The Voyage of the Rattletrap; Mr. Milo Bush and Other Worthies; Handbook of Golf for Bears. Har.
- Carryl, Guy Wetmore. N. Y., 1873-1904. Son of C. E. Carryl ([page 53]). A littérateur of Boston. Fables for the Frivolous; Mother Goose for Grown-ups; Grimm Tales Made Gay; Zut, and Other Parisians; The Lieutenant Governor; Far from the Madding Girls; The Transgression of Andrew Vane. The Garden of Years (verse). Har. Ho. Hou.
- Carson, Hampton Lawrence. Pa., 1852- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. The Law of Criminal Conspiracy; History of the Supreme Court of the United States; History of the Centennial Celebration of the Framing of the United States Constitution.
- Carson, William Henry. N. Y., 1859- ——. A novelist of New York city. Hester Blaire; The Fool; Tito.
- Carter, James Coolidge. Ms., 1827- ——. A lawyer of New York city. The Codification of Our Common Law.
- Carus, Paul. E., 1852- ——. A philosophical writer of Chicago, editor of The Open Court. The Ethical Problem; Fundamental Problems; The Soul of Man; Primer of Philosophy; Truth in Fiction; Monism and Meliorism; The Religion of Science; Science, a Religious Revelation; The Gospel of Buddhism; Karma; A Story of Early Buddhism; Nirvana; Homilies of Science; The Idea of God; Buddhism and its Christian Critics; The Dawn of a New Era, and Other Essays; The Soul of Man; Whence and Whither?; Kant and Spencer; Eros and Psyche; History of the Devil and the Idea of Evil; The Chief’s Daughter; Godward.
- Caruthers, Eli Washington. N. C., 1793-1865. A Presbyterian clergyman of Allamance, North Carolina. Life of David Caldwell; Revolutionary Incidents and Sketches of Character, chiefly in the Old North State.
- Carver, Jonathan. Ct., 1732-1780. A traveller who made very important explorations in the region now known as Minnesota, and died in London in great poverty. Travels through the Interior Parts of North America in 1766-68; Treatise on the Culture of the Tobacco Plant. Under his name was published The New Universal Traveller. See Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 9; Tyler’s Literary History of the American Revolution; J. G. Gregory’s Jonathan Carver (1896).
- Cary, Elizabeth Luther. L. I., 1867- ——. A literary critic of Brooklyn. Browning: Poet and Man; Tennyson: his Homes, his Friends and his Work; The Rossettis; William Morris: Poet, Craftsman, Socialist; Ralph Waldo Emerson: Poet and Thinker. Put.
- Case, Mary Emily. N. Y., 1857- ——. An educator, professor of Latin at Wells College, Aurora, New York, from 1883. The Lore of the World. Cent.
- Case, William Scoville. Ct., 1863- ——. A jurist of Hartford. Forward House. Scr.
- Caskoden, Edwin. See Major, Charles.
- Casler, John Overton. Va., 1838- ——. A Confederate officer during the Civil War, and subsequently a justice of the peace in Oklahoma City. Four Years in the Stonewall Brigade; Lillian Stuart, a romance.
- Castagnier, Georges. F., 1850- ——. An educator of New York city. Handbook of Greek and Roman History; Le Duc de Reichstadt. Am.
- Cate, Eliza Jane. N. H., 1812-1884. A once popular New England writer. Lights and Shadows of Factory Life; Rural Scenes in New England.
- Cathell, Daniel Webster. Md., 1839- ——. A physician of Baltimore. The Physician Himself.
- Catlin, Henry Guy. Vt., 1843- ——. A mining engineer of New York city who served in the Federal army during the Civil War. Beside professional articles he has published Yellow Pine Basin, a novel. Sm.
- Catlin, Mrs. Louise [Ensign]. N. Y., 1861- ——. A writer of Brooklyn. Marjory and Her Neighbours. Lo.
- Caughey, James. I., c. 1810-1892. A noted revivalist. Methodism in Earnest; Revival Miscellanies; Earnest Christianity; Glimpses of Soul Saving.
- Cavazza, Mrs. See Pullen.
- Caverly, Abiel Moses. Vt., 1817-1879. A physician of Pittsburg, Vermont, who wrote and published a valuable history of that town.
- Caverly, Robert Boodey. N. H., 1806-1887. A lawyer and author of Lowell. Genealogy of the Caverly Family; Epics, Lyrics and Ballads; Legends: Historic, Dramatic and Comic; History of the Indian Wars of New England; Heroism of Hannah Dustin; Battle of the Bush; The Merrimac and its Incidents.
- Challen, James. N. J., 1802-18—. A once prominent clergyman of the Campbellite church, long resident in Cincinnati. The Gospel and its Elements; Christian Evidences; Baptism in Spirit and in Fire; Christian Morals; Frank Elliot; The Cave of Machpelah and Other Poems; Igdrasyl, or the Tree of Existence; The Island of the Giant Fairies.
- Chamberlain, Alexander Francis. E., 1865- ——. An educator, lecturer on anthropology in Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts, from 1892. Modern Languages and Classics; Report on the Kootenay Indians; Language of the Mississaga Indians; The Mythology of the Columbian Discovery; The Child and Childhood in Folk-Thought; The Child: a Study in the Evolution of Man. Mac.
- Chamberlain, Henry Richardson. Il., 1859- ——. A journalist, London correspondent of the New York Sun from 1892. Six Thousand Tons of Gold.
- Chamberlain, Joshua Lawrence. Me., 1828- ——. A governor of Maine, 1867-71, and president of Bowdoin College, 1871-83. Maine: her Place in History, Sovereignty and Sacrifice; The Two Souls; American Ideals; The New Nation; Ethics and Politics of the Spanish Question.
- Chamberlain, Mellen. N. H., 1821-1900. A former librarian of the Boston Public Library. John Adams, the Statesman of the American Revolution, with Other Addresses. Hou.
- Chamberlain, Montagu. N. B., 1844- ——. An ornithologist of Cambridge. Catalogue of Birds of New Brunswick; Catalogue of Mammals of New Brunswick; Catalogue of Birds of Canada; Systematic Table of Birds of Canada; Birds of Field and Grove. Hou.
- Chambre, Albert Saint John. 18— - ——. An Episcopal clergyman, rector of Saint Anne’s Church, Lowell. Sermons on the Apostles’ Creed. Wh.
- Chancellor, Eustathius. Va., 1854- ——. A physician who has published Researches upon Treatment of Delirium Tremens; Woman in the Social Sphere; Correlation of Physical and Vital Forces; The Pacific Slope and its Scenery.
- Chandler, Frank Wadleigh. L. I., 1873- ——. A professor of literature in the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. Romances of Roguery: an Episode in the History of the Novel. Mac.
- Chandler, Joseph Ripley. Ms., 1792-1880. A Philadelphia journalist and member of Congress. A Grammar of the English Language; The Pilgrims of the Rock; Civil and Religious Equality; Outlines of Penology.
- Chanler, William Astor. N. Y., 1867- ——. A writer of New York city; elected to Congress in 1898. Through Jungle and Deserts: Travels in Eastern Africa. Mac.
- Channing, Blanche Mary. E., 1863-1902. Daughter of W. H. Channing ([page 57]). A writer for young people. She came from England in 1890, and resided in Brookline, Massachusetts. Zodiac Stories; Winifred West; The Balaster Boys. Lullaby Castle and Other Poems. We.
- Channing, Grace Ellery. See Stetson, Mrs. Grace.
- Chapin, Charles Value. R. I., 1856- ——. A physician, health officer of Providence. Municipal Sanitation in the United States.
- Chapman, Frank Michler. N. J., 1864- ——. A well-known ornithologist, assistant curator of the department of ornithology and mammalogy in the American Museum of Natural History, New York city. Handbook of Birds of Eastern North America; Bird-Life: a Guide to the Study of our Common Birds; Bird Studies with a Camera. Ap.
- Chapman, John Abney. S. C., 1821- ——. A South Carolina author. The Walk, and Other Poems; Within the Veil; Annals of Newberry; History of South Carolina; Poems for Young and Old.
- Chapman, John Jay. N. Y., 1862- ——. Grandson of John Jay, 2d ([page 208]). A lawyer of New York city. Emerson, and Other Essays; Causes and Consequences; Practical Agitation. Scr.
- Chapple, Joseph Mitchell. Ia., 1867- ——. A Boston novelist, editor of the National Magazine. The Minor Chord; Boss Burt, Politician. Scr.
- Charles, Frances. Cal., 1872- ——. In the Country God Forgot, an Arizona tale; The Siege of Youth. Lit.
- Chase, Mrs. Jessie [Anderson]. O., 1865- ——. A writer of Brookline, Massachusetts. Sixty Composition Topics; A Study of English Words; Three Freshmen; Mayken. Am. Mg. Sil.
- Cheney, Charles Edward. N. Y., 1836- ——. A bishop of the Reformed Episcopal Church, consecrated in 1873, and rector of Christ Church, Chicago, from 1860. The Evangelical Ideal of a Visible Church; A Word to Old-Fashioned Episcopalians; The Prayer which God Denied, and Other Sermons; Enlistment of the Christian Soldier; A King of France Unnamed in History.
- Chesnutt, Charles Waddell. O., 1858- ——. A Cleveland lawyer and author, of African descent. The Conjure Woman; Frederick Douglass, a brief biography; The Wife of his Youth and Other Stories; The Marrow of Tradition; The House Behind the Cedars. Hou. Sm.
- Cheyney, Edward Potts. Pa., 1861- ——. A professor of European history in the University of Pennsylvania. An Introduction to the Industrial and Social History of England.
- Child, Frank Samuel. N. Y., 1854- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Fairfield, Connecticut, known as a lecturer on historical subjects. The Boyhood of Beecher; Be Strong to Hope; The Friendship of Jesus; An Old New England Town; The Colonial Parson of New England; A Colonial Witch; A Puritan Wooing; The House with Sixty Closets; An Unknown Patriot; Friend or Foe, a Tale of the War of 1812; Little Dreamer’s Adventure. Ba. Hou. Le. Scr.
- Childs, Thomas Spencer. Ms., 1825- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Washington city, but for many years prior to 1890 in the Presbyterian ministry. The Heritage of Peace; The Lost Faith; Difficulties of the Scriptures Tested by the Laws of Evidence; Christian Unity and Church Unity.
- Chittenden, Hiram Martin. N. Y., 1858- ——. An engineer in the United States army, now (1904) Chief Engineer of the Fourth Army Corps. Beside many valuable professional papers he has published The Yellowstone National Park; The American Fur Trade of the Far West. Clke.
- Chittenden, William Lawrence. N. J., 1862- ——. A ranchman in Texas. Ranch Verses. Put.
- Christopher, E—— Earl. Tn., 1872- ——. The Invisibles, a novel.
- Christy, David. O., 1802-18—. A miscellaneous writer, whose Cotton is King, or Slavery in the Light of Political Economy (1855) was once famous. Other works of his are Letters on the Geology of the West and South West; Chemistry of Agriculture; Lectures on Colonization; History of Missions in Africa; Elements of Slavery; Billy McConnell, the Witch Doctor; Pulpit Politics.
- Chubb, Percival. E., 1860- ——. A New York educator and lecturer. The Teaching of English. Mac.
- Church, William Conant. N. Y., 1836- ——. Son of P. Church ([page 62]). A journalist of New York city. Life of John Ericsson; Life of Ulysses S. Grant. Put.
- Churchill, Winston. Mo., 1871- ——. A popular novelist who has published The Celebrity; Richard Carvel; The Crisis; Mrs. Keegan’s Elopement. Mac.
- Claghorn, Kate Holladay. Il., 1863- ——. A New York writer who has published College Training for Women. Cr.
- Clapp, Henry Austin. Ms., 1841-1904. A dramatic critic of Boston, for many years clerk of the Supreme Judicial Court. The Reminiscences of a Dramatic Critic. Hou.
- Clark, Frederick Thickstun. “Frederick Thickstun.” Pa., 1858- ——. A novelist of Denver, Colorado, whose stories deal with phases of Western life. A Mexican Girl; In the Valley of Havilah; On Cloud Mountain; The Mistress of the Ranch. Har. Hou.
- Clark, George Rogers. Va., 1752-1818. A brigadier-general in the Continental army, active in the conquest of the region north of the Ohio. His personal narrative of The Campaign in the Illinois in 1778-79, published in 1898, is a work of much historic interest. See Life by W. H. English. Clke.
- Clark, Henry Scott. See Cox, Millard.
- Clark, Imogen. N. Y., 18— - ——. A writer of New York city. Shakespeare’s Little Lad; God’s Puppets; The Victory of Ezry Gardner; The Heresy of Parson Medlicott. Scr.
- Clark, J—— Scott. N. Y., 1854- ——. A professor of English at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, from 1892. A Practical Rhetoric; English Literature by an Inductive Method; A Study of English Prose Writers; A Study of English and American Poets. Ho. Scr.
- Clark, Walter. N. C., 1846- ——. A justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina from 1889. Annotated Code of Civil Procedure; Laws for Business Men; Overruled Cases.
- Clarke, Joseph Ignatius Constantine. I., 1846- ——. A playwright of New York city. Malmôrda, a metrical romance; Heartsease; Robert Emmet, a tragedy.
- Clarke, Joseph Morison. Ct., 1829-1899. An Episcopal clergyman of Syracuse. Six Letters to Protestant Christians; Was John Wesley a Methodist?
- Clarke, William Newton. N. Y., 1841- ——. A clergyman, professor of theology at Colgate University, Hamilton, New York, from 1890. A Commentary on the Gospel of Mark; Outline of Christian Theology; What Shall We Think of Theology?; The Doctrine of God; A Study of Christian Missions; Can I Believe in God the Father? Scr.
- Clarkson, L. See Whitelock, Mrs.
- Clason, Isaac Starr. N. Y., 1789-1834. An actor and verse-writer. Don Juan, Cantos Seventeen and Eighteen; Horace in New York.
- Clendinin, Frank Montrose. D. C., 1853- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Westchester, New York. Idols by the Sea and Other Sermons.
- Cleveland, (Stephen) Grover. N. J., 1837- ——. The twenty-second President of the United States. The Self-Made Man in American Life; Presidential Problems. See Lives by Chamberlain, 1884; Hensel, 1884; King, 1884; Welch, 1884; Dieck, 1888; Grover Cleveland, by J. L. Whittle, 1896; The Hawaiian Incident, by J. A. Gillis, 1897; Atlantic Monthly, March, 1897.
- Clews, Henry E., 1840- ——. A New York financier of prominence. Wall Street and the Nation; Twenty-Eight Years in Wall Street; The Wall Street Point of View. Sil.
- Cloud, Virginia Woodward. Md., 18— - ——. A writer of pleasing verse who has published Down Durley Lane and Other Ballads; A Reed by the River; A Wayside Harp.
- Clute, Willard Nelson. N. Y., 1869- ——. A botanist, curator of the New York botanical gardens. A Flora of the Upper Susquehanna Valley; The American Fern Book.
- Clyde, John Cunningham. Pa., 1841- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Bloomsburg, New Jersey. History of the Irish Settlement of Pennsylvania; Guide to Non-Liturgical Prayer; Mohammedanism a Pseudo-Christianity; The Christian Temper and Scientific Thought.
- Coates, Mrs. Florence Van Leer [Earle] [Nicholson]. Pa., 1850- ——. A Philadelphia writer of verse. Poems; Mine and Thine. Hou.
- Cobb, Sanford Hoadley. N. Y., 1838- ——. A Dutch Reformed clergyman at Richfield Springs, New York. The Story of the Palatines; The Rise of Religious Liberty in America. Put.
- Coblentz, Virgil. O., 1862- ——. A New York chemist. Medical and Pharmaceutical Chemistry (with Sadtler); Handbook of Pharmacy; The Newer Remedies; Manual of Volumetric Analysis.
- Coburn, Stephen. Me., 1817-1882. A lawyer and philologist of Skowhegan, Maine. The Syntactic Genesis of Words.
- Cocker, Benjamin Franklin. E., 1821-1883. A Methodist clergyman, professor of philosophy at the University of Michigan, 1869-83. (His son, W. J. Cocker, is mentioned on [page 67].) Christianity and Greek Philosophy; University Lectures on the Truth of the Christian Religion; The Students’ Handbook of Philosophy; The Theistic Conception of the World. See Memorial Discourse by A. Winchell. Har.
- Cody, Sherwin. Mch., 1868- ——. The Art of Short-Story Writing; How to Write Fiction; In the Heart of the Hills, a novel; Story Composition; Four American Poets; Four Famous American Writers; The Art of Writing and Speaking the English Language. Mac.
- Coe, George Albert. N. Y., 1862- ——. A professor of philosophy at Northwestern University from 1893. The Spiritual Life; The Religion of a Mature Mind. Meth. Rev.
- Cohen, Alfred J——. “Alan Dale.” E., 1861- ——. A dramatic critic of New York city. Familiar Chats with Queens of the Stage; His Own Image; Jonathan’s Home; A Marriage below Zero; An Eerie He and She; My Footlight Husband; Miss Innocence; An Old Maid Kindled; A Moral Busybody; Conscience on Ice.
- Cohen, Solomon Solis. Pa., 1857- ——. A physician of Philadelphia. Therapeutics of Tuberculosis; Essentials of Diagnoses (with A. A. Eshner).
- Coit, Stanton. O., 1857- ——. A lecturer on ethics, now living in England. Neighborhood Guilds; Die Ethische Bewegung; La Religion basée sur la Morale; The Message of Man.
- Colby, John Stark. N. H., 1851-1898. A Congregational clergyman, but prior to 1891 a journalist of Lowell. Agatha, a volume of verse.
- Cole, William Morse. “Christopher Craigie.” Ms., 1866- ——. A university extension lecturer on economics. An Old Man’s Romance.
- Coler, Bird Sim. Il., 1867- ——. A New York politician of note. Municipal Government as illustrated by the Charter, Finances and Public Charities of New York; The Financial Effects of Consolidation, Municipal Government and Tunnels and Bridges. Ap.
- Collier, [Hiram] Price. Ia., 1860- ——. Son of R. L. Collier ([page 69]). A writer who was for nine years in the Unitarian ministry. Essays; Mr. Picket Pin and his Friends; America and the Americans from a French Point of View. Dou. Scr.
- Collier, William Miller. N. Y., 1867- ——. A lawyer of Auburn, New York. Civil Service Laws of the State of New York; Treatise on Bankruptcy; Official Rules, Forms, and General Orders in Bankruptcy; The Trusts: What can We do with Them?; Civil Service Law.
- Collins, Louis. Ky., 1797-1870. A journalist and jurist of Maysville, Kentucky. Historical Sketches of Kentucky; History of Kentucky.
- Colton, Arthur Willis. Ct., 1868- ——. The Delectable Mountains, a collection of short stories; The Debatable Land, a novel; Tioba; Port Argent. Har. Scr.
- Colton, Julia M——. N. Y., 18— - ——. A writer of Brooklyn. Annals of Switzerland; Life of Velasquez; Annals of Old Manhattan. Bar.
- Colvocoresses, George Musalas. Gr., 1816-1872. A United States naval officer. Four Years in a Government Exploring Expedition.
- Commons, John Rogers. O., 1862- ——. A professor of sociology at Syracuse University from 1895. The Distribution of Wealth; Social Reform and the Church; Proportional Representation; State Supervision for Cities. Cr. Mac.
- Comstock, Mrs. Harriet Theresa [Nichols]. N. Y., 1860- ——. A Boy of a Thousand Years Ago; Cedric the Saxon; Tower or Throne; A Little Dusky Hero. Lit.
- Conant, Charles Arthur. Ms., 1861- ——. A Boston writer upon economics. A History of Modern Banks of Issue; The United States in the Orient: the Nature of the Economic Problem; The Law of the Value of Money; Securities as a Means of Payment; Alexander Hamilton, a brief biography; Wall Street and the Country. Hou. Put.
- Conant, Levi Leonard. Ms., 1857- ——. A professor of mathematics at the Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Massachusetts, from 1891. The Number Concept: its Origin and Development. Mac.
- Concilio, Gennaro Luigi Vincenzo de. Iy., 1835-1898. A Roman Catholic clergyman long prominent in Jersey City. Catholicity and Pantheism; The Knowledge of Mary; Intellectual Philosophy; Harmony between Science and Revelation.
- Cone, Orello. N. Y., 1836- ——. A Unitarian clergyman, professor of biblical theology at Saint Lawrence University, Canton, New York, from 1900, but prior to 1898 a Universalist clergyman, president of Buchtel College, Akron, Ohio, 1880-96. The Gospel and its Earliest Interpretations; Rich and Poor in the New Testament; Gospel Criticism and Historical Christianity; Paul: the Man, the Missionary, and the Teacher. Mac. Put.
- Conklin, Mrs. Jennie Maria [Drinkwater]. Me., 1841-1900. A prolific writer of juvenile books, among which are Tessa Wadsworth’s Discipline; Bek’s First Corner; Fifteen; Uncle Justice Seth’s Will; The Fairfax Girls; Keenie’s To-morrow.
- Conklin, Mrs. Viola A. [Peckham]. N. Y., 1849- ——. A historical writer of Plainfield, New Jersey. American History to the Death of Lincoln, Popularly Told. Ho.
- Connelley, William Elsey. Ky., 1855- ——. A Kansas author. Wyandotte Folk Lore; Kansas Territorial Governors; John Brown, the Story of the Last of the Puritans; The Provisional Government of Nebraska Territory; James Henry Lane, the Grim Chieftain of Kansas; Life of John J. Ingalls.
- Connelly, James H——. Pa., 1840-1903. A New York novelist. (His wife, C. L. Connelly, is mentioned on [page 71]). My Casual Death; Jeb Hutton. Scr.
- Connery, Thomas Bernard Joseph. I., 1838- ——. A journalist of New York city. Don Tiburio; Black Friday; That Noble Mexican; All the Dog’s Fault; History of American Comic Journalism; My Trip to Mars; Violet Bland; Essays on Literary Women of England.
- Converse, Florence. La., 1871- ——. A novelist of Boston. Diana Victrix; The Burden of Christopher; Long Will. Hou.
- Cook, Frederick Albert. N. Y., 1865- ——. A physician and explorer. Through the First Antarctic Night.
- Cook, Grace Louise. 18- ——. Wellesley Stories.
- Cook, William Henry. N. Y., 1832-1899. A physician of Cincinnati. Physio-Medical Surgery; Woman’s Book of Health; Physio-Medical Dispensatory; Spermatorrhœa; Science and Practice of Medicine.
- Cook, William Wilson. Mch., 1857- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Stock and Stockholders, Bonds, Mortgages, and General Corporation Law, a work which has passed into several editions; The Corporation Problem. Put.
- Cooke, Edmund Vance. Ont., 1866- ——. A Cleveland lecturer. A Patch of Pansies; Rimes to be Read; Impertinent Poems.
- Cooke, Grace [MacGowan]. O., 1863- ——. A magazine writer of Chattanooga. Mistress Joy; Return. Cent.
- Cooke, Martin Warren. N. Y., 1840-1898. A lawyer of Rochester, New York. The Human Mystery in Hamlet.
- Coombe, Thomas. Pa., 1758-18—. An Episcopal clergyman of Philadelphia who was a moderate Loyalist at the time of the American Revolution and was consequently forced to seek a home in England. The Harmony between the Old and New Testaments respecting the Messiah; Edwin or the Emigrant, an Eclogue.
- Coonley, Mrs. Lydia [Avery]. See Ward, Mrs. Lydia.
- Cooper, James Wesley. Ct., 1842- ——. A Congregational clergyman at New Britain, Connecticut. Gospel Truth.
- Cooper, Samuel. Ms., 1724-1783. An influential clergyman of Boston, eminent as a preacher and pastor of Brattle Street Church, 1744-83. Besides a number of published sermons he was the author of The Crisis, an argument for a colonial excise. See Sprague’s Annals of the American Pulpit; Tyler’s Literary History of the American Revolution.
- Copeland, Royal Samuel. Mch., 1868- ——. A professor of ophthalmology in the University of Michigan. Treatise on Refraction.
- Coppin, Levi J——. Md., 1848- ——. A prominent African Methodist clergyman of Philadelphia. The Relation of Baptized Children to the Church and Key to Scriptural Interpretation.
- Corning, James Leonard. Ct., 1855- ——. A New York neurologist. Carotid Compression, Brain Rest, Brain Exhaustion; Local Anæsthesia, Hysteria and Epilepsy; Headache and Neuralgia; Pain in its Neuro-Pathological and Neuro-Therapeutic Relations; The Princess Ahmedee, a romance. Ap. Lip. Put.
- Cortissoz, Mrs. Ellen. See Hutchinson, Mrs. Ellen (page 202.)
- Cory, Charles Barney. “Owen Nox.” Ms., 1857- ——. An ornithologist of Boston. A Naturalist in the Magdalen Islands; Birds of the Bahama Islands; Southern Rambles; The Beautiful and Curious Birds of the World; Birds of Haiti and San Domingo; Catalogue of West Indian Birds; Hunting and Fishing in Florida; The Birds of Eastern North America; How to Know the Shore Birds of North America; How to Know the Ducks, Geese, and Swans of North America; The Birds of the West Indies; Key to the Water Birds of Florida; and in fiction, Montezuma’s Castle and Other Weird Tales; Dr. Wandermann. Est. Lit.
- Cory, Charles Henry. N. B., 1834-1899. A Baptist clergyman, president of the Theological Seminary, Richmond, Virginia, from 1868. Reminiscences of Thirty Years’ Labour among the Colored People of the South.
- Costello, Frederick Hankerson. Me., 1851- ——. A novelist of Bangor. Master Ardick, Buccaneer; Under the Rattlesnake Flag; On Fighting Decks in 1812; A Tar of the Old School. Ap. Est.
- Cothren, William. Me., 1819-1898. A lawyer and genealogist of Woodbury, Connecticut. A History of Ancient Woodbury (1854-79).
- Cox, Millard. “Henry Scott Clark.” Ind., 1856- ——. A lawyer of Indianapolis. The Legionaries. Bo.
- Coyner, Charles Luther. Va., 1853- ——. A lawyer of Duval County, Texas. Twenty Years in Texas; A Greenhorn in Texas.
- Crafts, Mrs. Annetta [Stratford]. Il., 1865- ——. A writer of Austin, Illinois. Jupiter Jingles. Lai.
- Crafts, James Mason. Ms., 1839- ——. A professor of chemistry in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1870. Qualitative Chemical Analysis; Arsenic Ethers; Studies in Thermometry.
- Craig, James Alexander. Mch., 1855- ——. A professor of Semitic languages in the University of Michigan. Inscriptions of Salmanassar; Hebrew Word Manual; Assyrian and Babylonian Religious Texts; Astronomical-Astrological Texts of Babylonians.
- Craigie, Christopher. See Cole, W. M.
- Cram, George F——. Ms., 1842- ——. A Chicago map publisher. Minette; Handbook of Geography.
- Cram, William Everett. N. H., 1871- ——. Brother of R. A. Cram ([page 18]). A writer and illustrator of ornithological works at Hampton Falls, New Hampshire. Little Beasts of Field and Wood; American Animals.
- Crandall, Charles Lee. N. Y., 1850- ——. A professor of railway engineering at Cornell University. Tables for Computation of Railway and Other Earthwork; Notes on Descriptive Geometry; Notes on Shades, Shadows and Perspective; The Transition Curve. Wil.
- Crane, Elizabeth Green. N. Y., 18— - ——. Berquin, an historical drama; Sylva, a collection of verse.
- Crane, Frank. Il., 1861- ——. A Methodist clergyman of Chicago. The Religion of To-morrow.
- Crane, Mrs. Sibylla [Bailey]. Ms., 1851-1902. Wife of O. Crane ([page 79]). A Boston writer. Glimpses of the Old World.
- Crawford, John Wallace. “Captain Jack Crawford.” I., 1847- ——. A well-known frontier scout and verse-writer of New Mexico. The Poet Scout: a Book of Song and Story; Camp Fire Sparks; Tatia, a Drama. Fu.
- Crawford, Mary Caroline. Ms., 1874- ——. A journalist of Boston. The Romance of Old New England Roof-trees; The Romance of Old New England Churches; The College Girl in America. Pa.
- Crawford, Samuel Wylie. Pa., 1827-1892. A physician who served as colonel in the Federal army during the Civil War, retiring from the service in 1873 with the rank of brigadier-general. The Genesis of the Civil War.
- Crawshaw, William Henry. N. Y., 1861- ——. A professor of English literature in Colgate University, Hamilton, New York. The Interpretation of Literature; Dryden’s Palamon and Arcite; Literary Interpretation of Life. Mac.
- Creelman, James. Q., 1859- ——. A New York journalist. On the Great Highway; Eagle Blood. Lo.
- Cressey, George Croswell. Me., 1856- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Portland, Oregon. The Essential Man; Mental Evolution; Philosophy of Religion; The Doctrine of Immortality in Liberal Thought; Soul Power. El.
- Crèvecœur, Jean Hector Saint-John de. F., 1731-1813. A writer of French birth who settled in Pennsylvania at the age of twenty-three, long famous for his Letters from an American Farmer, which was translated into French, German, and Dutch—a work which had much influence in stimulating emigration to America, and a distinct literary value. His other works include La Culture des Pommes de Terre; Voyage dans la Haute Pennsylvanie et dans l’Etat de New York. See Tyler’s Literary History of the American Revolution.
- Crockett, Ingham. Ky., 1856- ——. A writer of Henderson, Kentucky. Beneath Blue Skies and Gray: a Year Book of Kentucky Woods and Fields.
- Crooker, Joseph Henry. Me., 1850- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Ann Arbor. Jesus Brought Back; Problems in American Society; The New Bible and its New Uses; The Growth of Christianity; Different New Testament Views of Jesus; A Plea for Sincerity; The Supremacy of Kindness; The Menace to America; Religious Freedom in American Education; The Historical Jesus. El. Mac.
- Crosby, Ernest Howard. N. Y., 1856- ——. Son of H. Crosby ([page 80]), A social reformer in New York city. Plain Talk in Psalm and Parable; War Echoes; Swords and Plowshares; Captain Jinks, Hero, a satire on military life. Fu. Sm.
- Crosby, Fanny J. See Van Alstyne, Mrs.
- Cross, Roselle Theodore. N. Y., 1844- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Colorado. Home Duties; Clear as Crystal; History of Congregationalism in Colorado.
- Cross, Wilbur Lucius. Ct., 1862- ——. A professor of English in the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University from 1897. The Development of the English Novel. Mac.
- Crothers, Samuel McChord. Il., 1857- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Members of One Body; Miss Muffet’s Christmas Party; The Gentle Reader; The Understanding Heart. El. Hou.
- Crothers, Thomas Davison. N. Y., 1842- ——. A physician of Hartford, editor of the Journal of Inebriety. Disease of Inebriety (1893); Drug Habits and their Treatment; Morphinism and Other Drug Diseases.
- Crowell, John. Pa., 1814- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of East Orange, New Jersey. Republics or Popular Governments an Appointment of God; Christ in all the Scriptures.
- Crowell, John Franklin. Pa., 1857- ——. A writer on economics. The True Function of the American College; Taxation in American Colonies; The Logical Process of Social Development; Economic Aspects of British Agriculture. Ho.
- Crowley, Mary Catherine. Ms., 18— - ——. A novelist of Detroit. A Daughter of New France; The Heroine of the Strait; Love Thrives in War. Lit.
- Crowninshield, Mrs. Mary [Bradford]. Me., 1854- ——. A writer of Washington city. All among the Lighthouses: Where the Trade Wind Blows: West Indian Tales; Latitude 19°; The Lighthouse Children Abroad; Plucky Smalls; San Isidro; Ignoramuses; The Archbishop and the Lady; Valencia’s Garden. Ap. Lo. Mac. S.
- Crowninshield, Mrs. Schuyler. See Crowninshield, Mrs. Mary.
- Cummings, Charles Amos. Ms., 1833- ——. An architect of Boston. History of Architecture in Italy, from the Time of Constantine to the Dawn of the Renaissance; A Cyclopedia of Works of Architecture in Greece, Italy and the Levant (with W. P. P. Longfellow, supra). Hou.
- Cuckson, John. E., 1846- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Plymouth, Massachusetts. Faith and Fellowship. Hou.
- Curran, John Elliott. N. Y., 1818-1890. A littérateur of New York city. Miss Frances Merley, a novel.
- Currier, Charles Warren. W. I., 1857- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman of Washington city, among whose published works are Carmel in America; History of Religious Orders; Church and Saints; The Divinity of Christ; The Mass.
- Curtis, Charles Boyd. N. Y., 1827- ——. A lawyer and author of New York city. Description and Historical Catalogue of the Works of Velasquez and Murillo; Rembrandt Etchings.
- Curtis, Harriot F——. Vt., 1813-1889. A novelist and journalist who organized the first known woman’s club, and was senior editor of the noted Lowell Offering. Kate in Search of a Husband; The Smugglers; Truth’s Pilgrimage; Jessie’s Flirtations; S. S. Philosophy. Har.
- Curtis, Mattoon Monroe. N. Y., 1858- ——. A professor of philosophy at Western Reserve University, Cleveland. Locke’s Ethics; Philosophy and Physical Science; Philosophy in America.
- Curtiss, Samuel Ives. Ct., 1844-1904. A Congregational clergyman, professor in the Chicago Theological Seminary from 1878. The Name Machabee; The Levitical Priests; Ingersoll and Moses; The Date of Our Gospels.
- Cushing, Frank Hamilton. Pa., 1857-1900. An ethnologist of note, now in Government service, who lived with the Zuñi Indians 1878-81. My Adventures in Zuñi; Mental Concepts, or Hand-Made Mind; The Myths of Creation; The Arrow.
- Cushing, Harry Alonzo. Ms., 1870- ——. An instructor in history in Columbia University. History of the Transition from Provincial to Commonwealth Government in Massachusetts. King’s College in the American Revolution.
- Cushman, Herbert Ernest. Me., 1865- ——. A professor of philosophy at Tufts College, Medford, Massachusetts, who has translated Wendelband’s Geschichte der Alten Philosophie; The Truth in Christian Science. Scr.
- Cutler, Manasseh. Ct., 1742-1823. A Congregational clergyman of Hamilton, Massachusetts, who was among the founders of the first settlement in Ohio, at Marietta. He was a member of Congress 1801-05, and in his day was especially prominent in the field of scientific research. In 1888 his Life, Journals and Correspondence was published under the editorship of his grandsons. His son, J. Cutler, is mentioned on [page 84]. Clke.
- Cutting, Mrs. Mary Stewart [Doubleday]. N. Y., 1851- ——. A writer of East Orange, New Jersey. Little Stories of Married Life; Fairy Gold; The Coupons of Fortune; Heart of Lynn.
- Cutts, James Madison. Me., 1805-1863. A civil service official, second comptroller of the treasury during the administrations of Buchanan and Lincoln. The Conquest of California and New Mexico (1847); A Brief Treatise upon Constitutional and Parliamentary Questions.
- D
- Dabney, Julia Parker. Fayal, 1850- ——. An artist and novelist of Brookline, Massachusetts. Little Daughter of the Sun; Poor Chola,—both stories of life in Teneriffe; Songs of Destiny and Others; Musical Basis of Verse. Dut. Lit.
- Da Costa, John Chalmers. Pa., 1863- ——. A surgeon of Philadelphia. A Manual of Modern Surgery.
- Daggett, Mrs. Mary [Stewart]. O., 1854- ——. A novelist of Pasadena, California. Mariposilla; The Broad Aisle.
- Dahlgren, Charles Bunker. Pa., 1839- ——. Son of J. A. Dahlgren ([page 85]). A naval engineer and commander. Historic Mines of Mexico.
- Dale, Alan. See Cohen, Alfred.
- Dale, Thomas Nelson. N. Y., 1845- ——. A geologist. A Study of the Rhætic Strata of the Val di Ledro in the South Tyrol; The Outskirts of Physical Science, a collection of essays; Mount Greylock, its Areal and Structural Geology.
- Dallas, Mrs. Mary [Kyle]. Pa., 1830-1897. A Philadelphia fiction-writer. Billtry.
- Dallinger, Frederick William. Ms., 1871- ——. A politician of Cambridge. Nominations for Elective Office in the United States. Lgs.
- Damon, William Emerson. Vt., 1838- ——. A naturalist of New York city. Ocean Wonders.
- Dana, Marvin. N. Y., 1867- ——. A New York writer. Mater Christi and Other Poems; History of General Custer; The Woman of Orchids; A Puritan Witch.
- Daniels, George Fisher. Ms., 1820- ——. A notary public of Oxford, Massachusetts. The Huguenots in the Nipmuck Country prior to 1713; History of Oxford.
- Daniels, Mrs. Gertrude [Potter]. 18- ——. A novelist. Halamar; The Warners.
- Daniels, Winthrop Moore. O., 1867- ——. A professor of political economy at Princeton University. Elements of Public Finance. Ho.
- Darnell, Henry Faulkner. E., 1831- ——. An Episcopal clergyman at Avon, New York, from 1883. The Cross Roads; Songs by the Way; Verses in Memory of Bishop Mountain; Songs of the Seasons; A Nation’s Thanksgiving; A Psalm of Praise; Philip Hazebrook, or the Junior Curate; Flossy; The Craze of Christian Englehart; Kindesliebe; Memorabilia of the Presidents of the United States; A Four-Leaved Clover.
- Daskam, Josephine Dodge. See Bacon, Mrs. Josephine Dodge Daskam.
- Davenport, Charles Benedict. Ct., 1866- ——. An instructor in zoölogy at Harvard University from 1888. Experimental Morphology; Statistical Methods with special reference to Biological Variation; Introduction to Zoölogy (with G. Crotty). Mac. Wil.
- Davenport, Herbert Joseph. Vt., 1861- ——. An educator of Chicago. Outlines of Economic Theory; Elementary Economic Theory; Principles of Grammar. Mac.
- Davenport, Homer Calvin. Or., 1867- ——. A New York cartoonist. Davenport’s Cartoons; The Bell of Silverton and Other Stories of Oregon; The Dollar or the Man.
- Davidson, George Trimble. N. Y., 1863- ——. A lawyer and novelist of New York city. The Moderns.
- Davidson, James Wheeler. Min., 1872- ——. American consul for Formosa and Loo Choo Islands from 1898. Formosa Camphor; Review of the History of Formosa; Formosa Under Japanese Rule; The Island of Formosa, Past and Present. Mac.
- Davis, Boothe Colwell. W. Va., 1863- ——. A Seventh-Day Baptist clergyman of Alfred, New York, president of Alfred University from 1895. Roman Catholicism in America; The Beginnings of History; The Narrative of the Flood and the Lessons it Teaches.
- Davis, Charles Belmont. Pa., 1866- ——. Brother of R. H. Davis ([page 91]). A publisher of New York city. The Borderland of Society.
- Davis, David D——. Pa., 1854- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, professor of Semitic philology and Old Testament theology at Princeton Theological Seminary from 1888. Genesis and Semitic Tradition; The Sunday-school Teacher’s Bible Manual. Scr.
- Davis, George Breckinridge. Ms., 1847- ——. A United States army officer. The Elements of Law; Outlines of International Law; Treatise on the Military Laws of the United States. Har. Wil.
- Davis, John A——. 184- -1897. A Dutch Reformed clergyman of New Jersey, long resident in China as a missionary. The Slave Girl of China; The Young Mandarin; Rescue the Drunkard; Tom Bard and Other Nortonville Boys; Choh Lin, the Chinese Boy who became a Preacher; Leng Tso, the Chinese Bible Woman.
- Davis, John David. Pa., 1854- ——. A professor of Oriental literature at Princeton Theological Seminary. Genesis and Semitic Tradition; A Dictionary of the Bible; The Pentateuchal Question. Scr.
- Davis, John Patterson. Mch., 1862- ——. A lawyer of Idaho. The Union Pacific Railway, a Study of Political and Economic History.
- Davis, Mrs. Margaret Ellen [O’Brien]. Al., 1870-1898. A novelist of Birmingham, Alabama. Judith, an historical romance of the time of Nero; The Squire; Told by the Woman. Lip.
- Davis, Nathan Smith. Il., 1858- ——. Son of N. S. Davis ([page 91]). A Chicago physician. Consumption: How to Prevent It; Diseases of the Lungs, Heart and Kidneys; Dietetics.
- Davis, Oscar King. N. Y., 1866- ——. A New York journalist. Our Conquests in the Pacific; Dewey’s Capture of Manila. Sto.
- Davis, Raymond Cazallis. Me., 1836- ——. A librarian at the University of Michigan. Reminiscences of a Voyage around the World.
- Davis, Webster. Pa., 1861- ——. A Missouri Politician. John Bull’s Crime, or Assaults on Republics.
- Davis, William Stearns. Ms., 1887- ——. An historical novelist of Pittsfield, Massachusetts. A Friend of Cæsar; God Wills It; Belshazzar; Falaise of the Blessed Voice. Mac.
- Davis, William Thomas. Ms., 1822- ——. A lawyer and historical writer of Plymouth, Massachusetts. Ancient Landmarks of Plymouth; History of Plymouth; The Bench and Bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
- Dawley, Thomas Robinson. N. Y., 1862- ——. A journalist of Havana, Cuba, from 1898. Campaigning with Gomez.
- Dawson, Charles Carroll. N. Y., 1833- ——. A genealogist of Toledo. Occasional Thoughts and Fancies, a book of verse; Families bearing the Name of Dawson; Saratoga: its Mineral Waters and their Use.
- Dawson, Daniel Lewis. Pa., 1855-1893. An iron-founder of Pennsylvania. The Seeker of the Marshes and Other Poems.
- Dawson, Niles Menander. Wis., 1863- ——. An actuary of New York city. Practical Lessons in Actuarial Science; Elements of Life Insurance; Assessment Life Insurance; Principles of Insurance Legislation.
- Dawson, William Harbutt. 18— - ——. German Life in Town and Country; Germany and the Germans; German Socialism and Ferdinand Lassalle. Put. Scr.
- Day, Edward Parsons. 1822- ——. An educator of Brooklyn. Day’s Grammar; Day’s Collacon (edited).
- Day, Holman Francis. Me., 1865- ——. A journalist of Auburn, Maine. Up in Maine, stories told in verse; Pine Tree Ballads. Sm.
- Day, Oscar Fayette Gaines. Il., 1860- ——. A Minneapolis journalist. A Mistaken Identity; The Devil’s Gold; A Crown of Shame.
- Day, Thomas Fleming. E., 1861- ——. Editor of The Rudder from 1895. Songs of Sea and Sail.
- De Fontaine, Felix. Ms., 1832-1896. A journalist of Charleston during the Civil War, but subsequently, and for the greater part of his career, on the staff of the New York Herald. Gleanings from a Confederate Army Notebook; Army Letters of Personne, 1861-1865; News from the Front.
- De Forest, Robert Weeks. N. Y., 1848- ——. A lawyer of New York city, chairman of the Tenement House Commission in 1900. Tenement House Conditions in New York. Mac.
- De Garmo, Charles. Wis., 1849- ——. A professor at Cornell University, but from 1891 to 1898 president of Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania. Essentials of Method; Herbart and Herbartians; Language Lessons; Interest and Education. Scr.
- Deiler, John Hanno. Bv., 1849- ——. An educator of New Orleans. History of European Immigration to the United States, 1820-1896; History of the German Parishes in Louisiana; Germany’s Contribution to the Population of the United States.
- De Koven, Mrs. Anna [Farwell]. Il., 1860- ——. Daughter-in-law of J. De Koven ([page 94]). A novelist of New York city. A Sawdust Doll; By the Waters of Babylon.
- Delano, Frances Jackson. Ms., 1857- ——. A writer of Fairhaven, Massachusetts. Susanne; Polly State—One of Thirteen.
- De Leon, Thomas Cooper. S. C., 1839- ——. Brother of E. De Leon ([page 94]). A journalist and novelist, formerly of Mobile. His principal works include Four Years in Rebel Capitals; Creole Carnivals: their Origin, Growth, and Outcome; The Rock or the Rye, a burlesque; the novels Creole and Puritan; The Puritan’s Daughter; A Fair Blockade Breaker; Juny; John Holden, Unionist; A Bachelor’s Box; At the Bayou; An Innocent Cheat; The Romance of Sheridan’s Ride; Crag Nest; the plays Hamlet, a burlesque; Pluck; Paris; Jasper; Bet. Lip.
- Delery, François Charles. La., 1815-1858. A Southern author who wrote in the French language. Essay on Liberty; Studies of the Passions; King Cotton; Confederates and Federals.
- De Lestry, Louis Edmund. La., 1860- ——. A journalist of St. Paul. History of Helena, Montana (1890); Leaves from a Note Book.
- Dellenbaugh, Frederick Samuel. O., 1853- ——. A New York artist and author. The North Americans of Yesterday: a Comparative Study of North American Indian Life; The Romance of the Colorado River; Breaking the Wilderness. Put.
- Dembitz, Lewis Naphtali. P., 1833- ——. A lawyer of Louisville. Kentucky Jurisprudence; Law Language for Shorthand Writers; Land Titles in the United States.
- De Mille, Henry Churchill. N. C., 1850-1893. A popular playwright of New York city, whose dramas include The Wife; Lord Chumley; The Charity Ball; Men and Women.
- Deming, Clarence. Ct., 1848- ——. A journalist of New Haven. By-Ways of Nature and Life. Put.
- Denio, Francis Brigham. Vt., 1848- ——. A professor of Old Testament literature at Bangor Theological Seminary from 1882. Outlines of Old Testament Theology; Supreme Leader.
- Denison, Charles. Vt., 1845- ——. A physician of Denver. The Rocky Mountain Health Resorts; Climates of the United States in Colours; Exercise and Foods for Pulmonary Invalids; The Preferable Climate for Consumptives; Modern Treatment of Tuberculosis.
- Desmond, Humphrey Joseph. Wis., 1860- ——. A Wisconsin lawyer. The Church and the Law; Mooted Questions of History.
- Deutsch, Gotthard. A., 1859- ——. A professor of Hebrew at Union College, Cincinnati. Symbolik in Cultus; Theory of Oral Tradition; Philosophy of Jewish History; Andere Zeiten, a novel.
- Deutsch, Solomon. P., 1816-1897. A philologist of note. Letters for Self-Instruction in German; New Practical Hebrew Grammar; Key to the Pentateuch; Medical German; Drill Master in German; Biblical History in Biblical Language.
- Devereux, Mrs. Mary [Watson]. Ms., 18— - ——. A novelist of Marblehead, Massachusetts. Up and Down the Sands of Gold; From Kingdom to Colony; Betty Peach; Lafitte of Louisiana. Lit.
- Devine, Edward Thomas. Ia., 1867- ——. A New York writer. Economics; The Practice of Charity.
- Dewey, John. Vt., 1859- ——. A professor of philosophy in the University of Chicago. Outlines of a Critical Theory of Ethics; Leibnitz: a Critical Exposition; Psychology and Social Practice; The Educational Situation.
- Dewey, Mary Elizabeth. Ms., 1821- ——. Daughter of Orville Dewey ([page 97]). Life and Letters of Catherine M. Sedgwick, supra; Autobiography and Letters of Orville Dewey. Har. Lit.
- Dewhurst, Frederic Eli. Me., 1855- ——. A Congregational clergyman at Chicago. Dwellers in Tents.
- Dexter, Franklin Bowditch. Ms., 1842- ——. Assistant librarian of Yale from 1869. Biographical Sketches of Graduates of Yale College; Sketch of the History of Yale University. Ho. Scr.
- Dexter, Morton. N. H., 1846- ——. Son of H. M. Dexter ([page 98]). A Congregational clergyman of Boston. The Story of the Pilgrims. C. P. S.
- Dickinson, Edward. 18- ——. A professor of the history of music at Oberlin College. History of Music in the Western Church. Scr.
- Dickinson, Martha Gilbert. Ms., 18— - ——. Niece of Emily Dickinson ([page 98]). A writer of Amherst, Massachusetts. Within the Hedge, a collection of verse; The Cathedral and Other Poems.
- Dickinson, Mrs. Mary [Lowe]. Ms., 1839- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Driftwood: stories and poems; Temptation of Katharine Gray; Fair Half Dozen; Amber Star; From Hollow to Hilltop; From Girlhood to Motherhood. Bap. Rev.
- Dickson, Harris. Mi., 1868- ——. A lawyer of Vicksburg, Mississippi. The Black Wolf’s Breed, an historical novel; The Siege of Lady Resolute. Bo.
- Dillman, Willard. Min., 1872- ——. A writer of Revillo, South Dakota. Across the Wheat, a book of verse.
- Dillon, John Brown. W. Va., 1800-1879. Historian. History of Indiana; Notes on Historical Evidence in Preference to Adverse Theories of the Origin and Nature of the Government of the United States.
- Dinsmore, Charles Allen. N. Y., 1860- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Boston. The Teachings of Dante; Aids to the Study of Dante. Hou.
- Dinwiddie, William. Va., 1867- ——. A journalist of New York city. Our New Possessions; Puerto Rico: its Conditions and Possibilities; War Sketches; The War in the Philippines; The War in South Africa. Har.
- Dix, Beulah Marie. Ms., 1876- ——. An historical novelist of Cambridge. Hugh Gwyeth, a Roundhead Cavalier; Soldier Rigdale; Stories from American History; The Making of Christopher Ferringham; A Little Captive Lad. Mac.
- Dix, Edwin Asa. N. J., 1860- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Deacon Bradbury; Old Bowen’s Legacy; A Midsummer Drive through the Pyrenees; Champlain: the Founder of New France.
- Dix, William Giles. Me., 1821-1898. A miscellaneous writer of Peabody, Massachusetts. The Deck of the Crescent City; Pompeii and Other Poems; The Unholy Alliance; The American State and American Statesmen; Why a Catholic in the Nineteenth Century; The Wreck of the Glide (with J. Oliver).
- Dixon, Frank Haigh., Min., 1869- ——. An assistant professor of political economy at the University of Michigan. State Railroad Control, with a history of its development in Iowa. Cr.
- Dixon, Mrs. Susan [Bullitt]. Ky., 1829- ——. The True History of the Missouri Compromise and its Repeal. Clke.
- Dixon, Thomas. N. C., 1865- ——. A lecturer, formerly in the Baptist ministry. The Leopard’s Spots, a novel.
- Dodge, Robert. N. Y., 1820- ——. A lawyer of Flushing, New York. Diary Sketches and Reviews; Lectures on Austria; Memorials of Columbus; Tracts for the West (1861); Advance, Civil and Political, of the United States; Tristram Dodge and his Descendants in America.
- Dodge, Walter Phelps. Sa., 1869- ——. A littérateur of New York. Three Greek Tales; As the Crow Flies from Corsica to Charing Cross; A Strong Man Armed; The Sea of Love, a collection of short stories; From Squire to Prince; Piers Gaveston, a Chapter of Early Constitutional History.
- Donaldson, Thomas Corwin. O., 1843-1898. An historical writer of Philadelphia. The George Catlin Indian Art Gallery; The Public Domain; Walt Whitman, the Man; The House in which Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence.
- Donlevy, Mrs. Harriet [Farley]. See Farley, Harriet (page 125.)
- Dos Passos, Benjamin Franklin. Pa., 1856-1898. A lawyer of New York city. The Law of Collateral and Direct Inheritance, Legacy and Inheritance Taxes. West.
- Dos Passos, John Randolph. Pa., 1844- ——. Brother of B. F. Dos Passos, supra. A lawyer of New York city. The Law of Stock Brokers and Stock Exchanges; The Interstate Commerce Act; Defence of the McKinley Administration; Commercial Trusts.
- Dowd, Jerome. N. C., 1864- ——. A professor of political economy at Trinity College, North Carolina, from 1893. Sketches of Prominent Living North Carolinians; Life of Braxton Craven.
- Doyle, Charles W——. E. I., 1852- ——. A physician and novelist of Santa Cruz, California. The Seats of Judgment; The Making of a Man; The Shadow of Quong Long; The Taming of the Jungle. Lip.
- Doyle, Mrs. Martha Claire MacGowan. Ms., 1869- ——. A Boston writer for young people. Little Miss Dorothy; My Friend Tim; Tom Winstone; Wide Awake. Le.
- Drake, James Madison. N. J., 1837- ——. A journalist of Elizabeth, New Jersey, who served in the Federal army during the Civil War and was breveted brigadier-general. Fast and Loose in Dixie; Across the Continent in Red Breeches.
- Drake, Jeanie. S. C., 18— - ——. A novelist. In Old Saint Stephen’s; The Metropolitans. Ap. Cent.
- Dreiser, Theodore. Ind., 1871- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Studies of Contemporary Celebrities; Poems; Sister Carrie. Dou.
- Dresser, Horatio Willis. Me., 1866- ——. A Boston writer, editor of the Journal of Practical Metaphysics (1904). The Power of Silence; The Perfect Whole; In Search of a Soul; Methods and Problems of Spiritual Healing; Voices of Hope and Other Messages from the Hills; Voices of Freedom and Studies in the Philosophy of Individuality; Living by the Spirit; A Book of Secrets. Put.
- Dromgoole, [Miss] Will[iam] Allen. Tn., 1860- ——. A popular story-writer of Murfreesboro, Tennessee. The Valley Path; The Heart of Old Hickory; A Moonshiner’s Son; Three Little Crackers from Down in Dixie; The Fortunes of the Fellow; The Farrier’s Dog and his Fellow; Rare Old Chums; Cinch and Other Stories; A Boy’s Battle; Hero-Chums; Harum Scarum Joe; Little Brass Buttons; The Best of Friends.
- Drouet, Robert. Ia., 1870- ——. An actor and playwright of New York city. Among his plays are Doris; The White Czar; Montana; To-morrow; An Idyl of Virginia; Captain Bob.
- Drury, Marion Richardson. Ind., 1849- ——. A clergyman of the United Brethren faith, at Toledo, Iowa. Pastor’s Pocket Record; Handbook for Workers; Pastor’s Companion; At Hand; Our Catechism.
- Drysdale, William. Pa., 1852-1901. A New York journalist. In Sunny Lands: outdoor life in Nassau and Cuba; The Princess of Montserrat; The Mystery of Abel Forefinger; The Young Reporter; The Fast Mail; The Beach Patrol; The Young Supercargo; Cadet Standish of the St. Louis; Helps for Ambitious Boys; Helps for Ambitious Girls; The Treasury Club; The Young Consul; Pine Ridge Plantation. Cr.
- Du Bois, Constance Goddard. O., 18— - ——. A novelist of Waterbury, Connecticut. Martha Corey, a Tale of the Salem Witchcraft; Columbus and Beatriz; A Modern Pagan; The Shield of the Fleur-de-Lis; A Soul in Bronze.
- Du Bose, William Porcher. S. C., 1836- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, professor of theology in the University of the South at Sewanee, Tennessee. The Soteriology of the New Testament; The Ecumenical Councils.
- Dudley, Mrs. Lucy [Bronson]. O., 1848- ——. Contributions to the Knowledge of the Semites; Letters to Ruth; A Royal Journey.
- Duer, Alice. See Miller, Mrs. Alice.
- Duer, Catherine King. N. Y., 18— - ——. Poems (with A. Duer); Unconscious Comedians, a collection of short stories. Do.
- Duffey, Mrs. Eliza Bisbee. 18— -1898. No Sex in Education; The Relations of the Sexes; What Women Should Know; Our Behavior.
- Duffy, James Oscar Greeley. I., 1864- ——. A lawyer and playwright of Philadelphia. Glass and Gold, a novel; Hohenzollern (with C. T. Brady, supra), a play; Lady Helen, a play.
- Du Hamel, William. Del., 1866- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of New Harmony, Indiana. First Millennial Faith.
- Dumas, William Thomas. Ga., 1858- ——. A school superintendent at Sparta, Georgia. Golden Day and Other Poems.
- Duncan, Norman. Ont., 1871- ——. A New York journalist. The Soul of the Street, a collection of stories of the Syrian quarter of New York city; Doctor Luke of the Labrador. Rev.
- Dunham, Moses Earle. N. Y., 1825-1898. A Presbyterian clergyman at Utica. Here and Hereafter; The Philosophy of Prayer; Limitations in Biblical Knowledge.
- Dunn, Byron Archibald. Mch., 1842- ——. An author of Waukegan, Illinois. General Nelson’s Scout; On General Thomas’s Staff; Battling for Atlanta; From Atlanta to the Sea.
- Dunn, Martha Baker. 18— - ——. A novelist. Memory Street; ’Lias’ Wife; The Sleeping Beauty. Pa.
- Dunne, Finley Peter. Il., 1867- ——. A journalist of Chicago. Mr. Dooley in Peace and War, a humorous piece of political satire; Mr. Dooley in the Hearts of his Countrymen; Mr. Dooley’s Philosophy; Mr. Dooley’s Opinions; Observations of Mr. Dooley. Sm.
- Dunning, Edwin James. N. Y., 1821-1901. A Cambridge writer, but in earlier life a dentist in New York city for many years. The Genesis of Shakespeare’s Art: a Study of his Sonnets and Poems. Le.
- Dunning, William Archibald. N. J., 186- - ——. A professor of history at Columbia University from 1891. Essays on the Civil War and Reconstruction and Related Topics; A History of Political Theories, Ancient and Mediæval. Mac.
- Du Pont, Henry Algernon. Del., 1838- ——. A brevet lieutenant-colonel in the United States army. Cavalry Tactics; Artillery Tactics.
- Durand, William Frederick. Ct., 1859- ——. A professor of marine engineering at Cornell University from 1891. Fundamental Principles of Mechanics; Resistance and Propulsion of Ships; Practical Marine Engineering. Wil.
- Durfee, Thomas. R. I., 1826-1901. Son of J. Durfee (page 109). A Rhode Island jurist, chief justice of the State, 1875-91. Village Picnic and Other Poems; Gleanings from the Official History of Rhode Island; Some Thoughts on the Constitution of Rhode Island; Treatise on the Law of Highways; Reports of Cases.
- Durrett, Reuben Thomas. Ky., 1824- ——. A lawyer of Louisville, who published The Life and Writings of John Filson, the First Historian of Kentucky. Mor.
- Duryee, William Rankin. N. J., 1838-1897. A Dutch Reformed clergyman, professor of ethics in Rutgers College from 1891. Sentinels for the Soul; Our Mission Work Abroad; Centennial Discourses on the Reformed Church.
- Dutton, Samuel Train. N. H., 1849- ——. An educator, professor of school administration in the Teachers’ College, New York city. The Morse Speller; Phases of Education in the Home and in the School. Mac.
- Dwyer, John William. Wis., 1865- ——. An instructor in the law department of the University of Michigan. Cases on Private International Law; Cases on Law of Husband and Wife; Law and Procedure of United States Courts; Cases on Criminal Law.
- Dye, Mrs. Eva Emery. Il., 18— - ——. An Oregon novelist. McLoughlin and Old Oregon; The Conquest: being the True Story of Lewis and Clark. Mg.
- Dye, William McIntire. Pa., 1831-1899. A United States army officer who served in the Civil War and was brevetted colonel, and who served in the Egyptian army in 1873. Moslem Egypt and Christian Abyssinia.
- Dyer, Louis. Il., 1851- ——. A lecturer, since 1890 resident in Oxford, England. The Greek Question and Answer; Plato’s Apology and Crito; Studies of the Gods in Greece; Oxford as It is; Machiavelli and the Modern State. Gi. Mac.
- Dyer, Oliver. N. Y., 1824- ——. A Swedenborgian clergyman of Cottage City, Massachusetts, but prior to 1876 a New York journalist. The Wickedest Man in New York; Great Senators of the United States Forty Years Ago (1889); Life of Andrew Jackson, and Sketch of Henry W. Grady.
- E
- Earle, Mary Tracy. Il., 1864- ——. A New York writer. The Man who Worked for Collester; Through Old-Rose Glasses, and Other Stories, The Flag on the Hilltop; The Wonderful Wheel. Hou.
- Easter, Mrs. Marguerite Elizabeth (Miller). Va., 1839-1894. A verse-writer of Baltimore. Clytie and Other Poems.
- Eastman, Barrett. Il., 1869- ——. A New York journalist. Under the Star and Other Songs of the Sea (with W. Rice, infra).
- Eastman, Charles Alexander [Ohiyesa]. Min., 1858- ——. A physician, the son of a Sioux chief. Indian Boyhood; Red Hunters and the Animal People. Har.
- Eastman, Charles Rochester. Ia., 1868- ——. A scientist of Cambridge, an assistant in the Museum of Comparative Zoölogy. Beiträge zur Kenntniss der Gattung Oxyrhyna. He edited and translated from the German of Karl von Zittel a Text-Book of Palæontology. Mac.
- Eastwood, Benjamin. E., 1825-1899. An Episcopal clergyman of Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Trials and Triumphs among the Lowly; Cranberry Culture.
- Eberhard, Ernst. G., 1839- ——. A musician of New York city. Harmony and Counterpoint simplified.
- Ebersole, Ezra C——. Pa., 1840- ——. A lawyer of Toledo, Iowa. The Iowa People’s Law Book; Encyclopædia of Iowa Law.
- Eckstorm, Mrs. Fannie [Hardy]. Me., 1865- ——. An ornithologist of Brewer, Maine. The Bird Book; The Woodpeckers; The Penobscot Man. He. Hou.
- Eddy, Henry Turner. Ms., 1844- ——. A professor of engineering at the University of Minnesota from 1894. Analytical Geometry; Researches in Graphical Studies; Thermodynamics; Neue Constructionen aus der Graphischen Statik; Maximum Stresses Under Concentrated Loads.
- Edgerton, James Arthur. O., 1869- ——. A journalist of Lincoln, Nebraska. Voices of the Morning; Songs of the People; Better Day Poems.
- Edgett, Edwin Francis. Ms., 1867- ——. Literary editor of Boston Transcript. Players of the Present; Edward Loomis Davenport: A Biography; Plays of the Present; Nami-Ko, a translation from the Japanese (with Sakae Shioya).
- Edgren, John Alexis. Sn., 1839- ——. A Swedish Baptist clergyman of Oakland, California. Epiphaneia; and various theological works in Swedish. Bap. Rev.
- Edmonds, Franklin Spencer. Pa., 1874- ——. An educator, of Philadelphia. History of the Central High School, Philadelphia.
- Eells, Myron. Wash., 1843- ——. A Congregational clergyman in the State of Washington. Indian Missions; Ten Years at Skokomesh; Father Eells; Dictionary of Chinook Jargon Language.
- Ehrich, Lewis Rinaldo. N. Y., 1849- ——. A resident of Colorado Springs, but formerly a dry-goods merchant of New York city. The Question of Silver. Put.
- Eliot, Annie. See Trumbull, Annie Eliot.
- Eliot, Mrs. Henrietta Robins [Mack]. Ms., 18— - ——. A writer of Portland, Oregon. Laura’s Holidays. Lo.
- Ellicott, John Morris. Md., 1859- ——. A lieutenant in the United States navy. Justified, a novel; For Cuba.
- Elliot, Daniel Giraud. N. Y., 1835- ——. An ornithologist of Chicago, curator of the Field Columbian Museum. Monograph of the Pittidæ or Family of the Ant Thrushes; The New and Heretofore Unfigured Species of the Birds of North America (1869); The Life and Habits of Wild Animals; Classification and Synopsis of the Trochilidæ; North American Shore Birds; The Gallinaceous Game Birds of North America; The Wild Fowl of the United States and the British Possessions; and many ornithological monographs.
- Elliott, Byron K——. O., 1835- ——. A lawyer of Indianapolis. General Practice; Appellate Procedure; The Law of Roads and Streets; The Law of Railroads.
- Elliott, Charles Burke. O., 1861- ——. A Minnesota jurist. The United States and the North Eastern Fisheries; The Law of Private Corporations; The Law of Insurance; Practice at Trial and on Appeal for Minnesota; The Law of Public Corporations.
- Elliott, Henry Rutherford. Ct., 1849- ——. A publisher and novelist of New York city. The Bassett Claim; The Common Chord.
- Elliott, James. Ms., 1775-1839. A lawyer of Brattleboro, Vermont, of much local prominence in his day. The Poetical and Miscellaneous Works of James Elliott (1798).
- Ellis, John Breckenridge. Mo., 1870- ——. An historical novelist. The Holland Wolves; Garcilaso; The Dread and Fear of Kings; Adnah; The Red Box Clew; In the Days of Jehu; Shem. Mg. Rev.
- Ellwanger, William De Lancey. N. Y., 1855- ——. Brother of G. H. Ellwanger ([page 118]). A Summer Snowflake and Drift of Other Verse and Song. Don.
- Elson, Arthur. Ms., 1873- ——. A Boston music critic. Son of L. C. Elson, ([page 119]). Orchestral Instruments and their Use; A Critical History of the Opera; Woman’s Work in Music. Pa.
- Elson, Henry William. O., 1857- ——. A university extension lecturer, but prior to 1895 in the Lutheran ministry. Side Lights on American History; Four Historical Biographies for Children; How to teach History; History of the United States.
- Embree, Charles Fleming. Ind., 1864- ——. A Dream of a Throne; For the Love of Tonita; A Heart of Flame. Lit.
- Emerson, Edwin. Sxy., 186- - ——. A journalist of New York city. College Yell Book; Pepys’s Ghost; In War and Peace; Tales Drolatick; Rough Rider Stories; History of the Nineteenth Century; The Monroe Doctrine in History. Mac.
- Emerson, Mrs. Florence [Brooks]. Mch., 18— - ——. Destiny and Other Poems; Vagaries: Prose Episodes. Sm.
- Emerson, George Homer. Ms., 1823-1898. A Universalist clergyman, editor of the Christian Leader for many years. Memoir of Ebenezer Fisher; The Doctrine of Probation; The Bible and Modern Thought; Life of Alonzo Ames Miner ([page 256]).
- Emerson, Jesse Milton. Ms., 1818-1898. A publisher of New York city. New York to the Orient; Stimulants; European Glimpses and Glances.
- Emerson, Willis George. Ia., 1856- ——. A Wyoming lawyer and novelist. Buell Hampton; Winning Wins; My Pardner and I.
- Emery, Sarah Anna. Ms., 1821- ——. A writer of West Newbury, Massachusetts. Three Generations, a novel; Reminiscences of a Nonagenarian (edited).
- Emory, Frederic. Md., 1853- ——. The chief of the United States Bureau of Foreign Commerce. A Maryland Manor, a novel.
- Endlich, Gustav Adolf. Pa., 1856- ——. A jurist of Reading, Pennsylvania. The Law of Building Associations; The Law of Affidavits of Defense in Pennsylvania; Woodward’s Decisions; Commentaries on the Interpretation of Statutes; Rights and Liabilities of Married Women in Pennsylvania.
- English, William Hayden. Ind., 1822-1896. A politician and historian of Indianapolis. Conquest of the Northwest; History of Indiana; Life of George Rogers Clark, supra. Bo.
- Ensign, Hermon Lee. 18— -18—. Lady Lee, and Other Animal Stories. Mg.
- Ericsson, John. Sn., 1803-1889. A famous naval inventor. He invented monitor vessels, and was the first to apply the screw propeller in navigation. Movable Torpedoes; Solar Investigations; Contributions to the Centennial Exhibition; Radiant Heat. See Life of, by W. E. Church, 1890.
- Ernst, Oswald Hubert. O., 1842- ——. A brigadier-general in the United States army. A Manual of Practical Military Engineering. Vn.
- Estes, David Foster. Me., 1851- ——. Son of H. C. Estes, infra. A Baptist clergyman, professor of New Testament Interpretation at Hamilton Theological Seminary from 1891. History of Holden, Massachusetts; Outline of New Testament Theology. Sil.
- Estes, Hiram Cushman. Me., 1823- ——. A Baptist clergyman of New Hampshire. The Christian Doctrine of the Soul.
- Evans, Clement Anselm. Ga., 18— - ——. A brigadier-general in the Confederate army during the Civil War. Military History of Georgia.
- Evans, Lawrence Boyd. O., 1870- ——. A professor of history at Tufts College from 1900. Civil Government in the United States; The Federal Government. Mac.
- Evans, Robley Dunglison. Va., 1846- ——. A rear-admiral in United States Navy. A Sailor’s Log. Ap.
- Everest, Charles William. Ct., 1814-1877. An Episcopal clergyman of Hamden, Connecticut, who published The Poets of Connecticut, with biographical sketches; The Vision of Death, and Other Poems; Babylon, a Poem; The Hare Bell; The Moss Rose; The Snow Drop; The Memento (edited).
- Everman, Barton Warren. Ia., 1853- ——. A naturalist in government service. Studies of the Salmon of the Pacific Coast of America; The Fishes of North and Middle America (with D. S. Jordan, supra); American Food and Game Fishes (with D. S. Jordan); Natural History of Puerto Rico; Animal Analysis. Dou. Mg.
- Ewell, Alice Maud. Va., 1860- ——. A Virginia novelist. A White Guard to Satan, an historical novel. Hou.
- Ewing, Mrs. Emma (Pike). N. Y., 1838- ——. A writer on domestic science. Cooking and Castle Building; The Art of Cookery; Text Book of Cookery.
- Eyerman, John. Pa., 1867- ——. A geologist of Easton, Pennsylvania. The Mineralogy of Pennsylvania; The Genus Temnocyon; A Study in Genealogy; Mineralogy of the French Creek Mines; Determinative Mineralogy.
- F
- Fairbank, Calvin. N. Y., 1816-1898. A once noted abolitionist. How the Way was Prepared, an autobiographic narrative.
- Fairbanks, Arthur. N. H., 1864- ——. An instructor at Yale University from 1892. Introduction to Sociology; The First Philosophers of Greece; Study of the Greek Pæan. Mac. Scr.
- Fairbanks, Harold Wellman. N. Y., 1860- ——. A geologist of California who has published Stories of Our Mother Earth; Home Geography; Physiography of California; Stories of Rocks and Minerals. Mac.
- Fairbanks, Lorenzo Sayles. Ms., 1825-1897. A Boston lawyer. Marriage and Divorce Laws of Massachusetts; Genealogy of the Fairbanks Family in America.
- Fairchild, Edwin Milton. Mch., 1865- ——. A Congregational clergyman, of Albany. The Function of the Church; Commandments Father Wisdom taught the Child he Loved; The Educational Church Marriage Service; Ethical Instruction in School and Church.
- Fairchild, Mrs. Mary Salome [Cutler]. Ms., 1855- ——. Wife of E. M. Fairchild, supra. Home Libraries; Scientific Study of Philanthropy.
- Fairlie, John Archibald. S., 1872- ——. A writer upon economics. Economic Effects of Ship Canals; Centralization of Administration in New York State.
- Fall, Delos. Mch., 1848- ——. A professor of chemistry in Albion College, Michigan, from 1878. Laboratory Manual of Qualitative Chemistry by the Inductive Method.
- Farley, Frederick Augustus. Ms., 1800-1892. A Unitarian clergyman of Brooklyn. Unitarianism in the United States; Unitarianism Defined.
- Farmer, Elihu Jerome. O., 1836- ——. A Cleveland journalist. The Conspiracy against Silver; Resources of the Rocky Mountains.
- Farmer, Fannie Merritt. Ms., 1857- ——. A Boston writer on domestic science. The Boston Cooking School Cook Book; Chafing Dish Possibilities.
- Farmer, James Eugene. O., 1867- ——. An educator at Concord, New Hampshire. Essays on French History; The Grenadier, a Story of the Empire; The Grand Mademoiselle; Brinton Eliot. Do. Put.
- Farnham, Charles Haight. N. Y., 1841- ——. Son of T. J. Farnham ([page 125]). A writer of New York city. The Life of Francis Parkman, supra. Lit.
- Farries, Francis Wallace. S., 1840- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, of Goldsboro, North Carolina. The Transcendentalism of Man.
- Farrington, Oliver Cummings. Me., 1864- ——. A mineralogist, lecturer in the University of Chicago from 1894. Meteorites; The Volcanoes of Mexico; Gems and Gem Materials.
- Faville, John. Wis., 1847- ——. A Congregational clergyman at Peoria, Illinois. The Problem of Authority in Religion.
- Featherman, Americus. Bv., 1822- ——. A Bavarian scholar who after coming to the United States in 1839 studied and practised both law and medicine, and was professor of modern languages and botany in the Louisiana State University, 1869-72. Since 1878 he has lived in Paris, engaged upon a monumental work, The Social History of Mankind. The portions which have so far (1900) appeared in print are The Aramæans (1881); The Nigritians (1885); The Papuo and Malay Melanesians (1887); The Oceano-Melanesians (1888); Æono-Marononians (1889); Chiapo and Guarano Maranonians (1890); Dravido-Turanians, Turco-Tatar Turanians, Ugrio-Turanians (1891); Shyano Turanians (189-); The Iranians.
- Fellows, George Emory. Wis., 1858- ——. An educator, president of the University of Maine from 1902. Outlines of Sixteenth Century History; Recent European History.
- Fenn, William Wallace. Ms., 1862- ——. A Unitarian clergyman, dean of the Harvard Divinity School from 1901. The Flowering of the Hebrew Religion; Lessons on Acts.
- Fenollosa, Ernest Francisco. Ms., 1853- ——. An educator and art critic. East and West, a book of verse.
- Fenollosa, Mrs. Mary [McNeil]. Al., 18— - ——. Wife of E. F. Fenollosa, supra. Out of the Nest; A Flight of Verses; Hiroshize: the Artist of Mist, Snow, and Rain. Lit.
- Ferguson, Mrs. Elizabeth [Graeme]. Pa., 1739-1801. A once noted literary woman of Philadelphia whose prose translation of Fénelon’s Télémaque is preserved in manuscript in the Franklin Library at Philadelphia.
- Ferguson, Henry. Ct., 1844- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, professor of history at Trinity College, Hartford, from 1883. Four Periods in the Life of the Church; Essays on American History.
- Fernow, Berthold. Po., 1837- ——. An historical writer, of New York. Albany and its Place in the History of the United States; The Ohio Valley in Colonial Days.
- Fessenden, Mrs. Laura [Dayton]. N. Y., 18— - ——. A Chicago novelist. Essiel; Beth; A Puritan Lover; A Colonial Dame; Bonnie Mackirby; Moon Children. Le. Ra.
- Fezandie, Clement. N. Y., 1865- ——. An educator in New York City. Through the Earth. Cent.
- Ficklen, John Rose. Va., 1858- ——. A professor of history at Tulane University, New Orleans, from 1893. History of Louisiana (with G. E. King); An Outline History of Greece; The Civil Government of Louisiana.
- Field, Edward. R. I., 1858- ——. A clerk of probate in Providence, Rhode Island. Revolutionary Defences in Rhode Island; The Colonial Tavern; Tax Lists of the Town of Providence; Life of Esek Hopkins, the first commander-in-chief of the Continental navy. Pr.
- Field, Roswell Martin. Mo., 1851- ——. Brother of Eugene Field ([page 127]), a Chicago writer. Echoes from a Sabine Farm (with E. Field, supra); In Sunflower Land; The Passing of Mother’s Portrait; The Romance of an Old Fool; The Bondage of Ballinger.
- Fielde, Adele Marion. N. Y., 1839- ——. A missionary in Siam and China 1865-90. Dictionary of the Swatow Dialect; Pagoda Shadows; Chinese Nights Entertainment; A Corner of Cathay; Parliamentary Procedure; Political Primaries for New York City and State, and several books in Chinese, 1873-90. Mac. Put.
- Finch, John Bird. N. Y., 1852- ——. A once prominent prohibition orator. The Public versus the Liquor Traffic.
- Fine, Henry Burchard. Pa., 1858- ——. A professor of mathematics at Princeton University. The Number System of Algebra. He.
- Finerty, John Frederick. I., 1846- ——. A journalist, editor of the Chicago Citizen. Warpath and Bivouac.
- Finn, Francis J[ames]. Mo., 1859- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman, a member of the Society of Jesus from 1879, and now (1904) professor of English literature at Saint Xavier’s College, Cincinnati. His writings are mainly for young people, and include Tom Playfair; Percy Wynn; Harry Dee; Claude Lightfoot; Mostly Boys; Old Faces and New; Ethelred Preston; That Football Game; Ada Merton; Echoes from Bethlehem; My Strange Friend; The Best Foot Forward, and Other Stories. Ben.
- Fish, Pierre Augustine. N. Y., 1865- ——. A professor of physiology at Cornell University. Comparative Physiology; Elementary Laboratory Guide for Students in Materia Medica and Pharmacy.
- Fish, Williston. O., 1858- ——. A lawyer and littérateur of Chicago, but from 1881 to 1887 serving in the Fourth United States Artillery. Won at West Point; Short Rations. Har.
- Fisher, Albert Kendrick. N. Y., 1856- ——. A biologist in the Government service. Hawks and Owls of the United States in their Relation to Agriculture; Ornithology of the Death Valley Expedition of 1891.
- Fisher, Irving. N. Y., 1867- ——. A professor of political economy at Yale University. Mathematical Investigations in the Theory of Value and Prices; Appreciation and Interest; Elements of Geometry (with A. W. Phillips); Introduction to Calculus.
- Fisher, Mary. Il., 1858- ——. An educator at Kansas City. Twenty-five Letters on English Authors; A Group of French Critics (edited); Biographical and Critical Reviews of American Literature; Gertrude Dorrance, a novel. Mg.
- Fisher, Samuel Ware. N. J., 1814-1874. A Presbyterian clergyman, president of Hamilton College, Clinton, New York, 1858-67, and for some years a pastor in Utica. Three Great Temptations of Young Men; Occasional Sermons and Addresses; Sermons on the Life of Christ. Clke.
- Fisher, Sydney George. 1808-1871. (His son, Sydney Fisher, is mentioned on [page 129]). A lawyer of Philadelphia. The Trial of the Constitution; Kansas and its Constitution.
- Fisk, Franklin Woodbury. Vt., 1820-1901. A Congregational clergyman, professor of sacred rhetoric in the Chicago Theological Seminary. Manual of Preaching.
- Fiske, Amos Kidder. N. H., 1842- ——. A journalist of New York city. Midnight Talks at the Club, a series of social essays; Beyond the Bourn; The Jewish Scriptures; The Myths of Israel; The Story of the Philippines; The Modern Bank; The Story of the West Indies. Put. Scr.
- Fiske, Lewis Ransom. N. Y., 1825-1901. A Methodist clergyman, president of Albion College, Michigan, 1877-98. To-day and To-morrow; Echoes from College Platform; Man Building, a Treatise on Human Life and its Forces.
- Fiske, Ralph Browning. 18— - ——. Son of J. Fiske ([page 130]). The Count of Nideck, a romance. Pa.
- Fiske, Stephen. N. J., 1840- ——. A dramatic critic of New York city. English Photographs; Holyday Tales; Off-Hand Portraits of Prominent New Yorkers; and several plays.
- Fitts, James Franklin. N. Y., 1840-1890. A novelist and journalist, among whose fictions are The Parted Veil; A Version; A Modern Miracle; Captain Kidd’s Gold.
- Flagg, Edward Octavius. S. C., 1824- ——. An Episcopal clergyman in New York city. Poems; Later Poems.
- Flagg, William Joseph. Ct., 1818-1898. A viniculturist of Cincinnati. European Vineyards and Vine Culture; Three Seasons in European Vineyards; The Sulphur Cure; A Good Investment: a Story of the Upper Ohio; Wall Street and the Woods, or Woman the Stronger; Yoga, a work on the destiny of the soul.
- Flandrau, Charles Eugene. N. Y., 1828-1903. A lawyer of Saint Paul, Minnesota. History of Minnesota and Tales of the Frontier.
- Flandrau, Charles Macomb. Min., 1871- ——. Son of C. E. Flandrau, supra. A former instructor in English at Harvard University. Harvard Episodes; The Diary of a Freshman.
- Flather, John Joseph. Pa., 1862- ——. A professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Michigan from 1898. Dynamometers and the Measurement of Power; Rope Driving; Steam Boilers. Wil.
- Fleming, William Hansell. Pa., 1844- ——. A Shakespearean scholar, of New York city. A Bibliography of First Folios in New York; How to Study Shakespeare; Shakespeare’s Plots.
- Fletcher, Alice Cunningham. Ms., 1845- ——. An ethnologist. Indian Story and Song from North America. Sm.
- Fletcher, Horace. Ms., 1869- ——. A writer whose life has been largely spent abroad, and who is now (1904) living in Venice. Menticulture; Happiness. That Last Waif; The Mind-Power Plant; A. B. C. of Snap-Shooting; The A. B. Z. of Our Own Nutrition. Sto.
- Fletcher, Robert Howe. O., 1850- ——. Son of R. Fletcher ([page 131]). Director of the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art at San Francisco from 1899. A Blind Bargain; The Johnstown Stage; Marjorie and her Papa; Annals of the Bohemian Club. Ap. Cent.
- Flewellyn, Mrs. Juliette [Colliton]. Ont., 1850- ——. A writer of Lockport, New York. Hillcrest.
- Flick, Alexander Clarence. O., 1869- ——. A professor of history in Syracuse University from 1899. History of New York; Loyalism in New York; History in Rhymes and Jingles. Mac.
- Flickinger, Junius Rudy. 18— - ——. An educator, principal of the normal school at Lockhaven, Pennsylvania. Civil Government and its Development in the States and the United States. He.
- Flint, Grover. N. Y., 1867- ——. A journalist of New York city. Marching with Gomez. Lam.
- Flint, Martha Bockee. 18— -1900. An historical writer of Flushing. Early Long Island, a Colonial Study; A Garden of Simples. Put. Scr.
- Flower, Elliot. Wis., 1863- ——. A journalist and humourist of Chicago. Policeman Flynn; The Spoilsman; Delightful Dodd. Pa.
- Floyd, Robert Mitchell. La., 1849- ——. A journalist of Boston. Songs of the Apple Tree.
- Floyd-Jones, De Lancey. N. Y., 1826-1902. A United States army officer. Letters from the Far East.
- Flynt, Josiah. See Willard, Josiah Frank.
- Folk, Edgar Estes. Tn., 1856- ——. A Baptist clergyman of Nashville, Tennessee. The Mormon Monster.
- Folkmar, Daniel. Wis., 1861- ——. A sociologist of Milwaukee. Leçons d’anthropologie philosophique; a L’anthropologie philosophique considérée comme base de la morale.
- Follett, Mary Parker. Ms., 1868- ——. The Speaker of the House of Representatives (1896).
- Foote, Lucius Harwood. N. Y., 1826- ——. A San Francisco writer, secretary of the Academy of Sciences from 1890. Red Letter Days and Other Poems; On the Heights.
- Ford, Henry Jones. Md., 1851- ——. A journalist of Pittsburgh. The Rise and Growth of American Politics. Mac.
- Ford, Isaac N[elson]. N. Y., 1848- ——. A journalist on the staff of the New York Tribune since 1870, and since 1895 London correspondent of that journal. Tropical America. Scr.
- Forman, Samuel Eagle. Va., 1858- ——. An educator of Washington city. First Lessons in Civics; Life and Writings of Thomas Jefferson; Philip Freneau. Am. Bo. J. H. U.
- Formento, Felix. La., 1837- ——. A surgeon, of New Orleans. Notes and Observations of Army Surgery; Cremation; School Hygiene; On Alcoholics.
- Foster, David Skaats. N. Y., 1852- ——. A hardware merchant of Utica, New York. Rebecca the Witch, and Other Tales in Metre, first issued as The Romance of the Unexpected; Spanish Castles by the Rhine, a Triptychal Yarn. Ho.
- Foster, Edward Wells. Ms., 1838-1901. A physician who published Ye Pilgrims: historical opera; Man in the Earth World and in the Spirit World.
- Foster, John Watson. Ind., 1836- ——. A Washington lawyer, secretary of state 1892-93. A Century of American Diplomacy; American Diplomacy in the Orient. Hou.
- Foster, Mabel G——. Ms., 18— - ——. A lecturer of Boston. The Heart of the Doctor. Hou.
- Foster, Roger——. Ms., 1859- ——. A New York lawyer. Treatise on the Federal Judiciary Acts of 1875 and 1887; Federal Practice; Commentaries on the Constitution; Treatise on the Income Tax of 1894.
- Foulke, William Dudley. N. Y., 1848- ——. A civil service reformer at Richmond, Indiana. Slav and Saxon; Life of Oliver P. Morton; Maya: a Story of Yucatan. Put.
- Fowler, Charles Evan. O., 1867- ——. A civil engineer of Seattle. Cofferdam Process for Piers; General Specifications for Steel Roofs and Buildings; Engineering Studies. Wil.
- Fowler, Frank. L. I., 1852- ——. An artist of New York city. Portrait and Figure Painting; Oil Painting.
- Frackleton, Mrs. Susan Stewart [Goodrich]. Wis., 1848- ——. An artist-inventor of Milwaukee. Tried by Fire, a work on china decoration.
- Frank, Henry. 18— - ——. A clergyman, pastor of the Metropolitan church in New York city. The Shrine of Silence.
- Franklin, Samuel Rhoads. Pa., 1825- ——. A rear-admiral in the United States navy, retired in 1887. Memories of a Rear-Admiral. Har.
- Frazar, Douglas. Ms., 1836-1896. A colonel in the Federal army during the Civil War, brevetted brigadier-general of volunteers at the close of the war, and subsequently a citizen of Somerville, Massachusetts. The Log of the Maryland; Perseverance Island; Practical Boat-Sailing. Le.
- Freedley, Angelo Tillinghast. O., 1850- ——. Son of E. T. Freedley ([page 137]). A lawyer of Philadelphia. The General Corporation Law of Pennsylvania; Limited Partnership Association Laws of Pennsylvania.
- Freeman, Mrs. Mary Wilkins. See Wilkins, Mary E. (page 424).
- Freer, Paul Caspar. Il., 1862- ——. A professor of chemistry at the University of Michigan from 1889. A Text-Book of General Chemistry; The Elements of Chemistry.
- Freitag, Joseph Kendall. 18— - ——. An engineer of Boston. The Fire-proofing of Steel Buildings; Architectural Engineering. Wil.
- French, Allen. Ms., 1870- ——. A novelist of Concord, Massachusetts. The Colonials; Sir Marrock; The Junior Cup; The Story of Rolf and the Viking’s Bow; The Barrier. Cent. Dou.
- French, Ferdinand Courtney. Ms., 1861- ——. A professor of philosophy at Vassar College from 1894. The Concept of Law in Ethics.
- French, Joseph Lewis. N. Y., 1858- ——. A Boston writer. Christ in Art; A Breath of Desire (verse).
- French, Lillie Hamilton. D. C., 1854- ——. A writer of New York city who, besides contributing to the magazines, has published Hezekiah’s Wives; American Homes and their Decorations. Do. Hou.
- Friedman, Isaac Kahn. Il., 1870- ——. A Chicago journalist. The Lucky Number; Poor People; By Bread Alone. Hou.
- Friendly, Aunt. See Baker, Mrs. Sarah.
- Frost, Arthur Burdett. Pa., 1851- ——. A popular humorous artist and writer of Morristown, New Jersey. Stuff and Nonsense; My Bull Calf. Scr.
- Frost, William Goodell. N. Y., 1854- ——. An educator of Kentucky, president of Berea College from 1893. Studies in Oratory; A Greek Primer.
- Frothingham, Arthur Lincoln. Ms., 1859- ——. A professor of ancient history at Princeton University. A History of Sculpture (with A. Marquand); Mediæval Art Inventories of the Vatican. Lgs.
- Frothingham, Eugenia Brooks. F., 1874- ——. Niece of E. Frothingham ([page 139]). A Boston novelist. The Turn of the Road. Hou.
- Frothingham, Jessie Peabody. 18- ——. A writer for young people. Sea Fighters from Drake to Farragut; Sea Wolves of Seven Shores. Scr.
- Frothingham, Paul Revere. Ms., 1864- ——. Nephew of E. Frothingham ([page 139]). A Unitarian clergyman of Boston. George Ripley, in American Men of Letters Series. Hou.
- Fruit, John Phelps. Ky., 1855- ——. A professor of English literature in William Jewell College, Pembroke, Kentucky, from 1897. The Mind and Art of Poe’s Poetry. Bar.
- Fuertes, James Hillhouse. Puerto Rico, 1863- ——. A civil and sanitary engineer, of New York city. Water and Public Health; Water Filtration Works. Wil.
- Fuller, Edwin Wiley. N. C., 1847-1875. A writer of Louisburg, North Carolina. Angel in the Cloud, a poem; Sea Gift, a novel.
- Fuller, Hulbert. N. Y., 1865- ——. A physician and novelist of Chicago. Vivian of Virginia; God’s Rebel. Pa.
- Fuller, William Eddy. Vt., 1832- ——. A jurist of Taunton, Massachusetts. The Probate Laws of Massachusetts. Hou.
- Funk, Isaac Kaufman. O., 1839- ——. A New York publisher. The Widow’s Mite and Other Psychic Phenomena. Fu.
- Furness, William Henry. Pa., 1866- ——. Son of H. H. Furness, supra. Home Life of Borneo Head Hunters: its Festivals and Folklore.
- Fyles, Franklin, 18— - ——. The dramatic critic of the New York Sun from 1886. Cumberland, ’61; The Theatre and its People; A Ward of France; Drusa Wayne.
- G
- Gabb, William More. Pa., 1839-1879. A palæontologist, employed in government service. The Topography and Geology of Santo Domingo.
- Gage, Alfred Payson. N. H., 1836-1903. An educational writer of Arlington, Massachusetts. Physical Experiments; Principles of Physics; Elements of Physics. Gi.
- Gailor, Thomas Frank. Mi., 1856- ——. The third Protestant Episcopal bishop of Tennessee. Manual of Devotion; The Apostolical Succession; Things New and Old; The Puritan Reaction.
- Gaines, John Wesley. Ga., 1840- ——. A bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. African Methodism in the South; The Negro and the White Man.
- Galloway, Beverly Thomas. Mo., 1863- ——. A botanist employed in the United States Department of Agriculture, who has published several important professional monographs.
- Gannon, Anna. Pa., 1876- ——. A verse-writer, of Philadelphia. A Dream of Shakespeare’s Women; The Song of Stradella and Other Songs. Lip.
- Ganse, Hervey Doddridge. N. Y., 1822- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Chicago. Bible Slave-holding not Sinful.
- Gardenhire, Samuel M——. Mo., 1855- ——. A lawyer of New York. Lux Crucis, a tale of the Great Apostle.
- Gardiner, Asa Bird. N. Y., 1839- ——. A New York lawyer. The Writ of Habeas Corpus as affecting the Army and Navy; Practice and Proceedings of Courts-Martial; The Rhode Island Continental Line of the Revolution; The Society of the Cincinnati in France.
- Gardner, William Henry. Ms., 1865- ——. Work and Play Songs.
- Garner, James Wilford. Mi., 18— - ——. Reconstruction in Mississippi. Mac.
- Garner, Richard Lynch. Va., 1848- ——. A traveller and scientist. Psychoscope (verse); The Speech of Monkeys; Gorillas and Chimpanzees; Apes and Monkeys. Gi.
- Garrett, Edmund Henry. N. Y., 1853- ——. An artist and author of Boston. Romance and Reality of the Puritan Coast; The Pilgrim Shore. Lit.
- Garrison, George Pierce. Ga., 1853- ——. A professor of history in the University of Texas from 1897. The Civil Government of Texas; Texas, in American Commonwealths Series. Hou.
- Garrison, Wendell Phillips. Ms., 1840- ——. Son of W. L. Garrison ([page 143]), literary editor of The Nation from 1865. Parables for School and Home; Life of William Lloyd Garrison (with F. J. Garrison); Sonnets and Lyrics of the Ever-Womanly. Hou. Lgs.
- Gatchell, Charles. O., 1851- ——. A homœopathic physician of Chicago. Diet in Disease; Key Notes of Medical Practice; Pocket Book of Medical Practice; Diseases of the Lungs; and the novels Haschisch, They Say, and What one Woman Did.
- Gates, Mrs. Ellen M—— [Huntington]. Ct., 18— - ——. A verse-writer of East Orange, New Jersey. Treasures of the Kurium, a book of verse. Put.
- Gates, Lewis Edwards. N. Y., 1860- ——. A writer of Washington city, assistant professor in English at Harvard University, 1896-1903. Three Studies in Literature; Studies and Appreciations. Mac.
- Gates, Merrill Edwards. N. Y., 1848- ——. A lecturer and author. Sidney Lanier, Poet and Artist; Land and Law as Agents in Educating the Indians; International Arbitration.
- Gayley, Charles Mills. Ch., 1858- ——. A professor of English literature in the University of California from 1889. Songs of Yellow and Blue; Guide to Literature of Æsthetics; Methods and Materials of Literary Criticism (with F. N. Scott); Classical Myths in English Literature; The Principles and Progress of English Poetry (with C. C. Young). Mac.
- Gentry, Thomas George. Pa., 1843- ——. A Philadelphia scientist. Life Histories of the Birds of Pennsylvania; Nests and Eggs of Birds of the United States; Life and Immortality, or Soul in Plants and Animals; The House Sparrow at Home and Abroad; Family Names; Pigeon River, and Other Poems; Intelligence in Plants and Animals.
- Gere, George Grant. N. Y., 1848- ——. A San Francisco physician. Lectures on Callopractic Surgery.
- Gibbs, George. La., 1870- ——. An artist and littérateur of Philadelphia. Pike and Cutlass: hero tales of our navy; In Search of Mademoiselle; The Love of Monsieur. Lip.
- Gibson, Charles Dana. Ms., 1867- ——. An artist and book-illustrator of New York city. Sketches in Egypt; The Education of Mr. Pipp; The Americans.
- Gibson, Charles Donnel. Pa., 1863- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. My Lady and Allan Darke, an historical romance. Mac.
- Gibson, Charles [Hammond]. “Richard Sudbury.” Ms., 1874- ——. A Boston writer of verse and prose. Two Gentlemen in Touraine; The Amatoryad and Other Poems. S.
- Gibson, Mrs. Eva Katherine [Clapp]. Il., 1857- ——. A Chicago writer. Her Bright Future; A Lucky Mishap; Mismated; A Woman’s Triumph; A Dark Secret; Songs of Red Rose Land; Patriotic Song; Famous Lovers.
- Gibson, James Kimball. Ms., 1836- ——. A farmer of Denmark, Michigan. Pastime Jottings.
- Gifford, Mrs. Augusta [Hale]. Me., 1842- ——. An historical writer of Portland, Maine. Germany: her People and Their Story. Lo.
- Gifford, Franklin Kent. N. Y., 1861- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Colorado. Aphrodite, the Romance of a Sculptor’s Masterpiece.
- Gifford, Orrin Philip. Ms., 1847- ——. A Baptist clergyman of prominence. In Memoriam, and Other Sermons.
- Gilbert, Mrs. Anne Jane [Hartley]. E., 1821-1904. A noted actress whose Stage Reminiscences were published in 1901. Scr.
- Gilbert, George Holley. Vt., 1854- ——. A professor of New Testament theology in the Chicago Theological Seminary. The Student’s Life of Jesus; The Student’s Life of Paul; The Revelation of Jesus; The First Interpreters of Jesus; A Primer of the Christian Religion. Mac.
- Gilbert, Howard Worcester. Pa., 1819-1894. An educator in Pennsylvania, once prominent as an Abolitionist. Aldornere, a Pennsylvanian Idyl, and Other Poems.
- Gilbert, Levi. N. Y., 1852- ——. A Methodist clergyman, editor of the Western Christian Advocate from 1900. Side Lights on Immortality.
- Gilchrist, Mrs. Fredericka [Beardsley]. N. Y., 1846- ——. A writer of New York city. The True Story of Hamlet and Ophelia, an entirely new interpretation of the play. Lit.
- Gilder, Jeannette Leonard. N. Y., 1849- ——. Sister of R. W. Gilder ([page 146]). A journalist of New York city, editor of The Critic. Taken by Siege, a novel; The Autobiography of a Tomboy. Dou. Scr.
- Gill, Augustus Herman. Ms., 1864- ——. A professor of oil and gas analysis in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1894. Gas and Fuel Analysis for Engineers; A Short Handbook of Oil Analysis. Lip. Wil.
- Gillespie, Mrs. Elizabeth [Duane]. Pa., 1821-1901. Daughter of W. J. Duane ([page 106]), and descendant of Benjamin Franklin. A prominent social figure in Philadelphia for many years. A Book ©f Remembrances. Lip.
- Gillette, Halbert Powers. Ia., 1869- ——. A New York mining and civil engineer. Economics of Road Construction; Cost of Earthwork.
- Gillman, Henry. I., 1833- ——. A scientist of Detroit. Marked for Life, a book of verse; The Wild Flowers and Gardens of Jerusalem and Palestine; Hassan: a Fellah, a romance of Palestine. Lit.
- Gilman, Bradley. Ms., 1859- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Springfield, Massachusetts, prior to 1904. The Parsonage Porch, a collection of short stories; The Kingdom of Coins; The Musical Journey of Dorothy and Detra; Back to the Soil; Ronald Carmaquay, a Commercial Clergyman. Pa.
- Gilman, Mrs. Charlotte [Perkins] [Stetson]. Ct., 1860- ——. Daughter of F. B. Perkins, supra, and great granddaughter of L. Beecher, supra. A San Francisco writer. The Labour Movement; In This Our World, a collection of verse; Women and Economics; The Yellow Wall-Paper; Concerning Children; The Home: its Work and Influence; Human Work. Sm.
- Gilman, Mrs. Mary Rebecca [Foster]. Ms., 1859- ——. Wife of B. Gilman, supra. The Life of Saint Theresa.
- Gilman, Theodore. Il., 1841- ——. A New York banker. A Graded Banking System; Federal Clearing Houses. Hou.
- Gilson, Roy Rolfe. Ia., 1875- ——. A journalist of New York city. When Love is Young; In the Morning Glow; The Flower of Youth. Har.
- Gladwin, William Zachary. “Gulielma Zollinger.” 18— - ——. A writer of Newton, Iowa. Dan Drummond of the Drummonds; Maggie McLanehan; The Widow O’Callaghan’s Boys.
- Glasgow, Ellen Anderson Gholson. Va., 1874- ——. A novelist of Richmond, Virginia. The Descendant: a novel; Phases of an Inferior Planet; The Battleground; The Freeman, and Other Poems; The Deliverance. Dou. Har.
- Glasson, William Henry. N. Y., 1874- ——. A professor of political economy in Trinity College, Durham, North Carolina, from 1902. History of Military Pension Legislation in the United States. Mac.
- Glentworth, Marguerite Linton. N. J., 1881- ——. A novelist of Newark, New Jersey. A Twentieth Century Boy; The Tenth Commandment. Le.
- Glover, Elizabeth. See Bennett, Mary.
- Glynes, Mrs. Ella Maria [Dietz] [Clymer]. See Clymer, Mrs. ([page 66]).
- Godoy, José Francisco. Mex., 1851- ——. A secretary of the Mexican embassy at Washington from 1896. The American L’Assommoir; Who Did It?; The Prominent Men of Mexico; La Ciudad de San Francisco; Tratado de Extradicion; Biographical Encyclopædia of Contemporaries; Mercantile and Legal Handbook of Mexico.
- Goepp, Philip Henry. N. Y., 1864- ——. A Philadelphia musician. Symphonies and their Meaning. Lip.
- Goetschius, Percy. N. J., 1853- ——. A Boston musician, among whose writings are: The Material used in Musical Composition; Theory and Practice of Tone Relations; The Homophonic Forms of Musical Composition; Applied Counterpoint.
- Going, Charles Buxton. N. Y., 1863- ——. Editor of the Engineering Magazine. Summer-Fallow, a book of verse; and co-author of Urchins of the Sea; and Urchins at the Pole.
- Going, Ellen Maud. “E. M. Hardinge.” N. Y., 18— - ——. A nature writer of New York. With the Wild Flowers; Field, Forest, and Wayside Flowers; With the Trees. Ba.
- Goode, William Athelstane Meredith. Newfoundland, 1875- ——. A journalist of New York city. With Sampson through the War.
- Goodell, Thomas Dwight. Ct., 1854- ——. A professor of Greek at Yale University from 1888. Chapters on Greek Metric; The Greek in English; Greek Lessons. Scr.
- Goodell, William. Ms., 1792-1867. A Congregationalist missionary in Syria and Turkey, 1822-55. (His son of the same name is mentioned on [page 150].) Come-Outerism; American Constitutional Law and its Bearing upon American Slavery; The Democracy of Christianity; Slavery and Anti-Slavery; The Old and the New, or The Changes of Thirty Years in the East; The American Slave Code in Theory and Practice, American Slavery a Formidable Obstacle to the Conversion of the World.
- Goodhue, Edward Solon. Q., 1864- ——. A physician and littérateur of Riverside, California. Verses from the Valley.
- Goodrich, Alfred John. O., 1847- ——. A New York musical educator and critic. Piano Manual; Music as a Language; Complete Musical Analysis; Analytical Harmony; Theory of Interpretation; Guide to Practical Musicianship; Synthetic Counterpoint.
- Goodsell, Daniel Ayres. N. Y., 1840- ——. A Methodist bishop from 1888. Nature and Character at Granite Bay.
- Goodspeed, George Stephen. Wis., 1860- ——. A professor of Comparative Religion in the University of Chicago from 1892. Israel’s Messianic Hope; History of the Babylonians and Assyrians. Mac. Scr.
- Goodwin, Hermon Camp. N. Y., 1813-1891. A journalist of central New York. The Pioneer History of Cortland County and the Border Wars of New York; Life of John Jacob Astor; Legends of Poland; History of Ithaca, New York; Edgar Wentworth, a novel.
- Gordon, John Brown. Ga., 1832-1904. A prominent military leader of the Southern Confederacy. Reminiscences of the Civil War (1903).
- Gordon, William. E., 1740-1807. A Congregational clergyman, pastor at Roxbury, Massachusetts, 1772-86. He returned to England in the latter year. In 1788 he published in four volumes a History of the Rise, Progress, and Establishment of the Independence of the United States of America, a work of much value. See Tyler’s Literary History of the American Revolution; Dictionary of National Biography, volume 22.
- Gordy, John Pancoast. Md., 1851- ——. A New York educator, professor of history in New York University from 1901. Growth and Development of the Normal School Idea in the United States; Text-Book on Psychology; A History of Political Parties in the United States. He has also published a translation of Kuno Fischer’s Descartes.
- Gordy, Wilbur Fisk. Md., 1854- ——. A supervisor of schools in Hartford, Connecticut. A School History of the United States; American Leaders and Heroes; The Pathfinder in American History (co-author).
- Gorham, George Congdon. L. I., 1832- ——. A journalist, now (1904) living in Washington city. The Life and Public Services of Edwin M. Stanton. Hou.
- Goss, Charles Frederic. N. Y., 1852- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Cincinnati. The Optimist; The Philopolist; Hits and Misses; Life of D. L. Moody; The Redemption of David Corson; The Loom of Life; Little Saint Sunshine. Bo. Rev.
- Goss, Elbridge Henry. Ms. 1830- - ——. A writer of Melrose, Massachusetts. Life of Colonel Paul Revere; Melrose Memorial; History of Melrose.
- Gould, Elgin Ralston Lovell. Ont., 1860- ——. A professor of statistics in the University of Chicago. The Gothenburg System of Liquor Traffic; The Social Condition of Labour; European Labour Statistics; The Housing of Wage-Earners in European and American Cities; The Social Problems of Labour; Social Condition of Textile Workers in Europe and America.
- Gould, George Milbry. Me., 1848- ——. A Philadelphia physician. Illustrated Dictionary of Medicine, Biology, and Allied Sciences; Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine (with W. L. Pyle); Student’s Medical Dictionary; Cyclopædia of Practical Medicine and Surgery (with W. L. Pyle); Pocket Medical Dictionary; Suggestions to Medical Writers; Borderland Studies; An Autumn Singer.
- Gouraud, George Fauvel. N. Y., 1872- ——. A New York lawyer. Ballads of Coster-Land.
- Gow, George Coleman. Ms., 1860- ——. A professor of music at Vassar College. The Structure of Music.
- Grabau, Mrs. Mary Antin. R., 188- - ——. A writer of Hebrew-Russian parentage. At the age of eleven she wrote in Yiddish, From Plotzk to Boston, which two years later she translated into English.
- Gradle, Henry. G., 1855- ——. A Chicago physician. Bacteria and the Germ Theory of Disease; Diseases of the Nose, Pharynx, and Ear.
- Gramm, William. P., 1818-1901. A picture-frame maker and archæologist of New York city who came to America from Prussia in 1851. Phantasy and Life.
- Grandin, Egbert Henry. N. J., 1855- ——. A New York physician. Electricity in Gynæcology; Practical Obstetrics.
- Granger, Moses Moorhead. O., 1831- ——. A lawyer of Zanesville, Ohio. Washington versus Jefferson: the Case tried by battle in 1861-65. Hou.
- Grannis, Anna Jane. Ct., 1856- ——. A writer of Plainville, Connecticut. Skipped Stitches; Sandwort; Speedwell.
- Gray, Arthur Irving. Wis., 1859- ——. A New York journalist. Bath Robes and Bachelors; Over the Black Coffee. Ba.
- Gray, David. N. Y., 1870- ——. Son of D. Gray ([page 154]). A lawyer and journalist of Buffalo. Gallops, a book of fox-hunting stories. Cent.
- Gray, Morris. Ms., 1856- ——. A Boston lawyer, author of A Treatise on the Law of Communication by Telegraph. Lit.
- Green, Nathan. Tn., 1827- ——. A professor of law at Cumberland University, Tennessee, from 1856. The Tall Man of Winton; Sparks from a Back Log.
- Greene, Edward Lee. R. I., 1843- ——. A professor of botany at the Catholic University, Washington city, from 1895. Manual of Botany for the Region of San Francisco Bay; Flora Franciscana; West American Oaks and Pittonia.
- Greene, Evarts Boutell. Japan, 1870- ——. An educator of Illinois, professor of history in the University of Illinois at Urbana from 1894. The Provincial Governor in the English Colonies of North America. Lgs.
- Greene, Henry Copley. A., 1871- ——. A Boston littérateur. Theophile, a Miracle Play; Plains and Uplands of old France, a Book of Prose and Verse.
- Greene, Roy Farrell. Mch., 1873- ——. Cupid is King, a collection of verse.
- Greenslet, Ferris. N. Y., 1875- ——. Joseph Glanvill, a Study in English Thought and Letters of the Seventeenth Century; Walter Pater; The Quest of the Holy Grail. Mac.
- Greenwood, Elisha. Ms., 1863- ——. A lawyer of Boston. Public Policy in the Law of Contracts; Constitutional Law.
- Gregg, David. Pa., 1846- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, pastor of the Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn from 1890. From Solomon to the Captivity; Studies in John; Facts that Call for the Faith; Our Best Moods; The Things of Northfield; Makers of the American Republic; The Heaven Life; New Epistles from Old Lands; Our Best Moods. Rev.
- Gregory, Eliot. N. Y., 1858- ——. An artist and author of New York city. Worldly Ways and Byways; Idler Papers; The Ways of Men. Scr.
- Gregory, John Goadby. Wis., 1856- ——. A journalist of Milwaukee. A Beauty of Thebes (verse).
- Grier, James Alexander. Pa., 1846- ——. A United Presbyterian clergyman of Pennsylvania, professor in Alleghany Theological Seminary. Secret Societies; Biography of Jeremiah Rankine Johnston.
- Griggs, Edward Howard. Min., 1868- ——. A prominent lecturer upon ethics. The New Humanism; A Book of Meditations.
- Grinnell, Charles Edward. Md., 1841- ——. A Boston lawyer. A Study of the Poor Debtor Law of Massachusetts; The Law of Deceit; Points in Pleading and Practice.
- Grissom, Arthur [Colfax]. Il., 1869-1901. Beaux and Belles, a collection of society verse. Put.
- Gross, John Daniel. G., 1737-1812. A New York clergyman and educator. Natural Principles of Rectitude.
- Grubb, Edward Burd. N. J., 1841- ——. An iron manufacturer at Burlington, New Jersey, brevetted brigadier-general for service in the Federal army during the Civil War, and minister to Spain 1890-92. What I saw of the Suez Canal.
- Guerber, Hélène Adeline. N. Y., 18— - ——. An educator and author of Nyack, New York. Myths of Greece and Rome; Myths of Northern Lands; Legends of the Middle Ages; Legends of the Rhine; Legends of the Virgin and Christ; Stories of the Wagner Operas; Stories of Famous Operas; The Story of the Thirteen Colonies; The Story of Greece; The Story of the Romans; Legends of Switzerland; text books in modern languages; The story of the Chosen People; The Story of the Great Republic; Empresses of France. Am. Bar. Do. He.
- Gulick, Charles Burton. N. J., 1868- ——. An assistant professor of Greek at Harvard University from 1899. The Life of the Ancient Greeks. Ap.
- Gulick, John Thomas. H. I., 1832- ——. A Presbyterian missionary, now at Osaka, Japan, of prominence as a writer upon evolution. Diversity of Evolution; Divergent Evolution and the Darwinian Theory; Inconsistencies of Utilitarianism.
- Gunton, George. E., 1845- ——. A sociologist, editor of Gunton’s Magazine. Wealth and Progress; Principles of Social Economics; Trusts and the Public; Outlines of Political Science.
- Guthrie, William Dameron. Cal., 1859- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Lectures on the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. Lit.
- Guthrie, William Norman. S., 1868- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Alameda, California. Modern Poet Prophets; Essays Critical and Interpretative; To Kindle the Yule Log; A Booklet of Verse; Songs of American Destiny; The Old Hemlock; Symbolic Odes; The Christ of the Ages in Words of Holy Writ. Clke. Wh.
- H
- Hackett, Frank Warren. N. H., 1841- ——. A lawyer of Washington city. The Gavel and the Mace; The Geneva Award Acts. Lit.
- Hageman, John Frelinghuysen. N. J., 1816- ——. A lawyer of Princeton, New Jersey. Princeton and its Institutions (1879); History of Mercer County, New Jersey; Treatise on Privileged Communications.
- Hagen, John George. A., 1847- ——. An astronomer, director of the Observatory at Georgetown University, District of Columbia, from 1880. Synopsis der Höhern Mathematik; Index Operum Leonardi Euleri; Atlas Stellarum Variabilium.
- Hailmann, William Nicholas. Sd., 1836- ——. An educator of note, among whose many publications are Outlines of a System of Object Teaching; History of Pedagogy; Kindergarten Culture; Letters to a Mother; The English Language. Am.
- Hainer, Bayard Taylor. Mo., 1860- ——. An associate justice of the supreme court of Oklahoma. The Modern Law of Municipal Securities.
- Hains, T[hornton] Jenkins. D. C., 1866- ——. A writer of sea tales, now (1904) a resident of Brooklyn, but formerly a sailor. Captain Gore; Richard Judkins; The Windjammers; The Wreck of the Connemaugh; Mr. Trunnell; The Cruise of the Petrel; Sea Folk. Lip. Lo.
- Hale, Anne Gardner. Ms., 1823- ——. A Newburyport writer of verse and prose. Folly’s Bells, a German Legend; Uncle Mark’s Amaranths; Seedlings from My Wild Garden (1902). Le.
- Hale, George Silsbee. N. H., 1825-1877. Son of Salma Hale ([page 164]). A lawyer of Boston. Manual for the Overseers of the Poor; The Charities of Boston; Digest of United States Common Law Decisions. 1858-59.
- Hale, Mary Whitwell. Ms., 1810-1862. An educator and hymn-writer of Massachusetts, whose Poems appeared in 1840.
- Hale, William Bayard. Ind., 1869- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Ardmore, Pennsylvania. Phillips Brooks: a Memorial; The Eternal Teacher; The Making of the American Constitution: a Genesis of Nationality; The New Obedience: a Plea for Social Submission to Christ. Lgs.
- Hale, William Benjamin. Mo., 1871- ——. A lawyer of Northport, Long Island. Bailments and Carriers; Damages; Torts. West.
- Hale, William Gardner. Ga., 1849- ——. A professor of Latin and head of that department in the University of Chicago from 1892. The Art of Reading Latin; The Cum-Constructions; The Sequence of Tenses in Latin; The Anticipatory Subjunctive in Greek and Latin; Latin Grammar (with C. D. Buck). Gi.
- Hale, Will[iam] T[homas]. Tn., 1857- ——. A journalist of Nashville, Tennessee, whose verse has been widely copied. In Rural Ways; Showers and Sunshine; Poems and Dialect Pieces; Autumn Lane and Other Poems; Backward Trail: Stories of the Indians and Tennessee Pioneers; Great Southerners.
- Hall, Alexander Wilford. N. Y., 1819-1902. An evangelist of New York city, prominent as an opponent of Universalism and evolution. Universalism against Itself; Problem of Human Life; Immortality of the Soul; Hygienic Secret of Health.
- Hall, Arthur Cleveland. 18— - ——. Crime and Social Progress. Mac.
- Hall, Bolton. I., 1854- ——. Son of John Hall (1829-1868, [page 166]). A lawyer and university extension lecturer of New York city. Even as You and I; Things as They Are; The Game of Life; Life and Love and Death.
- Hall, Francis Joseph. O., 1857- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, professor of dogmatic theology in Western Theological Seminary, Chicago, from 1886. Theological Outlines; Historical Position of the Episcopal Church; The Kenotic Theory.
- Hall, Prescott Farnsworth. Ms., 1868- ——. A Boston lawyer. The Massachusetts Law of Landlord and Tenant; Practice Schedule; Examination of Land Titles.
- Hall, Ruth. N. Y., 1858- ——. A novelist of Catskill, N. Y. The Story of Moreton House; An Impossible Thing; The Best Policy; What Shall We Do?; In the Brave Days of Old, a tale for boys; The Boys of Scrooby; The Black Gown; The Golden Arrow; A Downrenter’s Son; The Pine Grove House. Hou.
- Hall, Thomas Bartlett. Ms., 1824-1903. A lawyer of Boston. Three Articles on Modern Spiritualism by a Bible Spiritualist; Modern Spiritualism; Legal Status of Patents; Treatise on Patent Estate.
- Hall, Thomas Cuming. I., 1858- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, professor in Union Theological Seminary, New York city. Messages of Jesus; The Social Meaning of Religious Movements in England; The Power of an Endless Life; The Synoptic Gospels. Scr.
- Hall, Thomas Proctor. Ont., 1858- ——. A professor of natural science at Tabor College, Iowa, from 1893. A Physical Theory of Electrical Magnetism.
- Hall, Thomas Winthrop. “Tom Hall.” N. Y., 1862-1900. A popular New York littérateur, whose verse includes When Hearts are Trumps; When Love Laughs; When Cupid Calls; When Love is Lord. The Little Lady, Some Other People, and Myself; An Experimental Wooing; Tales by Tom Hall; The Fun and Fighting of the Rough Riders, are prose works. Sto.
- Hall, Tom. See Hall, T. W.
- Hall, Violette. N. Y., 18— - ——. Sister of Ruth Hall, supra. A novelist. Chanticleer.
- Hall, Winfield Scott. Il., 1861- ——. A Chicago physician. Laboratory Guide in Physiology; Anatomy of the Central Nervous System in Man and in Vertebrates; Text Book of Physiology; Elementary Anatomy, Physiology and Hygiene; Intermediate Physiology and Hygiene.
- Hallam, Mrs. Julia [Clark]. Wis., 1860- ——. A writer of Sioux City, Iowa. The Relation of the Sexes from a Scientific Standpoint; The Story of a European Tour.
- Halleck, Reuben Post. N. Y., 1859- ——. An educator, principal of the Male High School at Louisville from 1896. Psychology and Psychic Culture; The Education of the Central Nervous System; Introduction and Notes to Cooper’s “Last of the Mohicans;” History of English Literature. Mac.
- Hallock, Gerard Benjamin Fleet. W. Va., 1856- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Rochester. Upward Steps; The Model Prayer; Sermon Seeds; God’s Whispered Secrets; Beauty in God’s Word; The Homiletic Year; Journeying in the Land Where Jesus Lived. Cr.
- Hallock, Joseph Newton. N. Y., 1834- ——. A Congregational clergyman of New York, editor of the Christian Work. A History of Southampton; First Impressions in Europe; Twice Across the Continent; The Christian Life; Family Worship.
- Hallowell, Mrs. Anna Coffin [Davis]. Pa., 1838- ——. Wife of R. P. Hallowell ([page 167]). James and Lucretia Mott: Life and Letters. Hou.
- Hallowell, Mrs. Sarah Catharine [Fraley]. Pa., 1833- ——. A Philadelphia journalist, an associate editor of the Public Ledger from 1877. On the Church Steps; Nan, the New-Fashioned Girl.
- Hallworth, Joseph Bryant. Ms., 1872- ——. A writer of Lowell, Mass. Arline Valere. Pa.
- Halsey, Francis Whiting. N. Y., 1851- ——. A journalist of New York city. Two Months Abroad; A History of Unadilla and the Headwaters of the Susquehanna; The Old New York Frontier; American Authors and their Homes; Authors of Our Day in their Homes; Our Literary Deluge.
- Halsey, Frederick Arthur. N. Y., 1856- ——. Brother of F. W. Halsey, supra. An engineer of New York city. Slide Valve Gears; The Locomotive Link Motion; The Slide Rule; Worm and Spiral Gearing; The Metric System. Vn.
- Halsey, Harlan Page. “Old Sleuth.” N. Y., 1837-1898. A Brooklyn author who published an immense number of sensational novels, of which Old Sleuth was the chief. He also wrote society novels, among which are My Aggravating Wife; A Lady Bachelor; Her Great Surprise.
- Hamblen, Herbert Elliott. “Frederick Benton Williams.” N. H., 1849- ——. A New York writer who has had a varied experience as sailor and railroad man. On Many Seas; The General Manager’s Story; Tom Benton’s Luck; The Yarn of a Bucko Mate; A Modern Sea Rover; We Win; The Red Shirts. Don. Mac. Scr.
- Hamersley, James Hooker. N. Y., 1844-1901. Son of J. W. Hamersley, infra. A New York littérateur. Seven Voices, a collection of verse. Put.
- Hamersley, John William. N. Y., 1808-1889. A lawyer of New York city. Reminiscences of Lady Hester Stanhope; A Chemical Change in the Eucharist.
- Hamilton, John Taylor. W. I., 1859- ——. A Moravian clergyman of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. History of the Moravian Church in the United States; History of the Moravian Church during the 18th and 19th Centuries; A History of Moravian Missions.
- Hamilton, Peter Joseph. Al., 1859- ——. A lawyer of Mobile. Colonial Mobile; Rambles in Historic Lands. Hou. Put.
- Hamp, Sidford Frederick. E., 1855- ——. A journalist of Colorado Springs. The Treasure of Mushroom Rock. Put.
- Hanchett, Henry Granger. N. Y., 1853- ——. A physician and musician of New York city. Elements of Modern Domestic Medicine; Sexual Health; The Prophylactic and Therapeutic Resources of Mankind; Inquiry in Prophylaxis.
- Hansborough, Mrs. Mary Berri [Chapman.] D. C., 187- - ——. Lyrics of Love and Nature.
- Hanus, Paul. Sil., 1855- ——. A professor of education at Harvard from 1901. Elements of Determinants; Geometry in the Grammar School; Educational Aims and Educational Values; A Modern School.
- Hapgood, Hutchins. Il., 1869- ——. Paul Jones; The Spirit of the Ghetto.
- Hapgood, Norman. Il., 1868- ——. A journalist of New York city, now (1904) on the editorial staff of the Commercial Advertiser. Literary Statesmen and Others, a collection of essays of notable excellence; Abraham Lincoln, the Man of the People; Daniel Webster, a brief biography; Great Actors; Famous Actresses; The Stage in America; George Washington, a brief biography. Mac. Pa. S. Scr. Sm.
- Harben, Will[iam] N[athaniel]. Ga., 1858- ——. A novelist of New York city. White Marie; Almost Persuaded; A Mute Confessor; The Land of the Changing Sun; From Clue to Climax; The Caruthers Affair; Westerfelt; Northern Georgia Sketches; A Woman who Trusted; Abner Daniel; The Substitute; The Georgians. Cas. Lip. Mer. Mg. Har.
- Harding, Chester. N. Y., 1843- ——. A former secretary of the United States legation at Pekin. The Real Chinaman. Do.
- Hardinge, E. M. See Going, Ellen Maud.
- Hare, Hobart Amory. Pa., 1862- ——. A physician of Philadelphia. Among his professional writings are Practical Therapeutics; Fever: its Pathology and Treatment; Epilepsy; Physiological Effects of Tobacco.
- Harley, Lewis Reifsnyder. Pa., 1866- ——. An educator of Philadelphia. Francis Lieber, his Life and Political Philosophy; Three Typical Educational Systems; The High School System; Life of Charles Thomson ([page 380]). Mac.
- Harlow, William Burt. Me., 1856- ——. A professor of English literature at Syracuse University. Songs of Syracuse; Early English Literature; Scenes Abroad, and Other Poems.
- Harper, George McLean. Pa., 1863- ——. A professor of English literature at Princeton University from 1900. The Legend of the Holy Grail; Masters of French Literature. Scr.
- Harriman, Karl Edwin. Mch., 1875- ——. A journalist of Battle Creek, Michigan. Ann Arbor Tales; The Home Builders.
- Harris, Frank Burlingame. N. Y., 18— - ——. An Omaha journalist. The Road to Ridgely’s.
- Harris, Lee O——. Pa., 1839- ——. An Indiana writer of domestic verse. Interludes; The Man who Tramps, a novel.
- Harris, Thomas Le Grand. Ind., 1863- ——. A writer of Sheridan, Indiana. The Evolution of the College Curriculum in the United States; The Trent Affair and Relations with England at the Beginning of the Civil War.
- Harris, William Charles. Md., 1830- ——. A New York editor and publisher. Salmon and Trout. Mac.
- Harrison, Benjamin. O., 1832-1901. The twenty-third President of the United States. This Country of Ours; Views of an Ex-President. See Life of, by L. Wallace. Bo. Cent.
- Hart, Burdett. Ct., 1821- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Fair Haven, Connecticut. Studies of the Model Life; Always Upward; Aspects of Heaven; Biblical Epochs; The Crown Lost and Restored. Rev.
- Hart, Henry Martyn. E., 1838- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Denver from 1870. Elementary Chemistry; Children’s Service Book; A Preacher’s Legacy; A Book of Family Prayer; A Way that Seemeth Right, a work on Christian Science; Priestcraft: Roman and Other.
- Harte, Mrs. Lucy Cecil [White] [Lillie]. See Lillie, Mrs. ([page 230]).
- Hartmann, Sadikichi. Japan. 1867- ——. A New York littérateur, of Japanese and German parentage. Shakespeare in Art; Conversations with Walt Whitman; Schopenhauer in the Air; Modern American Sculpture; Naked Ghosts; History of American Art; Japanese Art. Pa.
- Harvey, John Le Grand. O., 1857- ——. A lawyer of Waltham, Massachusetts. Law as a Factor of Civilization; The Torrens System of Land Transfer.
- Harvey, William Hope. W. Va., 1851- ——. An Arkansas writer on finance. Coin’s Financial School; Tale of Two Nations; Coin’s Financial School Up to Date; Patriots of America; Coin on Money, Trusts and Imperialism.
- Haskins, Caryl Davis. Ms., 1867- ——. An electrical engineer of Schenectady. Transformers, a technical work; For the Queen in South Africa, a volume of short stories. Lit.
- Hastings, Charles Sheldon. 18— - ——. A professor of physics at the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University. Light: a Consideration of the More Familiar Phenomena of Optics. Scr.
- Hastings, Elizabeth. See Sherwood, Margaret P.
- Hathaway, Warren. N. Y., 1828- ——. A Congregational clergyman at Blooming Grove, New York. A Faithful Pastor; Lectures on Living Questions; Studies in Nature and Grace.
- Haupt, Charles Elvin. Pa., 1852- ——. A Lutheran clergyman of Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Stories from Bible History; Life of Emanuel Greenwald ([page 157]).
- Haupt, Paul. G., 1858- ——. A professor of Semitic languages at Johns Hopkins University from 1883. Editor of the Polychrome Bible.
- Hawkes, Clarence. Ms., 1869- ——. A blind lecturer and verse-writer of Hadley, Massachusetts. Pebbles and Shells, a book of verse; Songs for Columbia’s Heroes; Little Foresters.
- Hawley, Gideon. Ct., 1785-1870. The first state superintendent of schools in New York. Essays in Truth and Knowledge.
- Hawthorne, Hildegarde. N. Y., 18— - ——. Daughter of J. Hawthorne ([page 176]). A Country Interlude, a novel. Hou.
- Hay, Gustavus. Ms., 1866-1901. A lawyer of Boston. The Law of Railway Accidents in Massachusetts.
- Hay, Helen. See Whitney, Mrs. Helen.
- Haydn, Hiram Collins. N. Y., 1831- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman and educator of Cleveland. Lay Effort; Death and Beyond; American Heroes on Mission Fields; The Bible and Current Thought; Midsummer Discourses; Brightening the World; The Face Angelic.
- Hayes, John Russell. Pa., 1866- ——. A professor of English at Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania. The Old-Fashioned Garden, and Other Verses; The Brandywine; West Chester Centennial Ode; Swarthmore Idylls.
- Hazard, Marshall Custiss. Pa., 1839- ——. The editor of the Congregational Publication Society from 1885. The Tearless Land; Outline Bible Studies; The Home Department.
- Hazen, Charles Downer. Vt., 1868- ——. A professor of history at Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts, from 1894. Contemporary American Opinion of the French Revolution; a translation of Borgeaud’s Adoption and Amendment of Constitutions in Europe and America. J. H. U. Mac.
- Hazen, Marshman Williams. Ms., 1845- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Observation, Thought, and Expression; Government; History of the United States.
- Heath, Perry Sanford. Ind., 1857- ——. An assistant postmaster-general under President McKinley. A Hoosier in Russia.
- Heaton, John Langdon. N. Y., 1860- ——. A New York city journalist. The Story of Vermont; The Book of Lies; The Quilting Bee, and Other Poems; Stories of Napoleon. Sto.
- Heermans, Forbes. N. Y., 1856- ——. A journalist and playwright of Syracuse. Thirteen Stories of the Far West; Love by Induction, and Other Plays; The Silent Witness, a drama; The Vagabond, a play.
- Hegan, Alice Caldwell. See Rice, Mrs. Alice Caldwell Hegan.
- Heistand, Henry Olcott Sheldon. O., 1856- ——. A United States army officer. Alaska: its History and Description.
- Hemenway, Abby Maria. Vt., 1828-1890. A Vermont historian. Poets and Poetry of Vermont (edited); Rosa Mystica; Rosa Immaculata; House of Gold; Vermont Historical Gazetteer.
- Hemmeter, John Cohn. Md., 1864- ——. A Baltimore physician. The Special Pathology and Treatment of Diseases of the Digestive Organs; Diseases of the Stomach; Theodore Billroth, Surgical and Mental Philosopher; Diseases of the Intestines.
- Hemstreet, Charles. N. Y., 1866- ——. A New York journalist. Nooks and Corners of Old New York; The Calendar of Old New York; The Story of Manhattan; When Old New York was Young; Literary New York: its Landmarks and Associations; The Flower of the Fort. Put. Scr.
- Henderson, Charles Hanford. Pa., 1861- ——. An educator. Physics; Education and the Larger Life; John Percyfield. Hou.
- Henderson, Charles Richmond. Ind., 1848- ——. A Baptist clergyman in Chicago. Introduction to Study of Dependents, Defectives, and Delinquents; Social Elements; Social Settlements; Development of Doctrine in the Epistles; The Social Spirit in America. Scr.
- Henderson, Marc Antony. See Strong, G. A.
- Henderson, John Brooks. La., 1870- ——. Son of Mrs. M. F. Henderson ([page 180]). A lawyer of Washington. American Diplomatic Questions.
- Henry, Arthur. Il., 1867- ——. A Toledo journalist. A Princess of Arcady; An Island Cabin; The House in the Woods. Bar.
- Henry, Stuart Oliver. N. Y., 1860- ——. An author long resident in Paris. Paris Days and Evenings; Hours with Famous Parisians; French Etudes and Rhapsodies.
- Henry, William Arnon. O., 1850- ——. An educator, dean of the College of Agriculture, Wisconsin University, from 1891. Experiments in Amber Cane and the Ensilage of Fodder; A Handbook of Northern Wisconsin; Feeds and Feeding, a Handbook for the Student and Stockman.
- Henshall, James Alexander. Md., 1836- ——. The superintendent of the Government Fish Commission Station at Bozeman, Montana, from 1896. Book of the Black Bass; Camping and Cruising in Florida; More about the Black Bass; Ye Gods and Little Fishes; Bass, Pike, Perch, and Others. Clke. Mac.
- Hensley, Mrs. Sophie M—— [Almon]. N. S., 1866- ——. A verse-writer of New York city. A Woman’s Love Letters; Souls.
- Herbermann, Charles George. Wa., 1840- ——. A professor of Latin in the College of the City of New York from 1869. Business Life in Ancient Rome.
- Herbert, Hilary Abner. S. C., 1834- ——. The secretary of the navy, 1893-1897. History of Efforts to Increase the United States Navy; Why the Solid South? (edited).
- Herford, Oliver. E., 18— - ——. A humorous artist and verse-writer of New York city. The Bashful Earthquake, and Other Tales and Verses; Artful Antics; An Alphabet of Celebrities; Wagner for Infants; Child’s Primer of Natural History; More Animals; Overheard in a Garden. Scr. Sm.
- Herne, James A——. N. Y., 1839-1901. A New York actor and playwright. Hearts of Oak; The Minute Men; Drifting Apart; Margaret Fleming; Sag Harbor; Shore Acres.
- Herrick, Clarence Luther. Min., 1858- ——. An educator, formerly president of the University of New Mexico. Mammals of Minnesota; Entomostraca of Minnesota; Waverly Group of Ohio.
- Herrick, Francis Hobart. Vt., 1858- ——. A professor of biology at Adelbert College, Cleveland, Ohio. The American Lobster: its Habits and Developments; The Home Life of Wild Birds. Put.
- Herrick, Robert [Welch]. Ms., 1868- ——. A novelist, assistant professor of rhetoric at the University of Chicago. The Man who Wins; Literary Love-Letters, and Other Stories; The Gospel of Freedom; Love’s Dilemma; Composition and Rhetoric (with L. T. Damon); The Real World; The Web of Life; Their Child; The Common Lot.
- Herringshaw, Thomas William. E., 1858- ——. A Chicago publisher and author. Home Occupations; Prominent Men and Women of the Day; Aids to Literary Success; Mulierology; Herringshaw’s Encyclopædia of American Biography.
- Herschel, Clemens. Ia., 1842- ——. A New York hydraulic engineer. Continuous Revolving Drawbridges; One Hundred and Fifteen Experiments; Frontinus and the Water Supply of the City of Rome. Est. Wil.
- Hersey, George Dallas. Ms., 1847- ——. A Providence physician. Medical History of the Colony and State of Rhode Island.
- Hersey, Heloise Edwina. Me., 1855- ——. A prominent educator in Boston. To Girls: a Budget of Letters. Sm.
- Hertor, Christian Archibald. Ct., 1865- ——. A New York physician. Diagnosis of Nervous Diseases; Lectures on Chemical Pathology.
- Hewins, Caroline Maria. Ms., 1846- ——. The librarian of the Hartford public library from 1892. Books for the Young; Books for Boys and Girls.
- Heydecker, Edward Le Moyne. N. Y., 1863- ——. A New York lawyer. Commentary on Mechanics’ Liens; War Revenue Law.
- Hibben, John Grier. Il., 1861- ——. A professor of philosophy at Princeton University from 1893. Inductive Logic; The Problems of Philosophy. Hegel’s Logic. Scr.
- Hicks, Frederick Charles. Mch., 1863- ——. An educator. Territorial Revenue System of Missouri; The Government of the People of Missouri; Economics: a Study of Fundamental Principles.
- Hicks, Lewis Ezra. 18— - ——. A professor of geology in Denison University, Granville, Ohio. A Critique of Design Arguments: or an Examination of the Methods of Reasoning in Natural Theology. Scr.
- Hill, Frances. Pa., 1875- ——. The Outlaws of Horseshoe Hole. Scr.
- Hill, Frederick Trevor. N. Y., 1866- ——. A New York lawyer. Miniatures of Balzac (with S. P. Griffin); The Case and Exceptions, a collection of short stories; The Care of Estates; The Minority, a novel. Ap. Sto.
- Hill, Mrs. Grace [Livingston]. N. Y., 1865- ——. A Philadelphia writer. A Chautauqua Idyl; A Parkerstown Delegate; A Little Servant; Katherine’s Yesterday; In the Way; Lone Point; A Daily Rate; An Unwilling Guest; The Angel of His Presence; According to the Pattern. Lo.
- Hill, Henry. N. Y., 1795-188-. Southern Africa; Recollections of an Octogenarian.
- Hill, John Ethan. Ct., 1865- ——. A professor of mathematics at Columbia University from 1895. Bibliography of Surfaces and Twisted Curves; Shades, Shadows, and Perspective. Wil.
- Hill, Joseph Adna. N. H., 1860- ——. A statistician of Washington city. The English Income Tax, with Special Reference to Administration and Method of Assessment. Mac.
- Hill, Robert Thomas. Tn., 1858- ——. A geologist of Washington city. Cuba, Porto Rico, with the Other Islands of the West Indies. Cent.
- Hill, Thomas Edie. Vt., 1832- ——. An author of Glen Ellyn, Illinois. Hill’s Manual of Social and Business Forms; Album of Biography; Condensed Political History; Money Found; Ways of Cruelty.
- Hillegas, Howard Clemens. Pa., 1872- ——. A journalist, correspondent of the New York World during the Boer War. Oom Paul’s People; The Boers in War; With the Boers in War.
- Hillis, Newell Dwight. Ia., 1858- ——. A prominent Presbyterian clergyman, formerly pastor of the Independent Church of Chicago, but since March, 1899, of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn. A Man’s Value to Society; The Investment of Influence; Foretokens of Immortality; How the Inner Light Failed; The Quest of Happiness; The Social Problems of the Republic; Right Living as a Fine Art; Great Books as Life Teachers; David: the Poet and King; The Influence of Christ in Modern Life. Rev.
- Hinds, John Iredell Dillard. N. C., 1847- ——. An educator. Using Tobacco; Charles Darwin; American System of Education; Inorganic Chemistry; Chemistry by Experiment.
- Hinman, Russell. O., 1853- ——. A geographer in New York city who has published a series of geographical text-books.
- Hinsdale, Mrs. Grace Webster [Haddock]. N. H., 1832- ——. A hymn-writer of New York city. Coming to the King, a Book of Daily Devotion for Children; Thinking Aloud.
- Hinton, Richard Josiah. E., 1830-1901. A Washington journalist. Life of Abraham Lincoln; Life of William H. Seward; English Radical Leaders; Handbook of Arizona; John Brown; The Making of the New West; Life of General Sheridan.
- Hirth, Friedrich. G., 1845- ——. A professor of Chinese literature at Columbia University from 1902. China and the Roman Orient; Notes on the Chinese Documentary Style; Ancient Porcelain; Textbook of Documentary Chinese; Chinesische Studien; Ueber fremde Einflüsse in der Chinesischen Kunst.
- Hitchcock, Mrs. Caroline Hanks. Ms., 1863- ——. A Cambridge writer. Nancy Hanks, the Story of Abraham Lincoln’s Mother; The History of the Hanks Family in America.
- Hoadley, Frederic Hodges. Ct., 1849- ——. A physician and ethnologist. Human Discords.
- Hoadley, George Arthur. Ms., 1848- ——. A professor of physics at Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania, since 1883. Brief Course in Physics; Teachers’ Manual of Physics; Elementary Measurements in Magnetism and Electricity. Am.
- Hoar, George Frisbie. Ms., 1826-1904. A Massachusetts statesman, a member of the national Senate from 1876. Autobiography of Seventy Years. Scr.
- Hobson, Richmond Pearson. N. C., 1870- ——. A naval officer, distinguished for bravery in the Spanish-American War. The Sinking of the Merrimac; The Disappearing Gun Afloat. Cent.
- Hodder, Alfred [LeRoy]. O., 1866- ——. The Powers that Prey (with “Josiah Flynt”); The Specious Present; The New Americans; A Fight for the City.
- Hodgin, Cyrus Wilburn. Ind., 1842- ——. A professor of history at Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana, from 1887. Outline of Course of Study in United States History; Outline of Civil Government in Indiana; Indiana and the Nation; A Study of the American Commonwealth. He.
- Hoff, William Bainbridge. Pa., 1846-1903. Examples, Conclusions, and Maxims of Modern Naval Tactics; The Avoidance of Collisions at Sea; Elementary Naval Tactics. Vn. Wil.
- Hoffman, Charles Frederick. N. Y., 1830-1897. Brother of E. A. Hoffman ([page 188]). An Episcopal clergyman, rector of All-Angels’ Church, New York city, 1873-97. All the Week Through; Days and Nights with Jesus.
- Hoffman, Frank Sargent. Wis., 1857- ——. A professor of philosophy at Union College, Schenectady, from 1885. The Sphere of the State; The Sphere of Science. Put.
- Hoffmann, Ralph. Ms., 1870- ——. An educator and ornithologist of Belmont, Massachusetts. Bird World (with J. H. Stickney); Bird Portraits; Birds of Berkshire County (with W. Faxon); A Guide to the Birds of New England and Eastern New York. Gi. Hou.
- Hofman, Heinrich Oscar. G., 1852- ——. A professor of metallurgy in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The Metallurgy of Lead; Metallurgy of Iron and Steel.
- Hogan, John Baptist. I., 1829-1901. A Roman Catholic clergyman of prominence, for thirty years professor in the Theological School of Saint Sulpice at Paris. In 1884 he became president of Saint John’s Ecclesiastical Seminary at Brighton, Massachusetts, continuing in that position until 1889, and again from 1894 till his death. From 1889 to 1894 he was president of Divinity College of the Catholic University at Washington city. Clerical Studies; Daily Thoughts for Priests. Mar.
- Hogan, Mrs. Louise E—— [Shimer]. Pa., 1855- ——. A writer on domestic science. How to Feed Children; A Study of a Child; Education and Amusement of Children; Children’s Diet in Home and School. Har. Lip.
- Holbrook, Florence. Il., 185- - ——. An educator of Chicago. Elementary Geography; Round the Year in Myth and Song; The Book of Nature Myths. Ra. Hou.
- Holcombe, Chester. N. Y., 1844- ——. A diplomatist long connected with the United States legation at Peking, China. The Real Chinaman; The Real Chinese Question. Do.
- Holland, William Jacob. W. I., 1848- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, chancellor of the Western University of Pennsylvania at Pittsburgh, from 1891. The Butterfly Book. Dou.
- Hollander, Jacob Harry. Md., 1871- ——. An educator. History of the Cincinnati Southern Railway; Financial History of Baltimore; Studies in State Legislation.
- Holley, George Washington. Ct., 1810-1897. A writer long resident at Niagara Falls, New York. Niagara: its History and Geology; The Falls of Niagara; Magnetism or the New Cosmography.
- Hollister, Horace. Pa., 1822- ——. A physician and local historian of Scranton, Pennsylvania. History of the Lackawanna Valley; Coal Notes.
- Holls, George Frederick William. Pa., 1857-1903. A lawyer of New York city. Franz Lieber, his Life and Work; Sancta Sophia and Troitza; Compulsory Voting; The Peace Conference at the Hague. Mac.
- Holt, Henry. Md., 1840- ——. A prominent publisher of New York city. Talks on Civics.
- Holyoke, Edward. Ms., 1689-1769. A Congregational clergyman, eleventh president of Harvard College. The Testimony of the President, Professors and Tutors and Hebrew Instructor of Harvard against the Reverend George Whitefield and His Conduct.
- Hood, James Walker. Pa., 1831- ——. A bishop in the African Methodist church from 1872. The Negro in the Christian Church; One Hundred Years of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church; The Plan of the Apocalypse.
- Hooker, Charles Edward. S. C., 1825- ——. A Mississippi soldier and congressman. Confederate Military History of Mississippi (1900).
- Hoopes, Josiah. Pa., 1832-1904. A botanist and nurseryman of West Chester, Pennsylvania. Evergreens of the World.
- Hope, Matthew Boyd. Pa., 1812-1859. A New Jersey educator, professor of belles-lettres and political economy at Princeton College 1846-1859. Considerations on a Call to the Ministry; Christianity the Only Basis of Free Institutions; Princeton Textbook on Rhetoric.
- Hopkins, Abel Grosvenor. N. Y., 1844-1899. A professor of Latin at Hamilton College, Clinton, New York, 1869-1899. Memorial Volume of O. S. Williams; Early Protestant Missions among the Iroquois; Memorial of Theodore Dwight; and an edition of Tacitus.
- Hopkins, Herbert Müller. Mo., 1870- ——. A professor of Latin in Trinity College, Hartford. The Fighting Bishop, a novel.
- Hopkins, Mrs. Margaret Sutton [Briscoe]. Md., 1864- ——. A story-writer of Amherst, Massachusetts. Perchance to Dream, and Other Stories; Jimty and Others; Links in a Chain; The Sixth Sense, and Other Stories. Do. Har.
- Hopkins, Mrs. Pauline Bradford [Mackie]. Ct., 1873- ——. Wife of H. M. Hopkins, supra. A novelist who has published Mademoiselle de Bernay: a Story of Valley Forge; Ye Lytle Salem Maide; A Georgian Actress; The Washingtonians; The Story of Kate; The Voice in the Desert; The Flight of Rosy Dawn. Pa.
- Hopkins, Thomas Cramer. Pa., 1861- ——. A professor of geology in Syracuse University from 1900. The Building Materials of Pennsylvania; Marble and Other Limestones; Geology of Coal, and other reports on geology.
- Hopper, Edward. N. Y., 1816-1888. A Presbyterian clergyman of New York city, pastor for many years of the Church of the Sea and Land. The Fire on the Hearth in Sleepy Hollow, a Christmas Poem; The Dutch Pilgrim Fathers, and Other Poems; One Wife too Many; Old Horse Gray and the Parish of Grumbleton.
- Horsford, Cornelia. Ms., 1861- ——. Daughter of E. N. Horsford ([page 195]). An archæologist of Cambridge. The Graves of the Northmen; Dwellings of the Saga-Time in Iceland; Greenland and Vinland; Vinland and its Ruins.
- Horton, Edward Augustus. Ms., 1843- ——. A prominent Unitarian clergyman of Boston, among whose writings are: Noble Lives and Noble Deeds; Story of Israel; Scenes in the Life of Jesus; Beacon Lights of Christian History; Our Faith.
- Horton, George. N. Y., 1859- ——. A Chicago journalist who was for some time American consul at Athens. Songs of the Lowly; In Unknown Seas; Constantine: a Tale of Greece under King Otho; Aphroessa; A Fair Brigand; Like Another Helen; The Tempting of Father Anthony; Modern Athens; War and Mammon, a collection of verse; The Long Straight Road; In Argolis. S.
- Hotchkin, Samuel Fitch. N. Y., 1833- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Philadelphia. Ancient and Modern Germantown; Early Clergy of Pennsylvania and Delaware; The Country Clergy of Pennsylvania; Pocket Gazetteer of Pennsylvania; A Splendid Inheritance; The Living Saviour.
- Hotchkiss, Chauncey Crafts. N. Y., 1852- ——. A novelist of New York city. In Defiance of the King; Betsey Ross, a Romance of the Flag; The Strength of the Weak; For a Maiden Brave. Ap.
- Hott, James William. Va., 1844-1902. A clergyman of the United Brethren body, long editor of a religious journal in Dayton, Ohio. Journeyings in the Old World; The Marvellous Conversion of Marshall O. Waggoner.
- Hough, E[merson]. Ia., 1857- ——. A Chicago journalist. The Singing Mouse Stories; The Story of the Cowboy; The Girl at the Half-way House; The Mississippi Bubble; The Settlement of the West; The Law of the Land. Ap. Bo.
- Houghton, Mrs. Louise Seymour. N. Y., 1838- ——. A writer of New York city, on the editorial staff of The Evangelist. Beside publishing a number of translations of foreign juvenile works and of Sabatier’s Saint Francis of Assisi, she has written Fifine; The Sabbath Month; Faithful to the End; The Log of the Lady Grey; Antipas, Son of Chuza, and Others whom Jesus Loved. Bon. Ran. Scr.
- Houston, Edwin James. Va., 1844- ——. An electrical engineer, one of the inventors of the Thomson-Houston system of arc-lighting. Elements of Physical Geography; Dictionary of Electrical Words, Terms, and Phrases; Elements of Physics.
- Hovey, Carl. See Hovey, Charles Henry.
- Hovey, Charles Henry. Ms., 1875- ——. A journalist. Life of Stonewall Jackson. Sm.
- How, Louis. Mo., 1873- ——. A St. Louis writer. Life of James B. Eades. Hou.
- How, Samuel Blanchard. N. J., 1790-1868. A clergyman who held Dutch Reformed and Presbyterian pastorates in New Jersey and New York. Slaveholding not Sinful; The Gospel Ministry.
- Howard, Clifford. Pa., 1868- ——. A Washington writer. Sex Worship; The Story of a Young Man, a life of Christ; Tenatsali, a dramatic poem of the Zuñi.
- Howard, George Elliott. N. Y., 1849- ——. A professor of history at Leland Stanford Junior University from 1891. An Introduction to the Constitution of the United States; Development of the King’s Peace and the Local Peace Magistracy. J. H. U.
- Howard, Joseph. N. Y., 1833- ——. A popular newspaper correspondent of New York city. Life of Henry Ward Beecher.
- Howard, Leland Ossian. Il., 1857- ——. An entomologist employed in the department of agriculture at Washington. The Insect Book; Mosquitoes.
- Howard, William Lee. Ct., 1862- ——. A physician. The Perverts.
- Howe, Andrew Jackson. Ms., 1825-1892. A surgeon of Cincinnati. Treatise on Fractures and Dislocations; Manual of Eye Surgery; Operative Gynæcology; Conversations on Animal Life.
- Howe, Mrs. Caroline Dana. Me., 183- - ——. A verse-writer of Portland, Maine, best known by her lyric, Leaf by Leaf the Roses Fall; Ashes for Flame, and Other Poems.
- Howe, Daniel Wait. Ind., 1839- ——. A jurist of Indianapolis. The Puritan Republic of the Massachusetts Bay in New England; Civil War Times. Bo.
- Howe, Malverd Abijah. Vt., 1863- ——. A professor of civil engineering at Rose Polytechnic Institute, Terre Haute, Indiana. Retaining Walls for Earth; Sabula Draw by Graphics; Treatise on Arches. Wil.
- Howe, Mark Antony DeWolfe. R. I., 1864- ——. Son of M. A. DeW. Howe ([page 198]). A littérateur of Boston. Shadows, a book of verse; American Bookmen; Phillips Brooks, a brief biography; Boston: the Place and the People. Cop. Do. Sm.
- Howe, Reginald Heber. Ms., 1846- ——. Son of M. A. DeW. Howe ([page 198]). An Episcopal clergyman of Brookline, Massachusetts. The Creed and the Year; The Call to Confirmation; Quadragesima.
- Howe, Reginald Heber. Ms., 1875- ——. Son of R. H. Howe, supra. An ornithologist. Every Bird; The Birds’ Highway; The Birds of Rhode Island (with E. Sturtevant); The Birds of Massachusetts (with G. M. Allen). Sm.
- Howe, William Wirt. N. Y., 1833- ——. An associate justice of the Supreme Court of Louisiana. Municipal History of New Orleans; Studies in the Civil Law. Lit.
- Howell, George Rogers. L. I., 1833-1899. A librarian of Albany from 1872, but previously in the Presbyterian ministry. The Early History of Southampton, Long Island, with Genealogies; The Bi-Centennial History of Albany (with J. Tenney); Noah’s Log Book, a novel.
- Howell, John Adams. N. Y., 1840- ——. A rear-admiral in the United States navy from 1898. Deviations of the Compass; Marine Surveying; Observations on the Dip of the Sea Horizon.
- Howland, [Albert] Franklyn. R. I., 1843- ——. A genealogist of Acushnet, Massachusetts. The Howlands of America.
- Howlett, Thomas Rosling. E., 1827-1898. A Baptist clergyman who held pastorates in New York and New Jersey. Anglo-Israel and the Jewish Problem; The Bible a Sealed Book, Why?; Songs of Israel; Baptismal Souvenir.
- Hoy, Albert Harris. 184- - ——. A surgeon and physician of Chicago. Eating and Drinking. Ma.
- Hoyt, Charles Hale. N. H., 1860-1900. A popular farce-writer of New York city. A Bunch of Keys; A Constant Woman; A Trip to China Town; A Brass Monkey; A Temperance Town, are among his many productions.
- Hoyt, Deristhe Lavinta. N. H., 184- - ——. A lecturer on the history of painting in the Massachusetts Normal Art School. Historic Schools of Painting; The World’s Painters and Their Pictures; Barbara’s Heritage. Gi. Wi.
- Hubbard, Richard Bennett. Ga., 1835-1901. A diplomatist who was United States minister to Japan 1883-90. The United States in the Far East, or Modern Japan and the Orient.
- Hubbell, Walter. Pa., 1851- ——. A novelist of New York city. The Curse of Marriage, a story; The Great Amherst Mystery; Marcus Brutus, and Other Verses; History of the Hubbell Family.
- Huddilston, John Homer. O., 1869- ——. A professor of Greek in the University of Maine from 1899. Essentials of New Testament Greek; The Attitude of the Greek Tragedians Towards Art; Greek Tragedy in the Light of Vase Paintings; Lessons from Greek Pottery. Mac.
- Huestis, Alexander Comstock. N. Y., 1819-1895. An educator who published Principles in Natural Philosophy.
- Huffcut, Ernest Wilson. Ct., 1860- ——. A professor of law at Cornell University from 1893. American Cases on Contract; American edition of Anson on Contract; Elements of the Law of Agency; Cases on Agency; Negotiable Instruments.
- Hughes, Nicholas Collin. Pa., 1822-1893. An Episcopal clergyman in North Carolina. Genesis and Geology.
- Hughes, Rupert. Mo., 1872- ——. A writer of books for boys. The Lakerim Athletic Club; The Dozen from Lakerim; The Whirlwind; Love Affairs of Great Musicians; The Real New York. Lo.
- Hughes, Thomas Aloysius. E., 1849- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman of the Society of Jesus, long attached to the St. Louis University at St. Louis. The Acolyte, a story for Catholic Youth; Four Lectures on Anthropology and Biology; Loyola and the Educational System of the Jesuits. Scr.
- Hughes, Thomas Patrick. E., 1838- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of New York city from 1885, and for twenty years previously an English missionary in Northern India. Notes on Muhammadanism; Dictionary of Islam; Ruhainah, a Story of Afghan Life; American Ancestry; Heroic Lives in Foreign Lands; The Stage from a Clergyman’s Standpoint. He has also published several text-books in Pushto, the Afghan language, and several editions of Afghan poets. Scr. Wh.
- Huidekoper, Rush Shippen. Pa., 1854-1901. Brother of H. S. Huidekoper, supra. A Philadelphia physician of prominence. Age of Domestic Animals; The Cat; The Veterinary Blue Book.
- Hulbert, Archer Butler. Vt., 1873- ——. A journalist. The Queen of Quelparte; Historic Highways of America: the Cumberland Road. Lit.
- Humphrey, Zephine. Pa., 1874- ——. A fiction-writer of Dorset, Vermont. The Calling of the Apostle; Uncle Charley. Bon. Hou.
- Humphreys, Frank Landon. N. Y., 1858- ——. An Episcopal clergyman resident (1904) in Morristown, New Jersey, who has written and lectured on musical and historical themes, and is an authority upon church music. The Evolution of Church Music; The Mystery of the Passion; English Church Music; Men of Understanding; Carols and Carolling; Chaplains of the Revolution. Scr.
- Huneker, James Gibbons. Pa., 1859- ——. A musician and essayist. Mezzotints in Modern Music; Chopin: the Man and his Music; Melomaniacs; Overtones: a Book of Temperaments. Scr.
- Hunnicutt, James W——. S. C., 1814- ——. A clergyman who published The Conspiracy Unveiled, or the Horrors of Secession.
- Hunt, Edward Bissell. Ms., 1822-1863. A military engineer. Union Foundations: a Study of American Nationality.
- Hunt, Gaillard. La., 1862- ——. A government official at Washington city. The Life of James Madison; The Seal of the United States; The Department of State of the United States; The American Passport.
- Hunt, Sanford. N. Y., 1825-1896. A Methodist clergyman of prominence, long associated with the Methodist Book Concern. Handbook for Trustees of Religious Corporations in the State of New York; Laws Relating to Religious Corporations in the United States. Meth.
- Hunt, Sanford Bebee. N. Y., 1825-1884. A journalist and surgeon of Buffalo. History of the United States Sanitary Commission; The Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion.
- Hunter, William Randolph. “Joseph Bradford.” Tn., 1843-1886. A journalist and playwright. Among his plays, Our Bachelors, and One of the Finest, have been the most popular.
- Huntington, Annie Oakes. ——., 18— - ——. Studies of Trees in Winter (1902).
- Huntington, Archer Milton. N. Y., 1870- ——. A New York littérateur. A Note Book in Northern Spain. Put.
- Huntington, De Witt Clinton. Vt., 1830- ——. A Methodist clergyman, chancellor of Wesleyan University at Lincoln, Nebraska, from 1898. The Cotton King and the Rum King; The Puritans; Sin and Holiness.
- Hurd, Edward Payson. Q., 1838-1899. A physician of Newburyport. Sleep, Insomnia, and Hypnotics; Neuralgia.
- Hurll, Estelle May. Ms., 1863- ——. An art lecturer who, beside editing the art works of Mrs. Jameson, with additional notes, has written The Life of Our Lord in Art; Child Life in Art; The Madonna in Art; Raphael; Rembrandt; Michelangelo; Millet; Reynolds; Murillo; Titian; Landseer; Correggio; Van Dyck; Greek Sculpture; Tuscan Sculpture. Hou. Pa.
- Hussey, William Joseph. O., 1862- ——. An astronomer in Lick Observatory, California, from 1896. Logarithmic and Other Mathematical Tables; Mathematical Theories of Planetary Motions.
- Hutchinson, Aaron. Ct., 1722-1800. A Congregational clergyman and educator. Valour for the Truth; Coming out of Christ; Meat out of the Eater, or Samson’s Riddle Unriddled.
- Hutchinson, John Russell. Pa., 1807-1878. A Presbyterian clergyman and educator in Texas. Reminiscences, Sketches, and Addresses.
- Hutchinson, John Wallace. N. H., 1821- ——. A once noted vocalist. The Story of the Hutchinsons. Le.
- Hutten, Elizabeth [Riddle], Baroness von. Pa., 187- - ——. A novelist of American birth, resident in Bavaria. Our Lady of the Beeches; Violett; Miss Carmichael’s Conscience; Marr’d in Making. Hou. Lip.
- Hutton, Frederick Remsen. N. Y., 1853- ——. A professor of mechanical engineering at Columbia University. Mechanical Engineering of Power Plants; Machine Tools; Heat and Heat Engines. Wil.
- Hyde, Ammi Bradford. N. Y., 1826- ——. A Methodist clergyman. The Story of Methodism; Essays.
- Hyde, James Thomas. Ct., 1827-1887. A Congregational clergyman, professor at Chicago Theological Seminary, 1870-1887. A New Testament Introduction; A New Catechism or Manual of Instruction.
- I
- Ide, Mrs. Frances Otis [Ogden]. “Ruth Ogden.” L. I., 1853- ——. A popular Brooklyn writer of juvenile tales. A Little Queen of Hearts; His Little Royal Highness; A Loyal Little Red-Coat; Courage; Little Homespun; Loyal Hearts and True; Tattine; A Christmas Message. Sto.
- Iglehart, Mrs. Fannie [Chambers] [Gooch]. Mi., 1851- ——. Face to Face with the Mexicans; Christmas in Old Mexico; The Boy Captive of the Wier Expedition.
- Ingersoll, Mrs. Julia Harriet [Pratt]. N. Y., 182- -1898. A religious writer of New Haven. The Coming of the Angels; Easter Even through Whitsuntide; Gathered Waifs, a book of verse.
- Ingham, Ellery P——. Pa., 1856- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. At the Point of the Sword.
- Ingle, Edward. Md., 1861- ——. An historical writer. Local Institutions of Maryland; Local Institutions of Virginia; Southern Sidelights. Cr. J. H. U.
- Inglis, Charles. I., 1734-1816. The first Protestant Episcopal bishop of Nova Scotia, but previously rector of Trinity Church, New York city, and conspicuous as a Loyalist. Letters of Papinian, a noted contribution to political controversy; The True Interest of America; Infant Baptism. See Tyler’s Literary History of the American Revolution.
- Ingraham, John Phillips Thurston. Me., 1817- ——. Brother of J. H. Ingraham ([page 204]). An Episcopal clergyman of St. Louis. Mother’s Talks with her Little Folk; Why we Believe the Bible; The Christian Faith traced from the Garden of Eden.
- Ingraham, Prentiss. Mi., 1843-1904. Son of J. H. Ingraham ([page 204]). A voluminous writer of sensational fiction who served in the Confederate army during the Civil War and as a soldier of fortune in various countries since. Among his over seven hundred productions may be named: Afloat and Ashore; The Cuban; The Shades and Shadows of Gotham; Montezuma; A Knight of the Plains; In Golden Fetters; Cadet Carey; Red Rovers on Blue Waters; In Satan’s Coil; An American Monte Cristo; Trailing with Buffalo Bill; Land of Legendary Lore.
- Inman, Henry. N. Y., 1837-1899. A United States army officer. The Old Santa Fé Trail: the Story of a Great Highway; The Great Salt Lake Trail; The Ranch on the Oxhide; Tales of the Trail; Pioneer from Kentucky; The Delahoyles. Mac.
- Irby, Richard. Va., 1825-1902. A Virginia author. History of the Nottaway Grays; History of Randolph-Macon College; Bird Notes and Other Sketches.
- Ireland, Alleyne. E., 1871- ——. A lecturer who has published Demerariana; Tropical Colonization; The Anglo-Boer Conflict; China and the Powers. Mac.
- Ireland, John. I., 1838- ——. The Roman Catholic archbishop of St. Paul, well known as a writer and speaker upon educational themes. The Church and Modern Society.
- Ireland, Mrs. Mary E—— [Haines]. Md., 1834- ——. A Washington writer for young people, among whose many books are: What I Told Dorcas; An Obstinate Maid; Doris and Her Mountain Home; The First School Year.
- Ironquill. See Ware, E. F.
- Irwin, John Arthur. I., 1853- ——. A New York physician. Hydrotherapy at Saratoga; Pathology of Sea Sickness.
- Irwin, Wallace. N. Y., 1875- ——. A San Francisco journalist. The Love Sonnets of a Hoodlum; The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám, Jr.
- Isaacs, Abram Samuel. N. Y., 1852- ——. A Hebrew rabbi of Paterson, New Jersey. Stories from the Rabbis; Moses Chaim Luzatto, a Modern Hebrew Poet.
- Isham, Asa Brainerd. O., 1844- ——. A Cincinnati physician. Prisoners of War and Military Prisons.
- Isham, Frederic Stewart. Mch., 1866- ——. The Strollers; Under the Rose; The Toy Shop; Black Friday.
- Isham, Norman Morrison. Ct., 1864- ——. An architect of Providence. Early Rhode Island Houses (with A. F. Brown); The Homeric Palace; Early Connecticut Houses (with A. F. Brown). Pr.
- Ives, Charles Linnæus. Ct., 1831-1879. A medical professor at Yale University, 1868-73. Prophylaxis of Phthisis Pulmonalis; The Therapeutic Value of Mercury and its Preparations; Bible Doctrine of the Soul.
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- Jackman, Wilbur Samuel. O., 1855- ——. A professor of teaching of natural science in the University of Chicago from 1901. Nature Study for the Common Schools; Field Work in Nature Study, and other similar works.
- Jackson, Abraham Valentine Williams. N. Y., 1862- ——. A professor of Indo-Iranian languages at Columbia University from 1895. Zoroaster, the Prophet of Ancient Iran; An Avestan Reader; An Avestan Grammar.
- Jackson, Dugald Caleb. Pa., 1865- ——. A civil engineer of prominence. Electro-Magnetism and Construction of Dynamos; Electricity and Magnetism; Alternating Currents and Alternating Current Machinery.
- Jackson, Gabrielle Emilie. N. Y., 1861- ——. A writer of juvenile books. Denise and Ned Toodles; Pretty Polly Perkins; Caps and Capers; A Blue Grass Beauty; Little Miss Sunshine; Colburn Prize; Doughnuts and Diplomas; Grace, Dis-Grace, and Scape-Grace.
- Jackson, Jonathan. Ms., 1743-1810. An eminent Massachusetts citizen who was the author of Thoughts upon the Political Situation of the United States. (1788).
- Jackson, Lewis Evans. S. I., 1822- ——. A Presbyterian layman, long prominent in city missionary work in New York city. Gospel Work; Christian Work in New York.
- Jackson, Mrs. Margaret [Doyle]. Ba., 1868- ——. A novelist of New York city. A Daughter of the Pit; The Horse-Leech’s Daughters. Hou.
- Jackson, Samuel. Pa., 1787-1872. A Philadelphia physician. Principles of Medicine (1832); Medical Essays.
- Jackson, Samuel Macauley. N. Y., 1851- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, professor of church history in the University of the City of New York. Beside editing many volumes of religious biography, he has written a Life of Zwingli, in a series of Heroes of the Reformation. Put.
- Jacobs, Joseph. W., 1854- ——. A New York author who has resided in the United States from 1900. Among his many published works are English Fairy Tales; Studies in Jewish Statistics; Indian Fairy Tales; Tennyson and In Memoriam; An Inquiry into the Sources of the History of the Jews in Spain; Jewish Ideals and Other Essays; Literary Studies; The Story of Geographical Study; Studies in Biblical Archæology.
- Jacobus, Melanchthon Williams. Pa., 1855- ——. Son of M. W. Jacobus ([page 206]). A Presbyterian clergyman, professor at Hartford Theological Seminary from 1891. Stone Lectures for 1897-98.
- Jacoby, Harold. N. Y., 1865- ——. A professor of astronomy at Columbia University from 1894. Practical Talks by an Astronomer. Scr.
- Jacoby, Henry Sylvester. Pa., 1857- ——. A professor of engineering at Cornell University from 1890. Notes and Problems in Descriptive Geometry; Outlines of Descriptive Geometry; Textbook on Plain Lettering; Textbook on Roofs and Bridges (with Merriman).
- Jaeger, Abraham. A., 1839- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Lynchburg, Virginia, but prior to 1872 a Jewish rabbi. Mind and Heart in Religion; Infant Baptism versus Converted Membership.
- Jaggar, Thomas Augustus. N. Y., 1839- ——. The first Protestant Episcopal bishop of the diocese of Southern Ohio. He resigned in 1904. The Man of the Ages, and Other Recent Sermons; The Personality of Truth. Wh.
- Jaggar, Thomas Augustus. Pa., 1871- ——. Son of T. A. Jaggar, supra. A geologist in Government service. The Lacoliths of the Black Hills.
- Jaggard, Edwin Ames. Pa., 1859- ——. A lawyer of Saint Paul. Jaggard on Torts; Jaggard on Taxation in Minnesota and North and South Dakota; Jaggard on Taxation in Iowa.
- Jak. See Williams, Mrs. Anna ([page 425]).
- James, Mrs. Alice Archer [Sewall]. O., 1870- ——. Daughter of F. Sewall ([page 337]). Ode to Girlhood, and Other Poems; The Ballad of the Prince.
- James, Bushrod Washington. Pa., 1836-1903. A Philadelphia oculist. Alaskana, or Alaska in Descriptive and Legendary Poems; American Resorts; Echoes of Battle; Alaska: its Neglected Past and its Brilliant Future; The Dawn of a New Era in America.
- James, Charles Fenton. Va., 1844- ——. A Virginia educator. Documentary History of the Struggle for Religious Freedom in Virginia (1900).
- James, George Francis. Il., 1867- ——. An educator in Los Angeles. Handbook of University Extension; Memorial of John A. Logan.
- James, George Wharton. E., 1858- ——. An explorer and ethnologist. Tourists’ Guide to Southern California; Nature Sermons; Picturesque Southern California; The Missions and Mission Indians of California; From Alpine Snow to Semi-Tropical Sea; In and Around the Grand Canyon; Indian Basketry; The Indians of the Painted Desert Region.
- James, Hartwell. 18— - ——. A writer for young people. Heroes of the United States Navy; Military Heroes of the United States; Sea Kings and Naval Heroes.
- James, James Alton. Wis., 1864- ——. A professor of history in Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, from 1897. English Institutions and the American Indian; Constitution and Admission of Iowa into the Union; Government in State and Nation (with A. H. Sanford). J. H. U. Scr.
- James, Richard Sexton. Pa., 1824- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Arkansas. The Walk with Christ through the Valley of Death; Forest Monarchs, and Other Poems.
- James, Samuel Humphreys. La., 1857- ——. A Louisiana novelist. A Woman of New Orleans; A Prince of Good Fellows.
- James, Thomas Chalkley. Pa., 1766-1835. A once noted Philadelphia physician. The Principles of Midwifery, a standard textbook.
- James, Thomas Potts. Pa., 1803-1882, A botanist and druggist of Philadelphia, co-author with Lesquereux ([page 228]) of The Manual of American Mosses.
- Jameson, Ephraim Orcutt. N. H., 1842-1902. A Congregational clergyman. Biography of Rev. Wm. Cogswell; The Cogswells in America; History of Medway, Massachusetts; Medway Biographies and Genealogies; Military History of Medway; The Choates in America; The Jamesons in America.
- Jaques, Jabez Robert. E., 1828-1892. A Methodist clergyman and educator in Illinois. Study of Classical Languages; Peter Cartwright, the Pioneer Preacher.
- Jaques, William Henry. Pa., 1848- ——. A naval architect. The Establishment of Steel Gun Factories in the United States; Horatio Nelson and the Naval Supremacy of England (with W. Clark Russell); and various monographs on ordnance and allied themes.
- Jardine, Robert. Ont., 1840- ——. A Chicago clergyman, but formerly prominent in the Presbyterian ministry of Canada. The Elements of the Psychology of Cognition; What to Believe.
- Jarrold, Ernest. E., 1850- ——. A New York journalist. Mickey Finn Idylls; Odds and Ends (with J. E. McCann); Tales of the Bowery.
- Jarvis, Thomas Stinson. Ont., 1854-1892. A novelist and dramatic critic of New York city. Letters from East Longitudes; Geoffrey Hampstead; Doctor Perdue; She Lived in New York; The Ascent of Life, a theosophical work.
- Jastrow, Joseph. Po., 1863- ——. A professor of psychology at the University of Wisconsin from 1888. Fact and Fable in Psychology. Hou.
- Jastrow, Morris. Po., 1861- ——. A brother of J. Jastrow, supra. A professor of Semitic languages in the University of Pennsylvania. The Religions of Babylonia and Assyria. Gi.
- Jay, John Clarkson. N. Y., 1808-1891. A conchologist and physician of New York city. A catalogue of Recent Shells (1836); Description of New and Rare Shells.
- Jayne, Anselm Helm. Mi., 1856- ——. A lawyer of Jackson, Mississippi. A History of Mississippi; A School History of Mississippi.
- Jayne, Horace [Fort]. Pa., 1859- ——. A Philadelphia physician, professor of vertebrate morphology in the University of Pennsylvania from 1884. Revision of Dermolidæ of North America; Notes on Biological Subjects; Mammalian Anatomy. Lip.
- Jefferson, Charles Edward. O., 1860- ——. A Congregational clergyman of New York city, pastor of the Broadway Tabernacle from 1898, but from 1887 to 1898 pastor in Chelsea, Massachusetts. Quiet Talks with Earnest People in My Study; Quiet Hints to Growing Preachers; Doctrine and Deed. Cr.
- Jenkins, Howard Malcom. Pa., 1842-1902. A Philadelphia publisher and author. History of Philadelphia; Historical Collections relating to Gynnedd, Pennsylvania; The Family of William Penn.
- Jenks, Tudor. N. Y., 1857- ——. An editor on the staff of the St. Nicholas magazine. The Century World’s Fair Imaginations; Truthless Tales; Boys’ Book of Explorations; Galopoff, the Talking Pony; Gypsy, the Talking Dog; The Defence of the Castle; Captain John Smith. Cent.
- Jennings N[apoleon] A[ugustus]. Pa., 1856- ——. A journalist of New York city. A Texas Ranger, an account of frontier life partly autobiographic in character. Scr.
- Jewell, Frederick Swartz. Ms., 1821- ——. An Episcopal clergyman and educator of Fond du Lac, but prior to 1874 in the Presbyterian ministry. School Government; Grammatical Diagrams; Christian Science.
- Jewett, Charles. Me., 1842- ——. A physician of New York city. Children Nursing; Outlines of Obstetrics; Essentials of Obstetrics; Practice of Obstetrics (edited); Syllabus of Gynæcology.
- Jewett, Edward Hurtt. E., 1830- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, professor in the General Theological Seminary, New York city. Communion Wine; Diabology: the Person and Kingdom of Satan.
- Jewett, John Howard. Ms., 1843- ——. A journalist of Worcester, Massachusetts. The Bunny Stories; More Bunny Stories. Sto.
- Jewett, Sophie. N. Y., 1861- - ——. A professor of literature at Wellesley College. The Pilgrim, and Other Poems. Mac.
- Jillson, Clark. Vt., 1825-1894. A lawyer of Worcester, Massachusetts. Green Leaves from Whittingham, Vermont, a town history.
- Johnes, Edward Rodolph. N. Y., 1852-1903. A lawyer of New York city. Briefs by a Barrister, a collection of verse; History of Southampton, Long Island; Circumstantial Evidence of a Future State.
- Johnson, Benjamin Peirce. N. Y., 1793-1869. A New York agriculturist. The Dairy (1857).
- Johnson, Bradley Tyler. Md., 1829- - ——. A Virginia lawyer who served in the Confederate army during the Civil War. The Foundation of Maryland; Memoir of Joseph E. Johnston; Life of General Washington; Confederate History of Maryland.
- Johnson, Charles Nelson. Ont., 1860- - ——. A Chicago dentist. The Hermit of the Nonquon, a novel; Poems of the Farm, and Other Poems; Success in Practice; Filling Teeth.
- Johnson, Elias Hersey. N. Y., 1841- - ——. A Baptist clergyman, professor of systematic theology in Crozer Theological Seminary, Chester, Pennsylvania, from 1882. Outline of Systematic Theology; Uses and Abuses of Ordinances; The Religious Use of Imagination; The Highest Life. Bap. Sil.
- Johnson, Emory Richard. Wis., 1864- - ——. An economist of note. Inland Waterways: their Relation to Transportation; American Railway Transportation.
- Johnson, John. S. C., 1829- - ——. Son of Joseph Johnson, infra. An Episcopal clergyman of Charleston, rector of St. Philip’s Church from 1872, but previously in the engineer corps of the Confederate army. Defence of Charleston Harbor, including Fort Sumter and the Adjacent Islands (1890).
- Johnson, Joseph. S. C., 1776-1862. A physician and author of Charleston. Traditions and Reminiscences of the Revolution in the South (1851).
- Johnson, Joseph French. Ms., 1853- - ——. A financier who has published Principles of Money Applied to Current Problems; Proposed Reforms of the Monetary System; Money and Credit; A Discussion of the Interrogatories of the Monetary Commission.
- Johnson, Lewis Jerome. Ms., 1867- - ——. A professor of civil engineering at Harvard University since 1896. Statics by Algebraic and Graphic Methods. Wil.
- Johnson, Margaret. Ms., 1860- - ——. A New York writer. What Did the Black Cat Do?; The Procession of the Zodiac.
- Johnson, Owen. N. Y., 1878- - ——. Son of R. U. Johnson ([page 211]). A novelist. Arrows of the Almighty. Mac.
- Johnson, Philander Chase. W. Va., 1866- - ——. A Washington Journalist. Sayings of Uncle Eben; Nowaday Poems.
- Johnson, William Henry. S. C., 1845- - ——. A novelist of Cambridge. In early life he served as an officer in the Confederate army, and subsequently entered the Unitarian ministry. The King’s Henchmen; King or Knave?; The World’s Discoverers; Pioneer Spaniards in North America.
- Johnson, William Woolsey. N. Y., 1841- - ——. A professor of mathematics at the United States Naval Academy from 1881. Elementary Treatise on Differential Calculus; Elementary Treatise on Integral Calculus; Curve Tracing in Cartesian Coördinates; Treatise on Differential Equations; Theory of Errors and Method of Least Squares; Treatise on Mechanics.
- Johnston, Mrs. Annie [Fellows]. Ind., 1863- - ——. A writer of Pewee Valley, Kentucky. Two Little Knights of Kentucky; The Little Colonel’s Home Party; The Story of Dago; The Little Colonel’s Holidays; Joel: a Boy of Galilee; In League with Israel; Old Mammy’s Torment; Songs Ysame (with A. F. Bacon); The Little Colonel; The Gate of the Giant Scissors; Asa Holmes; Big Brother; The Quilt that Jack Built; The Little Colonel’s Hero. Lit. Pa.
- Johnston, Charles. I., 1867- - ——. A writer of Flushing, Long Island, who, besides various translations from the Sanskrit and Russian, is the author of The Memory of Past Births; Kela Bai; Ireland, Historic and Picturesque.
- Johnston, Harold Whetstone. Il., 1859- - ——. An Indiana educator. Latin Manuscripts.
- Johnston, Hugh. Ont., 1840- - ——. A Methodist clergyman of Washington city. Toward the Sunrise, a volume of travel; Death Abolished; Shall We or Shall We Not?; William Morley Punshon, a biography; A Merchant Prince, a life of John Macdonald.
- Johnston, Josiah Stoddard. La., 1833- - ——. A Louisville writer who served in the Confederate army during the Civil War. Memorial History of Louisville; First Explorations of Kentucky; Confederate History of Kentucky.
- Johnston, Mary. Va., 1870- - ——. A popular novelist of Birmingham, Alabama. Prisoners of Hope: a Tale of Colonial Virginia; To Have and to Hold; Audrey; Sir Mortimer. Hou.
- Johnston, Nathan Robinson. O., 1820- - ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, once prominent in the anti-slavery movement, and since 1875 a missionary to the Chinese in Oakland, California. Looking Back from the Sunset Land.
- Jones, Augustine. Me., 1835- - ——. An educator, principal of the Friends’ School at Providence. Life of Thomas Dudley, Second Governor of Massachusetts. Hou.
- Jones, Charles Henry. Pa., 1837- - ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia, where he has filled a number of important local offices. A Pedestrian Tour through Switzerland; Recollections of Venice; A Trip to the Neusiedlersee; Memoir of William Rodman; Digest of Park Laws and Ordinances; Davenet’s Mills, a novel; History of the Campaign for the Conquest of Canada in 1776; Rodman Genealogy (1886).
- Jones, George. E., 1810-1879. An eccentric actor and lecturer who took the title of Count Joannes. A History of Ancient America; Tecumseh, a tragedy; Life of General Harrison.
- Jones, George James. W., 1856- - ——. A Presbyterian clergyman. The Province of Philosophy; The American Church; Bethlehem.
- Jones, John Mather. W., 1826-1874. A journalist of Welsh birth who came to America in 1849, founded the towns of New Cambria, Missouri, in 1865, and Avonia, Kansas, in 1869. History of the Rebellion (in Welsh) (1866).
- Jones, Marcus Eugene. O., 1852- - ——. A botanist and mining expert. Excursion Botanique; Ferns of the West; Geology of Utah.
- Jones, Nelson Edwards. O., 1821-1901. A physician of Circleville, Ohio. The Squirrel Hunters of Ohio. Clke.
- Jones, Richard. Wis., 1855- - ——. A professor of literature in Vanderbilt University from 1899. The Growth of the Idylls of the King; The Arthurian Legends; A History of English Literature. Lip.
- Jones, Thomas. L. I., 1731-1792. A colonial jurist who espoused the side of the King at the time of the American Revolution, and removed to England in 1781, where he passed the rest of his life. History of New York during the Revolutionary Period.
- Jones, Mrs. Virginia [Smith]. Ct., 1827- - ——. An ornithologist of Cleveland. The illustrations of the Nests and Eggs of the Birds of Ohio.
- Jordan, Elizabeth Garver. Wis., 1867- - ——. A New York journalist, editor of Harper’s Bazar from 1900. Tales of the City Room; Tales of the Cloister; Tales of Destiny; May Iverson: Her Book. Har.
- Jordan, William George. N. Y., 1864- - ——. A journalist of New York city. The Kingship of Self-Control; The Majesty of Calmness; The Power of Truth. Rev.
- Josephare, Lionel. Ms., 1876- - ——. A verse-writer of San Francisco. The Lion at the Well; Turquoise and Iron.
- Josselyn, Charles. Ms., 1847- - ——. A San Francisco writer. The True Napoleon.
- Joy, James Richard. Ms., 1863- - ——. A New York journalist. The Greek Drama; Outline History of England; Grecian History; Rome and the Making of Modern Europe; Twenty Centuries of English History; Thomas Joy and his Descendants. Meth.
- Joynes, Edward Southey. Va., 1834- - ——. A Virginia educator. Joynes-Meissner German Grammar; Minimum French Grammar.
- Judd, David Wright. N. Y., 1838-1888. A New York journalist. Two Years’ Campaigning in Virginia and Maryland; The Educational Cyclopædia; Life and Writings of Frank Forrester.
- Judson, Edward. E. I., 1844- - ——. A Baptist clergyman, pastor of the Judson Memorial church in New York city from 1881. Life of Adoniram Judson; The Institutional Church.
- Julian, Isaac Hoover. Ind., 1823- - ——. Brother of G. W. Julian ([page 214]). A journalist of San Marcos, Texas. Sketches of the Early History of the Whitewater Valley.
- Jusserand (zhu’s-rän´), Jean Adrien Antoine Jules. F., 1855- - ——. French ambassador to the United States from 1902. Les Anglais au Moyen Age; The English Novel in the Time of Shakespeare; A French Ambassador at the Court of Charles II.; Piers Plowman; English Essays from a French Pen; A Literary History of the French People; Shakespeare in France Under the Ancient Régime.
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- Kahn, Mrs. Ruth [Ward]. Mch., 1872- - ——. A verse-writer of Leadville, Colorado. Gertrude, an epic; The First Quarter, a collection of verse.
- Kasson, John Adam. A diplomat, minister to Austria, 1877-81, and to Germany, 1884-85. History of the Formation of the United States Constitution. Lip.
- Kaufman, Reginald Wright. Pa., 1877- - ——. A Philadelphia journalist. Jarvis of Harvard, a novel; The Things that are Cæsar’s. Ap.
- Kaye, John William. E., 1846- - ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Philadelphia. Luray Cave; Flight, Capture and Imprisonment of Jefferson Davis; Night Ascent of Vesuvius; The Royal Tomb at Charlottenburg.
- Kearney, Stephen Watts. N. J., 1794-1848. A United States army officer. Manual of the Exercise and Manœuvering of United States Dragoons; Laws for the Government of the Territory of New Mexico.
- Keasbey, Lindley Miller. N. J., 1867- - ——. A professor of history and economics at the University of Colorado, 1892-94, and at Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, from 1894. The Nicaragua Canal and the Monroe Doctrine; The Institution of Society. Put.
- Keely, Robert Neff. Pa., 1860- - ——. A Philadelphia physician. In Arctic Seas.
- Keener, John Christian. Md., 1819- - ——. A Methodist bishop. The Post Oak Circuit; Studies of Bible Truths.
- Keener, William Albert. Ga., 1856- - ——. A lawyer, formerly professor of law at Columbia University. Treatise on Quasi-Contracts; Selected Cases on Equity Jurisdiction; Selections on the Elements of Jurisprudence; Selection of Cases on the Law of Private Corporations. West.
- Keese, William Linn. N. Y., 1835-1904. A New York author. John Keese, Wit and Littérateur; William E. Burton, Actor, Author, Manager; A Group of Comedians; The Siamese Twins and Other Poems. Ap. Put.
- Keifer, Joseph Warren. O., 1830- - ——. A soldier and politician, Speaker of the national House of Representatives, 1881-85. Slavery and Four Years of War. Put.
- Keimer, Samuel. E., c. 1695-1739. A printer of Philadelphia. A Brand Plucked from the Burning, Exemplified in the Unparalleled Case of Samuel Keimer; Caribbeana, a Collection of Essays. See Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 30.
- Keith, Charles Penrose. Pa., 1854- - ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. The Provincial Councillors of Pennsylvania between 1733 and 1776, and those Earlier Councillors who were sometime Chief Magistrates of the Province, and their Descendants.
- Keith, Sir William. E., 1680-1749. A royal surveyor-general of customs in America and subsequently lieutenant-governor of Pennsylvania and Delaware. The History of the British Plantations in America, Part I.: The History of Virginia, 1738; Public Spirit; Papers and Tracts; On the Subject of Taxing the Colonies.
- Keller, Albert Galloway. O., 1864- ——. An assistant professor of the science of society at Yale University from 1902. Homeric Society; Essays in Colonization. Lgs.
- Kellerman, William Ashbrook. O., 1850- ——. A professor of botany at the Ohio State University from 1893. The Flora of Kansas; Elementary Botany; Phytotheca; Spring Flora of Ohio; Plant Analysis.
- Kelley, David Campbell. Tn., 1833- ——. A clergyman of the Methodist Church, South. Short Method with Modern Doubt.
- Kelley, Jay George. Ms., 1838-1899. A mining engineer of Denver. The Boy Mineral Collectors. Lip.
- Kellogg, Amos Markham. N. Y., 1832- ——. An editor of educational journals. School Management; How to Teach Botany; How to Teach Fractions to Young Children.
- Kellogg, Mrs. Eva Mary [Crosby]. Il., 1860- ——. A Boston writer for young people. Australia and the Islands of the Sea; Grandma’s Darlings. Sil.
- Kellogg, John Harvey. Mch., 1852-1904. A physician of Battle Creek, Michigan, for many years editor of Good Health. Ladies’ Guide in Health and Disease; Home Handbook of Hygiene and Rational Medicine; Man the Masterpiece; Plain Facts for Old and Young; The Art of Massage.
- Kellogg, Olin Clay. N. Y., 1870- ——. An educator. English Literature from its Origin to the Close of the Elizabethan Age; English and American Novelists; American Literature.
- Kellogg, Vernon Lyman. Kansas, 1867- ——. A professor of entomology at Leland Stanford Junior University from 1894. Common Injurious Insects of Kansas; Elements of Insect Anatomy (with Comstock); Lessons in Nature Study (with Jenkins); Animal Life (with D. S. Jordan); Elementary Zoölogy; North American Mallophaga.
- Kelly, Edmond. 1851- ——. A lecturer on municipal politics at Columbia University from 1896. The French Law of Marriage; Evolution and Effort; Government, or Human Evolution. Ap. Lgs.
- Kelly, Mrs. Florence [Finch]. Il., 1848- ——. A journalist who has published With Hoops of Steel. Bo.
- Kelly, Myra. I., 1876- ——. Little Citizens, a collection of humorous stories of school life.
- Kelsey, Charles Boyd. Ct., 1850- ——. A surgeon of New York City. Diseases of the Rectum and Anus; Surgery of Rectum and Pelvis.
- Kemp, James Furman. N. Y., 1859- ——. A geologist. Ore Deposits of the United States and Canada; Handbook of Rocks. Vn.
- Kendrick, Clark. N. H., 1775-1824. A Baptist clergyman of Poultney, Vermont, and one of the founders of what is now Colgate University. Plain Dealing with Pedo-Baptists.
- Kenealy, Ahmed John. E., 1854- ——. A journalist of New York city. Yacht Races for the America’s Cup; Boat-Sailing in Fair Weather and Foul; Yachting Wrinkles.
- Kennard, Joseph Spencer. N. Y., 1859- ——. A Philadelphia lawyer and artist. Among his works are The Fallen God and Other Essays in Literature and Art; Some Early Printers and their Colophons; Entro Un Cerchio di Ferro; Contemporary Italian Romance.
- Kennedy, Mrs. Sara Beaumont [Cannon]. Tn., 18— - ——. Wife of W. Kennedy, infra. A novelist of Memphis. Jocelyn Cheshire; The Wooing of Judith.
- Kennedy, Walker. Ky., 1857- ——. A journalist and novelist of Memphis, Tennessee. In the Dwellings of Silence; Javan Cen Seir; The Secret of the Wet Woods.
- Kent, Charles Foster. N. Y., 1867- ——. A professor of Biblical literature and history at Brown University from 1895. A History of the Hebrew People; Outline Study of Hebrew History; Wise Men of Ancient Israel; Students’ Chronological Chart of Biblical History; History of the Jewish People. Bap. Scr. Sil.
- Kent, William. Pa., 1851- ——. A civil engineer of note. Strength of Materials; Strength of Wrought Iron and Chain Cables; The Mechanical Engineer’s Pocket Book; Steam Boiler Economy. Wil.
- Kephart, Cyrus Jeffries. Pa., 1852- ——. A clergyman of the United Brethren faith, president of Avalon College, Trenton, Missouri, 1897-99. Public Life of Christ; Jesus the Nazarene; Life of Jesus for Children.
- Kephart, Ezekiel Boring. Pa., 1834- ——. Brother of C. J. Kephart, supra. A bishop of the United Brethren faith from 1881. Manual of Church Discipline; Authenticity and Interpretation of the Holy Scriptures; Apologetics; The Atonement.
- Kern, John Adam. Va., 1846- ——. A Methodist clergyman, president of Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Virginia, from 1897. Ministry to the Congregation, a work on homiletics; The Way of the Professor.
- Kernan, Will[iam] Hubbard. O., 1845- ——. A Louisiana journalist. The Flaming Meteor, a book of verse.
- Kester, Vaughan. N. J., 1869- ——. A littérateur of New York city. The Manager of the B. and A. Har.
- Ketchum, John Buckhout. N. Y., 1837- ——. A journalist who published Rustic Rhymes and other volumes.
- Kettell, Samuel. Ms., 1800-1855. A Massachusetts antiquarian writer. Specimens of American Poetry, with Critical and Biographical Notes (1829); Personal Narrative of the First Voyage of Columbus; The Settlers of Columbus; Records of Spanish Inquisition; Yankee Notions; Quozziana.
- Keyes, Winfield Scott. N. Y., 1834- ——. A California mining engineer. Resources of California; Resources of Montana.
- Keyser, Leander Sylvester. O., 1856- ——. A Lutheran clergyman and religious journalist. The Only Way Out; Bird-dom; In Bird Land; Birds of the Rockies; News from the Birds. Mg.
- Kidder, Frank Eugene. Me., 1859- ——. An architect of Denver. Architects’ and Builders’ Pocket Book; Churches and Chapels; Building Construction. Wil.
- Kieffer, Aldine Silliman. Mo., 1840- ——. A journalist and verse-writer of Dayton, Ohio. Vigil and Vision; Hours of Fancy.
- Kimball, Emma Adeline. N. H., 1847- ——. A writer of Haverhill, Massachusetts. Wayside Flowers, a book of verse; The Peaslees and Others, an Historical Sketch.
- Kimball, Hannah Parker. Ms., 1861- ——. A Boston poet, whose work includes Soul and Sense, and Other Verses; The Cup of Life, and Other Poems; Victory, and Other Verses. Sm.
- Kimball, John Calvin. Ms., 1832- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Sharon, Massachusetts. The Evolution of a New England Town; Zoölogy and Evolution; Moral Questions in Politics; Natural Factors in American Civilization; Immortal Youth; From Natural to Christian Selection. Lit.
- Kimball, Sumner Increase. Me., 1834- ——. A United States Treasury official. Organization and Methods of the United States Life-Saving Service (1889).
- Kinealy, John Henry. Mo., 1864- ——. A mechanical engineer of Boston. Steam Engines and Boilers; Slide Valve Simply Explained; Formulas and Tables for Heating.
- King, Franklin Hiram. Wis., 1848- ——. A professor of agricultural physics in the University of Wisconsin from 1888. Economic Relations of Wisconsin Birds; The Soil; Elementary Lessons in the Physics of Agriculture; Irrigation and Drainage. Mac.
- King, Hamilton. Newfoundland, 1852- ——. A diplomatist, United States minister to Siam from 1898. A Greek Reader; Outlines of United States History.
- King, Henry Churchill. Mch., 1858- ——. A professor of theology at Oberlin Seminary from 1897. Reconstruction in Theology; Outline of Erdmann’s History of Philosophy; Outline of the Microcosmus of Herman Lotze; The Appeal of the Child; Theology and the Social Consciousness. Mac.
- King, Mrs. Mary [Perry]. N. Y., 1865- ——. A writer of New York city. Comfort and Exercise; The Basis of Beauty.
- King, Stanton Henry. Barbados, 1868- ——. The superintendent of the Sailors’ Haven, Charlestown, Massachusetts, from 1898. Dog-Watches at Sea. Hou.
- Kingsbury, Charles People. N. Y., 1818-1879. A United States army officer who published an Elementary Treatise on Artillery and Infantry (1849).
- Kingsley, Mrs. Florence [Morse]. O., 1859- ——. A writer of West New Brighton, Staten Island. Paul, a Herald of the Cross; Titus, a Comrade of the Cross; Stephen, a Soldier of the Cross; Prisoners of the Sea; The Transfiguration of Miss Philura; The Cross Triumphant; The Needle’s Eye; Wings and Fetters; The Singular Miss Smith. Fu. My.
- Kingsley, John Sterling. N. Y., 1852- ——. A professor of zoölogy at Tufts College, Medford, Massachusetts. Elements of Comparative Zoölogy; Text Book of Vertebrate Zoölogy. Ho.
- Kinley, David. S., 1861- ——. An educator in Illinois, professor of economics and dean of the college of literature and arts at the University of Illinois. The Independent Treasury System of the United States; Money. Cr. Mac.
- Kinney, Abbot. N. Y., 1850- ——. A California writer on forestry. Eucalyptus; Tasks by Twilight; Conquest of Death; Forest and Water.
- Kinsolving, George Herbert. Va., 1849- ——. The second Protestant Episcopal bishop of Texas. The Church’s Burden.
- Kipling, Rudyard. E. I., 1865- ——. A distinguished English writer, born in Bombay. He was educated in England, but was for some years in the Indian civil service, leaving India, however, in 1889. Later he married the sister of C. W. Balestier, supra, and made his home in Brattleboro, Vermont, for several years. The greater part of his work in prose and verse has an East Indian locale, but some of his later stories have an American local colouring. As a writer of fiction his rank is deservedly high, and in The Seven Seas, as well as in The Recessional, published after the Queen’s Jubilee of 1897, he has abundantly vindicated his claim to the title of poet. His prose comprises Plain Tales from the Hills; Wee Willie Winkie, and Other Stories; The Light that Failed; Soldiers Three; The Naulahka (with C. W. Balestier, supra); The Jungle Book; The Second Jungle Book; Captains Courageous; The Walking Delegate; Life’s Handicap; The Day’s Work; From Sea to Sea, letters of travel; In Ambush; Stalky and Co.; A Fleet in Being; The Brushwood Boy; Kim; Just So Stories. His verse includes Barrack-Room Ballads, and Other Verses; Departmental Ditties, and Other Verses; The Seven Seas. See The Critic, January 21, 1893; The Fortnightly Review, November, 1893; The Forum, June, 1895, and December, 1896; Atlantic Monthly, January, 1897; Review of Reviews, February, 1897; McClure’s Magazine, July, 1899; The Cosmopolitan, September, 1901; W. L. Clemens, A Ken of Kipling; Le Gallienne, Rudyard Kipling: a criticism; Monkshood, Rudyard Kipling; Knowles, A Kipling Primer; F. Adams, Essays in Modernity.
- Kirby, Mrs. Georgiana [Bruce]. E., 1818- ——. She came to the United States in 1838, was for some years assistant matron at Sing Sing prison, and lived in California from 1850. Transmission, or the Variation of Character Through the Mother; Years of Experience, an Autobiographical Narrative.
- Kirkus, William. E., 1830- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Brooklyn. Christianity, Theoretical and Practical; Miscellaneous Essays; Orthodoxy, Scripture, and Reason; Religion a Revelation and a Rule of Life. Wh.
- Kiser, Samuel Ellsworth. Pa., 1862- ——. A Chicago journalist. Budd Williams at the Show, and Other Poems; Georgie; Love Sonnets of an Office Boy. Sm.
- Kittredge, Walter. N. H., 1834- ——. A popular song-writer of Reed’s Ferry, New Hampshire, best known as the author of the words and music of “Tenting on the Old Camp Ground.” Walter Kittredge’s Union Song-Book (1862). See New England Magazine, August, 1899.
- Klemm, Louis Richard. G., 1845- ——. A government specialist in education, among whose works are History of German Literature; Poetry in Home and School; German by Practice; European Schools; Chips from a Teacher’s Workshop; Higher Education of Women. Ap. Hou. Le. Put.
- Knapp, Adeline. N. Y., 1860- ——. A New York writer, editor of The Household Magazine from 1902. One Thousand Dollars a Day; Upland Pastures; The Boy and the Baron; How to Live; The Story of the Philippines. Cent. Sil.
- Knight, Frederick. N. H., 1791-1849. A verse-writer of Rowley, Massachusetts. Thorn Cottage, or the Poet’s Home.
- Knight, George Wells. Mch., 1858- ——. A professor of American history in Ohio State University from 1885. Land Grants in the Northwest Territory; The Government of the People of Ohio; History of Education in Ohio (with J. R. Commons).
- Knight, Henry Cogswell. N. H., 1788-1835. Brother of F. Knight, supra. An Episcopal clergyman of Massachusetts. Letters from the South and West (1824); Lectures and Sermons, and several books of verse, including The Cypriad; The Trophies of Love; The Broken Harp; Poems.
- Knowles, Frederic Lawrence. Ms., 1869- ——. A littérateur of Boston. He has published Practical Hints for Young Readers, Writers, and Book-Buyers; On Life’s Stairway, a book of verse; Love Triumphant; and edited Cap and Gown, a collection of college verse; The Golden Treasury of American Songs; and other verse compilations. Pa.
- Knowles, James Davis. R. I., 1798-1838. A Baptist minister of Boston. Memoir of Mrs. Ann Judson; Memoir of Roger Williams.
- Knowlton, Frank Hall. Vt., 1860- ——. An assistant palæontologist in Government service. Fossil Flora of Alaska; Cretaceous and Tertiary Plants of North America.
- Knowlton, Helen Mary. Ms., 1832- ——. An artist of Boston. Hints to Pupils in Drawing and Painting; The Art Life of William Morris Hunt; The Eternal Years. Hou. Lit.
- Knowlton, Miles Justin. Vt., 1825-1874. A Presbyterian missionary in China. The Foreign Missionary: his Field and his Work.
- Knox, Martin Van Buren. N. Y., 1841- ——. A Methodist clergyman, president of Red River Valley University, North Dakota, from 1892. A Winter in India and Malaysia.
- Koerner, Gustave. G., 1809-1896. An Illinois jurist of prominence, lieutenant-governor of Illinois, 1853-57. From Spain; Das deutsche Element in den Vereinigten Staaten, 1818-1848.
- Kohlmann, Anthony. P., 1771-1838. A Roman Catholic priest and educator who came to the United States in 1806 and became Superior of the Jesuit order in America in 1817. A True Exposition of the Doctrine of the Catholic Church; Centurial Jubilee; The Blessed Reformation; Martin Luther Portrayed by Himself; Unitarianism, Philosophically and Theologically Examined.
- Kolle, Frederick Strange. G., 1871- ——. A physician and inventor of New York city. The Recent Roentgen Discovery; The X-Rays; Pen Lyrics.
- Kollock, Henry. N. J., 1778-1819. Brother of S. K. Kollock, infra. A Presbyterian clergyman of Savannah, once of note as a pulpit orator. Sermons on Various Subjects appeared in 1811, and in 1822 his collected sermons appeared in four volumes.
- Kollock, Sheppard (or Shephard) Kosciuszko. N. J., 1795-1865. Brother of H. Kollock, supra. A Presbyterian clergyman, pastor at Norfolk and elsewhere. Biography of Henry Kollock (supra); Ministerial Character; Best Method of Delivering Sermons; The Perseverance of the Saints; Pastoral Reminiscences comprise all his works of importance.
- Koren, John. Ia., 1861- ——. A statistician. Economic Aspects of the Liquor Problem; The Liquor Problem in its Legislative Aspects. Hou.
- Kost, John. Pa., 1819-1904. A physician of Adrian, Michigan, and a minister in the Methodist Protestant body. Elements of Materia Medica and Therapeutics; Text Book on Medical Jurisprudence. See Representative Men of Michigan.
- Kramer, John Wesley. Md., 1832-1898. An Episcopal clergyman of Brooklyn. Mindful of Him; Manual for Visiting the Poor; Commentary on the Church Catechism; The Right Road; Comfortable Thoughts.
- Krause, Lyda Farrington. “Barbara Yechton.” W. I., 1864- ——. A New York writer on the staff of The Churchman. We Ten; A Lovable Crank; Derick; A Little Turning Aside; Ingleside; A Young Savage; A Cycle of Stories; Scaramouche; Fortune’s Boats; Young Mrs. Teddy. Do. Hou. Wh.
- Krauskopf, Joseph. P., 1858- ——. A Jewish rabbi of Philadelphia. Evolution and Judaism; A Rabbi’s Impressions of the Oberammergau Passion Play; The Service Ritual; Our Pulpit; Old Truths in New Books.
- Kriehn, George. Mo., 1868- ——. An educator. The English Rising in 1450; English Popular Upheavals in the Middle Ages; The English Social Revolt in 1381.
- Kroeh, Charles Frederick. G., 1846- ——. A professor of languages at the Stevens Institute at Hoboken from 1871, and author of a series of text-books, in German, Spanish, and French. Mac.
- Krout, Caroline Virginia. Ind., 18— - ——. A novelist of Crawfordsville, Indiana. Knights in Fustian.
- Krout, Mary Hannah. Ind., 1857- ——. Sister of C. V. Krout, supra. A journalist of Denver. Hawaii and a Revolution; A Looker-on in London; Alice in Hawaii; The China of To-day; Two Girls in China. Am. Do.
- Kuhns, Levi Oscar. Pa., 1856- ——. A professor of romance languages at Wesleyan University. Alfred de Musset; Treatment of Nature in Dante’s Divine Comedy; German and Swiss Settlements of Colonial Pennsylvania: A Study of the So-Called Pennsylvania Dutch; Studies in Pennsylvania German Family Names; The Great Poets of Italy. Ho. Hou.
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- Labberton, Robert Henlopen. F., 1812-1898. An historical writer of Philadelphia and subsequently of New York city, who had resided in the United States from 1834. Outlines of History; New Historical Atlas and General History.
- Lacey, John Fletcher. Va., 1841- ——. An Iowa congressman. Lacey’s Railway Digest; Third Iowa Digest.
- Lachman, Arthur. Cal., 1873- ——. A San Francisco chemist. The Spirit of Organic Chemistry. Mac.
- Lahee, Henry Charles. E., 1856- ——. A musical agent of Boston. Famous Singers of Yesterday and To-day; Famous Violinists of Yesterday and To-day; Famous Pianists of Yesterday and To-day; Grand Opera in America; The Organ and its Masters. Pa.
- Laidlaw, Alexander Hamilton. S., 1828- ——. A physician and educator of New York city. A Pronouncing Dictionary of the English Language; Curability of Consumption; Soldier Songs and Love Songs (1898).
- Laidlaw, Alexander Hamilton. N. J., 1869- ——. Son of A. H. Laidlaw, supra. A littérateur of New York city. Purgatory, a Story; How She Married Him, and Other Stories; The Charms of Music, a Farce; and several plays; Declaration and Constitution in English, German, and French, with Political and Historical Notes.
- Lakes, Arthur. E., 1844- ——. A Denver geologist. Geology of Colorado; Prospecting for Gold and Silver in North America.
- Lamar, James Sanford. Ga., 1829- ——. A clergyman of the sect known as Disciples of Christ. The Organon of Scripture; First Principles and Perfection.
- Lambert, Louis Aloisius. Pa., 1836- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman, editor of the Freeman’s Journal from 1894. Thesaurus Biblicus; Notes on Ingersoll; Tactics of Infidels; The Christian Father; Instructions on the Gospels of the Sundays of the Year.
- Lambert, Thomas Scott. Ms., 1819-1897. A physician who lectured extensively on medical and educational themes. Human Biology; Practical Anatomy and Physiology; Hygienic Physiology.
- Lamberton, John Porter. Pa., 1839- ——. A Philadelphia educator. Daughters of Genius; Literature of the Nineteenth Century.
- Lamborn, Robert Henry. Pa., 1835- ——. A scientist of note. The Metallurgy of Copper; The Metallurgy of Silver and Lead; Mexican Painting and Painters; The Spanish School in New Spain.
- Lamson-Scribner, Frank. Ms., 1851- ——. A botanist of note. Weeds of Maine; Ornamental and Useful Plants of Maine; Fungus Diseases of Plants; The Fungus Diseases of the Grape Vine; The Fungus Diseases of the Grape and Other Plants and Their Treatment; Grasses of Tennessee.
- Lancaster, Joseph. E., 1778-1838. A once prominent educational reformer, who, after establishing schools after his system in England and Canada, came to the United States in 1818, and was for many years a resident of New York city. Improvements in Education; The British System of Education (1812); An Epitome of the Chief Events and Transactions of My Own Life. See Corston, Life of Joseph Lancaster, 1840; Leiber’s Practical Educationists, 1848; Dictionary of National Biography, volume 32.
- Lane, Mrs. Anna [Eichberg] [King]. See King, Mrs. Anna ([page 218]).
- Lane, George Martin. Ms., 1823-1897. A noted classical scholar, professor of Latin at Harvard University 1851-94, professor emeritus from the latter date. A Latin Grammar for Schools and Colleges, prepared by him and edited by M. H. Morgan ([page 261]), appeared in 1898. Har.
- Lane, James Crandall. N. Y., 1823-1888. A civil engineer who was an officer of prominence in the Federal army during the Civil War. Man and his Surroundings.
- Langdon, Samuel. Ms., 1723-1797. A Congregational clergyman, president of Harvard College 1773-80. Summary of Christian Faith and Practice; Observations on the Revolution; Remarks on the Leading Sentiments of Dr. Hopkins’s System of Doctrine.
- Langford, Mrs. Laura [Carter] [Holloway]. See Holloway, Mrs. ([page 191]).
- Lanman, James Henry. Ct., 1812-1887. Uncle of C. Lanman ([page 223]). A lawyer and littérateur of New York city. History of Michigan (1842).
- Lanza, Gaetano. Ms., 1848- ——. A professor of mechanics in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Applied Mechanics. Wil.
- Larrabee, William. Ct., 1832- ——. A farmer and banker of Clermont, Iowa. The Railroad Question.
- Larremore, Wilbur. N. Y., 1855- ——. A New York lawyer, editor of the New York Law Journal from 1890. Mother Carey’s Chickens, a book of verse. Put.
- Larrowe, Marcus Dwight. “Alphonso Loisette.” N. Y., 1832- ——. A noted lecturer on the science of memory. Assimilative Memory, or How to Attend and Never Forget.
- Latch, Edward Biddle. Pa., 1833- ——. A retired naval officer. Review of the Holy Bible; Indications of the Book of Job; Indications of the Book of Genesis; Indications of the Book of Exodus; The Mosaic System of the Great Pyramid of Egypt; The Mosaic System of Stonehenge; The Mosaic System and the Codex Argenteus; The Mosaic System and The Gettysburg Stone.
- Latchaw, John Roland Harris. Pa., 1851- ——. A Baptist clergyman, president of Palmer University, Muncie, Indiana, from 1902. Outline Lectures in Theology; Theory and Art of Teaching; Citizenship in Northwest Territory; Outlines of Psychology: its Method and Matter.
- Lathe, Herbert William. Mo., 1850- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Manitou, Colorado. Spiritual Life in its Fullness; Chosen of God. Rev.
- Lathrop, Joseph. Ct., 1731-1820. A Congregational clergyman, pastor at West Springfield, Massachusetts, 1756-1818. A Miscellaneous Collection of Original Pieces, Political, Moral, and Entertaining; Sermons, seven volumes (1796-1820).
- Latimer, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth [Wormeley]. E., 1822-1904. (See [page 225].) Under her maiden name of Wormeley she published three novels, Forest Hill; Annabel, or the Victory of Love; Our Cousin Veronica.
- Laughlin, Clara Elizabeth. N. Y., 1873- ——. A Chicago writer. The Evolution of a Girl’s Ideal; Stories of Authors’ Loves; Miladi. Lip. Rev.
- Laurie, Thomas. S., 1821-1897. A congregational clergyman of Providence. Dr. Grant and the Mountain Nestorians; Woman and Her Saviour in Persia, reprinted as Morning on the Mountains; Glimpses of Christ; The Ely Volume, or the Contributions of Foreign Missions to Science; Assyrian Echoes of the Word. Lo.
- Laut, Agnes C——. Ont., 1872- ——. A novelist who has published Heralds of Empire; Lords of the North; The Story of the Trapper; Pathfinders of the West. Ap. Lit.
- Lavely, Henry Alexander. Pa., 1831- ——. A verse-writer of Pittsburgh. The Heart’s Choice, and Other Poems.
- Law, James. S., 1838- ——. A professor of veterinary medicine at Cornell University, 1868-96. General and Descriptive Anatomy of Domestic Animals; Farmers’ Veterinary Adviser; Text-Book of Veterinary Medicine.
- Lawler, Thomas Bonaventure. Ms., 1864- ——. A New York author. Essentials of American History. Gi.
- Lawrence, Egbert Charles. N. Y., 1845- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman in New York. Historical Recreations.
- Lawrence, Mrs. Ida Ethel (Eckert). O., 1864- ——. A verse-writer of Toledo, Ohio. Day Dreams. Clke.
- Lawrence, Isaac. E., 1828- ——. Son of W. B. Lawrence ([page 225]), whose Life he has written.
- Lawrence, Robert Means. Ms., 1847- ——. A physician of Boston. The Magic of the Horse-Shoe, with Other Folk-Lore Notes; Historical Sketches of the Lawrence Family. Hou.
- Laws, Samuel Spahr. Va., 1824- ——. An educator, chancellor of the University of Missouri, 1876-89. Metaphysics.
- Lawson, John Davison. Ont., 1852- ——. A legal writer, professor of common law in the University of Missouri from 1891. Contract of Common Carriers; Law of Usages and Customs; Concordance of Legal Words and Phrases; Law of Presumptive Evidence; Leading Cases Simplified; Expert and Opinion Evidence; Adjudged Cases on Defences to Crime; Rights, Remedies, and Practice in the Civil Law; Principles of American Law of Contracts; Select Cases in the Law of Personal Property; The American Law of Bailments.
- Lawson, Leonidas Moreau. Ky., 1812-1864. A physician, professor of medicine in Ohio and Kentucky medical schools. Practical Treatise on Phthisis Pulmonalis.
- Lawson, Thomas William. Ms., 1857- ——. A Boston broker and banker. The Krank; History of the Republican Party; Secrets of Success; History of the America’s Cup.
- Leahy, William Augustine. Ms., 1867- ——. A Boston writer. The Siege of Syracuse; The Incendiary; History of the Catholic Church in New England.
- Leakin, George Armistead. Md., 1818- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Baltimore. Legion, or Feigned Excuses; Periodic Law.
- Learned, William Law. Ct., 1821- ——. A jurist of Albany who edited The Journal of Madam Knight ([page 220]), and published The Learned Family, a genealogy.
- Lease, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth [Clyens]. Pa., 1853- ——. A prominent Kansas lecturer. The Problem of Civilization Solved. Lai.
- Lee, Albert. La., 1868- ——. A New York littérateur. Tommy Toodles; Track Athletics in Detail; The Knave of Hearts; Four for a Fortune; He, She, and They. Har.
- Lee, Alfred Emory. O., 1838- ——. A California orange-grower. European Days and Ways; Battle of Gettysburg; History of Columbus. Lip.
- Lee, Elmer. O., 1856- ——. A physician of New York city. Treatise on Asiatic Cholera; Medical Treatment of Appendicitis.
- Lee, Gerald Stanley. Ms., 1862- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Massachusetts. About an Old New England Church; The Shadow Christ; The Lost Art of Reading; The Confessions of an Unscientific Mind. Put.
- Lee, Guy Carleton. 187- - ——. A Baltimore educator. Source Book of English History; Historical Jurisprudence; Principles of Public Speaking; A History of England; Hincmar: an Introduction to the Study of the Church in the Ninth Century; The True History of the Civil War. Ho. Mac. Put. Lip.
- Lee, James Wideman. Ga., 1849- ——. A Methodist clergyman in St. Louis. The Making of a Man; Henry W. Grady, Orator and Man; The Romance of Palestine; The Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee.
- Lee, Mrs. Jeanette Barbour [Perry.] Ct., 1860- ——, wife of G. S. Lee, supra. A novelist of Northampton, Massachusetts. Kate Wetherell; A Pillar of Salt; The Son of a Fiddler. Cent. Hou.
- Lee, John Stebbins. Vt., 1820-1902. A Universalist clergyman, professor of church history at Canton Theological Seminary, New York. Nature and Art in the Old World; Sacred Cities.
- Lee, Leroy Madison. Va., 1808-1882. Nephew of Jesse Lee ([page 227]). A Methodist clergyman long prominent in Virginia. The Great Supper not Calvinistic; Advice to a Young Convert; Life and Times of Rev. Jesse Lee.
- Lee, Margaret. N. Y., 184- - ——. A New York novelist, among whose works are Dr. Wilmer’s Love; Lorimer and Wife; Marriage; Divorce; A Brighton Night; One Touch of Nature; Separation. Ap.
- Lefevre, Edwin. Colombia, 1871- ——. A New York journalist. Wall Street Stories.
- Leffingwell, Albert. N. Y., 1845- ——. A physician who has published Rambles in Japan without a Guide; Illegitimacy; Influence of Seasons upon Conduct; Vivisection in America; The Leffingwell Record. Ba. Mac. Scr.
- Le Gallienne, Richard. E., 1866- ——. An English poet and prose-writer, now (1904) living in New York city. My Ladies’ Sonnets; Volumes in Folio; George Meredith; The Bookbills of Narcissus; English Poems; The Religion of a Literary Man; Prose Fancies; Robert Louis Stevenson, and Other Poems; Retrospective Reviews; Prose Fancies, Second Series; The Quest of the Golden Girl; If I Were God; The Romance of Zion Chapel; Young Lives; Worshipper of the Image; Travels in England; The Beautiful Lie of Rome; The Life Romantic; Sleeping Beauty; Mr. Sun and Mrs. Moon; Perseus and Andromeda; An Old Country House; Odes from the Divan of Hafiz; How to Get the Best out of Books; Old Love Stories Retold.
- Leighton, Joseph Alexander. Ont., 1870- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, professor of philosophy in Hobart College, Geneva, New York. Typical Modern Conceptions of God; What is Personality? Lgs.
- Leiser, Joseph. N. Y., 1873- ——. A Jewish rabbi of Springfield, Illinois. Before the Dawn, a collection of verse.
- Lemcke, Gesine. G., 1841- ——. A teacher of domestic science in New York. Desserts and Salads; American Cuisine; How to Live on Twenty-five Cents a Day; Chafing Dish Recipes; Preserving and Pickling. Ap.
- Lemly, Henry Rowan. N. C., 1851- ——. A United States army officer, among whose writings are A West Point Romance; Who was Eldorado?; Among the Arapahoes; A Queen’s Thoughts.
- Lemmon, Mrs. Sara Allen [Plummer]. Me., 1836- ——. Wife of J. G. Lemmon ([page 228]). Marine Algæ of the West; Western Ferns.
- Lenski, Richard Charles Henry. P., 1864- ——. A Lutheran clergyman of Springfield, Ohio. Biblische Frauenbilder; His Footsteps; Studies for Edification from the Life of Christ.
- Lent, William Bement. N. Y., 1842-1902. A travel-writer of New York city. Gypsying beyond the Sea; Across the Country of the Little King; Halcyon Days in Norway, France, and the Dolomites; Holy Land from Landau, Saddle, and Palanquin. Bon.
- Leonard, Daniel. Ms., 1740-1829. A noted lawyer and politician of Taunton, Massachusetts, who espoused the cause of the Loyalists prior to the opening of the American Revolution, and was the author of Massachusettensis, a brilliant series of seventeen political letters on the side of the English government. He was banished from his State, and in later life became chief justice of Bermuda. See Tyler’s Literary History of the American Revolution.
- Leonard, John William. E., 1849- ——. A lawyer and journalist. Gold Fields of the Klondike. Editor of Who’s Who in America.
- Le Rossignol, James Edward. Q., 1866- ——. A professor of economics in the University of Denver. Monopolies Past and Present. Cr.
- Le Row, Caroline Bigelow. N. Y., 1843- ——. A Brooklyn educator. Duxberry Doings; A Fortunate Failure; How to Teach Reading; English as She is Taught; The Young Idea. Cent.
- Lesley, Mrs. Susan Inches [Lyman]. Ms., 1823-1904. Wife of J. P. Lesley ([page 228]). Recollections of My Mother. Hou.
- Leup, Francis Ellington. N. Y., 1849- ——. A New York journalist. Bagly vs. Bagly; How to Prepare for a Civil Service Examination; The Man Roosevelt: a Character Sketch. Ap.
- Leverett, Frank. Ia., 1859- ——. A geologist in government service. Glacial Formation and Drainage Features of the Erie and Ohio Basins; The Illinois Glacial Lobe; The Water Resources of Illinois.
- Levermore, Charles Herbert. Ct., 1856- ——. An educator, president of Adelphi College, Brooklyn, from 1896. The Republic of New Haven; Syllabus of Lectures upon Political History Since 1815. J. H. U.
- Lewin, Raphael De Cordova. W. I., 1844-1886. A Hebrew clergyman in Brooklyn and elsewhere, author of What is Judaism? (1870).
- Lewis, Alfred Henry. “Dan Quin.” O., 1842- ——. A journalist of New York city. Wolfville, episodes of cowboy life; Sandburrs; Wolfville Days; Wolfville Nights; Peggy O’Neal; The Black Lion Inn; The President. Sto. Bar.
- Lewis, Charlton Miner. N. Y., 1866- ——. A professor of English literature at Yale University. Gawayne and the Green Knight, a poem; The Beginnings of English Literature. Gi. Hou.
- Lewis, Edwin Herbert. R. I., 1866- ——. Son of A. H. Lewis ([page 229]). A professor of rhetoric in the University of Chicago. A First Book in Writing English; Introduction to the Study of Literature; A First Manual of Composition; Second Manual of Composition; A Text Book of Applied English Grammar. Mac.
- Lewis, Francis Albert. Pa., 1857- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. Law of Stocks, Bonds, and Other Securities of the United States.
- Lewis, Graceanna. Pa., 1821- ——. A naturalist of Media, Pennsylvania. Position of Birds in the Animal Kingdom; Chart of the Animal Kingdom; Chart of the Vegetable Kingdom; Chart of Geology; Microscopic Studies of Frost Crystals; Lower Forms of Animal and Vegetable Life; Studies in Forestry, are among her works.
- Lewis, Isaac Newton. Ms., 1848- ——. A lawyer and littérateur of Boston. In Memoriam; Pleasant Hours in Sunny Lands. (1888).
- Lewis, William Draper. Pa., 1867- ——. The dean of the law department of the University of Pennsylvania from 1896. Beside editing many legal works, he is the author of Federal Power over Commerce; Our Sheep and the Tariff; Digest of Decisions and Encyclopædia of Pennsylvania Law, 1754-1897 (with G. W. Pepper, infra).
- Libbey, Laura Jean. N. Y., 1862- ——. A sensational novelist of New York city, among whose many romances are Lovers Once but Strangers Now; When his Love Grew Cold.
- Liddell, Mark Harvey. Pa., 1866- ——. A professor in the University of Texas from 1897. Middle English; An Introduction to the Scientific Study of English Poetry. Dou.
- Lieber, Guido Norman. S. C., 1837- ——. Son of F. Lieber ([page 229]). A judge advocate general of the United States army from 1895. Remarks on the Army Regulations; The Use of the Army in Aid of the Civil Power.
- Liggins, John. E., 1829- ——. An Episcopal clergyman who was the first Protestant missionary to Japan. One Thousand Familiar Phrases in English and Japanese; England’s Opium Policy; Missionary Picture Gallery; Value and Success of Foreign Missions.
- Lighton, William Rheem. Pa., 1866- ——. Sons of Strength: a Romance of the Kansas Border Wars; Lewis and Clark; Uncle Mac’s Nebrasky. Dou. Ho. Hou.
- Liliuokalani, Lydia Kamekeha. H. I., 1838- ——. The former queen of the Hawaiian Islands, dethroned in 1892. Hawaii’s Story by Hawaii’s Queen. Le.
- Liljencrantz, Ottilie Adaline. Il., 1876- ——. A Chicago writer. The Scrape that Jack Built; The Thrall of Leif the Lucky; A Ward of King Canute; The Vinland Champions. Mg.
- Lincoln, Joseph Crosby. Ms., 1870- ——. A New York author. Cape Cod Ballads; Cap’n Eri. Bar.
- Lindsay, Anna Robertson Brown. D. C., 1864- ——. What is Worth While?; The Victory of Our Faith; Culture and Reform; Giving What we Have; What Good Does Wishing Do?; The Warriors.
- Linn, William Alexander. N. J., 1843- ——. A journalist. The Story of the Mormons; Rob and his Gun; Horace Greeley. Ap. Mac.
- Linthicum, Richard. Md., 1859- ——. A Chicago journalist. Rocky Mountain Tales; Boer and Britisher in South Africa; Encyclopædia of Common Things (edited).
- Lintner, Joseph Albert. N. Y., 1822-1898. An entomologist of note, and State entomologist of New York, 1880-98. Beside professional papers he published Injurious and Other Insects of the State of New York; Report of the State Entomologist.
- Litsey, Edwin Carlisle. Ky., 1871- ——. The Love Story of Abner Stone. Bar.
- Little, Arthur Wilde. L. I., 1856- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Evanston, Illinois. Reasons for Being a Churchman; The Intellectual Life of the Priest: its Duties and its Dangers.
- Little, Charles Eugene. Vt., 1838- ——. A Methodist clergyman. Biblical Lights and Side Lights; Historical Lights; Cyclopedia of Classified Dates.
- Littlehales, George Washington. Pa., 1860- ——. A hydrographic engineer in the United States naval department, among whose publications are The Azimuths of Celestial Bodies; Submarine Cables; Contributions to Terrestrial Magnetism.
- Littlejohn, John Martin. S., 1867- ——. A Western educator. Political Theory of the Schoolmen; Physiology Notes; Text Book on Physiology; Lectures on Psycho-Physiology and Pathology.
- Lloyd, Alfred Henry. N. J., 1864- ——. A professor of philosophy in the University of Michigan from 1899. Citizenship and Salvation: or Greek and Jew; Dynamic Idealism. Mg.
- Lloyd, John Uri. N. Y., 1849- ——. A botanist and pharmacist of Cincinnati. The Chemistry of Medicine; Elixirs: their History, Formulæ, and Method of Preparation; Etidorhpa, or the End of Earth, the title of which is Aphrodite reversed; The Right Side of the Car; The American Dispensatory (with John King); Drugs and Medicines of North America (with C. G. Lloyd); Stringtown on the Pike, a popular novel; Warwick of the Knobs; Red Head; Scroggins. Clke. Do.
- Lloyd, Nelson McAllister. Pa., 1873- ——. A New York journalist. The Chronic Loafer, a story; A Drone and a Dreamer.
- Locke [James De Witt], Clinton. N. Y., 1829-1904. An Episcopal clergyman of Chicago. The Age of the Great Western Schism; Five-Minute Talks.
- Lockhart, Clinton. Il., 1858- ——. A clergyman of the Christian denomination, president of a college of that faith at Canton, Missouri. Laws of Interpretation; Critical Commentary on Nahum; Messianic Prophecy.
- Lockwood, Henry Clay. N. Y., 1839-1902. Brother of I. Lockwood ([page 232]). A writer of New York city who published The Abolition of the Presidency; Constitutional History of France. Ra.
- Lockwood, Luke Vincent. L. I., 1872- ——. A New York lawyer. Colonial Furniture in America. Scr.
- Lockwood, Mrs. Mary Smith. N. Y., 1831- ——. Wife of H. C. Lockwood, supra. Historic Homes of Washington; Handbook of Ceramic Art.
- Lockwood, Thomas Dixon. E., 1848. An electrical engineer of Boston. Information for Telephonists; Electrical Measurements; Electricity, Magnetism, and the Electric Telegraph. Vn.
- Lodge, George Cabot. Ms., 1873- ——. Son of H. C. Lodge ([page 233]). A verse-writer of Nahant, Massachusetts. The Song of the Wave, and Other Poems; Poems: 1899-1902; Cain: a Drama. Scr. Hou.
- Lodge, Lee Davis. Md., 1865- ——. An educator, professor of literature in Columbian University, Washington city, from 1887. A Study in Corneille.
- Loeb, Jacques. G., 1859- ——. A professor of physiology in the University of California from 1902. Studies in General Physiology; Comparative Physiology of the Brain and Comparative Psychology.
- Lofft, Capel. E., 1806-1873. An English barrister, whose later years were spent in the United States. Self-Formation; Ernest, a Poem.
- Logan, John Alexander. Il., 1865-1899. A United States army officer. In Joyful Russia. Ap.
- Logan, Milburn Hill. Il., 1855- ——. A San Francisco physician. System of Urinology; Organic Chemistry.
- Loisette, Alphonso. See Larrowe.
- London, Jack. Cal., 1876- ——. A writer of Oakland, California. The Son of the Wolf: Tales of the Far North; The God of his Fathers; Children of the Frost; The Cruise of the Dazzler; A Daughter of the Snows; The Call of the Wild; The People of the Abyss; The Sea Wolf; The Faith of Men. Cent. Hou. Lip. Mac.
- Long, Edwin McKean. Pa., 1827-1894. A Lutheran clergyman, pastor in Philadelphia and elsewhere in Pennsylvania. Union Tabernacle, or Movable Tent Church; Precious Hymns of Jesus; Talks to Children; Lives of the Apostles; Sermons for Children; Gospel in Nature; Life of Christ; Emblems and Temperance; Illustrated History of Hymns and their Authors, comprise his most important writings.
- Long, John Luther. Pa., 1861- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. Madame Butterfly, a collection of Japanese tales; The Prince of Illusion; Naughty Nan; The Fur Woman; Little Miss Joy-Sing. Lip.
- Long, William Joseph. Ms., 1867- ——. A Congregational clergyman in Stamford, Connecticut. The Making of Zimri Bunker; Beasts of the Field; Fowls of the Air; Ways of Wood Folk; Wilderness Ways; Secrets of the Wood; School of the Woods; Following the Deer; A Little Brother to the Bear. Gi. Pa.
- Loomis, Charles Battell. L. I., 1861- ——. A littérateur of Scotch Plains, New Jersey. Just Rhymes; The Four-masted Catboat, a collection of prose sketches; Some Americans Abroad; Yankee Enchantments; A Partnership in Magic; Cheerful Americans; More Cheerful Americans. Cent. Ho.
- Lord, Augustus Mendon. Cal., 1861- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Providence. A Book of Verses; The Touch of Nature: Little Stories of Great People. A. U. A.
- Lorimer, George Horace. Ky., 1868- ——. Son of G. C. Lorimer ([page 235]). A Philadelphia journalist, literary editor of the Saturday Evening Post. Behind the Veil of Isis; Letters from a Self-Made Merchant to His Son; Old Gorgon Graham.
- Loring, Augustus Peabody. Ms., 1857- ——. A lawyer of Boston. A Handbook for Trustees. Lit.
- Lose, George William. Pa., 1852- ——. A Lutheran clergyman of Massillon, Ohio, among whose numerous works are Esther and Other Poems; Lives of the Twelve Apostles; From Darkness to Light; The Mission of a Book; Inasmuch.
- Loud, Mrs. Marguerite St. Leon [Barstow]. Pa., c. 1800-18—. A verse-writer of Philadelphia. Wayside Flowers.
- Lounsberry, Alice. N. Y., 18— - ——. A New York botanist. A Guide to the Wild Flowers; A Guide to the Trees; Southern Trees, Flowers, and Shrubs. Sto.
- Loveman, Robert. O., 1864- ——. A writer of Dalton, Georgia, whose verse displays much quiet beauty of thought and expression. Poems; A Book of Verses; The Gates of Silence, with Interludes of Song; Book of Songs.
- Low, A—— Maurice. E., 1860- ——. A Washington journalist. The Supreme Surrender. Har.
- Lowber, James William. Ky., 1847- ——. A clergyman in Austin, Texas, of the Christian (Disciples) denomination. Culture; Struggles and Triumphs of the Truth; The Devil in Modern Society; Macrocosmus.
- Lowrie, Walter. Pa., 1868- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Philadelphia. The Doctrine of Saint John; Monuments of the Early Church. Lgs. Mac.
- Loy, Matthias. Pa., 1828- ——. A Lutheran clergyman in Columbus, Ohio. The Doctrine of Justification; Life of Luther (translated); The Ministerial Office; Sermons on the Gospels; Christian Prayer; The Christian Church.
- Luby, Thomas Clarke. I., 1822-1901. An Irish writer active in Fenian movements and after five years’ imprisonment exiled for the rest of his twenty years’ sentence. He came to America in 1870, and his later years were passed in Jersey City. Lives of Illustrious and Representative Irishmen; The Life of Daniel O’Connell.
- Lucas, Frederic Augustus. Ms., 1852- ——. A Washington naturalist, curator of the department of comparative anatomy in the National Museum from 1893. Animals of the Past; Animals before Man in North America. Ap.
- Luccock, Naphtali. O., 1853- ——. A Methodist clergyman of Saint Louis. Christian Citizenship; Living Words from the Pulpit.
- Luckey, George Washington Andrew. Ind., 1855- ——. A professor of education in the University of Nebraska. The Professional Training of Secondary School Teachers in the United States. Mac.
- Lummus, Henry Tilton. Ms., 1876- ——. A lawyer of Lynn, Massachusetts. Law of Mechanics’ Liens upon Real Estate in Massachusetts.
- Lush, Charles Keeler. Wis., 1861- ——. A Milwaukee journalist. The Federal Judge, a political novel; The Autocrats. Hou.
- Lust, Mrs. Adelina [Cohnfeldt]. G., 1860- ——. A Chicago novelist. A Tent of Grace. Hou.
- Luther, Mark Lee. 18— - ——. The Henchman, a novel; The Mastery. Mac.
- Lynde, Francis. N. Y., 1856- ——. A Chattanooga littérateur. The Helpers, a novel of Colorado life; A Case in Equity; A Romance in Transit; A Question of Courage; A Private Chivalry; The Master of Appleby. Hou.
- Lyon, Frank Emory. Il., 1864- ——. A Chicago clergyman. The Art of Living; Social Evangelism.
- Lyon, William Henry. Ms., 1846- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Brookline, Massachusetts. A Study of the Sects. A. U. A.
- Lyons, Timothy Augustine. A naval commander. Meteorological Charts of the North Pacific Ocean; The Magnetism of Iron and Steel Ships; Electro-Magnetic Phenomena and its Deviations aboard Ship.
- Lyte, Eliphalet Oram. Pa., 1842- ——. A Pennsylvania educator. Practical Book-Keeping; Grammar and Composition; Elementary English; and other educational works.
- M
- McAdam, David. N. Y., 1838-1901. A New York justice of the Supreme Court, 1896-1901. Marine Court Practice; Landlord and Tenant.
- McAfee, Cleland Boyd. Mo., 1866- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Chicago. Where He Is; Wherefore didst Thou Doubt; Faith, Fellowship, and Fealty. Cr. Rev.
- Macbride, Thomas Huston. Tn., 1848- ——. A professor of botany in the University of Iowa from 1884. Textbook on Botany.
- McCall, Samuel Walker. Pa., 1851- ——. A lawyer of Boston, representative in Congress from Massachusetts from 1892. Thaddeus Stevens, a biography; Daniel Webster. Hou.
- McCartney, Washington. Pa., 1812-1856. A jurist and educator of Pennsylvania who founded the Union Law School at Easton. Differential Calculus; History of the Origin and Progress of the United States (1847).
- MacCauley, Clay. Pa., 1843- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Boston. Christianity in History; Japanese Literature; A Day in the Very Noble City, Manila.
- McChesney, Dora Greenwell. Il., 1871- ——. Daughter of E. S. McChesney, infra. A novelist. Kathleen Clare, her Book, 1637-1641; Miriam Cromwell, Royalist; Beatrix Infelix; Rupert, by the Grace of God; A Summer Tragedy in Rome; The Story of an Unrecorded Plot. Mac. S.
- McChesney, Mrs. Elizabeth [Studdiford]. Mch., 1841- ——. Under Shadow of the Mission.
- McCleary, James Thompson. O., 1853- ——. A prominent Minnesota educator and congressman. Studies in Civics; A Manual of Civics.
- McClellan, George Brinton. Sxy., 1865- ——. Son of G. B. McClellan ([page 240]). He became mayor of New York city in 1904. The Oligarchy of Venice. Hou.
- McClelland, Thomas Calvin. N. Y., 1869- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Newport. Verba Crucis; The Cross Builders. Cr.
- McClure, James Gore King. N. Y., 1848- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, president of Lake Forest University, Illinois, from 1897. Possibilities; The Man who Wanted to Help; Environment; The Great Appeal; For Hearts that Hope; A Mighty Means of Usefulness. Rev.
- McConaughy, Mrs. Julia E—— [Loomis]. O., 1834- ——. A writer of juvenile religious fiction. Among her books are The Widow’s Sewing Machine; How to be Beautiful; The Hard Master; The Prize Battle; Clarence.
- McCorvey, Thomas Chalmers. Al., 1852- ——. A professor of history in the University of Alabama from 1888. The Government of the People of the State of Indiana.
- McCracken, Elizabeth. 18— - ——. A journalist of New York city. The Women of America. Mac.
- McCrady, Edward. S. C., 1802-1892. A once eminent lawyer and theologian of Charleston, whose political monograph, Our Mission: Is it to be Accomplished by the Perpetuation of our Present Union? attracted much attention at the time of its publication in 1851.
- McCrady, Edward. S. C., 1833-1903. Son of E. McCrady, supra. A prominent lawyer of Charleston, and during the Civil War a colonel in the Confederate service. Beside many important professional papers, he published a valuable History of South Carolina under the Proprietary Government, 1670-1719; South Carolina under the Royal Government, 1719-1775; South Carolina in the Revolution, 1775-1780; History of South Carolina in the Revolution, 1780-1783. Mac.
- McCrady, John. S. C., 1831-1881. Son of E. McCrady, 1st, supra. A professor of zoölogy at Harvard University, and subsequently at the University of the South. His scientific writings are published in the transactions of the Elliot Society of Natural History of Charleston.
- McCulloch, Hugh. 18— -1902. The Quest of Herakles, a volume of verse; Written in Florence. Lit.
- McCulloch, Hunter. S., 1847- ——. A verse-writer of Philadelphia. From Dawn to Dusk, and Other Poems; Robert Burns, a centenary ode. Lip.
- McCutcheon, George Barr. Ind., 1866- ——. A novelist of Lafayette, Indiana. Graustark; Castle Craneycrow; The Sherrods; The Day of the Dog; Beverly of Graustark.
- MacDill, David. O., 1826-1903. A United Presbyterian clergyman, professor of apologetics in the Theological Seminary at Xenia, Ohio, from 1885. The Bible a Miracle; Mosaic Authorship of the Bible; Pre-Millennialism Discussed.
- MacDonald, Arthur. N. Y., 1856- ——. A government specialist in education. Abnormal Man; Criminology; Abnormal Woman; Experimental Study of Children; Emile Zola.
- Macdonald, Ronald. E., 1860- ——. A son of George Macdonald, the noted Scottish novelist. For some seven years a teacher in North Carolina. God Save the King; The Sword of the King. Cent.
- MacDougal, Daniel Trembly. Ind., 1865- ——. A botanist, director of the laboratories of the Botanical Garden in New York city from 1899. Experimental Plant Physiology; Living Plants and their Properties (with J. C. Arthur). The Nature and Work of Plants. Ba. Mac.
- McElroy, Mrs. Lucy Cleaver. Ky., 18— - ——. A novelist who has written Juletty; The Silent Pioneer. Cr.
- McElroy, William H——. N. Y., 184- - ——. A New York journalist. Matthew Middlemas’s Experiment; An Overture to William Tell.
- McEnroe, William Hale. Va., 1854-1899. A physician, professor of materia medica at New York University for some years. Materia Medica and Therapeutics.
- McGill, Alexander Taggart. Pa., 1807-1889. A Presbyterian clergyman, professor of theology at Princeton Theological Seminary, 1854-83. Church Government.
- McGovern, John. N. Y., 1850- ——. A Chicago author and compiler, among whose works are Famous Women of the World; American Statesmen; The Dream City; Empire of Information.
- MacGowan, Alice. O., 1858- ——. A Chattanooga writer. The Last Word; Return. Lo. Pa.
- McGrath, Harold. N. Y., 1872- ——. A Syracuse journalist. Arms and the Woman; The Puppet Crown; The Grey Cloak; The Man on the Box. Bo.
- McHenry, James. I., 1785-1845. A physician of Philadelphia whose poems and sensational novels once attracted attention. His fictions include O’Halloran, or The Insurgent; The Wilderness; A Spectre of the Forest; The Hearts of Steel; The Betrothed of Wyoming; Meredith. His other works are The Pleasures of Friendship; Waltham; The Antediluvians, a Narrative Poem in Ten Books; The Usurper, a tragedy.
- McIlvaine, Charles. Pa., 1849- ——. A Philadelphia mycologist. Fungi, Mushrooms, Toadstools (with McAdam); A Legend of Polecat Hollow. Bo.
- McIntosh, Burr. Pa., 186- - ——. A New York author and publisher. The Little I Saw of Cuba; Boy of the Twentieth; Football and Love. Ne.
- McIntyre, John T——. Pa., 1871- ——. The Ragged Edge, a novel of ward politics.
- Mackenzie, Arthur Stanley. N. S., 1865- ——. A professor of physics at Bryn Mawr College from 1891. The Laws of Gravitation. Am.
- Mackenzie, William Douglas. South Africa, 1859- ——. A Congregational clergyman, president of Hartford Theological Seminary from 1903. The Ethics of Gambling; The Revelation of the Christ; Christianity and the Progress of Man; South Africa: its Heroes and Wars; John Mackenzie, South African Missionary and Statesman. Rev.
- Mackie, Pauline Bradford. See Hopkins, Mrs. P. B.
- McKnight, Charles. Pa., 1826- ——. Old Fort Duquesne; Our Western Border One Hundred Years Ago.
- McKnight, George. N. Y., 1840-1897. A physician at Sterling, New York. Firm Ground, a volume of religious sonnets, reprinted as Thoughts in Life and Faith.
- Mackubin, Ellen. Il., 18— - ——. A novelist of New York. The King of the Town, a novel. Hou.
- MacLandburgh, Florence. O., 1850- ——. The Automaton Ear, and Other Sketches.
- Maclane, Mary. Manitoba, 1881- ——. The Story of Mary Maclane. S.
- McLaughlin, Mary Louise. O., 18— - ——. A Cincinnati ceramic artist. China Painting; Pottery Decoration; Suggestions to China Painters; Painting in Oil; The Second Madame. Clke. Put.
- McLaws, [Emily] Lafayette. Ga., 18— - ——. A novelist of Augusta, Georgia. When the Land was Young; Jezebel. Lo.
- Maclay, Edgar Stanton. Ch., 1863- ——. An historical writer at Setauket, Long Island. The History of the United States Navy; Reminiscences of the Old Navy; History of American Privateers. Ap. Put.
- Maclean, John Patterson. O., 1848- ——. An archæologist of Cleveland. A Manual of the Antiquity of Man; Mastodon, Mammoth, and Man; The Mound Builders; History of the Clan Maclean; Introduction to the Study of the Gospel of Saint John; Critical Examination of Evidence of Norse Discovery of America; Historical Examination of Fingal’s Cave. Clke.
- McLeod, Mrs. Georgiana A—— [Hulse]. Fl., 18- ——1890. An educator of Baltimore. Sunbeams and Shadows; Ivy Leaves from the Old Homestead; Theirs and Mine; Sea Drifts; Bright Memories.
- Macloskie, George. I., 1834- ——. A professor of biology at Princeton University from 1874. Elementary Botany. Ho.
- McManus, Blanche. See Mansfield, Mrs. Blanche.
- McMurrich, James Playfair. Ont., 1859- ——. A professor of anatomy at the University of Michigan from 1895. Invertebrate Morphology; The Development of the Human Body. Ho.
- McNeill, George Edwin. Ms., 1837- ——. A trades-union organizer of Boston. The Labour Movement the Problem of a Day; History of Coöperation in Massachusetts; History of the Development of the Shoe Industry; History of Shoemakers’ Unions; Eight Hour Primer; The Slave of Fortune, a novel; The Silver Dollar; Accidents and Accident Insurance; Unfrequented Paths.
- MacNutt, William Fletcher. N. S., 1839- ——. A San Francisco physician. Diseases of the Kidney and Bladder.
- McPherson, Logan Grant. O., 1863- ——. A Pittsburgh journalist. The Monetary and Banking Problem. Ap.
- MacVane, Silas Marcus. P. E. I., 1842- ——. A professor of history at Harvard University from 1886. The Wages Question; Austrian Theory of Value; Working Principles of Political Economy; The South African Question; Translation of Seignobos’s History of Europe since 1814. Ho.
- Madison, Mrs. Lucy [Foster]. Mo., 1865- ——. A littérateur of New York city. A Maid of the First Century; A Maid at King Alfred’s Court; A Colonial Maid.
- Main, Hubert Platt. Ct., 1839- ——. A writer of Newark, New Jersey. A Dictionary of American Musicians and Hymn Writers.
- Main, Thomas. S., 1828-1896. A mechanical engineer, professor of shipbuilding in the Webb Academy of Shipbuilding, New York city. History of the Steam Engine.
- Major, Charles. “Edwin Caskoden.” Ind., 1856- ——. A lawyer and novelist of Shelbyville, Indiana. When Knighthood was in Flower, a popular romance; The Bears of Blue River; Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall; A Forest Hearth. Bo. Mac.
- Mallon, Mrs. Isabel Allardice [Sloan]. “Ruth Ashmore.” Md., 1862-1898. A popular writer on deportment. Side Talks with Girls; The Business Girl. Scr.
- Maltbie, Milo Roy. Il., 1871- ——. A writer on economics. Municipal Functions, a Study of Municipal Socialism; English Local Government of Today. Mac.
- Mangasarian, Mangasar M——. Ty., 1859- ——. A Chicago lecturer. The Religion of the Future; Omar Khayyám; A New Catechism; Christian Science, a Comedy in Four Acts; The Abysmal Monster.
- Mann, Cameron. N. Y., 1851- ——. The second Protestant Episcopal bishop of North Dakota. Future Punishment; Comments of the Bystanders at the Cross.
- Mann, Charles Holbrook. N. Y., 1839- ——. A Swedenborgian clergyman of Orange, New Jersey. Interior Spiritual Living; Sermons on Marriage; What God hath Cleansed; The Christ of God; Psychiasis; God and Man in the Bible. Put.
- Mann, Henry. S., 1848- ——. A journalist of New York city. Ancient and Mediæval Republics; Features of Society in Old and New England; English Free Trade; Handbook for American Citizens; The Land we Live In; Turning Points in Natural History.
- Mansfield, Mrs. Blanche [McManus]. La., 18— - ——. An author and illustrator of New York city. The True Mother Goose; Childhood’s Songs of Long Ago; Bachelor Ballads; How the Dutch came to Manhattan; Voyage of the Mayflower.
- Marble, Mrs. Annie [Russell]. Ms., 1864- ——. A writer of Worcester, Massachusetts. Books that Nourish Us; Thoreau: his Home, Friends, and Books. Cr. Mac.
- March, Alden. Pa., 1869- ——. An editor on the staff of the Philadelphia Press from 1891. The Conquest of the Philippines and Our Other Island Possessions.
- Marcou, Jules. F., 1824-1898. A geologist in government service for many years. Recherches Géologiques sur la Jura Salinois; Origin of the Name America; First Discoveries of California; Life of Louis Agassiz. Mac.
- Maretzek, Max. A., 1821-1897. A noted opera manager and composer. Crotchets and Quavers, an autobiography.
- Marks, Arthur Handly. Ga., 1864-1892. A writer of Winchester, Tennessee; from 1886 to 1889 in the consular service at London and Berlin. Igerne, and Other Writings.
- Marks, William Dennis. Mo., 1849- ——. A mechanical engineer who has published The Relative Proportions of the Steam Engine; The Finances of Gas and Electricity Manufacturing Enterprises. Lip.
- Marshall, Mrs. Caroline Louise [Kingsbury]. Wis., 1849- ——. A writer of Eldora, Iowa. The Girl Ranchers; Two Wyoming Girls.
- Marshall [Caroline], Nina Lovering. N. Y., 1861- ——. An educator of New York city. The Mushroom Book. Dou.
- Marshall, Edward. N. Y., 1868- ——. A New York journalist, a correspondent of the Journal during the Spanish war. Lizette, a novel; The Story of the Rough Riders, First United States Volunteer Cavalry; The Middle Wall. Dil.
- Marshall, Henry Rutgers. N. Y., 1852- ——. An architect of New York city. Pain, Pleasure, and Æsthetics; Æsthetic Principles; Instinct and Reason. Mac.
- Martin, Benjamin Ellis. N. Y., 18— - ——. A littérateur of New York city. About England with Dickens; Old Chelsea; In the Footprints of Charles Lamb; The Stones of Paris in History and Letters (with C. M. Martin). Scr.
- Martin, Chalmers. Ky., 1859- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Pittsburgh. Apostolic and Modern Missions. Rev.
- Martin, George Madden. Ky., 1866- ——. Emmy Lou: her Book and Heart; The House of Fulfilment. Mac.
- Martin, Mrs. Jane [Percy]. E., 1847- ——. A story-writer of Pendleton, Oregon. Lost and Saved.
- Martin, Samuel Albert. Pa., 1853- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, president of Wilson College, at Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, from 1895. The Man of Uz.
- Martin, Mrs. Victoria [Claflin] [Woodhull]. O., 1838- ——. A once prominent reform agitator, now (1904) resident in England. Origin, Tendencies, and Principles of Government; Social Freedom; Garden of Eden Stirpiculture; Rapid Multiplication of the Unfit; The Human Body the Temple of God.
- Marvin, Winthrop Lippitt. N. H., 1863- ——. A Boston journalist. The American Merchant Marine: its History and Romance. Scr.
- Mason, Mrs. Agnes Louisa [Carter]. N. Y., 18- ——. A verse-writer of Montclair, New Jersey. The White Nun. Put.
- Mason, Mrs. Amelia [Gere]. Ms., 184- - ——. A Chicago writer. The Women of the French Salons; Woman in the Golden Ages. Cent.
- Mason, Mrs. Caroline [Atwater]. R. I., 1853- ——. A writer of Batavia, New York. A Titled Maiden; A Minister of the World; The Minister of Carthage; The Quiet King; A Wind Flower; A Woman of Yesterday; A Lily of France; Lux Christi: an Outline Study of India; The Little Green God; Holt of Heathfield. Dou. Mac. Rev.
- Mason, Lowell. Ms., 1792-1872. A famous Boston musician, who, beside publishing various collections of sacred and secular music which included many pieces of his own composition, was the author of Musical Letters from Abroad, and several musical text-books.
- Mason, Mary Augusta. N. Y., 18— - ——. An adopted daughter of C. M. Dickinson ([page 98]). With the Seasons, a collection of verse of more than average merit. Ran.
- Mason, Rufus Osgood. N. H., 1830-1903. A physician of New York city. Sketches and Impressions; Telepathy and the Subliminal Self; Hypnotism and Suggestion.
- Mason, William. Ms., 1829- ——. Son of L. Mason, supra. A musician of New York city. Easy System for Beginners (with Hoadley); Pianoforte Technics (with Matthews); Touch and Technic; Memories of a Musical Life. Cent.
- Mason, William Pitt. N. Y., 1853- ——. A professor of chemistry at the Troy Polytechnic Institute. Water Supply; Water Analysis; Notes on Qualitative Analysis. Wil.
- Massey, George Betton. Md., 1856- ——. A Philadelphia physician. Electricity in the Diseases of Women; Conservative Gynæcology and Electro-therapeutics.
- Mather, Mrs. Margaret Morgan [Herbert]. 184- -1900. Daughter of W. H. Herbert ([page 182]). History of Polo; Hunting Then and Now; Biography of Fox, a celebrated polo pony.
- Mathews, Alfred. O., 1852- ——. A Philadelphia writer. Ohio and the Western Reserve. Ap.
- Mathews, F[erdinand] Schuyler. S. I., 1854- ——. An artist and illustrator of Boston. The Golden Flower; The Beautiful Flower Garden; Familiar Flowers of Field and Garden; Familiar Trees and their Leaves; Familiar Features of the Roadside; Familiar Life in Field and Forest; The Writing Table of the Twentieth Century; The Field Book of American Wild Flowers; Field Book of Wild Birds and Their Music; The Field Book of American Wild Birds. Ap.
- Mathews, Frances Aymar. N. Y., 18— - ——. A novelist of New York city. The New Yorkers, and Other People; A Married Man; One Man in a Thousand; To-night at Eight; His Way and Her Will; My Lady Reggy Goes to Town, and several plays.
- Mathews, Shailor. Me., 1863- ——. A professor in the University of Chicago. Select Mediæval Documents; The Social Teaching of Jesus; History of New Testament Times in Palestine; The French Revolution. Mac.
- Mathews, Stanley. O., 1824-1889. An Ohio jurist, associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, 1881-89. A Summary of the Law of Partnership.
- Matson, Henry. O., 1829-1901. A clergyman in Oberlin, Ohio. References for Literary Workers; Knowledge and Culture. Mg.
- Matthewman, Lisle de Vaux. E., 1867- ——. A journalist of New York city. Crankisms; Brevities; Rips and Raps. Co. Sto.
- Matthews, William Baynham. Va., 1850- ——. A lawyer of Washington city. Forms of Pleading; Guide for Executors and Administrators; Digest of Land Decisions.
- Maurice, Arthur Bartlett. N. J., 1873- ——. New York in Fiction; The History of the Nineteenth Century in Caricature (with Taber). Do.
- Maxwell, Perriton. N. Y., 1866- ——. A journalist of New York city. Masterpieces of Art and Nature; American Art and Artists.
- Maxwell, Samuel. N. Y., 1826-1901. A Nebraska lawyer and congressman. Maxwell’s Nebraska Digest (1877); Practice in Justice Courts; Pleading and Practice; Criminal Procedure; Code Pleading.
- Mayer, Henry. G., 1868- ——. A caricaturist of note. Autobiography of a Monkey; In Laughland; A Trip to Toyland; Adventures of a Japanese Doll; Alphabet of Little People. Dut. Sto.
- Mayo, Earl Williams. N. Y., 1873- ——. A New York littérateur. A Border Rivalry.
- Mead, Edward Campbell. Ms., 1837- ——. A farmer of Keswick, Virginia. Genealogical History of the Lee Family of Virginia and Maryland; Australia in 1859; Sketches of the War; Historic Homes of the South-West Mountains, Virginia.
- Mead, Mrs. Lucia True [Ames]. N. H., 1856- ——. Wife of E. D. Mead ([page 252]). See Ames, Lucia.
- Mead, Theodore Hoe. N. Y., 1837- ——. A manufacturer of New York city. Our Mother Tongue; Health without Medicine; Horsemanship for Women. Do.
- Mead, [William] Leon. N. Y., 1861- ——. A New York littérateur. The Rockets, a volume of verse; In Thraldom: a physiological romance; Wild Cat Ledge; The Bow-Legged Ghost, and Other Stories; On Nature’s Reeds, a collection of verse; and several plays.
- Means, David MacGregor. Ms., 1847- ——. A lawyer of New York city. The Boss: an Essay on the Government of American Cities; Industrial Freedom. Ap.
- Mears, David Otis. Ms., 1842- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Albany. Life of Edward Norris Kirk, supra; The Deathless Book; Oberlin Lectures; Inspired Through Suffering. Lo. Rev.
- Mechem, Floyd Russell. N. Y., 1858- ——. Tappan professor of law in the University of Michigan from 1892. Agency; Public Officers; Cases on Agency; Elements of Partnership; The Law of Sales of Personal Property; Outlines of the Law of Agency.
- Meeker, Nathan Cook. O., 1817-1879. An author and journalist of Colorado. The Adventures of Captain Armstrong; Life in the West (1868); Rosa Robbins, or Life with John A. Logan and his Men.
- Meekins, Lynn Roby. Md., 1862- ——. A Baltimore journalist. The Robb’s Island Wreck; Some of Our People; Adam Rush. S. Lip.
- Mees, Theophilus Martin Konrad. O., 1848- ——. A Lutheran clergyman of Columbus, Ohio. Doctrinal History of Predestination from 1517 to 1580; School Government and Methods.
- Meigs, William Montgomery. Pa., 1852- ——. Son of J. F. Meigs, supra, grandson of C. J. Ingersoll, supra. A lawyer of Philadelphia. Life of Josiah Meigs; Life of Charles Jared Ingersoll; The Growth of the Constitution in the Federal Convention of 1787. Lip.
- Mell, Patrick Hues. Ga., 1850- ——. Son of P. H. Mell ([page 252]). A scientist of Auburn, Alabama. Wild Grasses of Alabama; Life of Patrick Hues Mell, Senior; Climatology of Alabama; Microscopic Study of the Cotton Plant, are among his works.
- Memminger, Allard. S. C., 1854- ——. A physician of Charleston. Diagnosis by the Urine.
- Mercer, Henry Chapman. Pa., 1856- ——. An archæologist of Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Hill Caves of Yucatan; Lenape Stone; Antiquity of Man in the Delaware Valley and the Eastern United States. Gi.
- Meredith, William Tuckey. Pa., 1839- ——. A banker of New York city. Not of her Father’s Race, a novel.
- Merington, Marguerite. E., 18— - ——. A playwriter of New York city. Captain Letterblair; Daphne, or the Pipes of Arcadia; Love Finds the Way. Cent.
- Merriam, Charles Edward. Ia., 1874- ——. An instructor in political science in the University of Chicago from 1903. The History of the Theory of Sovereignty since Rousseau; Economics and Public Law; A History of American Political Theories. Mac.
- Merrick, Mrs. Caroline Elizabeth [Thomas]. La., 1825- ——. A New Orleans writer. Old Times in Dixie Land: a Southern Matron’s Memories.
- Merrill, Catherine. Ind., 1824-1900. A once prominent educator at Indianapolis. The Soldier of Indiana, a Record of the State’s Relation to the Civil War.
- Merrill, George Edmands. Ms., 1846- ——. A Baptist clergyman, president of Colgate University from 1899. The Story of the Manuscripts; Crusaders and Captives; The Reasonable Christ; Parchments of the Faith.
- Merrill, Joseph. Ms., 1814-1898. A local historian who published a History of Amesbury, Massachusetts, in 1881.
- Merriman, Charles Eustace. 18— - ——. A littérateur who has published Letters from a Son to his Self-Made Father.
- Merriman, Mrs. Effie [Woodward]. Min., 1856- ——. A Minneapolis writer for children. Among her books are Pards; A Queer Family; The Little Millers; How Women may Earn Money.
- Merriman, Mrs. Helen [Bigelow]. Ms., 1844- ——. A writer of Worcester, Massachusetts. What Shall Make us Whole? Religio Pictoris. Hou.
- Merriman, Roger Bigelow. Ms., 187- - ——. Son of Mrs. H. Merriman, supra. Life and Letters of Thomas Cromwell.
- Merriman, Titus Mooney. Q., 1822- ——. A Baptist clergyman in Cambridge. Trail of History; William, Prince of Orange; Pilgrims, Puritans, and Roger Williams Vindicated.
- Merwin, Samuel. Il., 1874- ——. A story-writer of Plainfield, New Jersey. His Little World; The Road to Frontenac; The Upper Hand; The Story of Hunch Badeau; The Merry Anne. With H. K. Webster, infra, he wrote Calumet K; The Short Line War. Bar. Mac.
- Messmer, Sebastian Gebhard. Sd., 1847- ——. A Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Green Bay from 1892. Praxis Synodalis; Canonical Procedure; Spirago’s Method. Ben.
- Meyer, Mrs. Annie Nathan. N. Y., 1867- ——. A New York writer. Helen Brent, M. D.; My Park Book; Robert Annys: Poor Priest.
- Mielziner, Moses. G., 1828-1903. A Hebrew rabbi, Talmud professor in Union College, Cincinnati, from 1879. Slavery Among the Ancient Hebrews; Jewish Law of Marriage and Divorce; Introduction to the Talmud; Legal Maxims of the Talmud.
- Mifflin, John Houston. Pa., 1807-1883. An artist and author of Columbia, Pennsylvania. He was a portrait and miniature painter of much delicacy. Rhymes of an Artist.
- Mifflin, Lloyd. Pa., 1846- ——. Son of J. H. Mifflin, supra. A poet and artist of Columbia, Pennsylvania. At the Gates of Song, a volume of one hundred and fifty sonnets; On the Slopes of Helicon, and Other Poems; Memorial Day Ode; The Hills: a Poem; Conversation as a Fine Art; Echoes of Greek Idyls; Lyrics; The Fields of Dawn, and Later Sonnets; Castalian Days. Est. Hou.
- Mifflin, Samuel Wright. Pa., 1805-1885. Cousin of J. H. Mifflin, supra. A civil engineer of Pennsylvania. Location of Railway Engineers.
- Miller, Adolph Caspar. Cal., 1866- ——. A professor of economics in the University of California from 1902. The Monetary Problem in the University of California.
- Miller, Alfred Stanley. Pa., 1856- ——. A metallurgist, professor of mining metallurgy and geology in the University of Idaho from 1897. Manual of Assaying; The Cyanide Process. Wil.
- Miller, Mrs. Alice [Duer]. N. Y., 18— - ——. Sister of C. Duer, supra. Poems (with C. Duer); Calderon’s Prisoner. Scr.
- Miller, Andrew James. Ga., 1855- ——. An Alabama journalist. Old School Days; The Making of a Pirate; The Toastmaster.
- Miller, Charles Armond. W. Va., 1864- ——. A Lutheran clergyman of New York city. Ad Astra and Other Verses on Sacred Themes; The Way of the Cross. Rev.
- Miller, Frank Justus. Tn., 1858- ——. A professor of Latin in the University of Chicago from 1892. Dido, an Epic Tragedy; Studies in Roman Poetry. Sil.
- Miller, Freeman Edwin. Ind., 1864- ——. An educator of Oklahoma, professor in the Oklahoma Agricultural College 1894-98. Oklahoma, and Other Poems; Songs from the Southwest Country.
- Miller, John Bleecker. N. Y., 1856- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Trade Organizations in Politics; Trade Organizations in Religion.
- Miller, Marion Mills. O., 1864- ——. A classical scholar of New York city. The Sicilian Idyls of Theocritus.
- Miller, Mrs. Mary [Rogers]. Ia., 1868- ——. An educator of New York city. The Brook Book. Dou.
- Miller, Samuel Almond. O., 1836-1897. A lawyer and geologist of Cincinnati. American Palæozoic Fossils; North American Geology and Palæontology; Mesozoic Fossils; Cenozoic Fossils.
- Mills, Benjamin Fay. N. J., 1857- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Oakland, California, formerly prominent as an orthodox evangelist. Power from on High; Victory through Surrender; God’s Word; Twentieth Century Religion.
- Mills, Herbert Elmer. N. H., 1861- ——. A professor of economics at Vassar College from 1890. The French Revolution in San Domingo; Practical Economic Problems; The Labour Problem.
- Mills, Weymer Jay. N. J., 1880- ——. Historic Houses of New Jersey; Through the Gates of Old Romance. Lip.
- Millspaugh, Charles Frederic. N. Y., 1854- ——. A Chicago botanist. American Medical Plants; Weeds of West Virginia; Flora of West Virginia.
- Minot, Charles Sedgwick. Ms., 1852- ——. A professor of histology in the medical school of Harvard University from 1892. Human Embryology.
- Minton, Henry Collin. Pa., 1855- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, professor of systematic theology in the San Francisco Theological Seminary from 1892. Christianity Supernatural; The Cosmos and the Logos.
- Mitchell, Clifford. Ms., 1854- ——. A homœopathic physician of Chicago. Manual of Urinary Analysis; Renal Therapeutics; Dental Chemistry; The Physician’s Chemistry; The Chronicles of the Omelette Club; Diseases of the Urinary Organs.
- Moffat, William David. N. J., 1865- ——. Son of J. C. Moffat ([page 258]). A New York writer of stories for boys, business manager of The Book-Buyer and Scribner’s Magazine. The County Pennant; The Crimson Banner; Brad Mattoon; Not Without Honor, a novel.
- Moffett, Cleveland. N. Y., 1803- ——. A journalist who has published Real Detective Stories; Careers of Danger and Daring. Cent.
- Moffett, Samuel Erasmus. Mo., 1860- ——. A New York journalist. The Tariff; Chapters on Silver; Suggestions on Government.
- Moise, Penina. S. C., 1797-1880. A verse-writer of Charleston. Fancy’s Sketch Book.
- Moldehnke, Charles Edward. P., 1860- ——. An Egyptologist. The Trees of Ancient Egypt; The New York Obelisk; Egyptian Origin of Our Alphabet; Egyptian Classics.
- Monroe, Mrs. Harriet [Earhart]. Pa., 1842- ——. An author and lecturer of Washington city. The Art of Conversation; Heroine of the Mining Camp; Historical Lutheranism; Washington: its Sights and Insights. Bar. Fu.
- Monroe, Will Seymour. Pa., 1863- ——. A professor of psychology in the Westfield, Massachusetts, Normal School. Educational Labours of Henry Barnard; Comenius’s School of Infancy; Bibliography of Education; Child Study Outlines; Comenius and the Beginnings of Educational Reform. Ap. He. Scr.
- Moody, Mrs. Helen [Watterson]. O., 1860- ——. A journalist of New York city. The Unquiet Sex, a volume of essays. Scr.
- Moody, William Godwin. 18— - ——. Land and Labor in the United States; Our Labor Difficulties. Scr.
- Moody, William Vaughn. Ind., 1869- ——. A poet whose work displays qualities which place it above the level of much recent American poetry. Poems; The Masque of Judgment, a dramatic poem; The Fire-Bringer; The History of English Literature (with R. M. Lovett). Hou. Scr. Sm.
- Mooney, James. Ind., 1861- ——. An ethnologist of note. Medical Mythology of Ireland; Funeral Customs of Ireland; Holiday Customs of Ireland; Myths of the Cherokees; Sionian Tribes of the East; The Messiah Religion and the Ghost Dance.
- Moore, Albert Weston. Ms., 1842- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Lynn, Massachusetts. The Rational Basis of Orthodoxy. Hou.
- Moore, Mrs. Alice Rogers. 18— - ——. In the Fireflies’ Glow, a collection of juvenile tales.
- Moore, Charles. Mch., 1855- ——. A writer of Washington city. Charities of the District of Columbia; The Northwest under Three Flags. Har.
- Moore, James W——. Pa., 1844- ——. A professor of mechanics at Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania. The Elements of Natural Philosophy.
- Moore, John Bassett. Del., 1860- ——. A professor of international law at Columbia University. A Treatise on Extradition and Interstate Rendition; History and Digest of International Arbitrations to which the United States has been a Party.
- Moore, John Trotwood. Al., 1858- ——. A Summer Hymnal; Ole Mistis; Songs and Stories from Old Tennessee. Co.
- Moore, Thomas Joseph. Pa., 1864- ——. A verse-writer of New York city. Elecampane, and Other Poems. Clke.
- Moore, William Thomas. Ky., 1832- ——. A clergyman of the Christian (Disciples) sect. Views of Life; Living Pulpit of the Christian (Disciples) Church (edited); Life of Timothy Coup.
- Moran, Mrs. Jane Wormley [Blackburn]. Va., 1842- ——. A novelist of Charlottesville, Virginia. Miss Washington of Virginia; What a Man can Do with a Woman’s Life.
- Morgan, Anne Eugenia Felicia. O., 1845- ——. A professor of philosophy at Wellesley College from 1878. Scripture Studies on the Origin and Destiny of Man; The White Lady.
- Morgan, Mrs. Caroline [Starr]. 184- - ——. Wife of T. J. Morgan, infra. Ways that Win; Esther Lawrence; Charlotte’s Revenge; Marmaduke Multiply Stories.
- Morgan, George Campbell. E., 1863- ——. A Congregational clergyman, widely known as a lecturer. Among his works are Discipleship; Hidden Years at Nazareth; God’s Methods with Man; Wherein?; Life Problems; True Estimate of Life; The Ten Commandments; All Things New; The Crises of the Christ. Rev.
- Morgan, Thomas Hunt. Ky., 1866- ——. A professor of biology in Bryn Mawr College. The Development of the Frog’s Egg; Regeneration; Evolution and Adaptation (1903).
- Morgan, Thomas Jefferson. Ind., 1839-1902. A Baptist clergyman in Yonkers, New York. Patriotic Citizenship; Studies in Pedagogy; The Negro in America. Bap.
- Morison, George Shattuck. Ms., 1842-1903. Son of J. H. Morison, infra. A civil engineer of distinction. The New Epoch as developed by the Manufacture of Power. Hou.
- Morison, John Hopkins. N. H., 1808-1896. A Unitarian clergyman, pastor at Milton, Massachusetts, 1846-1885. Life of Honorable Jeremiah Smith; Disquisitions and Notes on the Gospel of Saint Matthew; The Great Poets as Religious Teachers. See John Hopkins Morison, Memoir, 1897.
- Morley, Margaret Warner. Ia., 1858- ——. A Boston writer on elementary botany and zoölogy. A Song of Life; Life and Love; A Few Familiar Flowers; Seed-Babies; Flowers and their Friends; The Bee People; The Honey Makers; Down North and Up Along, a volume of travels in Nova Scotia and Cape Breton. Gi. Mg.
- Morris, Mrs. Alice A—— Parmelee. Ct., 186- - ——. A writer of New York city. Dragons and Cherry Blossoms. Do.
- Morris, Clara. O., 1848- ——. An actress of note. Life on the Stage; A Pasteboard Crown; Stage Confidences. Lo. Scr.
- Morris, Gouverneur. N. Y., 1876- ——. A New York littérateur, great-grandson of Gouverneur Morris, supra. A Bunch of Grapes; Tom Beauling; Aladdin O’Brien; The Pagan’s Progress; Ellen and Mr. Man. Bar. Cent.
- Morris, Henry Crittenden. Il., 1868- ——. A lawyer of Chicago. The History of Colonization from the Earliest Times.
- Morris, Martin Ferdinand. D. C., 1834- ——. A professor of law in Georgetown University from 1876. Lectures on the Development of Constitutional and Civil Liberty.
- Morris, Mrs. Robert C. See Morris, Mrs. Alice.
- Morris, Robert Tuttle. Ct., 1857- ——. A surgeon of New York city. How We treat Wounds To-day; Lectures on Appendicitis; Hopkins’s Pond, and Other Sketches. Put.
- Morrison, Harry Steele. Il., 1880- ——. A littérateur of New York city. A Yankee Boy’s Success; The Adventures of a Boy Reporter. Pa. Sto.
- Morrison, Joseph. Ont., 1848- ——. A surgeon and astronomer in Washington city. Treatise on Trigonometry.
- Morrison, Mrs. Mary Jane [Whitney]. Me., 1832-1904. A writer of Waltham, Massachusetts. Stories True and Fancies New.
- Morrison, Sara Elizabeth. Ind., 18— - ——. A Philadelphia writer for young people. Chilhowee Boys; Chilhowee Boys in War Times; Chilhowee Boys at College; Chilhowee Boys in Harness. Cr.
- Morrow, Prince Albert. Ky., 1849- ——. A physician of New York city, among whose professional publications are System of Genito-Urinary Diseases; Atlas of Skin and Venereal Diseases; Venereal Diseases and Marriage. Wo.
- Mortimer, Alfred [Garnett]. E., 1848- ——. An Episcopal clergyman resident in the United States from 1877 and long rector of Saint Mark’s Church, Philadelphia. Helps to Meditation; Sermons in Miniature; Laws of Penitence; Stories from Genesis; Notes on the Penitential Psalms; Laws of Happiness; Catholic Faith and Practice; Lenten Preaching; The Creeds; The Seven Last Words; Jesus and the Renunciation; Learn of Jesus Christ to Die. Dut. Lgs.
- Morton, Frederick William. Ont., 1859- ——. A Chicago journalist. Woman in Epigram; Men in Epigram; The Revolt of the Covenanters; Love in Epigram.
- Moses, Alfred Joseph. L. I., 1859- ——. A professor of mineralogy at Columbia University from 1897. Mineralogy, Crystallography and Blowpipe Analysis; Characters of Crystals. Vn.
- Moses, Bernard. Ct., 1846- ——. A professor of history in the University of California from 1876. Politics (with W. W. Crane); Federal Government in Switzerland; Democracy and Social Growth in America; Establishment of Spanish Rule in America. Put.
- Moss, Frank. N. Y., 1860- ——. A New York lawyer of prominence. The American Metropolis.
- Moss, Lemuel. Ky., 1829-1904. A Baptist clergyman of Philadelphia. What Baptists Stand for; A Day with Paul.
- Moxom, Philip Stafford. Ont., 1848- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Springfield, Massachusetts, but formerly in the Baptist ministry. From Jerusalem to Nicæa; The Aim of Life; The Religion of Hope. Lit.
- Muhleman, Maurice Louis. Il., 1852- ——. A deputy assistant treasurer of the United States at New York city from 1888. The Money of the United States; Monetary Systems of the World.
- Mullany, John Francis. N. Y., 1853- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman of Syracuse, among whose writings are Old and New Spain; Dante and His Times; Bible Studies; The Old World Seen through American Eyes. Ben.
- Mumford, John Kimberly. N. Y., 1863- ——. A New York journalist. Oriental Rugs.
- Munn, Charles Clark. Ct., 1848- ——. Uncle Terry; Pocket Island; Rockhaven; The Hermit. Le.
- Munro, Dana Carleton. R. I., 1866- ——. A professor of European history in the University of Wisconsin from 1902. Syllabus of Mediæval History; Mediæval History; Essays on the Crusades (joint author). Ap.
- Munroe, James Phinney. N. Y., 1862- ——. A Boston writer. The Educational Ideal; Adventures of an Army Nurse in Two Wars. He. Lit.
- Münsterberg, Hugo. G., 1863- ——. An eminent psychologist, professor at Harvard University from 1897. Psychology and Life; American Traits; Grundzüge der Psychologie; The Americans. Hou.
- Murfree, William Law. N. C., 1817-1892. A lawyer of Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and, in later life, of St. Louis. His daughters, F. N. D. and M. N. Murfree, are mentioned on [page 266]. A Treatise on the Law of Sheriffs; Official Bonds; Practice before Justices of the Peace.
- Murphy, Edgar Gardner. Ark., 1869- ——. An educator, of Montgomery, Alabama, but prior to 1903 in the Episcopal ministry. Words for the Church; The Larger Life. Lgs. Wh.
- Muzzarelli, Antoine [Jules César Venceslas Ermanigilde]. F., 1847- ——. An educator, resident in the United States from 1877. Histoire de la Guerre Pacifique; Etude sur la Situation Politique de l’Amérique du Sud; La Question du Canal de Panama; Les Autonymes de la Langue Française; The Academic French Course; Le Pays de France. Am.
- Muzzey, David Saville. Ms., 1870- ——. A writer of Lexington, Massachusetts. Rise of the New Testament; Spiritual Heroes. Dou. Mac.
- Myer, Edmund John. Pa., 1840- ——. A vocal teacher of New York city, among whose professional works are The Voice from a Practical Standpoint; Position and Action in Singing; The Renaissance of the Vocal Art.
- Myer, Isaac. Pa., 1836-1902. A lawyer of Philadelphia. The Quabbalah; On Dreams; Scarabs; The Oldest Books in the World; Taken from Papyri and Monuments.
- Myers, Cortland. N. Y., 1864- ——. A Baptist clergyman of Brooklyn, among whose books are Midnight in a Great City; Why Men do not Go to Church; The Lost Wedding Ring; The Best Place on Earth. Fu.
- Myers, Mrs. Minnie [Walter]. Mi., 1852- ——. A writer of Memphis. Romance and Realism of the Southern Gulf Coast. Clke.
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- Nagle, James C——. Va., 1865- ——. A civil engineer. A Field Manual for Railroad Engineers. Wil.
- Nancrede, Charles Beylard. Pa., 1847- ——. A professor of surgery in the University of Michigan from 1887. Essentials of Anatomy; Lectures upon the Principles of Surgery.
- Nash, Charles Ellwood. N. J., 1855- ——. A Universalist clergyman, president of Lombard University, Galesburg, Illinois, from 1895. The Saviour of the World.
- Nash, Henry Sylvester. O., 1854- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Cambridge, Massachusetts, professor of New Testament interpretation in the Episcopal Theological School from 1884. The Genesis of the Social Conscience: the Relation between the Establishment of Christianity in Europe and the Social Question; Ethics and Revelation; History of the Higher Criticism of the New Testament. Mac.
- Nason, Frank Lewis. Wis., 1856- ——. A mining engineer. To the End of the Trail, a novel; Iron Ores of Missouri; The Blue Goose. Hou. Mac.
- Naylor, James Ball. O., 1860- ——. A novelist. Ralph Marlowe; The Sign of the Prophet; In the Days of Saint Clair; The Cabin in the Woods.
- Needham, James George. Il., 1868- ——. An entomologist, professor of biology in Lake Forest University, Illinois, from 1898. Elementary Lessons in Zoölogy; Outdoor Studies. Am.
- Nehrling, Henry. Wis., 1853- ——. An ornithologist who has published Die Nordamerikanische Vogelwelt; Our Native Birds of Song and Beauty.
- Neidhard, Charles. G., 1809- ——. A homœopathic physician of Philadelphia. Homœopathy in England, France, and Germany; Answer to the Delusions of Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes; On Crotalus Horridus in Yellow Fever; Diphtheria in the United States.
- Nelson, Aven. Ia., 1859- ——. A professor of botany in the University of Wyoming from 1887. Report on the Flora of Wyoming; The Trees of Wyoming and How to Know Them; Key to the Rocky Mountain Flora. Ap.
- Nelson, William. N. J., 1847- ——. A lawyer and local historian of Paterson, New Jersey. The Indians of New Jersey; The Doremus Family in America; History of Paterson.
- Nelson, Wolfred. Q., 1846- ——. A physician of New York City. Aperçu de Quelques Difficultés à vaincre dans la Construction du Canal de Panama; Five Years in Panama.
- Nevin, Robert Peebles. Pa., 1820- ——. A Pittsburgh writer. Black Robes, or Missions and Ministers; Les Trois Rois, sketches of the history of Pittsburgh.
- Nevins, Winfield Scott. Me., 1850- ——. A writer of Salem, Massachusetts. Old Naumkeag; Guide to the North Shore of Massachusetts; Witchcraft in Salem Village.
- New, Clarence Herbert. N. Y., 1862- ——. A New York writer. Franc Elliott; Under the Pacific; Chronicles of Murphy’s Gulch. Lip.
- Newcomb, Charles Benjamin. Ms., 1845- ——. A mental healer, of Boston. All’s Right with the World; Discovery of a Lost Trail. Lo.
- Newell, Frederick Haynes. Pa., 1862- ——. A hydrographer attached to the United States Geological Survey from 1888, Agriculture by Irrigation; Hydrography of the United States; The Public Lands of the United States. Cr.
- Newel, Peter Sheaf Hersey. Il., 1862- ——. A humorous artist and illustrator of books. Pictures and Rhymes. Har.
- Newman, Albert Henry. S. C., 1852- ——. A Baptist clergyman, professor of church history in McMaster University, Toronto, but prior to 1881 the holder of similar posts in the United States. The Baptist Churches in the United States; History of Anti-Pædobaptism; Manual of Church History; A Century of Baptist Achievement. Bap.
- Niblack, Albert Parker. Ind., 1859- ——. A United States naval lieutenant. The Coast Indians of Alaska and Northern British America.
- Niccols, Samuel Jack. 1838- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman in St. Louis. The Eastern Question in Prophecy (1877).
- Nichols, Charles Wilbur de Lyon. Ct., 1854- ——. A New York philanthropist. The Decadents; The Greek Madonna.
- Nichols, Francis Henry. L. I., 1868- ——. A newspaper correspondent and traveller. Through Hidden Shensi. Scr.
- Nicholson, Meredith. Ind., 1866- ——. An Indianapolis writer. Short Flights (verse); The Hoosiers; The Main Chance. Bo.
- Nicklin, Philip Houlbrouke. “Peregrine Prolix.” Pa., 1786-1842. A once prominent bookseller in Philadelphia. Letters Descriptive of Virginia Springs; A Pleasant Peregrination through the Prettiest Parts of Pennsylvania; Remarks on Literary Property; Papers on Free Trade.
- Nicolls, William Jasper. Pa., 1854- ——. A civil and mining engineer of Philadelphia. Graystone, a novel; Nicolls’s Railway Builder; The Story of American Coal; Coal Catechism. Lip.
- Nixon, Oliver Woodson. N. C., 1825- ——. A Chicago editor. How Marcus Whitman Saved Oregon for the Union; Memories of a Forty-Niner.
- Noble, Frederick Alphonso. Me., 1832- ——. A Congregational clergyman, pastor of Union Park Church, Chicago. Our Redemption; Divine Life in Man; Discourses on the Epistle to the Philippians. Rev.
- Norris, Frank. Il., 1870-1902. A novelist of New York city, war correspondent of McClure’s Magazine during the Spanish-American War. Yvernette, a mediæval poem; Moran of the Lady Letty; McTegue; Blix; A Man’s Woman; The Octopus; The Pit. Dou. Lip.
- Norris, Homer Albert. Me., 1860- ——. A Boston musician. Practical Harmony on a French Basis; The Art of Counterpoint.
- Norris, Mary Harriott. N. J., 1848- ——. A novelist of New York city and dean of Northwestern University at Evanston, Illinois. Editor of editions of George Eliot’s Silas Marner; Longfellow’s Evangeline; Scott’s Marmion, Kenilworth, and Quentin Durward, and author of Dorothy Delafield; Afterward; John Applegate, Surgeon; Lakewood; The Gray House of the Quarries; The Grapes of Wrath. Pa. Sto.
- Norris, Richard Cooper. Md., 1863- ——. A Philadelphia physician. American Text Book of Obstetrics; Syllabus of Obstetrical Lectures.
- Norris, William Fisher. Pa., 1839-1901. A Philadelphia surgeon who, in addition to many professional papers, has published (with C. A. Oliver) A Text Book of Ophthalmology and edited A System of Diseases of the Eye, by American, British, French, Dutch, and Spanish Authors.
- North, Simeon. Ct., 1802-1884. An educator who was president of Hamilton College, Clinton, New York, 1839-1857. The American System of Collegiate Education; Faith in the World’s Conversion; Anglo-Saxon Literature; The Weapons in Christian Warfare; Obedience in Death; Half Century Letter of Reminiscences.
- Northrop, Henry Davenport. N. Y., 1836- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Philadelphia. Crown Jewels; History of the United States; World Renowned Authors; Grandfather’s Bible Stories.
- Norton, Charles Benjamin. Ct., 1825-1891. American Breech-Loading Small-Arms; Life Insurance; The President and his Cabinet (1888); World’s Fairs from 1851 to 1893.
- Norton, John Foote. Ct., 1809- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Natick, Massachusetts, who published town histories of Natick and Athol, Massachusetts, and of Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire.
- Norton, John Pease. Ct., 1877- ——. An instructor in economics at Yale University from 1901. Statistical Studies in the New York Money Market. Mac.
- Norwood, Thomas Manson. Ga., 1830- ——. A lawyer of Savannah. Plutocracy, or American White Slavery, a novel.
- Nott, Charles Cooper. N. Y., 1827- ——. A jurist of Washington city. Mechanics’ Lien Laws; Sketches of the War; Sketches of Prison Camps; Seven Great Hymns of the Church.
- Nox, Owen. See Cory, C. B.
- Noyes, Alexander Dana. N. J., 1862- ——. A New York journalist, financial editor of the Evening Post. Thirty Years of American Finance. Put.
- Noyes, Carleton [Eldredge]. 18— - ——. An instructor in English at Harvard University. The Enjoyment of Art. Hou.
- Noyes, Theodore Williams. D. C., 1848- ——. A journalist of Washington city. The National Capital; Notes of Travel; Newspaper Libels.
- Noyes, William Albert. Ia., 1857- ——. A professor of chemistry at the Rose Polytechnic Institute, Terre Haute, Indiana. Elements of Qualitative Analysis; Organic Chemistry for the Laboratory.
- Nutting, Mary Olivia. Vt., 1831- ——. Our Summer at Hillside Farm; Steps in the Upward Way; The Story of William the Silent and the Netherland War; The Days of Prince Maurice. C. P. S. Lo.
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- Oakley, Henry Augustus. N. Y., 1827- ——. An insurance president of New York city. A Christmas Reverie, and Other Sketches.
- Ober, Sarah Endicott. Ms., 1854- ——. For six years a Congregationalist missionary in the mountains of Tennessee and Kentucky. Ginsey Krieder; Little Tommy; Stacy’s Room. Bap. C. P. S.
- O’Bryan, William. I. 1778-1868. A Wesleyan preacher who in 1816 founded the sect of Bryanites, or Arminian Bible Christians. In 1831 he emigrated to the United States, and was long resident in Brooklyn. Travels in the United States of America (1836); The Rules of Society, a Guide for Those who Desire to be Arminian Bible Christians. See Dictionary of National Biography, volume 41.
- Ogden, Henry Neely. Me., 1868- ——. A professor of civil engineering at Cornell University from 1896. Sewer Design. Wil.
- Ogden, Rollo. N. Y., 1856- ——. The editor of the New York Evening Post from 1903. William Hickling Prescott in American Men of Letters Series. Hou.
- Ogden, Ruth. See Ide, Mrs.
- Ogg, Frederic Austin. Ind., 1878- ——. An instructor in History in Indiana University. Saxon and Slav; The Exploration and Diplomacy of the Mississippi. Mac.
- O’Gorman, Thomas. Ms. 1843- ——. The Roman Catholic bishop of Sioux Falls from 1896. A History of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States.
- O’Hagan, Anne. D. C., 1869- ——. A journalist of New York city. Cuba at a Glance (joint author).
- Ohmann-Dumesnil, Arnaut Henry. Ia., 1857- ——. A dermatologist of St. Louis. Handbook of Dermatology; History of Syphilis.
- Olcutt, Henry Steel. N. J., 1832- ——. The founder, in 1875, of the Theosophical Society, now (1904) resident at Adgar, near Madras, India. Outlines of First Course of Yale Agricultural Lectures (1860); People from the Outer World; Theosophy, Religion, and Occult Science; A Buddhist Catechism; Old Diary Leaves. Put.
- Olmsted, Charles Sanford. N. Y., 1853- ——. The third Protestant Episcopal bishop of Colorado. December Musings, and Other Poems; Discipline of Perfection.
- Olney, Edward. N. Y., 1827-1887. An educator of note, professor of mathematics in the University of Michigan, 1863-1887, and author of a complete series of mathematical text-books which bear his name.
- Onderdonk, James Lawrence. N. Y., 1854-1899. A lawyer in Idaho 1880-1886, and subsequently in Chicago. A Political Map of the United States; History of American Verse (1610-1897). Mg.
- Oppenheim, Nathan. N. Y., 1865- ——. A New York physician. The Development of the Child; The Medical Diseases of Childhood; The Care of the Child in Health; Mental Growth and Control.
- Orcutt, William Dana. N. H., 1870- ——. A Boston writer. Good Old Dorchester, a volume of town history; The Princess Kallisto, and Other Tales; Robert Cavelier: the Story of the Romance of the Sieur de La Salle. Lit.
- Ordronaux, John. N. Y., 1830- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Hints on the Preservation of Health in Armies; The Jurisprudence of Medicine; Manual of Instructions for Military Surgeons. Vn.
- O’Reilly, Bernard. I., 1820- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman and educator, formerly of New York city, but from 1887 domestic prelate of the papal household. Mirror of True Womanhood; Life of Pius IX.; True Men; Key of Heaven; The Two Brides, a novel; Life of Leo XIII.
- Osborn, Herbert. Wis., 1856- ——. A professor of entomology in Ohio University from 1888. Insects affecting Domestic Animals; Pediculi and Mallophaga of Man and Lower Animals.
- Osborne, Edward William. E. I., 1845- ——. The Protestant Episcopal bishop-coadjutor of Springfield from 1904, but previously a prominent clergyman of Boston. The Children’s Saviour; The Children’s Faith; The Saviour King. Lgs.
- Osbourne, Lloyd. Cal., 1868- ——. A San Francisco writer. With his stepfather, Robert Louis Stevenson, he wrote The Wrong Box; The Wrecker; and The Ebb Tide. He is sole author of The Queen vs. Billy; The Renegade.
- Otis, George Edmond. Ms., 1846- ——. A lawyer who has published The River of Dreams and Other Poems; Thurid and Other Poems.
- Overall, John Wilford. Va., 1823-1899. A Catechism of the United States Constitution; The Negro as he Was and Will Be.
- Overton, Gwendolen. Kan., 1876- ——. A novelist of Los Angeles. The Heritage of Unrest; The Captain’s Daughter; Captains of the World. Mac.
- Owen, Mary Alicia. Mo., 1858- ——. Ole Rabbit’s Plantation Stories; Voodoo Tales; Oracles and Witches. Put.
- Owen, Thomas McAdory. Al., 1866- ——. A bibliographer of Montgomery, Alabama. City Code of Bessemer; Bibliography of Alabama; Bibliography of Mississippi; Annals of Alabama, 1819-1900.
- Owen, Wilber Allen. Mch., 1873- ——. A lawyer of Toledo. Questions and Answers on Pleading; Questions and Answers on Evidence; Law Quizzer.
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- Packard, Charlotte Mellen. O., 1839- ——. A writer of verse and fiction. Helen Grey: what She Sought and what She Did.
- Packard, Winthrop. 18— - ——. A Boston journalist. The Young Ice Whalers. Hou.
- Page, Walter Hines. N. C., 1855- ——. An editor of New York city. The Rebuilding of Old Commonwealths. Dou.
- Paige, Elbridge Gerry. N. Y., 1813-1859. A journalist of New York city, still remembered for his Short Patent Sermons (1854).
- Paine, Albert Bigelow. Ms., 1861- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Rhymes by Two Friends (with W. A. White); The Mystery of Evelyn de Lorme; Gobolinks (with Mrs. Ruth Stewart); The Dumpies (with F. Van der Beck); The Hollow Tree; Autobiography of a Monkey; In the Deep Woods; The Beacon Prize Medals, and Other Stories; The Van Dwellers; The Bread Line; The Little Lady: her Book; The Great White Way; Thomas Nast: his Period and his Pictures; The Commuters. Ba. Cent.
- Paine, Dan L——. Ind., 1830-1895. An Indianapolis journalist. Club Moss, a collection of verse.
- Paine, Levi Leonard. Ms., 1832-1902. A Congregational clergyman, professor of ecclesiastical history in Bangor Theological Seminary 1870-1902. A Critical History of the Evolution of Trinitarianism and its Outcome in the New Christology; The Ethnic Trinities, and Their Relation to the Christian Trinity. Hou.
- Paine, Willis Seaver. N. Y., 1848- ——. A lawyer of New York city. The Laws of the State of New York relating to Banks and Banking; The Law of Building Associations; Insolvent Savings Banks of New York.
- Painter, Franklin Verzelius Newton. Va., 1852- ——. A professor of modern languages in Roanoke College, Salem, Virginia, from 1852. A History of Education; History of Christian Worship; Introduction to English Literature; Introduction to American Literature; History of English Literature; Lyrical Vignettes; The Reformation Dawn; Poets of the South. Am. Ap.
- Pallen, Conde B[enoist]. Mo., 1858- ——. A littérateur of New York city. The Philosophy of Literature; Epochs of Literature; New Rubáiyát, a book of verse; What is Liberalism?; The Death of Sir Launcelot, and Other Poems.
- Palmer, Frederic. Ms., 1848- ——. Brother of J. A. and G. H. Palmer ([page 282]). An Episcopal clergyman, rector (1904) of Christ Church, Andover, Massachusetts. Studies in Theologic Definition underlying the Apostles’ and Nicene Creeds; The Drama of the Apocalypse. Dut.
- Palmer, Frederick. Pa., 1873- ——. A journalist of New York city. Going to War in Greece; In the Klondike; The Ways of the Service; The Vagabond; George Dewey, Admiral; With Kuroki in Manchuria. Dou. Scr.
- Palmer, John McAuley. Ky., 1817-1900. A soldier and politician, governor of Illinois 1868-1872; and the presidential candidate of the gold democratic party in 1896. Personal Recollections of John M. Palmer; An Autobiography. Clke.
- Pancoast, Henry Spackman. Pa., 1858- ——. An educator of Philadelphia. Introduction to English Literature; Introduction to American Literature. Ho.
- Pangborn, Mrs. Georgia (Wood). N. Y., 1872- ——. A novelist of New York city. Roman Biznet. Hou.
- Paret, J[ahial] Parmly. N. J., 1870- ——. Nephew of W. Paret, infra. A specialist in relation to amateur sports. The Woman’s Book of Sport; How to Play Lawn Tennis. Ap.
- Paret, William. Md., 1826- ——. The fifth Protestant Episcopal bishop of Maryland. Saint Peter and the Primacy.
- Parker, Benjamin S——. Ind., 1833- ——. An Indiana verse-writer. The Cabin in the Clearing.
- Parker, Herschel Clifford. L. I., 1867- ——. An instructor in physics at Columbia University from 1890. A Systematical Treatise on Electrical Measurements (1897).
- Parker, Orson. Ms., 1800-1876. A once noted Michigan evangelist. The Fire and the Hammer, or Revivals and How to Promote Them (1876).
- Parker, W[illiam] Gordon. N. Y., 1875- ——. An artist and author of New York city, whose stories for boys are illustrated by himself. Six Young Hunters; Grant Burton, the Runaway; Rival Boy Sportsmen; Two Boys in the Blue Ridge. Est. Le.
- Parkes, Mrs. Elizabeth [Robins]. “C. E. Raimond.” Ky., 186- - ——. A novelist and actress, for many years resident in London. George Mandeville’s Husband; The Fatal Gift of Beauty, and Other Stories; The New Moon; An Open Question; The Magnetic North. Ap. S.
- Parkhurst, Howard Elmore. Ms., 1848- ——. A musician and author of Englewood, New Jersey. The Birds’ Calendar; Songbirds and Waterfowl; Trees, Shrubs and Vines of Northeastern United States; How to Name the Birds. Scr.
- Parrish, Randall. 18— - ——. A novelist. When Wilderness was King; My Lady of the North. Mg.
- Parsons, Albert Ross. O., 1847- ——. A musician of note, president of the American College of Musicians. Beside many musical compositions, he is the author of New Light from the Great Pyramid; Parsifal; and a translation of Wagner’s Life of Beethoven.
- Parsons, William Barclay. N. Y., 1859- ——. A civil engineer of New York city. Track; An American Engineer in China; Turnouts.
- Pasko, Wesley Washington. N. Y., 1840-1897. An author and inventor. Men who Advertise; History of Butler County, Ohio; Dictionary of Advertising Terms; Biographical History of Indiana; History of Printing in New York.
- Patch, John. Ms., 1807-1887. A lawyer and verse-writer, long resident in Ipswich, Massachusetts. The Poet’s Offering.
- Patch, Kate, Mrs. [Whiting]. N. J., 1870- ——. A writer of Framingham, Massachusetts. Middleway; Rainy Days and Sunny Days; Old Lady and Young Laddie; Prince Yellowtop.
- Paterson, Stephen Van Rensselaer. N. J., 1817-1872. A verse-writer of New Jersey, whose version of The Moss Rose, from the German of Krummacher, is his best-known poem. Poems of Twin Graduates of the College of New Jersey (with W. Paterson, infra).
- Paterson, William. N. J., 1817-1899. Twin brother of S. V. R. Paterson, supra. A jurist of Perth Amboy, New Jersey. Co-author, with his brother Stephen, of Poems of Twin Graduates of the College of New Jersey.
- Paton, Lewis Bayles. N. Y., 1864- ——. A professor of Old Testament exegesis at Hartford Theological Seminary. The Early History of Syria and Palestine.
- Paton, William Agnew. N. Y., 1848- ——. A journalist who has published Down the Islands: a Voyage to the Caribbees; Picturesque Sicily. Scr.
- Pattee, Fred Lewis. N. H., 1863- ——. A professor of English literature at Pennsylvania State College. The Wine of May, and Other Poems; A History of American Literature; The Foundations of English Literature; Mary Garvin. Sil.
- Pattee, William Sullivan. Me., 1846- ——. A lawyer of Minneapolis, dean of the law department of the University of Minnesota from 1888. Illustrative Cases in Contracts; Illustrative Cases in Equity; Illustrative Cases in Personalty; Illustrative Cases in Realty; Elements of Contracts; Elements of Realty.
- Patterson, Charles Brodie. N. S., 1854- ——. A lecturer on metaphysics. Seeking the Kingdom; Beyond the Clouds; New Thought Essays; Studies in Spiritual Science; Dominion and Power; The Will to be Well.
- Patterson, John Henry. O., 1844- ——. A manufacturer, of Dayton, Ohio. He organized the National Cash Register Company in 1885. Concerning the Forefathers.
- Pattison, Robert Everett. Vt., 1800-1874. A Baptist clergyman and educator, president of several Baptist institutions. Commentary on the Epistle to the Ephesians.
- Pattison, Thomas Harwood. E., 1838-1904. A Baptist clergyman, professor of homiletics at the Theological Seminary, Rochester, New York. Present Day Lectures; History of the English Bible; The Making of the Sermon; Public Worship; The Ministry of the Sunday School.
- Patton, William Macfarland. Va., 1845- ——. A professor of engineering in the Virginia Polytechnic Institute. Practical Treatise on Foundations; General Treatise on Civil Engineering. Wil.
- Payson, William Farquhar. N. Y., 1876- ——. A New York novelist. The Copymaker, a story; The Titlemongers; John Vytal; The Triumph of Love; Debonnaire.
- Peabody, Cecil Hobart. Vt., 1855- ——. A professor of naval architecture and marine engineering in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1893. Thermodynamics of the Steam Engine; Valve Gear for Steam Engines; Steam Boilers. Wil.
- Peabody, James Chute. Ms., 1828-1900. A Newburyport journalist who published Key Notes, a book of verse; and a translation of Dante’s Inferno.
- Peabody, Josephine Preston. N. Y., 1874- ——. A Cambridge poet. The Wayfarers, a book of verse; Fortune and Men’s Eyes: Poems with a Play; Marlowe, a drama; Old Greek Folk Stories; The Singing Leaves. Hou. Sm.
- Peabody, Selim Hobart. Vt., 1829-1903. An educator, president of the University of Illinois, 1880-1891. Natural History for Children; Elements of Astronomy; American Patriotism.
- Peacock, Virginia Tatnall. Pa., 1873- ——. A Washington journalist. Famous American Belles of the Nineteenth Century. Lip.
- Peake, Elmore Elliott. O., 1871- ——. A Wisconsin writer. The Darlingtons, a novel; The Pride of Tellfair.
- Peale, Albert Charles. Pa., 1849- ——. A geologist in the government service. Lists and Analysis of the Mineral Springs in the United States.
- Pearse, John Barnard. Pa., 1842- ——. A Philadelphia chemist of note. A Concise History of the Iron Manufacture of the American Colonies up to the Revolution, and of Pennsylvania to the Present.
- Pearson, Charles William. E., 1846- ——. A Unitarian clergyman in Quincy, Illinois, but prior to 1902 in the Methodist ministry and a professor in Northwestern University. Methodism: a Retrospect and an Outlook; The Carpenter Prophet.
- Peary, Mrs. Josephine [Diebitsch]. D. C., 18— - ——. Wife of R. E. Peary, infra, an Arctic explorer. My Arctic Journal; The Snow Baby. Sto.
- Peary, Robert Edwin. Pa., 1854- ——. A noted Arctic explorer; a civil engineer in the United States navy, with the relative rank of lieutenant. Northward over the Great Ice: a Narrative of Life and Work in Northern Greenland in 1886 and 1891-1897; Snowland Folk. Sto.
- Peaslee, John Bradley. N. H., 1842- ——. A prominent educator of Cincinnati, superintendent of schools in that city, 1874-1886. Thoughts and Experiences In and Out of School (1900); Trees and Tree Planting; Occasional Poems and Sacred Songs.
- Peck, William Farley. N. Y., 1840- ——. A journalist of Rochester, New York. History of Rochester; Landmarks of Monroe County.
- Peckham, Mrs. Mary Chace [Peck]. Ms., 1839-1892. Wife of S. F. Peckham, infra. A writer and reformer of Providence. Father Gabriel’s Fairy; Windfalls Gathered Only for Friends, a collection of verse.
- Peckham, Stephen Farnum. R. I., 1839- ——. A chemist of New York city. Elementary Chemistry; Report on Production; Technology and Uses of Petroleum.
- Peebles, James Martin. Vt., 1822- ——. A physician and author of Battle Creek, Michigan. Seers of the Ages; Immortality and Our Homes Hereafter; Three Journeys Round the World; The Christ Question Settled.
- Peet, Isaac Lewis. Ct., 1824-1898. Son of H. P. Peet ([page 290]), and, like him, a noted instructor of deaf-mutes in New York city. A monograph on Decimal Fractions; Language Lessons for the Deaf and Dumb; Manual of Vegetable Physiology; Psychical Status and Criminal Responsibility of the Uneducated Deaf Mute.
- Peirce, Augustus. Ms., 1802-1849. A physician of Tyngsboro, Massachusetts, who, while a student at Harvard College, wrote The Rebelliad, a witty, though somewhat coarse, mock heroic metrical satire, which appeared in 1818 and was very popular, the authorship long remaining undisclosed.
- Peirce, Mrs. Melusina [Fay]. Vt., 1836- ——. A Newport writer on domestic science. Coöperative Housekeeping.
- Pellew, Charles Ernest. E., 1863- ——. A professor of chemistry at Columbia University from 1897. Manual of Practical Medical and Physiological Chemistry.
- Pendleton, Edmund. O., 1845- ——. A novelist. A Conventional Bohemian; A Virginia Inheritance; One Woman’s Way; A Complication in Hearts. Ap.
- Penfield, Frederic Courtland. N. Y., 1855- ——. A diplomatist, now (1904) resident in New York city. He was consul-general to Egypt, 1893-1897, and has held other posts in the diplomatic service. Besides contributing to periodicals on economic and other topics, he has published Present Day Egypt; Mahmoud Pasha. Cent.
- Penniman, Josiah Harmar. Ms., 1868- ——. A professor of English literature in the University of Pennsylvania. The War of the Theatres. Gi.
- Penrose, Boies. Pa., 1860- ——. A United States senator from Pennsylvania. History of the City Government of Philadelphia.
- Penrose, Charles Bingham. Pa., 1862- ——. A Philadelphia physician. Text Book of Diseases of Women.
- Pepper, Charles Melville. O., 1859- ——. A journalist of Washington city. To-morrow in Cuba. Har.
- Pepper, George Wharton. Pa., 1867- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. The Borderland of Federal and State Decisions; Pleading at Common Law and Under the Codes; Digest and Encyclopædia of Pennsylvania Law (with W. D. Lewis).
- Percival, Henry Robert. Pa., 1854-1903. An Episcopal clergyman of Philadelphia. A Digest of Theology; The Doctrine of the Episcopal Church; Invocation of Saints Treated Theologically and Historically; The Seven Ecumenical Councils of the Undivided Church. Lgs. Put.
- Percival, Olive May Graves. Il., 1868- ——. An underwriter of Los Angeles. Mexico City: an Idler’s Notebook. S.
- Perkins, William Oscar. Vt., 1831-1902. A Boston composer who in addition to many professional works published The War in South Africa, or Boer and Briton.
- Perley, Sidney. Ms., 1858- ——. A lawyer of Salem, Massachusetts. Practice in the Probate Court of Massachusetts; History of Boxford, Massachusetts; Historic Storms of New England; Poets of Essex County; Principles of the Law of Interest; Mortuary Law; Massachusetts Adjudicated Forms. Hou.
- Perry, J[oseph] Frank[lin]. Me., 1840- ——. A Boston physician. A Friend in Need; Health in Our Homes; Health of Our Children; Kennel Secrets; Kennel Diseases; Dogs in Health and Disease.
- Perry, Mrs. Lilia Cabot. Ms., 185- - ——. Wife of T. S. Perry ([page 293]). Impressions, a book of verse; The Heart of the Weed; From the Garden of Hellas, a translation. Hou.
- Perry, Nelson William. O., 1853-1898. An electrician who published Electric Railway Motors.
- Peter, Philip Adam. G., 1832- ——. A Lutheran clergyman of Ohio. The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century; Saint Paul, the Great Apostle to the Gentiles.
- Peters, John Punnett. N. Y., 1852- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of New York city, prominent as an archæologist. Nippur, or Explorations and Adventures on the Euphrates; The Old Testament and the New Scholarship; Some Old Testament Problems; Early Hebrew Story. Mac. Put.
- Peters, Madison Clinton. Pa., 1859- ——. A Baptist clergyman, of Baltimore, but formerly in the Reformed (German) ministry. Justice to the Jew; The Great Hereafter; Empty Pews; The Panacea for Poverty; The Path of Glory; Sanctified Spice; The Birds of the Bible; Hebrew Heroines of Sacred Story; Wrongs to be Righted; Wit and Wisdom of the Talmud; The Jew as a Patriot; Will Our Republic Live?
- Phelps, Charles Edward. Vt., 1833- ——. A law professor in the University of Maryland. Juridical Equity; Falstaff and Equity.
- Phelps, Charles Henry. Cal., 1853- ——. A New York lawyer, authority upon copyright law. Californian Verses.
- Phelps, Edward Bunnell. Ct., 1863- ——. A journalist of New York city. War Risks; Tropical Hazards; Universal Club Book.
- Phelps, Edward John. Vt., 1822-1900. A noted lawyer and diplomat, United States minister to England, 1885-89. Orations and Essays.
- Phelps, William Franklin. N. Y., 1822- ——. An educator of St. Paul. Teachers’ Handbook; Normal Schools of Europe and America.
- Philipson, David. Ind., 1862- ——. A Jewish rabbi of Cincinnati, professor of homiletics at the Hebrew Union College. The Jew in English Fiction; Old European Jewries; The Oldest Jewish Congregation in the West; Progress of the Jewish Reform Movement in the West; A Holiday Sheaf. Clke.
- Phillips, David Graham. Ind., 1867- ——. A New York novelist. The Great God Success; Her Serene Highness; A Woman Ventures; Golden Fleece; The Master Rogue; The Cost. Bo. Har.
- Phillips, John Herbert. Ky., 1853- ——. A superintendent of public schools in Birmingham, Alabama, from 1883. History and Literature in Grammar Schools; The Negro and Education. He.
- Phillips, Morris. E., 1834-1904. For many years the proprietor of the New York Home Journal, now Town and Country, and formerly associated with N. P. Willis ([page 427]) in its management. At Home and Abroad (1893).
- Pidgin, Charles Felton. Ms., 1844- ——. A Boston novelist. Quincy Adams Sawyer, an extremely popular tale; Blennerhassett; Mason’s Corner Folks; Practical Statistics; Stephen Holton; The Climax. Pa.
- Pieper, Franz August Otto. P., 1852- ——. A Lutheran clergyman in St. Louis. Grundbekenntniss der lutheranische Kirche; Lehre von Christi Werke; Distinctive Doctrines of the Lutheran Church.
- Pier, Arthur Stanwood. Pa., 1874- ——. A Boston novelist, now (1904) on the editorial staff of the Youth’s Companion. The Pedagogues, a story of the summer school of Harvard University; The Sentimentalists; The Triumph; Boys of Saint Timothy’s. Scr.
- Piffard, Henry Granger. 1842- ——. A physician who has published Treatise on the Materia Medica and Therapeutics of the Skin; Elementary Treatise on Diseases of the Skin; Guide to Urinary Analysis. Ap.
- Pike, Granville Ross. O., 1855- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman in Chicago. The Divine Drama. Mac.
- Pilch, Frederick Henry. N. J., 1842-1889. A New Jersey writer whose Homespun Verses appeared in 1889.
- Pilsbry, Henry Augustine. Ia., 1862- ——. A conchologist of note, connected with the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Science. The Manual of Conchology; Guide to the Study of Helices.
- Pinkney, Ninian. Md., 1776-1825. A colonel in the United States army, who published in 1809 Travels in the South of France and in the Interior of Languedoc, a book widely popular in its day.
- Pitkin, Helen. 18— - ——. A novelist of New Orleans. An Angel by Brevet. Lip.
- Pittsinger, Mrs. Eliza A——. Ms., 1837- ——. A California verse-writer. Bugle Peals.
- Plummer, Mary Wright. Ind., 1856- ——. A Brooklyn Librarian, director of the Pratt Institute free library. Hints to Small Libraries; Verses.
- Plympton, Almira George. Ms., 18— - ——. A Massachusetts writer for young people. A Willing Transgressor; A Bud of Promise; Dear Daughter Dorothy; Betty, a Butterfly; The Little Sister of Wilifred; Robin’s Recruit; Penelope Prig; The Black Dog; Dorothy and Anton; Rags and Velvet Gowns; Wanlasset; Two Dogs and a Donkey; Child of Glee; A Flower of the Wilderness; Gerald and Geraldine and Other Stories; In the Shadow of the Black Pine. Lit.
- Polk, William Mecklenburg. Tn., 1844- ——. A physician of New York city. The Biography of Leonidas Polk: Bishop and General.
- Pollard, Percival. P., 1869- ——. A New York littérateur, born in Pomerania of English and German parentage, and resident in the United States from 1885. Figaro Pictures, a collection of short stories; Cape of Storms, a novel; The Imitator; Lingo Land; Posters in Miniature; Dreams of To-day; The Kiss that Killed. S.
- Pollock, Edward. Pa., 1823-1858. A California lawyer and verse-writer whose Collected Poems was published in 1876.
- Poor, Agnes Blake. Ms., 18— - ——. A writer of Brookline, Massachusetts. Brothers and Strangers; Boston Neighbours in Town and Out. Put.
- Porter, Anthony Toomer. S. C., 1828-1902. An Episcopal clergyman, forty-three years rector of the Church of the Holy Communion, Charleston. Led on Step by Step, an autobiography. Put.
- Porter, Horace. Pa., 1837- ——. A United States army officer, brevetted brigadier-general, and minister to France from 1897. West Point Life; Campaigning with Grant. Cent.
- Porter, Jermain Gildersleeve. N. Y., 1852- ——. An astronomer of Cincinnati. Our Celestial Home: an Astronomer’s View of Heaven; The Stars in Song and Legend. Gi.
- Porter, Robert Percival. E., 1852- ——. A journalist of Cleveland, superintendent of the Eleventh Census. The West; Free Trade Folly; Life of William McKinley; Industrial Cuba; Vested Wrongs; Other People’s Money; Municipal Ownership a Public Franchise. Put.
- Post, Charles Cyrel. Mch., 1846- ——. A Florida journalist. Driven from Sea to Sea; Congressman Swanson; Metaphysical Essays; Men and Gods; From Wabash to the Rio Grande.
- Post, George Edward. N. Y., 1838- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, professor of surgery in the Syrian Protestant College, Beirut, Syria. In Arabic he has published Flora of Syria, Palestine and Egypt; Text Book of Surgery; Text Book of Botany, and other works, and in English, Flora of Syria, Palestine and Sinai.
- Post, Melville Davisson. W. Va., 1870- ——. A novelist of Wheeling. The Strange Schemes of Randolph Mason; The Man of the Last Resort; Dwellers in the Hills. Put.
- Potter, Elisha Reynolds. R. I., 1811-1882. A Rhode Island jurist. The Early History of Narragansett; A Brief Account of Emissions of Paper Money made by the Colony of Rhode Island; The Bible and Prayer in the Public Schools, include his more important works.
- Potter, Margaret Horton. See Black, Mrs. Margaret.
- Potter, Mary Knight. Ms., 18— - ——. A Boston writer. The Councils of Crœsus; Love in Art; The Art of the Vatican; Peggy’s Trial; The Art of the Louvre. Pa.
- Potter, Samuel Otway Lewis. I., 1846- ——. A San Francisco physician among whose publications are Handbook of Materia Medica; Pharmacy and Therapeutics; Speech and its Defects.
- Potts, Charles Sower. Pa., 1864- ——. A Philadelphia physician. Nervous and Mental Diseases.
- Potts, William. Pa., 1838- ——. A civil service reformer of New York city. From a New England Hillside; Noblesse Oblige; The Monetary Problem; The Socialistic Method. Mac.
- Poulsson, Anne Emilie. N. J., 1853- ——. A kindergarten educator in Boston. Nursery Finger Plays; In the Child’s World; Through the Farmyard Gate; Child Stories and Rhymes. Lo.
- Powderly, Terence Vincent. Pa., 1849- ——. A noted labour leader, admitted to the bar in 1894. Thirty Years of Labor.
- Powell, Aaron Macy. N. Y., 1832-1899. A philanthropist of Plainfield, New Jersey. State Regulation of Vice; Personal Reminiscences of the Anti-Slavery and Other Reforms and Reformers.
- Powell, William Bramwell. N. Y., 1836- ——. A superintendent of public schools in Washington city from 1885. English Grammar Language Lessons; Rational Grammar of the English Language (with L. Connolly); History of the United States for Elementary Schools. Am.
- Powell, William Henry. D. C., 1838-1901. A lieutenant-colonel in the United States army. The History of the Fifth Army Corps, 1861-1865; History of the Fourth United States Infantry; Tactical Queries; Records of Living Officers of the United States Army (1890). Put.
- Prall, William. N. J., 1853- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Albany, New York. Civic Christianity; The State and the Church. Wh.
- Pratt, Anna Maria. Ms., 18— - ——. A Cleveland author. Little Rhymes for Little People.
- Pratt, Charles Stuart. Ms., 1854- ——. A writer of juvenile books. (His wife, Mrs. E. F. Pratt, is mentioned on [page 302].) By-O-Baby Ballads; Baby’s Lullaby Book; Buz-Buz, and similar works.
- Pratt, Cornelia Atwood. O., 18— - ——. A novelist who has published A Book of Martyrs; The Daughter of a Stoic; Dr. Berkeley’s Discovery (with R. Slee). Put. Scr.
- Pratt, Edwin Hartley. Pa., 1849- ——. A Chicago surgeon. Orificial Surgery; Composite Man.
- Pratt, Henry Sherring. O., 1859- ——. A professor of biology in Haverford College, Pennsylvania. A Course in Invertebrate Zoölogy. Gi.
- Preble, William Pitt. Me., 1854- ——. Brother of H. Preble ([page 302]). A lawyer of New York city. Patent Case Index; Collisions in United States Waters.
- Prichard, Sarah Johnson. Ct., 1830- ——. A writer of Waterbury, Connecticut. Martha’s Hooks and Eyes; Hugh’s Fire on the Mountain; Nat’s Shoes; Kate Morgan and her Soldiers; Kenny Carle’s Uniform; Joe and Jim; The Old Stone Chimney; Margie’s Matches; Faye Mar; Rose Marbury; Shawney and the Lighthouse; Aunt Sadie’s Cow; History of Waterbury, 1674-1784; The Only Woman of the Town.
- Priestley, Joseph. E., 1733-1804. A celebrated English scientist and Unitarian theologian, who came to the United States in 1794 and settled in Northumberland, Pennsylvania. From 1780 to 1791 he had been pastor of a Unitarian chapel in Birmingham, but in the latter year his house and chapel were burned by a mob. He was one of the foremost scientists of his time, the discovery of oxygen being his most important contribution to scientific knowledge. Among his many works are: Rudiments of English Grammar; Theory of Language and Universal Grammar; History and Present State of Electricity (1767); Vision, Light, and Colours; Experiments and Observations relating to Natural Philosophy; Familiar Letters to the People of Birmingham; General History of the Christian Church; Notes on all the Books of Scripture; The Doctrines of Heathen Philosophy compared with those of Revelation. A collection of his Theological and Miscellaneous Works (excluding those upon science) appeared in twenty-six volumes in 1817-1832. See Brougham’s Lives of Philosophers; Dictionary of National Biography, volume 46.
- Prince, John. Ms., 1820-1900. A citizen of Essex, Massachusetts, of prominence in state politics, and in earlier life a Universalist clergyman. Rural Lays and Sketches; A Wreath of Saint Crispin.
- Prince, Samuel Thornton Kemeys. Ct., 1834- ——. A Chicago compiler of crop statistics. Crop Reports; Model Farmers and Their Methods.
- Pritchett, Henry Smith. Mo., 1857- ——. An astronomer, superintendent of the government coast and geodetic survey 1897-1900, and president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1900. Among numerous scientific monographs by him are: Determination of the Mass of Mars; The Rotation Period of Jupiter; Eclipses of the Satellites of Saturn.
- Prolix, Peregrine. See Nicklin.
- Pulitzer, Walter. 18— - ——. A littérateur of New York. That Duel at the Château Marsanac; Through the Shadows; Chess Harmonies; Prose Harmonies; Links of Life and Love. Fu.
- Pullen, Mrs. Elizabeth [Jones] [Cavazza]. Me., 18— ——. A littérateur of Portland, Maine. Don Finimondone; Calabrian Sketches; Mr. Whitman. Lo.
- Pupin, Michael Idvorsky. Hy., 1858- ——. A physicist and inventor who came to the United States in 1874. He became adjunct professor of mechanics at Columbia University in 1892, and in 1902 of electro-mechanics. Beside professional monographs he has published Thermodynamics of Reversible Cycles in Gases.
- Putnam, Eben Frederic. Ms., 1868- ——. Son of F. W. Putnam, infra. A genealogist of Salem, Massachusetts. His principal work is a valuable History of the Putnam Family in England and America.
- Putnam, Frederic Ward. Ms., 1839- ——. A noted archæologist of Cambridge, professor of American archæology and ethnology at Harvard University from 1886, and curator of the Peabody Museum there from 1874. His professional papers, reports, and other contributions to science are exceedingly numerous and valuable.
- Putnam, George I[srael]. N. Y., 1860- ——. A newspaper publisher in Claremont, New Hampshire, but prior to 1889 an officer in the United States army. On the Offensive; and In Blue Uniform, are novels of army life. Scr.
- Putnam, John Pickering. Ms., 1847- ——. An architect of Boston. The Metric System of Weights and Measures; The Open Fireplace in All Ages; The Principles of House Drainage; Imported Plumbing Appliances.
- Putnam, Samuel Porter. N. H., 1838-1896. A writer who, after holding successive pastorates in Congregational and Unitarian churches, became known as an extremely radical thinker. Prometheus: a Poem; The Golden Throne: a Radical Romance; Four Hundred Years of Free Thought.
- Pyle, Katherine. Del., 18— - ——. Sister of H. Pyle ([page 306]). A writer of Wilmington, Delaware. As the Goose Flies; The Christmas Angel; The Counterpane Fairy; In the Green Forest; When the Wind Blows; Stories of Humble Friends; Childhood. Dut. Lit.
- Pyle, Walter Lytle. Pa., 1871- ——. A Philadelphia physician. A Manual of Personal Hygiene; Diseases of the Eye; Cyclopedia of Practical Medicine and Surgery; Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine.
- Q
- Quad, M. See Lewis, C. B. ([page 229]).
- Quayle, William Alfred. Mo., 1860- ——. A Methodist clergyman of Kansas City. The Poet’s Poet, and Other Essays; A Hero and Some Other Folk; In God’s Out of Doors.
- Quesada, Gonzalo de. C., 1868- ——. Minister plenipotentiary at Washington from Cuba. Mi Primera Offenda; Patriotismo; Ygnacio Mora; History of Free Cuba.
- Quin, Dan. See Lewis, Alfred Henry.
- Quin, Minnie. Ga. An educator of Atlanta. May Blossoms, a book of verse.
- Quinn, Arthur Hobson. Pa., 1875- ——. An instructor in English in the University of Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Stories. Pen.
- R
- Radford, Benjamin Johnson. Il., 1838- ——. A Christian (Disciples) clergyman of Eureka, Illinois. The Court of Destiny, and Other Poems.
- Raimond, C. E. See Parkes, Mrs. Elizabeth.
- Ranck, George Washington. Ky., 1831-1901. A writer of Lexington, Kentucky. History of Lexington; Girty, the White Indian; The Travelling Circus; Story of Bryan’s Station; The Bivouac of the Dead and its Author. Clke.
- Randall, John Witt. Ms., 1813-1892. A Boston physician and naturalist. Consolations of Solitude, a book of verse (1856); Critical Notes on Etchers and Engravers; Poems of Nature and Life, edited by F. E. Abbott, and including Consolations of Solitude (1899). El.
- Randall, Thomas. N. H., 1778-1869. A pastoral versifier of Eaton, New Hampshire, the author of The Farmer’s Meditations, or Shepherd’s Songs (1833).
- Randolph, Alfred Magill. Va., 1836- ——. The first Protestant Episcopal bishop of Southern Virginia. Reason, Faith and Authority in Christianity. Wh.
- Randolph, Paschal Beverley. N. Y., 1825- ——. A physician of some note at one period as a miscellaneous writer. Waa-gu-Nah; Lara; The Grand Secret, a medical work; The Unveiling; It Isn’t All Right; Hesperina; Dealings with the Dead; Human Love; Rosicrucian’s Love; Wonderful Story of the Ravalette; Tom Clodd and his Wife; Pre-Adamite Man; Dhonla Bel; Edward Price; After Death, or Disembodied Man.
- Rantoul, Robert. Ms., 1805-1852. A prominent anti-slavery congressman from Massachusetts. The Republic in the United States; Memoirs, Letters, and Speeches, edited by Luther Hamilton (1854).
- Rapp, Wilhelm. G., 1828- ——. A Chicago journalist, editor Illinois Staats-Zeitung. Recollections of the German Fatherland by a German American.
- Rathbone, St. George. Ky., 1854- ——. A sensational novelist among whose numerous fictions are The Spider’s Web; My Hildegarde; The Man from Denver.
- Rathom, John Revelstoke. Australia, 1868- ——. A Chicago journalist. Four Years in the Chinese Navy.
- Rauschenbusch, Augustus. G., 1816-190-. A Baptist clergyman, professor in the German Baptist Theological Seminary at Rochester, New York, 1853-1888. Saturday or Sunday—Which shall We Observe?; Biblische Traumbilder; A History of Infant Baptism.
- Ravenel, Mrs. Harriot Horry [Rutledge]. S. C. 1832- ——. A biographer of Charleston, South Carolina. Life of Eliza Pinckney; The Life and Times of William Lowndes; Ashurst, a novel. Scr.
- Ravenscroft, John Stark. Va., 1772-1830. The first Protestant Episcopal bishop of North Carolina, consecrated in 1822. His Works in two volumes, including sermons and controversial papers, were issued in 1830.
- Ravogli, Augustus. Iy., 1851- ——. A dermatologist of Cincinnati. Hygiene of the Skin; Structure and Development of the Human Skin.
- Ray, William. Ct., 1771-1827. A writer who published Poems on Various Subjects, Religious, Moral, Sentimental, and Humorous.
- Raymond, Bradford Paul. Ct., 1846- ——. A Methodist clergyman, president of Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, from 1889. Christianity and the Christ. Meth.
- Raymond, Mrs. Evelyn [Hunt]. N. Y., 1843- ——. A Baltimore writer of juvenile fiction. Mixed Pickles; Monica; The Little Lady of the Horse; Little Red School House; Among the Lindens; A Daughter of the West; The Mushroom Cave; A Cape May Diamond; The Boys and Girls of Brantham; My Lady Barefoot; Divided Skates; A Story of Delight; The Sun Maid; Reels and Spindles; A Pair of Them; The Doings of Nancy. Cr. Dut. Lit. Wi.
- Raymond, William Galt. Ia., 1869- ——. An engineering professor at the Troy Polytechnic Institute from 1892. Plane Surveying.
- Rayner, Mrs. Emma. E., 18— - ——. A Boston novelist. Free to Serve; In Castle and Colony; Visiting the Sin; Doris Kingsley: Child and Colonist; Handicapped among the Free.
- Rea, George Bronson. N. Y., 1869- ——. A journalist and electrical engineer of New York city. Facts and Fancies about Cuba.
- Read, John Elliot. Ms., 1845- ——. An agricultural journalist of Amherst, Massachusetts. Farming for Profit; Within and Beyond the States; Life Triumphant.
- Rector, Elbridge Lee. Ts., 1847- ——. A lawyer of San Saba, Texas. The Science of Money and Exchange.
- Reddall, Henry Frederic. E., 1852- ——. From the Golden Gate to the Golden Horn; Who Was He?; School-boy Life in Merrie England; Courtship, Love, and Wedlock; Fancy, Fact, and Fable; Life of Henry M. Stanley. Meth.
- Rede, Wyllys. Il., 1859- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, of Brunswick, Georgia. The Communion of Saints; Striving for the Mastery. Lgs.
- Redfield, Henry Stephen. N. Y., 1851- ——. A professor of law at Columbia University from 1901. Cases on Pleading and Practice.
- Reed, Mrs. Elizabeth [Armstrong]. Me., 1842- ——. A Chicago philanthropist. The Bible Triumphant; Earnest Words; Hindu Literature; Primitive Buddhism: its Origin and Destiny. Sc.
- Reed, Helen Leah. N. B., 186- - ——. A Boston writer. Miss Theodora, a novel; Brenda: her School and her Club; Brenda’s Summer at Rockley; Brenda’s Cousin at Radcliffe; Brenda’s Bargain; Irma and Nap. Lit.
- Reed, Henry Albert. N. Y., 1844- ——. An army officer who has published Topographical Drawing and Sketching; Photography Applied to Surveying. Wil.
- Reed, Myron Winslow. 1836-1899. A Congregational clergyman of Denver. Temple Talks. Bo.
- Reed, Myrtle. Il., 1874- ——. A Chicago writer. The Love Letters of a Musician; Later Love Letters of a Musician; The Spinster Book; Lavender and Old Lace; The Master’s Violin; The Book of Clever Beasts. Put.
- Reed, Mrs. Rebecca Perley [Page]. Me., 1840- ——. A Milwaukee author. Above and Below, a juvenile tale; Everybody’s Providence; From Shore to Shore; Ethel’s Gift.
- Reed, Verner Z——. O., 1863- ——. A Colorado writer. Lo-To-Kah; Tales of the Sunland; Adobeland Stories.
- Reeder, Charles. Md., 1817-1900. A merchant and manufacturer in Baltimore. Caloric: a Review of the Dynamic Theory of Heat.
- Reemelin, Charles [Gustavus], originally Rümelin, Carl Gustav. Wg., 1814- ——. A vine-culturist long resident in and near Cincinnati. He emigrated to America in 1832, and after being naturalized in the United States adopted the English form of his name. Vine-Dresser’s Manual; The Wine Maker’s Manual; Politics as a Science; A Critical Review of American Politics (1881). In 1892 he published an autobiography covering the events of his life till that year. Clke.
- Rees, James. Pa., 1802-1885. A Philadelphia journalist and playwright, among whose plays are The Headsman; Washington at Valley Forge; Changes; Marion; Pat Lyon; Anthony Wayne; Benjamin Franklin. His other works include The Dramatic Authors of America; Mysteries of City Life; The Tinker Spy; Footprints of a Letter-Carrier; Life of Edwin Forrest; Shakespeare and the Bible.
- Reeve, Charles McCormick. N. Y., 1847- ——. A Minneapolis lawyer and soldier, warden of the Minnesota state prison from 1899. How we Went and What we Saw. Put.
- Reeves, Alfred Gandy. N. J., 1859- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Cases on Wills. West.
- Reeves, Arthur Middleton. Ind., 1856-1891. Icelandic scholar. The Finding of Wineland the Good: the history of the Icelandic Discovery of America; Lad and Lass: a Story of Life in Iceland; Jan: a short story.
- Reid, Mayne. I., 1818-1883. An Irish writer who came to the United States in 1838, fought in the Mexican War as captain in the United States service, and for a number of years lived and wrote in Philadelphia, but subsequently made his home in London. He was a prolific writer of tales of adventure for boys. Among them are The Rifle Ranger; The Quadroon; Osceola; The White Chief; The Yellow Chief; The Lost Mountain, a tale of Sonora; The Lone Ranch; The Land of Fire; The Boy Tar; Afloat in the Forest; Boy Hunters; Forest Exiles; Plant Hunters; Desert Home. See Dictionary of National Biography, volume 47; Memoir by his wife, 1890. Put.
- Reid, Sydney [Robert Charles Forneri]. Ont., 1857- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Josey and the Chipmunk. Cent.
- Reid, W[illiam] Max. N. Y., 1839- ——. A merchant of Amsterdam, New York. The Mohawk Valley: its Legends and its History. Put.
- Reinhardt, Charles William. Wg., 1858- ——. An illustrator and draftsman of New York city. Lettering for Draftsmen, Engineers, and Students; The Technic of Mechanical Drafting. Vn.
- Reinsch, Paul Samuel. Wis., 1869- ——. A professor of physical science in the University of Wisconsin from 1899. The Common Law in the Early American Colonies; World Politics as Influenced by the Oriental Situation (1900); Colonial Administration. Mac.
- Remsburg, John Eleazer. O., 1848- ——. A writer and lecturer in behalf of atheism. His principal writings include Life of Thomas Paine; Bible Morals; The Image-Breaker.
- Réno, Mrs. Itti [Kinney]. Tn., 1862- ——. A novelist of Washington city. Miss Breckenridge: a Daughter of Dixie; An Exceptional Case.
- Renouf, Edward. N. Y., 1848- ——. A professor of chemistry at Johns Hopkins University from 1885. Vollhard’s Experiments in General Chemistry, translation; Inorganic Preparations.
- Restarick, Henry Bond. E., 1854- ——. The first Protestant Episcopal bishop of Honolulu. Lay Readers; their History and Work; The Love of God; Addresses on the Seven Last Words.
- Reynolds, Cuyler. N. Y., 1866- ——. A writer, of Albany, New York. Janet, a Character Study; The Rosamond Tales; The Banquet Book of Classified Familiar Quotations, Toasts, etc.
- Reynolds, Elhanan Winchester. N. Y., 1827-1867. A Universalist clergyman. Our Campaigns, or Thoughts on the Career of Life; Records of Rubbleton Parish, once a popular book; The True Story of the Barons of the South.
- Rhees, Rush. Il., 1860- ——. A Baptist clergyman, president of the University of Rochester from 1900. The Life of Jesus of Nazareth: a Study.
- Rhoades, Cornelia Harsen. N. Y., 1863- ——. A blind writer, of New York city. Only Dollie; The Little Girl Next Door; Winifred’s Neighbours.
- Rice, Mrs. Alice Caldwell, (Hegan). Ky., 1870- ——. A writer of Louisville, Kentucky. (Wife of C. Y. Rice, infra.) Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch; Lovey Mary. Cent.
- Rice, Cale Young. Ky., 1872- ——. A verse-writer of Louisville, Kentucky. From Dusk to Dusk; With Omar; Song Surf; David.
- Rice, Joseph M——. Pa., 1857- ——. A New York physician, editor of The Forum from 1897. The Public School System of the United States (1893); The Rational Spelling-Book. Cent.
- Rice, Rosella. O., 1827-18—. Mabel, a novel; Other People’s Windows.
- Rice, Wallace [de Groot Cecil]. Ont., 1859- ——. A Chicago journalist. Under the Stars (with B. Eastman, supra); Flying Sands; Great Travellers; Heroic Deeds.
- Rice, William North. Ms., 1845- ——. A professor of geology at Wesleyan University from 1884. Twenty-five Years of Scientific Progress, and Other Essays; Geology of Bermuda; Christian Faith in an Age of Science.
- Richards, Charles Herbert. N. H., 1839- ——. A Congregational clergyman in Philadelphia. Religious Rights of a Christian State; The improvement of Worship; Evolution of a Redeemed Humanity; Will Phillips, or Ups and Downs of Christian Boy Life; God Our Help; What is your Life?
- Richards, George. Ms., 1849- ——. A lawyer of New York city. The Law of Insurance.
- Richards, Joseph William. E., 1864- ——. A professor of metallurgy in Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, who has published an important Treatise on Aluminium. Bai.
- Richards, Thomas Addison. E., 1820-1900. Brother of W. C. Richards ([page 314]). A New York artist, professor of art in the University of the City of New York from 1868. The American Artist; Georgia Illustrated; Summer Stories of the South; Pictures and Painters.
- Richardson, Ernest Cushing. Ms., 1860- ——. The librarian of Princeton University from 1890. Bibliographical Synopsis of the Ante-Nicene Fathers; Classification: Theoretical and Practical. Scr.
- Richardson, Leander. O., 1856- ——. A New York journalist and playwright. As Yankees See Us; The Dark City; Sketches of London Life; Lord Dunmersey, a novel; As Ye Sow, a novel.
- Richardson, Rufus Byam. Ms., 1845- ——. An archæologist, head of the American Archæological School at Athens. Vacation Days in Greece. Scr.
- Richardson, Warfield Creath. Ky., 1823- ——. A writer of Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Gaspar, a metrical romance; The Fall of the Alamo, an epic poem.
- Richman, Irving Berdine. Ia., 1861- ——. A lawyer of Muscatine, Iowa. Rhode Island: its Making and its Meaning; John Brown among the Quakers, and Other Sketches; Appenzell: Pure Democracy and Pastoral Life in Inner-Rhoden. Put.
- Richmond, Mary E——. Il., 1861- ——. A charity organizer of Philadelphia. Friendly Visiting among the Poor. Mac.
- Ricker, Nathan Clifford. Me., 1843- ——. The dean of the College of Engineering, University of Illinois. Construction of Trussed Roofs.
- Rickert, Edith. O., 1871- ——. The Reaper, a novel of the Shetland Islands. Hou.
- Ricketson, Daniel. Ms., 1813-1898. A philanthropist of New Bedford, Massachusetts. The History of New Bedford (1858); The Autumn Sheaf, a Collection of Miscellaneous Poems; The Factory Bell, and other Poems; New Bedford of the Past. See Daniel Ricketson and his Friends (1900).
- Ricketts, Palmer Chamberlaine. Md., 1850- ——. The president of the Rensselaer Polytechnic of Troy, New York, from 1901, of which institution he published a history in 1895. Wil.
- Riley, Benjamin Franklin. Al., 1849- ——. A Baptist clergyman, professor of English in the University of Georgia, 1893-1900. Physical History of Alabama.
- Riley, Franklin Lafayette. Mi., 1868- ——. A professor of history in the University of Mississippi from 1897. Colonial Origins of New England Senates; School History of Mississippi. J. H. U.
- Ripley, William Zebina. Ms., 1867- ——. A professor of sociology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a lecturer on anthropology at Columbia University. Besides many contributions to scientific periodicals, he has published Financial History of Virginia; The Races of Europe: a sociological study. Ap.
- Rishell, Charles Wesley. Pa., 1850- ——. A Methodist clergyman, professor of historical theology in Boston University from 1896. The History of Christianity; Official Recognition of Women in the Church; The Higher Criticism; The Foundations of Christian Faith. Meth.
- Rishell, James Dyson. Pa., 1858- ——. Brother of C. W. Rishell, supra. A professor of law in Northern Illinois College from 1897. Elfrida: a Historical Drama. Lip.
- Risley, Richard Voorhees. N. Y., 1874-1904. A novelist of New York city. The Sentimental Vikings; Men’s Tragedies; The Anvil; The Sledge; The Life of a Woman. Scr.
- Rivers, George Robert Russell. R. I., 1853-1900. An historical novelist of Milton, Massachusetts. The Count’s Snuff-Box; Captain Shays, a Populist of 1786; The Governor’s Garden. Lit.
- Rives, Hallie Erminie. Ky., 1874- ——. Cousin of Amélie Rives ([page 317]). A novelist of New York city. Smoking Flax; As the Hart Panteth; A Fool in Spots; Singing Wire; The Furnace of Earth; Hearts Courageous; The Castaway. Bo.
- Roark, Ruric Nevel. Ky., 1859- ——. An educator, dean of the department of pedagogy in the Kentucky State College. Psychology in Education; Method in Education; General Outline of Pedagogy.
- Robb, Mrs. Isabella Adams [Hampton]. Ont., 1863- ——. A Cleveland writer. Nursing: its Principles and Practice; Nursing Ethics.
- Robbins, Hayes. N. Y., 1873- ——. A social economist of New York city. (Joint author.) Outlines of Social Economics; Outlines of Political Science. Ap.
- Robbins, Wilford Lash. Ms., 1859- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, dean of the cathedral of Albany, New York, for several years, and since 1903 the dean of the General Theological Seminary, New York city. An Essay Toward Faith; A Christian’s Apologetic.
- Robert, Henry Martyn. S. C., 1837- ——. A retired brigadier-general in the United States army. Rules of Order for Deliberative Assemblies, an authoritative work.
- Robert, Joseph Thomas. S. C., 184- - ——. A Congregational clergyman of Chicago, since 1896 prominent as a lecturer on parliamentary law. Robert’s Parliamentary Syllabus; Primer of Parliamentary Law; Parliamentary Manual. Dou. Sc.
- Roberts, Brigham Henry. E., 1857- ——. A Mormon writer of prominence, elected to Congress from Utah in 1899. Life of John Taylor; Outlines of Ecclesiastical History; The Gospel; A New Witness of God; Missouri Persecutions; The Rise and Fall of Nauvoo.
- Roberts, Charles Humphrey. O., 1847- ——. A Chicago lawyer. Down the O-hi-o, a novel of Quaker life. Mg.
- Roberts, George Evan. Ia., 1857- ——. A director of the mint at Washington city from 1898. Coin at School in Finance; Iowa and the Silver Question; Money, Wages, and Prices.
- Roberts, Mrs. Ina [Brevoort]. N. Y., 1874- ——. A novelist of New York city. The Lifting of a Finger.
- Roberts, Isaac Philips. N. Y., 1833- ——. A director of the College of Agriculture, Cornell University. The Fertility of the Land; The Farmstead; The Farmer’s Business Handbook. Mac.
- Roberts, Joseph. Del., 1814-1898. A United States army officer, brevetted brigadier-general in 1885. A Handbook of Artillery (1860).
- Roberts, Peter. E., 1859- ——. A Congregational clergyman at Mahanoy City, Pennsylvania. The Anthracite Coal Industry. Mac.
- Roberts, William Charles. W., 1832-1903. A Presbyterian clergyman, president of Lake Forest University, Illinois, 1886-1892. Letters on the Great Preachers of Wales.
- Robertson, Harrison. Tn., 1856- ——. A novelist of Louisville, Kentucky, editor of the Courier-Journal. If I were a Man, a story; Red Blood and Blue; The Inlander; The Opponents. Scr.
- Robertson, Louis Alexander. N. B., 1856- ——. A San Francisco verse-writer. The Dead Calypso and Other Verses; Beyond the Requiems; Cloistral Strains.
- Robertson, Morgan Andrew. N. Y., 1861- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Spun Yarn; Futility; Shipmates; Where Angels Fear to Tread; Masters of Men; Sinful Peck; Down to the Sea; Tale of a Halo. Cent. Har.
- Robins, Edward. F., 1862- ——. Nephew of C. G. Leland ([page 228]). A dramatic and musical critic of Philadelphia. Echoes of the Playhouse, a review of old-time English theatrical life; The Palmy Days of Nance Oldfield; Benjamin Franklin: Printer, Statesman, Philosopher, and Private Citizen; Twelve Great Actors; Twelve Great Actresses; With Washington in Braddock’s Campaign. Put. S.
- Robins, Henry Ephraim. Ct., 1827- ——. A Baptist clergyman, professor of Christian ethics at the Theological Seminary, Rochester, New York, from 1882. Harmony of Ethics with Theology; The Christian Idea of Education; The Ethics of the Christian Life.
- Robinson, Albert Gardner. Ms., 1855- ——. A journalist, war correspondent of the New York Evening Post during the Spanish-American War. The Porto Rico of To-day; The Philippines: the War and the People (1901). Scr.
- Robinson, Andrew Rose. Ont., 1845- ——. A dermatologist of New York city. A Manual of Dermatology; Cancer of the Skin. Ap.
- Robinson, Charles Mulford. N. Y., 1869- ——. A publicist of Rochester, New York. Modern Civic Art; The Improvement of Towns and Cities. Put.
- Robinson, Conway. Va., 1805-1884. A lawyer of Richmond, Virginia. Forms adapted to Virginia Practice; Practice in the Virginia Courts of Law and Equity; Early Voyages to America; Views of the Constitution of Virginia; Practice in Courts of Justice in England and the United States; History of the High Court of Chancery in England.
- Robinson, Doane. Wis., 1856- ——. A journalist of Aberdeen, South Dakota. Coteaus of Dakota; History of South Dakota; History of Dakota.
- Robinson, Edwin Arlington. Me., 1869- ——. A verse-writer of New York city. The Torrent and the Night Before; The Children of the Night; Captain Craig: a Book of Poems. Hou.
- Robinson, James Harvey. Il., 1863- ——. A professor of history in Columbia University. The German Bundesrath; Petrarch, First Modern Scholar and Man of Letters; Introduction to History of Western Europe. Gi. Put.
- Robinson, John. Ms., 1846- ——. A botanist of Salem, Massachusetts. Ferns in Their Homes and Ours; Flora of Essex County, Massachusetts.
- Robinson, Mrs. Suzanne (Antrobus). Mch., 18— - ——. A New Orleans novelist. The King’s Messenger. Put.
- Robinson, William Callyhan. Ct., 1834- ——. A lawyer, dean of the law department of the Catholic University of America from 1895, but earlier in his career an Episcopal clergyman. Life of Ebenezer Beriah Kelly; Notes on Elementary Law; Elementary Law; Clavis Rerum; The Law of Patents; Forensic Oratory; Elements of American Jurisprudence. Lit.
- Rockhill, William Woodville. Pa., 1853- ——. A traveller, Oriental scholar, and diplomat; appointed United States minister to Greece in 1897. Udanvarga, the Northern Buddhist; A Life of the Buddha and the Early History of his Church; Land of the Lamas; Diary of a Journey in Mongolia and Tibet; Notes on the Ethnology of Tibet. Cent.
- Rockwell, Alfred Perkins. Ct., 1834- ——. A mining engineer of Boston. Roads and Pavements in France. Wil.
- Rockwood, Elbert William. Ms., 1860- ——. A professor of chemistry at the University of Iowa from 1888. Laboratory Manual of Physiological Chemistry; Introduction to Chemical Analysis for Medical Students.
- Rodney, George Brydges. Del., 1872- ——. An historical novelist. In Buff and Blue. Lit.
- Roe, Mrs. Nora Ardelia [Metcalf]. Ms., 1856- ——. A writer of Worcester, Massachusetts. Two Little Street Singers. Le.
- Rodriguez, José Ignacio. C., 1831- ——. A lawyer of Cuban birth, a resident of Washington city from 1870. Vida de Don José de la Luz y Cabellero; Vida del Presbitero Don Felix Varela.
- Rogers, Arthur [Kenyon]. R. I., 1864- ——. Son of H. Rogers ([page 321]). An Episcopal clergyman, rector (1904) of Holy Trinity Church at West Chester, Pennsylvania. Men and Movements in the English Church. Lgs.
- Rogers, John Rankin. Me., 1838-1901. A politician, governor of the State of Washington, 1896-1900. The Irrepressible Conflict; Looking Forward; The Inalienable Rights of Man.
- Rogers, Lebbeus Harding. O., 1847- ——. A writer of New York city. The Kite Trust; The Temples of Pæstum. Ap.
- Rogers, Robert. N. H., 1727-1800. A famous American soldier who commanded the noted Rogers’s Rangers in the French and Indian War. A Concise Account of North America (1765); Journal of Major Rogers (1765); Ponteach, or The Savages of America, a blank-verse tragedy, now very rare; Diary of the Siege of Detroit in the War with Pontiac, first published in 1860. See Tyler’s Literary History of the American Revolution, volume 2.
- Rohé, George Henry. Md., 1851-1899. A Maryland physician, superintendent of the State Hospital for the Insane. Text-Book of Hygiene; Electricity in Medicine and Surgery; Handbook of Skin Diseases.
- Rollins, Mrs. Clara Harriot [Sherwood]. Mo., 1874- ——. A Boston writer of short stories. A Burne-Jones Head; Threads of Life. Lam.
- Rollins, Frank West. N. H., 1860- ——. A Boston banker whose residence is in Concord, New Hampshire. He was governor of New Hampshire, 1899-1901. The Ring in a Cliff; The Twin Hussars; Break o’ Day Tales; The Lady of the Violets; Old Home Week; Speeches. Le.
- Romero [ro-may´-ro], Matias. Mexico, 1837-1898. A Mexican diplomatist who was secretary of the Mexican Legation at Washington, 1859-63, and minister plenipotentiary, 1863-68 and 1882-98. Coffee Culture on the Southern Coast of Chiapas; The State of Oaxaca; Mexico and the United States: a Study of Subjects affecting their Policy, Commerce, and Social Relations. Put.
- Rood, Henry Edward. Pa., 1868- ——. A New York writer, assistant editor (1904) of Harpers’ Magazine. Hardwicke; In Pastures New.
- Rood, John Romain. Mch., 1868- ——. A law instructor in the University of Michigan. The Law of Garnishment; Common Remedial Processes; Attachments, Garnishments, Judgments, and Executions.
- Rooney, John Jerome. N. Y., 1866- ——. A broker of New York city. The Men Behind the Guns, a collection of verse on the Spanish-American War.
- Rorer, Mrs. Sarah Tyson [Heston]. Pa., 1849- ——. A teacher of domestic economy, among whose many writings on culinary topics are Mrs. Rorer’s Cook Book; Canning and Preserving; Salads; Leftovers; Good Cooking; How to Use a Chafing Dish; A Book on Diet and Cookery; Hot Weather Dishes; Bread Making; Colonial Cookery.
- Rose, Ray Clarke. N. Y., 1870- ——. A Chicago journalist. At the Sign of the Ginger Jar: some Verses Gay and Grave. Mg.
- Roseboro, Viola. Tn., 18— - ——. A New York writer for magazines. Old Ways and New, a volume of short stories; Players and Vagabonds; Out of the Heart, a novel. Mac.
- Rosenfeld, Morris. Po., 1862- ——. A Hebrew tailor of New York city. Songs from the Ghetto.
- Rosenfeld, Sidney. Va., 1855- ——. A popular playwright. The Senator (with D. Lloyd); A Possible Case; The Stepping Stone; The Politician; and other plays.
- Rosewater, Victor. Nebraska, 1871- ——. An Omaha journalist. Special Assessments, a Study in Municipal Finance. Mac.
- Ross, Denman Waldo. O., 1853- ——. A writer of Cambridge. Early History of Landholding among the Germans.
- Ross, Edward Alsworth. Il., 1866- ——. A professor of sociology in the University of Nebraska. Social Control; Honest Dollars.
- Roth, Filibert. Wg., 1858- ——. A forestry expert in Government service. First Book of Forestry, and various professional monographs and government reports.
- Rothwell, Richard Pennefather. Ont., 1836-1901. A civil and mining engineer of New York city, editor of The Engineering and Mining Journal from 1873. The Mineral Industry: its Statistics, Technology, and Trade; Universal Bimetallism.
- Rowan, Andrew Summers. Va., 185- - ——. A United States army officer. The Island of Cuba. Ho.
- Rowlandson, Mrs. Mary [White]. 16— - ——. The wife of Joseph Rowlandson, first pastor of Lancaster, Massachusetts. She was taken captive by the Indians in 1676, and ransomed after three months’ captivity. In 1682 she published The Narrative of the Captivity and Restauration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson among the Indians.
- Rowley, John. N. Y., 1866- ——. A prominent taxidermist of New York city. The Art of Taxidermy. Ap.
- Rulison, Nelson Somerville. N. Y., 1842-1897. The second Protestant Episcopal bishop of Central Pennsylvania. History of St. Paul’s Church, Cleveland, Ohio; A Study of Conscience.
- Runkle, Bertha Brooks. N. J., 187- - ——. A novelist. The Helmet of Navarre, a popular romance. Cent.
- Rusby, Henry Hurd. N. J., 1855- ——. A botanical writer of New York city. Essentials of Pharmacognosy; Morphology and Histology of Plants; Materia Medica of Buck’s Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences.
- Rusling, James Fowler. N. J., 1834- ——. A lawyer of Trenton, New Jersey. Across America; Men and Things I Saw in Civil War Days; European Days and Ways. Meth.
- Russell, Charles Edward. Ia., 1860- ——. A Chicago journalist. Such Stuff as Dreams. Bur.
- Russell, Frank. Ia., 1868-1903. An entomologist who published Explorations in the Far North.
- Russell, Henry Benajah. Me., 1859- ——. A journalist of Hartford. Life of William McKinley; International Monetary Conferences; Our War with Spain. Har.
- Russell, Isaac Franklin. Ct., 1867- ——. A professor of law in the University of the City of New York. Outline Study of Law; Lectures on Law for Women.
- Russell, James Earl. N. Y., 1864- ——. An educator, dean of the Teachers’ College of Columbia University from 1898. The Extension of University Teaching; History, Organization and Methods of Secondary Education in Germany. Lgs.
- Russo, Nicolas. Iy., 1845-1902. A Roman Catholic clergyman of New York city, for forty years a member of the Society of Jesus. The True Religion: Summa Philosophica.
- Ryan, Daniel Joseph. O., 1855- ——. A lawyer of Portsmouth, Ohio. A History of Ohio; Arbitration between Capital and Labor.
- Ryley, Mrs. Madeleine Lucette. E., 18— - ——. A dramatist among whose plays are The American Citizen; Lady Jemima; A Coat of Many Colours.
- S
- Saalfield, Mrs. Adah Louise [Sutton]. L. I., 1865- ——. A writer for young people. Lingua Gemmæ; Mr. Bunny: his Book; Seeds of April’s Sowing.
- Sabin, Edwin Legrand. Il., 1870- ——. A writer of Des Moines. The Making of Iowa; The Magic Mashie.
- Sackett, Henry Woodward. N. Y., 1833- ——. A lawyer of New York city. The Law of Libel for Newspaper Men.
- Sage, Agnes Carolyn. L. I., 1854- ——. A writer for young people. Christmas Elves; The Jolly Ten; A Little Colonial Dame; A Little Daughter of the Revolution. C. P. S. Sto.
- Sage, William. N. H., 1864- ——. Son of Mrs. Sage Richardson ([page 314]). A writer of New York city. Robert Tournay: a Romance of the French Revolution; The Claybornes; Frenchy: the Story of a Gentleman. Hou.
- Sagebeer, Joseph Evans. Pa., 1862- ——. A Baptist clergyman of Germantown, Pennsylvania. The Bible in Court; A First Book in Christian Doctrine. Rev.
- Sajous, Charles Euchariste. F., 1852- ——. A Philadelphia physician, professor in Jefferson College. Curative Treatment of Hay Fever, Diseases of the Nose and Throat; Annual and Analytical Cyclopedia of Practical Medicine.
- Salisbury, James Henry. N. Y., 1823- ——. An Albany physician of prominence as a specialist, and president of the Institute of Micrology from 1878. Beside professional monographs he published The Relation of Alimentation to Disease.
- Sallmon, William Henry. Ont., 1866- ——. A Congregational clergyman, president of Carleton College from 1903. Studies in the Life of Jesus; Studies in the Parables and Miracles of Jesus; Studies in the Life of Paul.
- Salmon, Lucy Maynard. 185- - ——. A professor of history at Vassar College. Domestic Service; A History of the Appointing Power; History: Suggestions as to its Study and Teaching. Mac.
- Salter, William Mackintire. Ia., 1853- ——. An ethical lecturer of Chicago. On a Foundation for Religion; Die Religion der Moral; Moralische Reden; Ethical Religion; First Steps in Philosophy; Anarchy or Government? Cr. El. Lit.
- Sample, Robert Fleming. N. Y., 1829- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman. Early Dawn; Shining Light; Clouds after Rain; Sunset, or The Christian’s Death; The Curtained Throne; Education and Christianity; Memoir of Rev. T. C. Thorn; Christ’s Valedictory. Rev.
- Sanborn, Charles Henry. N. H., 1821- ——. A physician and justice of the peace of Hampton Falls, New Hampshire. The North and the South.
- Sanders, Thomas Jefferson. O., 1855- ——. An Ohio educator, president of Otterbein University from 1891. Philosophy of the Christian Religion; Transcendentalism; The Purpose and Place of the College.
- Sanderson, Ezra Dwight. Mch., 1878- ——. A professor of entomology in the Texas Agricultural College from 1902. Insects Injurious to Staple Crops. Wil.
- Sands, Benjamin Franklin. Md., 1811-1883. A rear-admiral in the United States navy, retired in 1874. From Reefer to Rear-Admiral. Sto.
- Sanford, Ezekiel. Ct., 1796-1819. A writer who published in 1819 A History of the United States before the Revolution. The Humours of Eutopia, a satirical novel, remained in manuscript at his death.
- Sanger, William Cary. L. I., 1853- ——. An army officer. Letters of an Idle Man; The Reserve and Auxiliary Forces of England and the Militia of Switzerland.
- Sargent, Frederick Leroy. Ms., 1863- ——. A botanist of Cambridge. Corn Plants: Their Uses and Ways of Life. Hou.
- Sargent, Herbert H[owland]. Il., 1858- ——. A captain of the Second Cavalry, of note as a military strategist. Napoleon’s First Campaign; The Campaign of Marengo, with Comments. Mg.
- Sartain, John. 1808-1897. A noted engraver of Philadelphia. Reminiscences of a Very Old Man. Ap.
- Satterthwaite, Thomas Edward. N. Y., 1843- ——. A physician of New York city. Manual of Histology; Practical Bacteriology.
- Saunders, Margaret Marshall. “Marshall Saunders.” N. S., 1861- ——. A Nova Scotian writer of fiction, much of whose literary work has been done in Boston. My Spanish Sailor; Beautiful Joe, a prize story written for the Humane Education Society; Daisy; Charles and his Lamb; For the Other Boy’s Sake, and Other Stories; The House of Armour, a novel; The King of the Park; Rose à Charlitte, a story of Acadian Life; Deficient Saints; Her Sailor; ’Tilda Jane; For his Country; Beautiful Joe’s Paradise; Nita. Bap. Cr. Pa.
- Saunders, Marshall. See Saunders, M. M.
- Saunders, Ripley Dunlap. Mi., 1856- ——. A St. Louis journalist. John Kenadie. Hou.
- Savidge, Eugene Coleman. Md., 1863- ——. A physician and author of New York city. The American in Paris; Gallery of Eminent Men; The Life and Times of Brewster; Wallingford. Lip.
- Savidge, Frank Raymond. Md., 1866- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. The Law of Boroughs in Pennsylvania.
- Savoy, George Washington. N. H., 1856- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Los Angeles. Marriage; Stronger than Samson, a book for boys.
- Sawin, Theophilus Parsons. Ms., 1841- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, pastor in Troy, New York, from 1886. The Transfiguring of the Cross; Liberty in the Presbyterian Church.
- Sawyer, Josephine Caroline. N. Y., 1879- ——. An historical novelist of Watertown, New York. Every Inch a King; All’s Fair in Love. Do.
- Sawyer, Walter Leon. Me., 1862- ——. A Boston journalist and littérateur. An Outland Journey; A Local Habitation. Sm.
- Sayre, Theodore Burt. N. Y., 1874- ——. A novelist and playwright of New York city. He has published two novels: Two Summer Girls and I; The Son of Curleycroft; and among his plays are A Classical Cowboy; Manon Lescaut; Tom Moore; The Bold Sojer Boy. Har.
- Scaife, Walter Bell. Pa., 1858- ——. A writer of Allegheny, Pennsylvania. American Geographical History; Florentine Life During the Renaissance; A History of Geographical Latitude.
- Schaeffer, Nathan C——. Pa., 1849- ——. The state superintendent of instruction in Pennsylvania from 1893. Thinking and Learning to Think; History of Education in Pennsylvania. Lip.
- Schaff, David Schley. Pa., 1852- ——. Son of Philip Schaff ([page 330]). A professor of church history at Lane Seminary, Cincinnati, from 1897. Life of Philip Schaff; Commentary on Acts.
- Schauffler, Adolphus Frederick. Ty., 1845- ——. Son of W. G. Schauffler ([page 330]). A Presbyterian clergyman of New York city. Ways of Working; The Teacher, the Child and the Book; The Pastor as Leader of Sunday School Forces. We.
- Schelling, Felix Emmanuel. Ind., 1858- ——. A professor of English literature in the University of Pennsylvania. Literary and Verse Criticism of the Age of Elizabeth; Life and Works of George Gascoigne; The Queen’s Progress. Gi. Hou.
- Schenck, Ferdinand Schureman. N. Y., 1845- ——. A [Dutch] Reformed clergyman of New Brunswick, New Jersey. The Ten Commandments in the Nineteenth Century; The Ten Commandments and the Lord’s Prayer. Fu.
- Schenk, David. N. C., 1835- ——. A lawyer of Greensboro, North Carolina. The Battle of Guilford Court House; North Carolina, 1780-1781; Railroad Law in North Carolina.
- Schermerhorn, Martin Kellogg. N. Y., 1845- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Poughkeepsie. Sacred Scriptures of the World (edited); Renascent Christianity. Put.
- Schimpff, Henry William. N. Y., 1868- ——. A physician of New York city. Textbook of Volumetric Analysis; Qualitative Chemical Analysis. Wil.
- Schmidt, Nathaniel. Sn., 1862- ——. A professor of Semitic languages at Cornell University from 1896. The Character of Christ’s Last Meal; Maranatha; The Son of Man and the Son of God in Modern Theology. Mac.
- Schneider, Albert. Il., 1863- ——. A professor of botany in Chicago. A Text-book of General Lichenology; Guide to the Study of Lichens; Microscopy and Micro-Technique; Hints on Drawing for Students in Biology; General Vegetable Pharmacography.
- Schoenhof, Jacob. G., 1839-1903. A prominent political economist, resident in the United States from 1861. Destructive Influence of the Tariff upon Manufactures and Commerce; The Industrial Situation and the Question of Wages; Wages and Trade; The Economy of High Wages; Technical Education in Europe; History of Money and Prices. Put.
- Schofield, John McAllister. N. Y., 1831- ——. The lieutenant-general of the United States army in 1895; previously major-general commanding the army from 1888. Forty-six Years in the Army. Cent.
- Schultze, Augustus. G., 1840- ——. An educator, professor in the Moravian College at Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, from 1870. History of the Foreign Mission Work of the Moravians (in German); The Books of the Bible Analyzed; Grammar and Vocabulary of the Alaskan-Eskimo Language; Theology of the Apostles Peter and Paul in their Own Words.
- Schuyler, James Dix. N. Y., 1848- ——. An hydraulic engineer of distinction, who has published a valuable work on Reservoirs for Irrigation, Water Power, and Domestic Water Supply. Wil.
- Schwab, John Christopher. N. Y., 1865- ——. A professor of political economy at Yale University. The Confederate States of America, 1861-1865. Scr.
- Scidmore, Eliza Ruhamah. Ia., 1856- ——. A writer of Washington city. Alaska; Jinrikisha Days in Japan; Guide to Alaska and the Northwest Coast; Westward to the Far East; Java: the Garden of the East; China: the Long Lived Empire; Winter India. Ap. Cent. Lo.
- Scott, Charles Angus. E., 1858- ——. A professor of mathematics at Bryn Mawr College from 1885. Certain Modern Ideas and Methods in Plane Analytical Geometry. Mac.
- Scott, William Amasa. N. Y., 1862- ——. A professor of economic history and theory in the University of Wisconsin. Repudiation of State Debts; The Economics of Commerce. Cr.
- Scott, William Berryman. O., 1858- ——. A professor of geology and palæontology at Princeton University. An Introduction to Geology. Mac.
- Scott, William Earl Dodge. L. I., 1852- ——. A naturalist, curator of the department of ornithology at Princeton University from 1897. Bird Studies; Story of a Bird Lover; Birds of Patagonia. Put.
- Scribner, Frank Kimball. N. Y., 1867. A littérateur of New York city. The Honour of a Princess; The Love of the Princess Alice; The Fifth of November; A Continental Cavalier.
- Scripps, James Edmund. E., 1835- ——. A retired newspaper publisher of Detroit. Five Months Abroad; Memorials of the Scripps Family.
- Scruggs, William Lindsay. Tn., 1834- ——. An Atlanta lawyer, United States minister to Colombia 1871-1877 and 1881-1887. British Aggressions in Venezuela; Fallacies of the British Blue Book; The Colombian and Venezuelan Republics; The Evolution of American Citizenship; Origin and Meaning of the Monroe Doctrine. Lit.
- Sealsfield, Charles. A., 1793-1864. An Austrian author resident for some years in the United States, whose original name was Karl Postle. Tokeah, or the White Rose, published in German as Der Legitime und die Republikaner; Transatlantische Reiseskizzen; Der Virey und die Aristokraten, a Mexican novel; Lebensbilden ans beiden Hemisphären, reissued as Morten oder die grosse Tour; Deutsch-amerikanische Wahlverwandtschaften; Süden und Norden; The Cabin Book, or Life in Texas. See Kertbény’s Erinnerung an Sealsfield (1864).
- Seaman, Louis Livingston. N. Y., 1851- ——. A major-surgeon in the United States volunteer engineers during the Spanish-American war. The Social Waste of a Great City; From Tokio through Manchuria with the Japanese. Ap.
- Search, Preston Willis. O., 1853- ——. An educator of Worcester, Massachusetts. An Ideal School. Ap.
- Searle, George Mary. E., 1839- ——. Brother of A. Searle ([page 334]). A Roman Catholic clergyman and astronomer, belonging to the order of Paulists. Elements of Geometry; Plain Facts for Fair Minds.
- Sears, Lorenzo. Ms., 1838- ——. A professor of rhetoric and oratory at Brown University. The History of Oratory from the Age of Pericles; The Occasional Address: its Literature and Composition; Principles and Methods of Literary Criticism. Put.
- Sedgwick, Annie Douglas. N. J., 187- - ——. A novelist. The Confounding of Camelia; The Dull Miss Auchinard; The Rescue; Paths of Judgment. Cent. Scr.
- Sedgwick, Ellery. N. Y., 1872- ——. A New York littérateur. Son of H. D. Sedgwick, infra. Life of Thomas Paine. Sm.
- Sedgwick, Henry Dwight. Ms., 1824-1903. Son of H. D. Sedgwick ([page 335]). A lawyer of New York city. Damages; Leading Cases on Damages.
- Sedgwick, Henry Dwight. 186- - ——. Son of H. D. Sedgwick, supra. An essayist and historian, of Stockbridge, Mass. Samuel de Champlain; Essays on Great Writers; Francis Parkman. Hou.
- Sedgwick, William Thompson. Ct., 1855- ——. A professor of biology in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1883. General Biology Principles of Sanitary Science and Public Health. Ho. Mac.
- Sedley, Henry. Ms., 1835-1899. A journalist of New York city. Dangerfield’s Rest: a Romance; Marion Rooke, or The Quest for Fortune.
- See, Thomas Jefferson Jackson. Mo., 1866- ——. An astronomer at Washington city. Researches on the Evolution of the Stellar Systems.
- Seeley, Levi. N. Y., 1847- ——. A professor of pedagogy in the State Normal School, Trenton, New Jersey, from 1895. The American Common School System; The German Common School System; History of Education; The Foundations of Education, are his most important works. Am.
- Selleck, Willard Chamberlain. N. Y., 1856- ——. A Universalist clergyman of Providence. The Spiritual Outlook. Lit.
- Sellers, Edwin Jaquett. Pa., 1865- ——. A lawyer of Philadelphia. Genealogy of the Jaquett Family; Genealogy of the Kollak Family; and other genealogical works.
- Semple, Ellen Churchill. 18— - ——. A Louisville writer on geographical subjects, and an editor of the Journal of Geography. American History and its Geographic Conditions. Hou.
- Senn, Nicholas. Sd., 1844- ——. A Chicago physician. Four Months among the Surgeons of Europe; Experimental Surgery; Principles of Surgery; Surgical Bacteriology; Pathology and Surgical Treatment of Tumours; Tuberculosis of the Genito-Urinary Organs.
- Serviss, Garrett Putnam. N. Y., 1851- ——. A Brooklyn lecturer oil astronomy. Astronomy with an Opera Glass; Edison’s Conquest of Mars, a novel; Pleasures of the Telescope; Other Worlds. Ap.
- Setchell, William Albert. Ct., 1864- ——. A professor of botany in the University of California from 1895. Laboratory Practice for Beginners in Botany. Mac.
- Severance, Frank Hayward. Ms., 1856- ——. An historical lecturer of Buffalo. Old Trails on the Niagara Frontier. Bur.
- Sewell, Robert. I., 1831-1897. A lawyer of New York city. Pension Law Practice in the United States; Titles to Beds of Ponds and Streams in the State of New York.
- Seymour, Horatio Winslow. N. Y., 1854- ——. A Chicago journalist and publisher. Government and Co. Limited. Mg.
- Shackelton, Robert. Wis., 1860- ——. A novelist. Toomey and Others, a volume of short stories; Many Waters; The Great Adventurer. Scr.
- Shackford, Charles Chauncy. N. H., 1815-1891. A Unitarian clergyman, pastor in Lynn, Massachusetts, 1846-65, and from 1871 professor of rhetoric at Cornell University. A Citizen’s Appeal in Regard to the War with Mexico; Social and Literary Papers. Rob.
- Shaffer, Newton Melman. N. Y., 1846- ——. An orthopædic surgeon of New York city. Potts’ Disease; The Hysterical Element in Orthopædic Surgery; Brief Essays on Orthopædic Surgery. Ap. Put.
- Sharp, Dallas Lore. N. J., 1870- ——. A Methodist clergyman of Boston, professor of English at Boston University from 1902. Wild Life Near Home; Roof and Meadow. Cent.
- Sharpless, Isaac. Pa., 1848- ——. An educator, president of Haverford College, Pennsylvania, from 1887. English Education in Elementary and Secondary Schools; A Quaker Experiment in Government; The Quakers in the Revolution; Two Centuries of Pennsylvania History. Lip.
- Sharpless, Joseph. N. J., 1772-1861. A Quaker philanthropist of Burlington, New Jersey. The Story of Joseph and his Brethren, set forth in a Pleasing and Instructive Manner (1812); A Family Record (1816), a Sharpless genealogy.
- Sharts, Joseph William. O., 1875- ——. A lawyer and novelist of Dayton, Ohio. Ezra Caine; The Romance of a Rogue; The Hills of Freedom. S.
- Shaw, John. Md., 1778-1809. A physician of Baltimore. Poems (1810).
- Sheedy, Morgan Madden. I., 1853- ——. A Roman Catholic clergyman of Altoona, Pennsylvania. Christian Unity; Social Problems.
- Sheldon, Charles Monroe. N. Y., 1857- ——. A Congregational clergyman in Topeka, Kansas, whose writings have been extraordinarily popular, especially in England. In His Steps; His Brother’s Keeper; The Redemption of Freetown; Richard Bruce; Robert Hardy’s Seven Days; The Twentieth Door; The Crucifixion of Philip Strong; John King’s Question Class; Malcom Kirk; One of the Two; The Miracle at Markham; For Christ and the Church; The Narrow Gate.
- Sheldon, Henry Davidson. Utah, 1874- ——. A professor in the University of Oregon. Student Life and Customs. Ap.
- Sheldon, Walter Lorenzo. Vt., 1858- ——. An ethical lecturer of St. Louis. An Ethical Movement; An Ethical Sunday School; The Story of the Bible; Old Testament Bible Stories for the Young. Mac.
- Shepherd, Mrs. Elizabeth Lee [Kirkland]. “Odette Tyler.” Ga., 1860- ——. An actress. Boss, a Story of Virginia Life.
- Sheppard, Francis Henry. Mo., 1846- ——. A retired lieutenant-commander in the United States navy. Love Afloat, a novel.
- Sherlock, Charles Reginald. Pa., 1857- ——. A novelist of Syracuse, New York. Your Uncle Lew; The Red Anvil. Sto.
- Sherman, Charles Pomeroy. L. I., 1847- ——. An attorney of Philadelphia. A Bachelor’s Wedding Trip. Pen.
- Sherman, Lucius Adelno. Ms., 1847- ——. An educator, professor of literature in the University of Nebraska. Analytics of Literature; What is Shakespeare? Gi. Mac.
- Sherwood, Andrew. Pa., 1848- ——. An assistant state geologist of Pennsylvania. Geology of Lycoming and Sullivan Counties, Pennsylvania; Geology of Potter County, Pennsylvania; and the words of a number of popular sacred and sentimental songs.
- Sherwood, Margaret Pollock. “Elizabeth Hastings.” N. Y., 1864- ——. An instructor in Wellesley College. A Puritan Bohemia; Henry Worthington: Idealist; An Experiment in Altruism; Dryden’s Dramatic Theory and Practice; Daphne: an Autumn Pastoral; The Coming of the Tide. Hou. Mac.
- Shields, George O——. O., 1846- ——. A writer of New York city. The Big Game of North America; Cruisings in the Cascades; American Game Fishes; Hunting in the Great West; The American Book of the Dog; Camping and Camp Outfits; The Battle of the Big Hole. Ra.
- Shinn, Milicent Washburn. Cal., 1858- ——. Sister of C. H. Shinn ([page 342]). A writer of Niles, California. The Biography of a Baby. Hou.
- Shipman, Benjamin Jonson. Ct., 1853- ——. A lawyer of Saint Paul. Common Law Pleading; Equity Pleading; Practice and Forms: Minnesota. West.
- Shipman, Louis Evan. L. I., 1869- ——. A New Hampshire playwright and novelist. D’Arcy of the Guards; Predicaments, a collection of short stories; Urban Dialogues; Ralph Tarrant; The Curious Courtship of Kate Poins. Lip. S.
- Shiras, Oliver Perry. Pa., 1833- ——. An Iowa jurist. Equity Practice in Circuit Courts of the United States.
- Shock, William Henry. Md., 1821- ——. A noted United States naval engineer, author of an important work on Steam Boilers, their Design, Construction, and Management.
- Shoemaker, John Vietch. Pa., 1852- ——. A physician and medical lecturer of Philadelphia. Poisons and Antidotes; Ointments and Oleates; Treatise on Materia Medica and Therapeutics; Heredity, Health, and Personal Beauty. Ap.
- Shortz, Robert Packer. 18— - ——. A civil engineer who has written the novels The Passing Emperor; The Gift of Bonaparte; The Girdle of the Gods.
- Shriver, John Shultz. Md., 1857- ——. A Washington newspaper correspondent. Almost, a romance; Through the South and West with President Harrison.
- Shuey, Mrs. Lillian [Hinman]. Il., 1853- ——. A novelist of California. Hulda; Don Luis’ Wife: a Romance of the West Indies; The Little Lady of the Cobweb Palace; California Sunshine (verse). Lai.
- Shufeldt, Robert William. N. Y., 1850- ——. A surgeon and biologist of Washington city. The Anatomy of Birds; Chapters on the Natural History of Birds; The Myology of the Raven; Folk-Lore Tales of Moe and Asbjörnsen (with A. Shufeldt); Chapters on the Natural History of the United States.
- Shuman, Edwin Llewellyn. Pa., 1863- ——. A journalist of Evanston, Illinois. Steps into Journalism; Practical Journalism. Ap.
- Shumway, Edgar Solomon. Ms., 1856- ——. A university extension lecturer. A Day in Ancient Rome; Latin Synonyms. Gi. He.
- Shute, Daniel Kerfoot. Va., 1858- ——. A physician of Washington city. A First Book in Organic Evolution.
- Shute, Samuel Moore. Pa., 1823-1902. A Baptist clergyman, professor of English literature at Columbian University, Washington city, from 1859. Manual of Anglo-Saxon.
- Shutter, Marion Daniel. O., 1853- ——. A Universalist clergyman of Minneapolis. Wit and Humour of the Bible; Justice and Mercy; Child of Nature; Applied Evolution.
- Sibley, Edwin Day. 18— - ——. A Boston lawyer and writer. Stillman Gott, Farmer and Fisherman. Lit.
- Sibley, Mrs. Louise Florence Maria [Lyndon]. N. Y., 18— - ——. A littérateur of Malden, Massachusetts. A Lighthouse Village. Hou.
- Sickles, David Banks. N. Y., 1837- ——. A diplomatist, United States Minister to Siam 1876-1881. Leaves of the Lotus; The Land of the Lotus.
- Sidney, Edward William. Pseudonym of Nathaniel Beverly Tucker ([page 390]).
- Siebert, Wilbur Henry. O., 1866- ——. A professor of European history in the Ohio State University from 1898. The Underground Railroad from Slavery to Freedom; The Government of Ohio. Mac.
- Sigsbee, Charles Dwight. N. Y., 1845- ——. A noted naval officer, captain in command of the warship Maine at the time of its explosion in the harbour of Havana. Deep-Sea Sounding and Dredging; The Maine. Cent.
- Simmons, Henry Martyn. N. Y., 1864- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Minneapolis. The Unending Genesis; New Tables of Stone and Other Essays.
- Simonds, William Edward. Ms., 1860- ——. A professor of English literature at Knox College, Galesburg, Illinois. A Student’s History of English Literature; Sir Thomas Wyatt and his Poems; Introduction to the Study of English Fiction. He. Hou.
- Simonton, Charles Henry. S. C., 1829- ——. A jurist of Charleston. Lectures on Jurisdiction and Practice of United States Courts; Digest of South Carolina Equity Decisions.
- Simpson, Samuel. Mch., 1868- ——. A lecturer on American church history in Hartford Theological Seminary. Life of Ulrich Zwingli: Swiss Patriot and Reformer. Ba.
- Sinclair, Upton. Ind., 1878- ——. A novelist of Princeton, New Jersey. King Midas; The Journal of Arthur Stirling; Prince Hagen: a Phantasy; Manassas. Mac.
- Singleton, Esther. Md., 18— - ——. The Furniture of our Forefathers; A Guide to the Opera; Turrets, Towers, and Temples; Love in Literature and Art (edited); Wonders of Nature (edited); Romantic Castles and Palaces (edited); Social New York under the Georges. Ap. Do.
- Sitterly, Charles Fremont. N. Y., 1861- ——. A professor of biblical literature at Drew Theological Seminary, Madison, New Jersey, from 1892. Praxis in Manuscripts of Greek New Testament; History of the English Bible (with S. G. Ayres, supra).
- Sizer, Nelson. Ms., 1812-1897. A phrenologist of Brooklyn. How to Teach; Forty Years in Phrenology; Heads and Faces; Right Selection in Wedlock; Resemblance to Parents.
- Skeel, Adelaide. N. Y., 1852- ——. An author of Newburg, New York. An After Christmas Thought; My Three-Legged Story-Teller; King Washington (with W. H. Brearley, supra). Lip.
- Skinner, Mrs. Henrietta Channing [Dana]. Ms., 186- - ——. Daughter of R. H. Dana, 2d ([page 87]). A novelist of Detroit. Espiritu Santo; Heart and Soul. Har.
- Slattery, Charles Lewis. Pa., 1867- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Faribault, Minnesota. Felix Reville Brunot. Lgs.
- Sleight, Charles Lee. N. Y., 1856- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Waterford, New York. Prince of the Pin Elves; The Water People. Pa.
- Sleight, Mary Breck. N. Y., 18— - ——. A writer of Sag Harbor, New York. Prairie Days; Osego Chronicles; Pulpit and Easel; The House at Crague; Flag on the Mill; The Knights of Sandy Hollow; An Island Heroine.
- Slicer, Thomas Roberts. D. C., 1847- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of New York city, but prior to 1881 in the Methodist ministry. The Great Affirmations of Religion; The Power and the Promise of the Liberal Faith. Hou.
- Slocum, Joshua. N. S., 1844- ——. A navigator who in 1898 completed a voyage around the world alone in a craft of nine tons register. The Voyage of the Liberdade from Brazil to New York; Sailing Alone Around the World. Cent.
- Smart, Richard Addison. Ind., 1872- ——. A mechanical engineer of Boston. Handbook of Engineering Laboratory Practice. Wil.
- Smiley, Francis Edward. Pa., 1858- ——. A Presbyterian evangelist of Philadelphia. The Evangelization of a Great City.
- Smith, Mrs. Alice [Prescott]. Wis., 18— - ——. A novelist now residing in California. The Legatee; Off the Highway. Hou.
- Smith, Arthur Cosslett. N. Y., 1852- ——. A lawyer and novelist of Rochester, New York. The Monk and the Dancer; The Turquoise Cup. Scr.
- Smith, Arthur Henderson. Ct., 1845- ——. A missionary in China among whose writings are Chinese Characteristics; China in Convulsion; Rex Christus. Mac. Rev.
- Smith, Asa Dodge. N. H., 1804-1877. A Congregational clergyman, president of Dartmouth College, 1863-67. Letters to a Young Student; Memoirs of Mrs. Louisa Leavitt; Christian Statesmanship.
- Smith, Benjamin Mosby. Va., 1811- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Virginia, professor of Oriental literature at Union Theological Seminary in Virginia, 1854. Commentary on the Psalms and Proverbs; Family Religion; Questions on the Gospels.
- Smith, Charles Henry. Sa., 1842- ——. A professor of American history at Yale University from 1890. History of Yale University (1898).
- Smith, Charles Sprague. Ms., 1853- ——. A lecturer of New York city; Barbizon Days.
- Smith, David Eugene. N. Y., 1860- ——. A professor of mathematics in the Teachers’ College, Columbia University, among whose professional works are Plane and Solid Geometry; History of Modern Mathematics; Teaching of Elementary Mathematics. Gi. Mac. Wil.
- Smith, David Thomas. Ky., 1840- ——. A Louisville physician. Obstetric Problems; The Philosophy of Memory and Other Essays. Mor.
- Smith, [Edmund] Munroe. L. I., 1854- ——. A professor of Roman law at Columbia University from 1891. Bismarck and German Unity. Mac.
- Smith, Mrs. Elizabeth Lee [Allen]. N. H., 1817-1898. Wife of H. B. Smith ([page 317]). Beside editing The Life and Work of Henry Boynton Smith, she wrote several hymns which are found in hymnals, and other verse.
- Smith, Frank Berkeley. 18— - ——. Son of F. Hopkinson Smith ([page 347]). The Real Latin Quarter; How Paris Amuses Itself; Budapest, The City of the Magyars. Fu.
- Smith, Mrs. Harriette [Knight]. O., 1855- ——. A Boston journalist. The History of the Lowell Institute.
- Smith, Harry Bache. N. Y., 1860- ——. A dramatist of New York city, among whose opera librettos are Robin Hood; Rob Roy; Clover; Sindbad; The Little Corporal. He has also written Will Shakespeare, a comedy; Stage Lyrics and Sonnets.
- Smith, Henry Erskine. N. Y., 18— - ——. A New York writer. On and Off the Saddle; Love’s Diplomacy.
- Smith, Henry Preserved. O., 1847- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, professor of Hebrew at Lane Theological Seminary at Cincinnati from 1877. The Bible and Islam; Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Books of Samuel. Scr.
- Smith, John Bernhardt. N. Y., 1858- ——. A professor of entomology at Rutgers College. Economic Entomology for the Farmer and Fruit Grower.
- Smith, John Day. Me., 1845- ——. A lawyer of Minneapolis. Cases on Constitutional Law. West.
- Smith, Justin Harvey. N. H., 1857- ——. A professor of history at Dartmouth College from 1899. The Troubadours at Home. Put.
- Smith, Langdon. Ky., 1858- ——. A New York journalist. On the Pan Handle.
- Smith, Lewis Worthington. Il., 1866- ——. A professor of English in Drake University, Iowa, from 1902. A Modern Composition and Rhetoric; God’s Sunlight; The Writing of the Short Story. Cr. He.
- Smith, Marion Couthouy. Pa., 18— - ——. A magazine contributor of East Orange, New Jersey. Dr. Marks, Socialist.
- Smith, Munroe. See Smith, Edmund Munroe.
- Smith, Nora Archibald. Pa., 186- - ——. Sister of Mrs. Riggs ([page 315]). A writer upon kindergarten themes. The Children of the Future; Under the Cactus Flag. With Mrs. Riggs she has written The Republic of Childhood; The Story Hour. Hou.
- Smith, Orlando Jay. Ind., 1842- ——. The president of the National Press Association. Eternalism: A Theory of Infinite Justice; Balance: The Fundamental Verity. Hou.
- Smith, Philip Henry. N. Y., 1842- ——. An editor and author of Pawling, New York. Acadia: a Lost Chapter in American History; Curiosities in American History; General History of Dutchess County, 1609-1876; Legends of the Shawangunk; Vermont and New York Land Jobbers; The Statesmen of Podunk; Little Ethel, or a Sprig of Sumac; Evangeline, a dramatization of Longfellow’s poem.
- Smith, Samuel Joseph. N. J., 1771-1835. Grandson of Samuel Smith ([page 350]). A writer of Burlington, New Jersey, author of the hymn, “Arise, my soul, with rapture rise.” Miscellaneous Writings with Memoir (1836).
- Smith, Theodore Clarke. Ms., 1870- ——. A professor of American history in Williams College since 1903. The Free-Soil Party in Wisconsin; The Liberty and Free-Soil Parties in the Northwest; Analytical Index and Bibliography to the American Statesmen series of biographies. Lgs. Hou.
- Smith, Thomas Berry. O., 1850- ——. A Missouri educator, president of Central College, Fayette, from 1901. Studies in Nature and Language Lessons; In Many Moods (verse). He.
- Smith, William Benjamin. Ky., 1850- ——. A professor of mathematics at Tulane University, New Orleans, from 1893. Elementary Coördinate Geometry; A Clue to Trigonometry; Bible of the New Testament; Introductory Modern Geometry. Gi. Mac.
- Smithey, Royall Bascom. Va., 1851- ——. A professor of mathematics in Randolph-Macon College, Virginia, from 1878. History of Virginia; Civil Government of Virginia. Am.
- Smythe, William Ellsworth. Ms., 1861- ——. A journalist of San Diego, California. The Conquest of Arid America. Har.
- Sneath, Elias Hershey. Pa., 1857- ——. A professor of philosophy at Yale University. The Philosophy of Reid; The Ethics of Hobbes; The Mind of Tennyson.
- Snow, Alvin Lincoln. Il., 1862- ——. A clergyman of Lenox, Iowa. Songs of the White Mountains and Other Poems.
- Snow, Charles Henry. N. Y., 1863- ——. An engineer, dean of the School of Applied Science, New York University, from 1897. The Principal Species of Wood (1893). Wil.
- Snow, Lorenzo. O., 1814-1901. The president of the Mormon Church 1898-1901. The Italian Mission; The Only Way to be Saved; The Voice of Joseph; The Palestine Tourists. The Book of Mormon was translated into Italian by him.
- Snow, Walter Bradlee. Ms., 1860- ——. A mechanical engineer of Boston. Mechanical Draft; Steam Boiler Practice. Wil.
- Snowden, David Harold. W. Va., 1842- ——. A Congregational clergyman in Kansas. Is Man a Creation? God’s Hand in American History.
- Snowden, James Henry. Pa., 1852- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Pittsburgh, editor of the Presbyterian Banner. Scenes and Sayings in the Life of Christ. Rev.
- Snyder, Albert Whitcomb. N. Y., 1845- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of New York city, among whose writings are The Chief Things; Confirmation; Church Doctrine for the People. Wh.
- Snyder, Charles McCoy. Pa., 1859- ——. A Philadelphia journalist. Comic History of Greece; Runaway Robinson. Lip.
- Sommerville, Maxwell. Va., 1829-1904. A professor of glyptology in the University of Pennsylvania from 1894. Engraved Gems; On the Meinam, together with Three Romances of Siamese Life and Customs; Sands of Sahara; Siam. Lip.
- Soule, Charles Carroll. Ms., 1842- ——. A Boston writer. Romeo and Juliet, a New York travesty; Hamlet Revamped; The Lawyer’s Reference Manual of Law Books and Citations.
- Sousa, John Philip. D. C., 1854- ——. A popular musician and bandmaster. The Fifth String. Bo.
- Southworth, Alvan S——. 1846-1901. The secretary of the American Geographical Society for some years. Four Thousand Miles up the Nile; Life of General Winfield Hancock.
- Spalding, Frederick Putnam. Pa., 1857- ——. A civil engineer. Notes on Hydraulic Cement; Text-Book on Roads and Pavements; Hydraulic Cement, its Properties, Testing, and Use. Wil.
- Spalding, James Field. Ct., 1839- ——. A Roman Catholic theologian of Concord, Massachusetts, but prior to 1890 an Episcopal clergyman of Cambridge. The Teaching and Influence of Saint Augustine; The World’s Unrest and its Remedy. Lgs.
- Spalding, Volney Morgan. N. Y., 1849- ——. A professor of botany at the University of Michigan from 1876. Introduction to Botany; Guide to the Study of Common Plants; Monograph on the White Pine. He.
- Spalding, William Andrew. Mch., 1852- ——. A journalist of Los Angeles. The Orange: its Culture in California.
- Sparks, Edwin Erle. O., 1860- ——. A professor of history in the University of Chicago from 1895. The Men who Made the Nation; Formative Incidents in American Diplomacy; The Men who Rule the Nation.
- Spearman, Frank Hamilton. N. Y., 186- - ——. A magazinist of Wheaton, Illinois. The Nerve of Foley; Held for Orders, tales of railway life; Doctor Bryson; The Daughter of a Magnate; The Close of the Day. The Strategy of Great Railroads. Ap. Scr.
- Speer, Emory. Ga., 1848- ——. A jurist of Macon, Georgia. Removal of Causes from State to United States Courts; Lectures on the Constitution of the United States.
- Speer, Robert Elliott. Pa., 1867- ——. A Presbyterian missionary. Christ and Life; Papers and Practice of the Christian Life; Studies of the Man, Jesus Christ; Remember Jesus Christ; Missions and Politics in Asia; Memorial of a True Life; Studies of the Man, Paul. Rev.
- Sperry, Lyman Beecher. N. Y., 1841- ——. A lecturer of Oberlin, Ohio. Concerning Narcotics; Confidential Talks with Young Men; Confidential Talks with Young Women; Husband and Wife; Physiology, Fear and Faith. Rev.
- Speyers, Clarence Livingstone. N. Y., 1863- ——. A professor of Chemistry at Rutgers College, New Jersey, from 1891. Text-Book of Physical Chemistry. Vn.
- Spingarn, Joel Elias. N. Y., 1875- ——. A tutor in Columbia University from 1900. A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance; The New Hesperides; American Scholarship. Mac.
- Sprague, Frank Headley. Ms., 1861- ——. A metaphysical writer of Quincy, Massachusetts. Spiritual Consciousness.
- Sprague, Franklin M——. Ms., 1843- ——. A Congregational clergyman of Tampa, Florida. Socialism from Genesis to Revelation; The Laws of Social Evolution; Honest Money.
- Sprague, Henry Harrison. Ms., 1841- ——. A lawyer of Boston. Women under the Law of Massachusetts: their Rights, Privileges, and Disabilities; History of the Massachusetts Charitable Fire Society; City Government in Boston (1890).
- Sprague, Homer Baxter. Ms., 1829- ——. An educator of Boston, among whose many publications are The Fellowship of Slaveholders; Voice and Gesture; Alleged Law Blunders in Shakspere. Gi.
- Sprague, William Cyrus. O., 1860- ——. A lawyer of Detroit. Sprague’s Abridgment of Blackstone’s Commentaries; Flashes of Wit from Bench and Bar; Directions to Vendors in Conditional Sales; Sprague’s Speeches; Illustrative Cases on the Law of Domestic Relations; Selected Cases on Contracts.
- Stanley, Hiram Alonzo. N. Y., 1859- ——. A journalist, formerly of Binghamton, New York. Rex Wayland’s Fortune; The Backwoodsman.
- Stapleton, Ammon. Pa., 1850- ——. A Lutheran clergyman of Philadelphia. Natural History of the Bible; Annals of the Evangelical Association; Evangelical Catechism and Bible Companion.
- Stapleton, Mrs. Patience [Tucker]. Me., 1861-1893. A novelist and journalist of Colorado. My Jean; Kady; My Sister’s Husband; Babo Murphy; Rose-Geranium.
- Starling, William. O., 1839-1900. An engineer in government service. The Improvement of the Mississippi River; Some Notes on the Holland Dykes; The Floods of the Mississippi.
- Starr, Frederick. N. Y., 1858- ——. A professor of anthropology in the University of Chicago from 1893. First Steps in Human Progress; On the Hills; American Indians. He. Fl.
- Starr, Louis. Pa., 184- - ——. A Philadelphia physician. Diseases of the Digestive Organs in Infancy and Childhood; Hygiene of the Nursery; Diets for Infants and Children in Health and Disease.
- Starrett, Mrs. Helen [Ekin]. Pa., 1840- ——. A Chicago educator. Letters to a Daughter; Letters to Elder Daughters; After College, What? Cr.
- Stearns, Henry Putnam. Ms., 1828- ——. A physician of Hartford. Insanity: its Causes and Prevention; Mental Diseases.
- Steere, Joseph Beal. Mich., 1842- ——. A professor of zoölogy in the University of Michigan. Fifty New Species of Philippine Birds.
- Steffens, Joseph Lincoln. Cal., 1866- ——. A journalist of New York city. The Shame of the Cities.
- Stein, Evaleen. Ind., 18— - ——. A verse-writer of Lafayette, Indiana. One Way to the Woods.
- Steiner, Bernard Christian. Ct., 1867- ——. The librarian of the Enoch Pratt Free Library at Baltimore from 1892. History of Education in Maryland; History of Education in Connecticut; Citizenship and Suffrage in Maryland; Institutions and Civil Government of Maryland; History of Guilford, Connecticut; Genealogy of the Steiner Family; Life of Sir Robert Eden.
- Steinmetz, Charles Proteus. Ga., 1865- ——. An electrician of Schenectady. Theory and Calculation of Alternating Current Phenomena; Theoretical Elements of Electrical Engineering.
- Stelwagon, Henry Weightman. Pa., 1853- ——. A Philadelphia physician. Essentials of Diseases of the Skin; Treatise on Diseases of the Skin.
- Stengel, Alfred. Pa., 1868- ——. A Philadelphia physician. A Text-Book of Pathology.
- Stephens, Henry Morse. S., 1857- ——. A historian of Scottish birth, formerly a journalist, but from 1892 to 1894 lecturer on Indian history at Cambridge, England, from 1894 to 1902 professor of modern European history at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, and from 1902 professor of history at the University of California. Beside contributions to the Encyclopedia Britannica and Dictionary of National Biography, he has published A History of the French Revolution; The Story of Portugal; Albuquerque (in Rulers of India Series); European History, 1789-1815; Principal Speeches of the Statesmen and Orators of the French Revolution (edited); Syllabus of European History. Mac. Put.
- Stephens, Robert Neilson. Pa., 1867- ——. Kinsman of A. H. Stephens ([page 359]). A New York writer of plays and novels, dramatic editor of the Philadelphia Press, 1887-1893. His plays include, An Enemy to the King; The Ragged Regiment. His novels are, An Enemy to the King; The Continental Dragoon; The Road to Ruin; A Gentleman Player; Captain Ravenshaw; The Mystery of Murray Davenport; The Bright Face of Danger. Pa.
- Stephenson, Henry Theu. O., 1870- ——. A professor of English in Indiana University from 1900. Patroon Van Volkenberg; The Fickle Wheel.
- Stephenson, Nathaniel. O., 1867- ——. Brother of H. T. Stephenson, supra. A novelist, professor of history in the College of Charleston, South Carolina, from 1902. They that Take the Sword; The Beautiful Mrs. Moulton.
- Sterrett, James Macbride. Pa., 1847- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, professor of philosophy in Columbian University at Washington city from 1892. Studies in Hegel’s Philosophy of Religion; Reason and Authority in Religion; The Ethics of Hegel. Wh.
- Stetson, Mrs. Charlotte [Perkins]. See Gilman, Mrs. C. P.
- Stetson, Mrs. Grace Ellery [Channing]. R. I., 1862- ——. Daughter of W. F. Channing ([page 57]). A littérateur of Pasadena, California. Dr. Channing’s Note Book (edited); Selections from hitherto unpublished manuscript of W. E. Channing, 1st; The Sister of a Saint, and Other Stories; Sea Drift, a collection of verse; The Fortune of a Day. S. Sm.
- Stevens, Albert Clark. N. Y., 1854- ——. A New York journalist. Cyclopædia of Fraternities.
- Stevens, Augusta De Grasse. N. Y., 1865-1894. A novelist and art critic whose home was in London for many years. Distance, a novelette; Old Boston, an American Historical Romance; The Lost Dauphin; Miss Hildreth; The Sensation of the Season; A Romantic Inheritance. See Black’s Notable Women of To-day. Ap. Scr.
- Stevens, Charles Wistar. N. H., 1836-1901. A physician of Boston. Revelations of a Boston Physician.
- Stevens, Charles Woodbury. Ms., 1831- ——. A Boston merchant. Fly Fishing in Maine Lakes.
- Stevens, Frank Lincoln. N. Y., 1871- ——. A professor of botany and vegetable pathology at the North Carolina College of Agriculture for 1903. Agriculture for Beginners and many professional papers.
- Stevens, Hazard. R. I., 1842- ——. Son of I. I. Stevens, infra. A lawyer of Boston. The Life of Isaac Ingalls Stevens. Hou.
- Stevens, Isaac Ingalls. Ms., 1818-1862. A major-general of the United States army, killed at the battle of Chantilly. Campaigns of the Rio Grande and Mexico; Report of Explorations for a Route for the Pacific Railroad from St. Paul to Puget Sound (1855-1860). See Life, by H. Stevens (1900).
- Stevens, Joseph Earle. Ms., 1870- ——. A business man of New York city who has published Yesterdays in the Philippines, a record of life in Manila, 1894-1895. Scr.
- Stevens, Sheppard. See Stevens, Mrs. Susan.
- Stevens, Mrs. Susan Sheppard [Pierce]. Al., 1862- ——. Daughter of H. N. Pierce ([page 297]). A novelist of St. Louis. I Am the King; The Sword of Justice; The Eagle’s Talon, a Romance of the Louisiana Purchase; The Sign of Triumph. Lit. Pa.
- Stevens, Walter B——. Ct., 1848- ——. A Washington newspaper correspondent. Through Texas (1892).
- Stevenson, Burton Egbert. O., 1872- ——. A librarian of Chilicothe, Ohio. A Soldier of Virginia, an historical novel; At Odds with the Regent; The Heritage; Tommy Remington’s Battle; Marsan; The Halladay Case; Cadets of Gascony; The Marathon Mystery. Cent. Hou. Lip.
- Stevenson, James Henry. Ont., 1860- ——. A Methodist clergyman, professor of Hebrew in Vanderbilt University, Nashville. Herodotus and the Empires of the East (joint author); Babylonian and Assyrian Contracts; Hymnology of the Assyrians and Babylonians. Am.
- Stevenson, Paul Eve. N. Y., 1868- ——. A writer of Garden City, Long Island. A Deep-Water Voyage; By Way of Cape Horn. Lip.
- Stevenson, Mrs. Sara [Yorke]. F., 1847- ——. An archæologist of Philadelphia. The Book of the Dead; Maximilian in Mexico. Cent.
- Stewart, David. Md., 1856- ——. A lawyer of Baltimore. The Law of Marriage and Divorce in England and the United States; Digest of the Law of Husband and Wife (with F. King).
- Stifler, James Madison. Pa., 1839-1902. A Baptist clergyman, professor of New Testament exegesis at Crozer Theological Seminary, Chester, Pennsylvania, 1882-1902. The Life of Christ; An Introduction to the Book of Acts; Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans.
- Stillman, Annie Raymond. S. C., 1855- ——. How They Kept the Faith.
- Stillman, Thomas Bliss. N. J., 1852- ——. Nephew of W. J. Stillman ([page 361]). A professor of analytical chemistry in the Stevens Institute of Technology at Hoboken, New Jersey, from 1886. Engineering Chemistry; The Rutgers Scarlet Letter.
- Stimpson, Herbert Baird. Md., 1869- ——. A novelist of Baltimore. The Regeneration; The Tory Maid. Do.
- Stimson, Henry Albert. N. Y., 1842- ——. A Congregational clergyman in New York city. Religion and Business; Questions of Modern Inquiry; The Apostles’ Creed. Rev.
- Stine, Wilbur Morris. Pa., 1863- ——. A professor of engineering at Swarthmore College, Pennsylvania, from 1898. Photometrical Measurements; The Wreck of the Myrtle, and Other Verses.
- Stiness, John Henry. R. I., 1840- ——. A jurist of Providence. History of Lotteries in Rhode Island; Liquor Legislation in Rhode Island.
- Stockard, Henry Jerome. N. C., 1858- ——. A North Carolina educator who has published Fugitive Lines.
- Stockbridge, Horace Edward. Ms., 1857- ——. An agricultural chemist, professor of agriculture in the Florida Agricultural College. Rocks and Soils. Wil.
- Stockham, Mrs. Alice [Bunker]. O., 1833- ——. A Chicago physician. Tokology, a Book of Maternity; Keradin; Karezza; Parenthood; True Manhood; Koradine (with L. H. Talcott); Creative Life; Tolstoi.
- Stockton, Louise. Pa., 1838- ——. Sister of F. R. Stockton ([page 362]). A novelist and journalist of Philadelphia. Dorothea; Apple Seeds and Briar Thorn; The Sylvan City, a series of papers upon Philadelphia.
- Stockwell, Chester Twitchell. Ms., 1841- ——. A dental surgeon of Springfield, Massachusetts. The Evolution of Immortality; The Philosophic Idea of God; Sentiment versus Science; Ethical Aspects of the Evolution of Machinery; Relation of Evolutionary Thought to Immortality; Ethical Basis of Equality; The New Materialism; The New Pantheism; Ethical Ideals and World Movements.
- Stoddard, Enoch Vine. Ct., 1840- ——. Cousin of W. O. Stoddard ([page 363]). A physician and surgeon of Rochester, New York, professor emeritus of therapeutics and hygiene in the University of Buffalo. Beside professional papers he has published Bertrand du Guesclin: his Life and Times. Put.
- Stoddard, Francis Hovey. Vt., 1847- ——. A professor of English literature at the University of the City of New York. The Modern Novel; The Evolution of the English Novel; Tolstoi and Matthew Arnold; The Ideal in Literature; The Uses of Rhetoric, are among his writings. Mac.
- Stone, Frederick Dawson. Pa., 1841-1897. An historical scholar of Philadelphia, librarian of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1876-1897, and author of many historical essays of value.
- Stone, Mrs. Margaret Manson [Barbour]. Mo., 1841- ——. A St. Louis writer. The Problem of Domestic Service; One of “Berrian’s” Novels; A Practical Study of the Soul. Do.
- Stone, Richard French. Ky., 1844- ——. A physician of Indianapolis. Elements of Modern Medicine; Biography of Eminent American Physicians and Surgeons (edited).
- Stone, Witmer. Pa., 1886- ——. Son of F. D. Stone, supra. An ornithologist of Philadelphia, among whose writings are Bird Waves; The Birds of Eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey; Report on Birds collected in Yucatan and Southern Mexico.
- Stowell, Calvin Llewellyn. Pa., 1845- ——. A prominent financier of Rochester, New York. The Red Cross of Constantine, a work upon Free Masonry.
- Strang, Lewis Clinton. Ms., 1869- ——. A dramatic critic. Famous Actresses of the Day; Famous Actors of the Day; Prima Donnas and Soubrettes in America; Celebrated Comedians in America; Players and Plays of the Last Quarter Century. Pa.
- Stratemeyer, Edward. N. J., 1862- ——. An author of Newark, New Jersey, popular as a writer for young people. Victor Horton’s Idea; Richard Dare’s Venture; Oliver Bright’s Search; The Last Cruise of the Spitfire; Reuben Stone’s Discovery; Bound to be an Electrician; The Minute Boys of Lexington; Under Dewey at Manila; A Young Volunteer in Cuba; Fighting in Cuban Waters; The Campaign of the Jungle; The Minute Boys of Bunker Hill; Under Otis in the Philippines; To Alaska for Gold; With Washington in the West; Under McArthur in Luzon; Between Boer and Briton; On to Pekin; True to Himself; For the Liberty of Texas; The Young Bandmaster; With Taylor on the Rio Grande; Lost on the Orinoco; The Young Volcano Explorers; Young Explorers of the Isthmus; Young Explorers of the Amazon; Two Young Lumbermen; The Young Auctioneer; Shorthand Tom; Fighting for his Own; American Boys’ Life of William McKinley; American Boys’ Life of Theodore Roosevelt; Marching on Niagara; At the Fall of Montreal; On the Trail of Pontiac; Joe the Surveyor; Larry the Wanderer; Under the Mikado’s Flag. Est. Le.
- Stratton, George Malcolm. Cal., 1865- ——. A professor of psychology in the University of California. Experimental Psychology and its Bearing upon Culture. Mac.
- Strecker, Herman. Pa., 1836-1901. A naturalist and sculptor of Reading, Pennsylvania. Butterflies and Moths of North America.
- Street, Ida Maria. Ia., 1856- ——. A Milwaukee educator. Ruskin’s Principles of Art Criticism. S.
- Streeter, John Williams. O., 1847- ——. A Chicago physician. Doctor Tom, a novel. Mac.
- Stringer, Arthur John Arbuthnot. Ont., 1874- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Watches of Twilight; Pauline and Other Poems; Epigrams; The Loom of Destiny; The Silver Poppy. Sm.
- Stringham, [Washington] Irving. N. Y., 1847- ——. A professor of mathematics in the University of California from 1882. Uniplanar Algebra.
- Stroebel, Edward Henry. S. C., 1855- ——. A lawyer and diplomat, Secretary of the United States Legation and Chargé d’Affaires at Madrid, 1885-1890. The Spanish Revolution, a history covering the period from 1868 to 1875. Sm.
- Strong, Charles Hall. La., 1850- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Savannah. In Paradise; Sermons; Creed in Deed; A Fair Agnostic; Is Hell Endless?
- Strong, Frank. N. Y., 1859- ——. The chancellor of the University of Kansas from 1902. Life of Benjamin Franklin; A Forgotten Danger to the New England Colonies; The Government of the American People (with J. Schafer). Hou.
- Strong, George Augustus. “Marc Antony Henderson.” 18- ——. An Episcopal clergyman now (1904) living in Cambridge, but formerly a professor in Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio. The Song of Milkanwatha, and Other Poems,—the title poem a witty parody of Hiawatha.
- Stryker, William Scudder. N. J., 1838-1900. An author of Trenton, New Jersey, adjutant-general of New Jersey. The Battles of Trenton and Princeton. Hou.
- Studer, Jacob Henry. O., 1840- ——. An ornithologist of Columbus, Ohio. Columbus, Ohio: its Resources and Progress; The Birds of North America; Ornithology.
- Sudbury, Richard. See Gibson, Charles H.
- Sudworth, George Bishop. Wis., 1862- ——. A dendrologist in government service, among whose writings are Check List of North American Forest Trees; Forest Flora of the Rocky Mountain Region; Forest Flora of Tennessee; Trees of the United States Important in Forestry; Nomenclature of Arborescent Flora of the United States.
- Sullivan, Mrs. Elizabeth Higgins. Nebraska, 1874- ——. Out of the West. Har.
- Super, Charles William. Pa., 1842- ——. An educator, president of Ohio University at Athens, Ohio. Translation of Weil’s Order of Words; A History of the German Language; Between Heathenism and Christianity; Wisdom and Will in Education. Rev.
- Sutherland, Mrs. Evelyn Greenleaf [Baker]. Ms., 185- - ——. A playwright of Boston. Po’ White Trash and Other One-act Dramas; In Office Hours and Other Vaudeville Sketches, and other one-act plays.
- Sutphen, William Gilbert Van Tassel. Pa., 1861- ——. A littérateur of New York city. The Golficide; The Golfer’s Alphabet; The Nineteenth Hole; The Cardinal’s Rose; The Doomsman; The Golfer’s Calendar. Har.
- Swift, Lindsay. Ms., 1856- ——. Son of J. L. Swift (page 370). A librarian in the Boston Public Library. Brook Farm; Benjamin Franklin, a brief biography; Literary Landmarks of Boston. Hou. Mac. Sm.
- Swift, Morrison Isaac. 18— - ——. A writer of Cambridge. Imperialism and Liberty; A League of Justice; The Advent of Empire; Grimple’s Mind.
- Swing, Albert Temple. O., 1849- ——. A Congregational clergyman, professor of church history in Oberlin Theological Seminary from 1893. Theology of Albrecht Ritschl. Lgs.
- Swing, Melvin. Ms., 1863- ——. The Darrow Enigma.
- T
- Tadd, James Liberty. At Sea, 1854- ——. An educator, director of the Philadelphia School of Industrial Art. New Methods in Education. Ju.
- Taft, Lorado. Il., 1860- ——. A sculptor of Chicago. The History of American Sculpture. Mac.
- Taggart, Marion Ames. Ms., 1866- ——. A New York writer for young people. Aser the Shepherd; Bezaleel; Blissylvania Post Office; By Branscombe River; Three Girls and Especially One; Treasure of Nugget Mountain; Winnetou; Jack Hildreth on the Nile; Loyal Blue and Royal Scarlet; The Wyndham Girls; Miss Lochinvar; The Little Gray House. Ap. Ben. Cent.
- Tait, John Robinson. O., 1834- ——. A New York author and artist. European Life, Legend, and Landscape; Dolce far Niente, a collection of verse.
- Talbot, Arthur Newell. Il., 1857- ——. A professor of engineering in the University of Illinois from 1890. The Railway Transition Spiral.
- Talbot, Eugene Solomon. Ms., 1847- ——. A prominent Chicago dentist. Degeneracy: its Causes, Signs, and Results; Irregularities of the Teeth and their treatment; Interstitial Gingivitis. Scr.
- Talmage, James Edward. E., 1862- ——. A professor of geology in the University of Utah. First Book of Nature; Domestic Science; The Articles of Faith; The Book of Mormon; The Great Salt Lake, Present and Past.
- Tappan, Eva March. Ms., 1854- ——. A teacher in the English High School, Worcester, Massachusetts. Charles Lamb: the Man and the Author; In the Days of Alfred the Great; Old Ballads in Prose; England’s Story; In the Days of William the Conqueror; Our Country’s Story; In the Days of Queen Elizabeth; The Christ Story; In the Days of Queen Victoria; Robin Hood: his Book; Canada’s Story. Hou. Le.
- Tapper, Thomas. Ms., 1864- ——. A Boston musician, among whose publications are Chats with Music Students; The Music Life; Pictures from the Lives of Great Composers; First Studies in Music Biography; The Child’s Music World; The Natural Course in Music.
- Tarkington, [Newton] Booth. Ind., 1869- ——. A novelist of Indianapolis. The Gentleman from Indiana; Monsieur Beaucaire; The Two Vanrevels; Cherry. Dou.
- Taylor, Albert Reynolds. Il., 1846- ——. An educator of Illinois. The Church at Work in the Sunday School; Civil Government in Kansas; Apple-Blossoms; Among Ourselves; The Government of the State and Nation. He.
- Taylor, Arthur Nelson. Wis., 1867- ——. A lawyer of New York city. The Law in its Relations to Physicians. Ap.
- Taylor, Barnard Cook. N. J., 1850- ——. A professor of Old Testament interpretation at Crozer Seminary, Chester, Pennsylvania, from 1883. Outline Analysis of the Books of the Bible; Historical Books of the Old Testament. Bap.
- Taylor, Charles Elisha. Va., 1842- ——. A Baptist clergyman, president of Wake Forest College, North Carolina, from 1884. The Story of Yates; Gilbert Stone, the Millionaire; How Far may a State Educate?
- Taylor, Charles Maus. Pa., 1849- ——. A retired merchant of Philadelphia and a member of several geographical societies. Vacation Days in Hawaii and Japan; The British Isles Through an Opera Glass; Odd Bits of Travel with Brush and Camera; Why My Photographs are Bad.
- Taylor, Joseph Russell. 18— - ——. A professor of English literature at Ohio State University. The Overture: Poems. Hou.
- Taylor, M[ary] Imlay. 18— - ——. A novelist of Washington city. On the Red Staircase; An Imperial Lover; A Yankee Volunteer; The House of the Wizard; The Cobbler of Nîmes; The Cardinal’s Musketeer; Anne Scarlett; Little Mistress Goodhope, and Other Fairy Tales; The Rebellion of the Princess. Mg.
- Taylor, William Alexander. O., 1837- ——. A journalist of Columbus, Ohio. Eighteen Presidents; Peril of the Republic; Roses and Rue; Ohio Statesmen; Ohio in Congress; Intermere. (Joint author) The Book of Ohio; Twilight or Dawn; The Next Morning Philosopher.
- Temple, Edward Lowe. Wis., 1844- ——. A banker of Rutland, Vermont. The Church in the Prayer Book; Shakespeare: the Man and his Art; The Testimony of the Scriptures; Old World Memories. Pa.
- Temple, Oliver Perry. Tn., 1820- ——. A prominent lawyer of Knoxville, Tennessee. The Covenanter; The Cavalier and the Puritan; East Tennessee and its Union Leaders in the War. Clke.
- Terry, Benjamin. Min., 1857- ——. A professor of mediæval history in the University of Chicago from 1892. A History of England from Earliest Times to the Death of Victoria. Sc.
- Terry, Henry Taylor. Ct., 1847- ——. A lawyer in Yokohama, professor of law in the University of Tokio. First Principles of Law; Principles of Anglo-American Law; The Common Law.
- Thickstun, Frederick. See Clark, F. T.
- Thomas, Allen Clapp. Md., 1846- ——. A professor of history in Haverford College, Pa., from 1878. Elementary History of the United States; History of the Society of Friends in America.
- Thomas, Augustus. Mo., 1859- ——. A popular playwright of New York city. Alabama: In Mizzourah; After Thoughts; A Man of the World; The Burglar; Reckless Temple; New Blood; The Hoosier Doctor; In Illinoy; and other plays.
- Thomas, Calvin. Mch., 1854- ——. A professor of the Germanic languages and literatures at Columbia University from 1896. A Practical German Grammar. Ho.
- Thomas, Henry Wilton. N. Y., 1867- ——. A New York journalist. The Last Lady of Mulberry Street, a novel; The Kiss of Nero, and Other Tales of Mulberry. Ap.
- Thomas, Hiram Washington. Va., 1832- ——. A popular Methodist clergyman of Chicago. Origin and Destiny of Man; The People’s Pulpit, a volume of sermons.
- Thomas, James. Ky., 1843- ——. A physician of Cincinnati. Lectures on Physiology; Theory and Practice of Medicine; Heart Disease; Exiled for Lèse Majesté.
- Thomas, Martha Carey. Md., 1857- ——. An educator of note, president of Bryn Mawr College from 1894. Sir Gawayne and the Green Knight.
- Thomas, William Hannibal. 18— - ——. The American Negro: What he Was, What he Is, and What he may Become. Mac.
- Thomas, William Widgery. Me., 1839- ——. A diplomatist, minister plenipotentiary to Sweden and Norway, 1883-1885, 1889-1894, and from 1897. Sweden and the Swedes.
- Thompson, David Decamp. O., 1852- ——. A Chicago journalist. Abraham Lincoln, the First American; John Wesley as Social Reformer. Lgs. Meth.
- Thompson, Mrs. Ella Mason [Williams]. Ms., 183- -1875. A writer of Newton, Massachusetts. Beaten Paths, or a Woman’s Vacation. Le.
- Thompson, Ernest [Evan Seton]. E., 1860- ——. An artist and naturalist of New York city, at one time official naturalist of Manitoba. Birds of Manitoba; Mammals of Manitoba; Art Anatomy of Animals; Wild Animals I have Known; The Trail of the Sandhill Stag; The Lives of the Hunted; Biography of a Grizzly; Lobo, Rag and Vixen; Wild Animal Play for Children; Monarch. Cent. Mac. Scr.
- Thompson, Frederick Diodati, Count. N. Y., 1850- ——. A lawyer of New York city. In the Track of the Sun. Ap.
- Thompson, Mrs. Grace [Gallatin]. Cal., 1872- ——. Wife of E. E. S. Thompson, supra. A Woman Tenderfoot. Dou.
- Thompson, Slason. N. B., 1849- ——. A Chicago journalist. Eugene Field: a Study in Heredity and Contradictions. Scr.
- Thompson, Vance. 1862- ——. A journalist and playwright of New York city. Songs and Symbols (verse); Berwyn Kennedy; The City of Torches; A Flash of Honour; Writers of Young France; Spinners of Life; and several dramas. Lip.
- Thompson, William Gilman. N. Y., 1856- ——. A New York physician. Practical Dietetics; Text Book of Practical Medicine. Ap.
- Thorndike, Edward Lee. Ms., 1874- ——. An adjunct professor of genetic psychology in the Teachers’ College, Columbia University, from 1901. The Human Nature Club. Lgs.
- Thornton, Gustavus Brown. Va., 1835- ——. A prominent physician of Memphis, Tennessee. Yellow Fever, Pathology and Treatment; Six Years’ Sanitation in Memphis.
- Thornton, Thomas C——. Va., 1794-1860. A Methodist clergyman in Mississippi. Inquiry into the History of Slavery in the United States; Theological Colloquies.
- Thrasher, Max Bennett. N. H., 1860-1903. A New Hampshire writer. Tuskegee, its Story and its Work. Sm.
- Thruston (throo’ston), Gates Phillips. O., 1835- ——. A lawyer of Nashville, brevetted brigadier-general for service in the Federal army during the Civil War. Antiquities of Tennessee and Adjacent States. Clke.
- Thruston, Lucy Meacham. Va., 1862- ——. A Baltimore novelist. Mistress Brent, a story of Lord Baltimore’s Colony; A Girl of Virginia; Jack and his Island; Where the Tide Comes In. Lit.
- Thurston, Ernest Lawton. Ms., 1873- ——. An educator in Washington city. Mental Commercial Arithmetic; Practical Tests in Commercial and Higher Arithmetic.
- Tiffany, Francis Buchanan. Ms., 1865- ——. Son of F. Tiffany ([page 373]). A lawyer of St. Paul. Handbook of the Law of Sales; Death by Wrongful Act. West.
- Tiffany, Mrs. Nina [Moore]. O., 18— - ——. Wife of F. B. Tiffany, supra. A writer of St. Paul, Minnesota. Samuel Edmund Sewall: a Memoir; Pilgrims and Puritans; From Colony to Commonwealth. Gi. Hou.
- Tiffany, Walter Checkley. Ms., 1857- ——. Son of F. Tiffany ([page 383]). A lawyer of Minneapolis. The Law of Persons and Domestic Relations. West.
- Tighe, Ambrose. L. I., 1859- ——. A lawyer of St. Paul. The Development of the Roman Constitution. Am.
- Tilley, Lucy Evangeline. O., 1859-1890. A verse-writer of Medina, Ohio. Little Rhymes in Brown; Verses.
- Tillotson, Mrs. Mary Ella [Tillotson]. N. Y., 1816-190-. A writer and lecturer on hygiene, long resident in Vineland, New Jersey. History of the Dress Movement; Love and Transition (verse); Miscellaneous Poems.
- Tillson, George Williams. Me., 1852- ——. A civil engineer of Brooklyn. Street Pavements and Paving Materials. Wil.
- Tilton, Howard Winslow. Me., 1848-1902. A journalist of Council Bluffs, Iowa. Editor of The Nonpareil Lay Sermons.
- Timby, Theodore Ruggles. N. Y., 1822- ——. The inventor of the floating dry dock, the revolving turret, the turbine water wheel, and other important inventions. Stellar Worlds; Lighted Lore for Gentle Folk.
- Timlow, Elizabeth Westyn. N. Y., 1861- ——. An educator and writer of juvenile tales. Cricket, a story; Cricket at the Sea Shore; Eunice and Cricket; A Nest of Girls; Dorothy Dot; What Came to Winifred. Dut. Est.
- Titherington, Richard Handfield. E., 1861- - ——. A New York littérateur, editor of Munsey’s Magazine. History of the Spanish-American war of 1898. Ap.
- Titterington, Mrs. Sophie [Bronson]. E. I., 1846- ——. An author of Rochester, Illinois. A Summer Brother; Mabel Livingstone; Hill-Top Farm; Little Pilgrim Series; A New Endeavour; Folded Hands (verse); Joe Nelson’s Problem; Soldier Jack. Bap.
- Todd, Mrs. Mary [Ives]. Ia., 1848- ——. A writer of Los Angeles. The New Adam and Eve; Little Ruth.
- Tolman, William Howe. R. I., 1861- ——. A social economist. History of Higher Education in Rhode Island; Municipal Reform Movements in the United States.
- Tompkins, Arnold. Il., 1849- ——. A Chicago educator. Science of Discourse; Philosophy of Teaching; Philosophy of School Management; Literary Interpretations. Gi.
- Tompkins, Elizabeth Knight. Cal., 1867- ——. A novelist of Berkeley, California. Her Majesty; An Unlessoned Girl; The Things that Count; Talks with Barbara.
- Tooker, Lewis Frank. N. Y., 1855- ——. A New York writer, on the editorial staff of the Century Magazine from 1885. The Call of the Sea (verse). Cent.
- Torrence, Frederic Ridgeley. O., 1875- ——. A librarian of New York city. The House of a Hundred Lights, a volume of verse in the Persian manner; El Dorado, a Tragedy in Blank Verse. Sm.
- Torrey, Henry Augustus Pierson. Ms., 1837-1902. A clergyman, professor in the University of Vermont. The Philosophy of Descartes.
- Torrey, Mrs. Mary [Ide]. Ms., 1817-1869. Wife of C. T. Torrey ([page 385]). Christian Rule in Dress; City and Country Life.
- Tower, Charlemagne. Pa., 1848- ——. A lawyer and diplomatist, minister to Austria in 1898; ambassador to Russia from 1899. The Marquis de la Fayette in the American Revolution. Lip.
- Townsend, William Kneeland. Ct., 1849- ——. A jurist of New Haven. New Connecticut Civil Officer.
- Trask, Mrs. Katrina [Nichols]. L. I., 1853- ——. Wife of S. Trask, infra. A magazinist of Saratoga. Under King Constantine (verse); Sonnets and Lyrics; White Satin and Homespun; John Leighton, Jr.; Lessons in Love; Free, not Bound. Har. Put. Ran.
- Trask, Spencer. N. Y., 1844- ——. A banker of Saratoga. Bowling Green, an historical monograph. Put.
- Triggs, Oscar Lovell. Il., 1865- ——. An instructor in the University of Chicago. Browning and Whitman: a Study in Democracy; Chapters in the History of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
- Trimble, Henry. Pa., 1853-1898. A Philadelphia botanist and chemist. The Taunins; Handbook of Analytical Chemistry. Lip.
- Trine, Ralph Waldo. Il., 1866- ——. A Boston lecturer and writer upon social science. What All the World’s a-Seeking; In Tune with the Infinite; The Greatest Thing ever Known. Cr. El.
- Troeger, John Winthrop. Il., 1849- ——. A Chicago educator. Troeger’s Science Book; Hand Book of Geography; Harold’s Discoveries; Harold’s Rambles; Harold’s Quests; Harold’s Explorations; Harold’s Discussions. Ap. Sc.
- Trowbridge, William Rutherford Hayes. W. I., 1866- ——. A writer educated in the United States, but since 1895 a resident of London. Gossip of the Caribbees; Children of Men; For the Vagabond Hour; The Letters of Her Mother to Elizabeth; The Grandmother’s Advice to Elizabeth; O! Duchess; A Girl of the Multitude, published in America as Eglee.
- True, Hiram L——. O., 1845- ——. A physician of McConnelsville, Ohio. The Cause of the Glacial Period. Clke.
- Trueblood, Benjamin Franklin. Ind., 1847- ——. The secretary of the American Peace Society from 1892. The Federation of the World. Hou.
- Trumbull, Annie Eliot. Ct., 1857- ——. Daughter of J. H. Trumbull ([page 389]), and niece of Mrs. Annie Trumbull Slosson ([page 345]). A popular story-writer of Hartford. A Christmas Accident; A Cape Cod Week; Rod’s Sensation; A Wheel of Progress; An Hour’s Promise; Mistress Content Cradock; White Birches; Mind Cure, a farce; Life’s Common Way; Shields of Brass. Bar.
- Tucker, Gilbert Milligan. N. Y., 1847- ——. An Albany journalist, editor of The Country Gentleman. Our Common Speech. Do.
- Tufts, Henry. N. H., 1748-1831. A notable vagabond, whose autobiography furnishes a valuable picture of certain phases of New England life a century ago. It was published in 1807, with the title, A Narrative of the Life, Adventures, Travels, and Sufferings of Henry Tufts. See T. W. Higginson’s Travellers and Outlaws.
- Tufts, William Whittemore. Ms., 1832-1901. A physician and littérateur of Arlington, Massachusetts. A Market for an Impulse.
- Tupper, Kerr Boyce. Ga., 1854- ——. A Baptist clergyman of Philadelphia. Gladstone, and Other Addresses; Seven Great Lights; Robertson’s Living Thoughts; Popular Treatise on Christian Baptism. Bap.
- Turnbull, Mrs. Francese Hubbard [Litchfield]. N. Y., 184- - ——. Wife of L. Turnbull ([page 391]). A novelist of Baltimore. The Catholic Man; Val-Maria; The Golden Book of Venice.
- Turner, William Wilberforce. Ga., 1830- ——. A writer of Eatonton, Georgia. Jack Hopeton, a novel.
- Tuttle, Mrs. Mary McArthur [Thompson]. O., 1849- ——. An artist who has published The Historical Chart of the Schools of Painting; Manifest Destiny, a novel.
- Twells, Julia Helen. 18— - ——. A novelist. A Triumph of Destiny; By the Higher Law. Co.
- Twombly, Alexander Stevenson. Ms., 1832- ——. A retired Congregational clergyman in Newton, Massachusetts, for nineteen years pastor of the Winthrop Church, Boston. Summer in the Country; The Choir Boy of York Cathedral; Life of John Lord, supra; Masterpieces of Michelangelo and Milton; Hawaii and its People (1899); Kelea, the Surf Rider. Dut. Fo. Sil.
- Tyler, Benjamin Bushrod. Il., 1844- ——. A clergyman of the Christian (Disciples) sect. The Way of Salvation; History of the Disciples of Christ; The Peculiarities of the Disciples.
- Tyler, Charles Mellen. Me., 1832- ——. Kinsman of M. C. Tyler ([page 392]). A professor of the history and philosophy of religion at Cornell University from 1891. Bases of Religious Belief, Historic and Ideal. Put.
- Tyler, Odette. See Shepherd, Mrs. Elizabeth.
- U
- Udden, Johan August. Sn., 1859- ——. A professor of geology in Augustana College, Rock Island, Illinois, from 1888. The Mechanical Composition of Wind Deposits; The Geology of Muscatine County, Iowa; An Old Indian Village; Geology of Louisa County, Iowa, and of Jefferson County.
- Ulmann, Albert. N. Y., 1861- ——. A stockbroker of New York city. A Landmark History of New York; Frederick Struther’s Romance; Chaperoned; New York’s Historic Sites. Ap.
- Underhill, John Garrett. L. I., 1876- ——. An assistant instructor in comparative literature in Columbia University. Spanish Literature in the England of the Tudors. Mac.
- Underwood, Mrs. Sara A—— [Francis]. E., 1838- ——. Wife of B. F. Underwood, supra, and associated with him in editing free-thought journals, 1881-1887 and 1893-1894. Heroines of Free Thought; Automatic Writing.
- Underwood, Wilbur. D. C., 1876- ——. The Burden of the Desert.
- Unger, Frederic William. Pa., 1875- ——. A Philadelphia journalist. With “Bobs” and Kruger.
- Updike, Wilkins. R. I., 1784-1864. A Rhode Island lawyer. Memoirs of the Rhode Island Bar (1842).
- Upham, Warren. N. H., 1850- ——. A geologist of St. Paul. The Glacial Lake Agassiz; Greenland Icefields and Life in the North Atlantic (with G. F. Wright, supra).
- Urbino, Mrs. Lavinia Buoncuore. 18— - ——. The wife of a former bookseller in Boston. An American Woman in Europe (1869); Biographical Sketches of Eminent Musical Composers. The Princes of Art, a translation.
- Urdahl, Thomas Klingenberg. Wis., 1869- ——. A professor of economics in the University of Wisconsin. The Fee System in the United States.
- V
- Vail, Charles Henry. N. Y., 1866- ——. A Universalist clergyman of Jersey City. Modern Socialism; Scientific Socialism; The Trust Question; Socialism and the Negro Problem.
- Vaile, Mrs. Charlotte Marion [White]. Ms., 1854-1902. A Denver, Colorado, writer of stories for young people. The Orcutt Girls; Sue Orcutt; The M. M. C.; Wheat and Huckleberries; Two and One. We.
- Valentine, Edward Abram Uffington. Pa., 1870- ——. A journalist of Baltimore. The Ship of Silence, and other Poems. Bo.
- Van Alstyne, Mrs. Frances Jane [Crosby]. “Fanny J. Crosby.” N. Y., 1820- ——. A well-known blind hymn and song writer of New York city. Her hymns and songs number over five thousand. A Blind Girl, and Other Poems; Monterey, and Other Poems; A Wreath of Columbia’s Flowers; Bells at Evening.
- Van Buren, Mrs. Alicia [Keisker]. Ky., 1860- ——. A Louisville writer. As Thought is Led: Lyrics and Sonnets.
- Vance, Arthur Turner. Pa., 1872- ——. A journalist of New York city. The Real David Harum. Ba.
- Vance, James Isaac. Tn., 1862- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman who has published Young Man Four-Square; Church Portals; College of Apostles; Royal Manhood; The Rise of a Soul; American Problems. Rev.
- Van Deman, Henry Elias. O., 1845- ——. A pomologist of Washington city. Tropical and Semi-Tropical Fruits in America.
- Van Dyke, Paul. L. I., 1859- ——. Son of H. J. Van Dyke, 1st ([page 395]). A Presbyterian clergyman, professor of modern European history at Princeton University from 1898. The Age of the Renascence.
- Van Marter, Martha. N. Y., 1839- ——. An editor of Methodist Sunday School periodicals. Jessie in Switzerland; The Primary Teacher.
- Van Noppen, Charles Leonard. H., 1868- ——. A writer of Greensboro, North Carolina, who has made the only English translation of The Lucifer, by the famous Dutch author, Joost Van Vondel.
- Van Pelt, John Vredenburgh. La., 1874- ——. A professor in charge of the College of Architecture at Cornell University. A Discussion of Composition, Especially as Applied to Architecture. Mac.
- Van Praag, Charles Francis Wells. 18— - ——. A novelist. Clayton Halowell, an historical romance.
- Van Rensselaer, Mrs. John King. See Van Rensselaer, Mrs. May.
- Van Rensselaer, Mrs. May [King]. N. Y., 1848- ——. An historical writer of New York city. Crochet Lace; The Devil’s Picture Books: a History of Playing-Cards; The Goede Vrouw of Mana-ha-ta; New Yorkers of the Nineteenth Century; A Girl’s Life Eighty Years Ago (edited). Scr.
- Van Sickle, John Waddell. O., 1835-1895. An educator and physician of Springfield, Ohio. Practical System of Bookkeeping; History of the Van Sickle Family in the United States.
- Van Tyne, Claude Halstead. Mch., 1869- ——. A professor of history in the University of Michigan from 1903. The Loyalists in the American Revolution; Brief History of the United States of America. Mac.
- Van Zandt, Charles Collins. R. I., 1830-1890. A governor of Rhode Island, 1877-1880. Newport Ballads.
- Vaughan, Benjamin. W. I., 1751-1835. A once prominent scientist and political economist who lived at Hallowell, Maine, from 1795. His writings nearly all appeared anonymously. The Calm Observer; Ten Hints to Wise Men; The Rural Socrates, a translation from the German of Hirzel, include a portion of his writings.
- Vaughan, George Tully. Va., 1859- ——. A surgeon of Washington, professor of surgery at Georgetown University from 1897. The Principles and Practice of Surgery.
- Vaughan, Victor Clarence. O., 1851- ——. The dean of the medical department of the University of Michigan from 1890. Osteology and Mycology of the Domestic Fowl; Textbook of Physiological Chemistry; Ptomaines and Leucomaines (with Novy).
- Veblen, Thorstein B——. 18— - ——. An assistant professor of political economy in the University of Chicago from 1900. The Theory of the Leisure Class; The Theory of Business Enterprises. Mac. Scr.
- Veeder, Nicholas. N. Y., 1819-1892. A writer of Allegheny, Pennsylvania. Cometallism: a Plan for Continuing Gold and Silver Coinage (1885).
- Verner, Samuel P——. S. C., 18— - ——. An American missionary in Africa. Pioneering in Central Africa (1903).
- Vickers, George Morley. Pa., 1841- ——. A Philadelphia publisher. Ballads of the Occident.
- Viele, Herman Knickerbocker. N. Y., 1856- ——. Son of E. L. Viele ([page 398]). A civil engineer and novelist. The Inn of the Silver Moon; The Last of the Knickerbockers; Myra of the Pines. Mac. S.
- Vincent, Boyd. Pa., 1845- ——. The second Protestant Episcopal bishop of Southern Ohio. Can God Hear Prayer?; The Episcopal Church Put to the Test.
- Vincent, George Edgar. Il., 1864- ——. Son of J. H. Vincent ([page 399]). A professor of sociology in the University of Chicago from 1896. Social Mind and Education. Mac.
- Vincent, John Martin. O., 1857- ——. An associate professor of history in Johns Hopkins University from 1895. State and Federal Government in Switzerland; Government in Switzerland. J. H. U. Mac.
- Vincent, Leon Henry. Il., 1859- ——. A Philadelphia lecturer on English literature. A Few Words on Browning; The Bibliotaph and Other People; Hôtel de Rambouillet and the Précieuses; The French Academy; Corneille; Molière. Hou.
- Vischer, William Lightfoot. Ky., 1842- ——. A Chicago journalist whose writings include the novels Carlisle of Colorado; Way Out Yonder; Peter Vansant; A Head of Bronze; and the following volumes of verse: Chicago: an Epic; Harp of the South; Black Mammy; Blue Grass Ballads.
- Vivian, Thomas J[ondre]. E., 1855- ——. A journalist and novelist of San Francisco and subsequently of New York city. Seven Smiles and a Few Fibs, a volume of short stories; five novels, including A Life Wasted; Judge Day’s Case; Old Dudley’s Monument; Sweet Polly Poljew; Luther Strong. With Dewey at Manila and The Fall of Santiago are historical narratives, and The Fairy Spinning Wheel is a translation from Les Contes du Rouet of Catulle Mendes. Fen.
- Vizetelly, Francis Horace. E., 1864- ——. A New York author, formerly of London. Romance of the Finger Ring; The Fan in Romance and History; Sunshades and Umbrellas; The History of the Glove.
- Von Gottschalck, Oscar Hunt. R. I., 1865- ——. A littérateur of New York city. Yankee Doodle Gander; Gnome Man’s Land; Lives of the Haunted; Historical Sense and Nonsense.
- Voorhees, Daniel Wolsey. O., 1827-1897. A prominent United States senator from Indiana. Forty Years of Oratory, a collection of speeches and addresses posthumously published. Bo.
- Voorsanger, Jacob. H., 1852- ——. A San Francisco rabbi. Life and Works of Moses Mendelssohn; The Chronicles of Emmanuel.
- Vorse, Albert White. Ms., 1866- ——. A New York journalist. The Laughter of the Sphinx, a collection of short stories.
- Votaw, Clyde Weber. Il., 1864- ——. A professor of biblical Greek in the University of Chicago from 1900. Inductive Studies in the Founding of the Christian Church; The Primitive Era of Christianity.
- W
- Waddell, Alfred Moore. N. C., 1834- ——. A lawyer of Wilmington, North Carolina. A Colonial Officer and his Times.
- Waddell, John Alexander Low. Ont., 1854- ——. A distinguished civil engineer of Kansas City. The Designing of Ordinary Iron Highway Bridges; A System of Iron Railway Bridges for Japan; General Specifications for Iron or Steel Highway Bridges; Disputed Points in Railway Bridge Designing; Elevated Railways; De Pontibus. Wil.
- Wade, Mrs. Mary Hazelton Blanchard. Ms., 1860- ——. A writer of Malden, Massachusetts, among whose books for juvenile reading are Little Japanese Cousin; Little Russian Cousin; Little Porto Rican Cousin. Pa.
- Wagnalls, Mabel. Mo., 1871- ——. A writer and musician of New York city. Miserere: a Musical Story; Stars of the Opera; Selma, the Soprano. Fu.
- Wagner, Frank Caspar. Mch., 1864- ——. A professor of engineering in the Rose Polytechnic Institute, Terre Haute. Notes on Applied Electricity.
- Wait, John Cassan. N. Y., 1860- ——. A lawyer and civil engineer of New York city. Engineering and Architectural Jurisprudence; Car Builders’ Dictionary; Law of Contracts; Poems of Industry and Labour; Calendar of Invention and Discovery; Law of Operations Preliminary to Construction in Engineering and Architecture. Wil.
- Wake, Charles Staniland. E., 1835- ——. An anthropologist connected with the Field Columbian Museum at Chicago. Chapters on Man; The Evolution of Morality; Development of Marriage and Kinship; Serpent Worship and Other Essays; The Geometry of Science.
- Wakeman, Antoinette van Hoesen. N. Y., 1854- ——. A journalist of Hastings, Nebraska. Scientific Sewing and Garment Cutting; Questions of Conscience, a novel.
- Wakeman, Thaddeus Burr. Ct., 1834- ——. A lawyer of New York city. An Epitome of Positive Philosophy and Religion; The Religion of Humanity; Liberty and Purity; The Age of Revision; Evolution or Creation.
- Waldo, Clarence Abiathar. N. Y., 1852- ——. Head professor of mathematics in Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana, from 1895. Manual of Descriptive Geometry. He.
- Waldstein, Louis. N. Y., 1853- ——. A physician, resident in London from 1898. Brother of C. Waldstein ([page 401]). The Subconscious Self. Scr.
- Walke, Willoughby. Va., 1859- ——. An army officer. Lectures on Explosives; Gunpowder and High Explosives. Wil.
- Walker, Albert Henry. Vt., 1844- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Walker on Patents, a standard authority; Christ’s Christianity.
- Walker, James Bryant. O., 1841-1874. Son of T. Walker ([page 402]). A lawyer of Cincinnati. Law of Municipal Corporations in the State of Ohio; The Ohio Digest (with C. Bates).
- Wall, Mrs. Annie [Carpenter]. Wis., 1859- ——. A verse-writer of Pueblo, Colorado. Some Scattered Leaves.
- Wallace, David Duncan. S. C., 1874- ——. A professor of history in Wofford College, South Carolina. Constitutional History of South Carolina, 1725 to 1775.
- Wallace, Edwin Sherman. Pa., 1864- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Greensburg, Pennsylvania. Jerusalem the Holy. Rev.
- Wallace, Joseph. Ky., 1834- ——. A lawyer of Springfield, Illinois. Biography of Colonel Edward D. Baker; History of Illinois and Louisiana under French Rule. Clke.
- Wallihan, Allen Grant. Wis., 1859- ——. A Colorado photographer. Hoofs, Claws and Antlers of the Rocky Mountains; Camera Shots at Big Game. Dou.
- Walsh, Henry Collins. Iy., 1863- ——. A journalist of New York city. By the Potomac and Other Poems; The Last Cruise of the Miranda, a Record of Arctic Adventure.
- Walter, Robert. Ont., 1841- ——. A physician of Walters Park, Pennsylvania. Vital Science; The Exact Science of Human Health.
- Waltz, Mrs. Elizabeth [Cherry]. O., 1866-1903. A journalist and short-story writer. Pa Gladden. Cent.
- Wambaugh, Eugene. O., 1856- ——. A professor of law in Harvard University from 1892. The Study of Cases; Cases for Analysis; Cases on Agency; Littleton’s Tenures; Cases on Insurance. Lit.
- Ward, Cyrenus Osborne. N. Y., 1832- ——. Brother of L. F. Ward ([page 405]). A translator in the United States Bureau of Labour from 1885. A Labour Catechism of Political Economy; Our Tragedy, a dramatic poem; The Equilibration of Human Aptitudes; The Ancient Lowly, a history of the ancient working class, the two volumes of which were published under the separate titles of Irascibility and Concupiscence, and Origins of Socialism.
- Ward, Mrs. Lydia [Avery] [Coonley]. Va., 1845- ——. A Chicago writer of pleasing verse. Under the Pines, and Other Verses; Singing Verses for Children; Love Songs; Christmas in Other Lands. Mac.
- Ward, Robert DeCourcy. Ms., 1867- ——. A meteorologist, professor of climatology at Harvard University from 1900. Practical Exercises in Elementary Meteorology. Gi.
- Ward, Susan Hayes. Ms., 1838- ——. Sister of W. H. Ward ([page 405]). Sabrina Hackett; Christus ad Portam; George Hepworth, Preacher, Journalist, Friend of the People. Dut. Lov.
- Ward, William Godman. O., 1848- ——. A Boston lecturer upon English literature. Tennyson’s Debt to Environment; The Poetry of Robert Browning; Art for Schools. Lit.
- Warder, George Woodward. Mo., 1848- ——. A lawyer and writer of Kansas City, among whose numerous works are Poetic Fragments; The New Cosmogony; The Cities of the Sun; The Stairway to the Stars. Dil.
- Ware, Eugene Fitch. “Ironquill.” Ct., 1841- ——. United States Pension Commissioner 1902-1904. Rhymes of Ironquill.
- Ware, Lewis S——. Pa., 1851- ——. A Philadelphia writer, editor of The Sugar Beet Magazine. The Sugar Beet; Study of the Various Sources of Sugar, and similar works. Bai. Ju.
- Warne, Frank Julian. W. Va., 1874- ——. The editor of the Railway World. The Slav Invasion and the Mine Workers.
- Warren, Arthur. Ms., 1860- ——. The London correspondent of the Boston Herald 1888-1896. The Charles Whittinghams; A Title of Nobility, are among his writings.
- Warren, Charles. Ms., 1868- ——. A Boston lawyer. The Girl and the Governor, and Other Stories. Scr.
- Warren, Frederick Morris. Me., 1859- ——. A professor of modern languages at Yale University from 1901. A Primer of French Literature; History of the Novel Previous to the Seventeenth Century. He. Ho.
- Warring, Charles Bartlett. N. Y., 1825- ——. An educator and scientist of Poughkeepsie. “Strike, but Hear Me:” the Mosaic Account of the Creation; The Miracle of To-day; Genesis I. and Modern Science; The Three Climates of Geology; Groscepic Bodies.
- Warvelle, George William. Wis., 1852- ——. A jurist of Chicago. Abstracts and Examinations of Title; Origin and Operation of the Homestead Laws; Law of Vendor and Purchaser; Principles of the Law of Real Property; Introduction to the Principles of Jurisprudence and Legal Procedure; Compendium of Freemasonry in Illinois.
- Washburn, Dexter Carlton. Me., 1861- ——. A New York journalist. Songs from the Seasons, and Other Verses.
- Washburn, Henry Stevenson. R. I., 1813-1903. An author of Newton, Massachusetts, well known by his lyric, We shall Meet but we shall Miss Him. The Vacant Chair, and Other Poems. Sil.
- Watanna, Onoto. See Badcock, Mrs. Winnifred (Eaton).
- Waterloo, Stanley. Mch., 1846- ——. A Chicago novelist and journalist. A Man and a Woman; An Odd Situation; The Seekers; The Story of a Strange Career; The Story of Ab; Armageddon; Honest Money, a work on the currency question (1895); The Wolf’s Long Howl; The Launching of a Man. Ra. S.
- Waterman, Lucius. R. I., 1851- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Charlestown, New Hampshire. The Post-Apostolic Age; Early Journals of Convention of the Episcopal Church in New Hampshire (edited). Scr.
- Waterman, Nixon. Il., 1859- ——. A Boston journalist. Some Home-Made Verses; A Book of Verses; In Merry Mood; Cap and Bells.
- Watson, Mrs. Augusta [Campbell]. N. Y., 1862- ——. A novelist of Groton, Connecticut. The Old Harbor Town; Dorothy the Puritan; Off Lynnport Light; Beyond the City Gates. Dut.
- Watson, Edward Willard. R. I., 1843- ——. A physician and verse-writer of Philadelphia. Songs of Flying Hours; To-day and Yesterday. Co.
- Watson, Thomas Edward. Ga., 1856- ——. A Georgia lawyer and Congressman. The Story of France from the Earliest Times to the Consulate of Napoleon; Thomas Jefferson; Napoleon: a Sketch of his Life, Character, Struggles and Achievements; Bethany: a Study and a Story of the Old South. Ap. Mac. Sm.
- Watson, William Franklin. Ont., 1862- ——. A professor of chemistry in Furman University, Greenville, South Carolina. The Children of the Sun, and Miscellaneous Poems; Text-Book on Chemistry.
- Watt, David Alexander. E., 1865- ——. A civil engineer in government service. The Improvement of Rivers (with B. F. Thomas), 1903. Wil.
- Wayne, Henry Constantine. Ga., 1815-1883. A brigadier-general in the Confederate service during the Civil War. A Manual of Sword Exercise.
- Webb, William Seward. N. Y., 1851- ——. Son of J. W. Webb ([page 411]). A New York physician, president of the Wagner Palace Car Company. California and Alaska over the Canadian Pacific Railway. Put.
- Webber, Samuel Gilbert. Ms., 1838- ——. A Boston physician. Cerebro-spinal Meningitis; Treatise on Nervous Diseases.
- Weber, Adna Ferrin. N. Y., 1870- ——. The chief statistician of the New York State Department of Labour from 1901. The Growth of Cities in the Nineteenth Century. Mac.
- Weber, Henry Adam. O., 1845- ——. State chemist of Ohio 1884-1897. Select Course in Qualitative Analysis.
- Weber, John Langdon. S. C., 1862- ——. A Methodist clergyman, president of Kentucky Wesleyan College from 1901. History of South Carolina; History of Epworth League.
- Webster, Arthur Gordon. Ms., 1863- ——. A professor of physics at Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts. The Theory of Electricity and Magnetism.
- Webster, Helen Livermore. Ms., 1853- ——. A professor of comparative philology in Wellesley College from 1890. A Special Treatise on the Gutteral Question in Gothic.
- Webster, Henry Kitchell. Il., 1875- ——. A story writer of Evanston, Illinois. The Short Line War (with S. Merwin); Calumet K. (with S. Merwin); The Banker and the Bear; The Story of a Corner in Land; Rogers Drake; The Duke of Cameron Avenue; Traitor and Loyalist. Mac.
- Webster, John Clarence. N. B., 1863- ——. An obstetrician of Chicago, among whose professional monographs are Text Book of Diseases of Women; Human Placentation. Mac.
- Webster, William Clarence. Mch., 1866- ——. A writer of New York city. General History of Commerce.
- Webster, William Franklin. Min., 1862- ——. An educator, principal of the East High School of Minneapolis from 1893. English: Composition and Literature. Hou.
- Weeden, (Miss) Howard. Al., 18— - ——. An artist and verse-writer of Huntsville, Alabama. Bandanna Ballads; Songs of the Old South; Old Voices. Dou.
- Weeks, Robert Dodd. N. Y., 1819-1898. An educator, but after 1860 an insurance clerk in Newark, New Jersey. Jehovah-Jesus, the Oneness of God; Genealogy of the Family of George Weekes (1885); The New Dispensation.
- Wegmann, Edward. B., 1850- ——. A civil engineer of note. Design and Construction of Mason Dams; Water-Works of the City of New York; Design and Construction of Dams. Wil.
- Weir, James. Ky., 1856- ——. A physician of Owensboro, Kentucky, who besides contributing frequently to scientific periodicals has published Religion and Lust, or The Psychical Correlation of Religious Emotion and Sexual Desire; The Dawn of Reason, or Mental Traits in the Lower Animals. Mac.
- Weitzel, Mrs. Sophie Winthrop [Shepherd]. 1840-1892. A writer of verse and fiction who published Miss Robert’s Fortune; The Harrington Girls; Sister and Saint; Renée of France; From Time to Time, a collection of verse. Ran.
- Wellman, Francis Lewis. Ms., 1854- ——. A lawyer of New York. The Art of Cross-Examination. Mac.
- Wells, Amos Russell. N. Y., 1862- ——. The managing editor of the Christian Endeavor World, among whose numerous publications are Golden Rule Meditations; Sermons in Stones; The Business Man’s Religion. Rev.
- Wells, Benjamin W[illis]. N. H., 1856- ——. A professor of modern languages at the University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee. Modern German Literature; Modern French Literature; A Century of French Fiction. He has also published a number of school texts in French and German, and philological and literary papers. Do. Gi. Lit.
- Wells, Carolyn. N. J., 186- - ——. A librarian, of Rahway, New Jersey, whose writing is largely of a humorous nature. Trotty’s Trip; Folly in the Forest; Abeniki Caldwell; Children of Our Town; A Phenomenal Fauna (with O. Herford, supra); Nonsense Anthology (edited); The Merry-Go-Round; Mother Goose’s Menagerie; Patty Fairfield; The Pete and Polly Stories; Eight Girls and a Dog; Patty at Home; The Staying Guest; Folly for the Wise; In the Reign of Queen Dick; A Parody Anthology. Ap. Bo. Dou. Scr.
- Wells, David Dwight. Ct., 1868-1900. Son of D. A. Wells ([page 414]). A littérateur of Norwich, Connecticut. Her Ladyship’s Elephant; His Lordship’s Leopard; Parlous Times.
- Wells, Horace Lemuel. Ct., 1855- ——. A professor of chemistry at Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University. Laboratory Guide in Qualitative Analysis; Fresenius’s Qualitative Analysis (translated).
- Wells, Webster. Ms., 1851- ——. A Boston mathematician who has published a series of mathematical text-books. He.
- Welsh, Charles. E., 1850- ——. A publisher and writer. Publishing a Book; A Bookseller of the Last Century. He. Dut.
- Wemyss [weems], Francis Courtney. E., 1797-1859. A theatrical manager in New York city. Chronology of the American Stage, 1752-1852.
- Wenley, Robert Mark. S., 1861- ——. A Scottish thinker and a leading exponent of the spiritual reaction in philosophy, professor of philosophy in the University of Michigan from 1896. Socrates and Christ; Aspects of Pessimism; Contemporary Theology and Theism; Introduction to Kant; Preparation for Christianity in the Ancient World. Ho. Rev. Scr.
- Wentworth, George Albert. N. H., 1835- ——. A Boston mathematician. Elements of Geometry; Elements of Algebra; Elements of Analytical Geometry. Gi.
- Wentworth, John. 1815-1888. A Chicago journalist of note. Early Chicago; Congressional Reminiscences; History of the Wentworth Family.
- Wesselhoeft, Lily F. See Wesselhoeft, Mrs. Elizabeth (page 415).
- West, Anson. N. C., 1832- ——. A Methodist clergyman of Alabama. The State of the Dead; The Old and the New Man; History of Methodism in Alabama. Lip.
- West, James Harcourt. Ms., 1850- ——. A Boston publisher who has held several Unitarian pastorates. Holiday Idlers and Other Poems; Uplifts of Heart and Will; In Love With Love.
- West, Max. Min., 1870- ——. A journalist of New York city. The Inheritance Tax. Mac.
- West, Willis Mason. Min., 1857- ——. Brother of M. West, supra. A professor of history in the University of Minnesota from 1892. Ancient History to Charlemagne; Modern History: Europe from Charlemagne to the Present Time. Ap.
- Westcott, Edward Noyes. N. Y., 1847-1898. A banker of Syracuse, whose David Harum, a Story of American Life, was published after his death and achieved a widespread popularity; The Teller is his only other book. Ap.
- Weston, James Augustus. N. C., 1838- ——. An Episcopal clergyman at Edenton, North Carolina. Historic Doubts as to the Execution of Marshall Ney. Wh.
- Weston, Stephen Francis. Me., 1855- ——. An educator; dean of Antioch College, Ohio, from 1902. Principles of Justice in Taxation.
- Wetmore, Claude Hazeltine. O., 1862- ——. A novelist whose youth was passed in Peru. Fighting under the Southern Cross; Sweepers of the Sea; Incaland; In a Brazilian Jungle; The Battle against Bisbay. Bo. We.
- Weyl, Walter Edward. Pa., 1873- ——. An economist of Philadelphia. The Passenger Traffic of Railways (1901). Gi.
- Wharton, Mrs. Edith Newbold [Jones]. N. Y., 1862- ——. A novelist of New York city. The Greater Inclination; Crucial Instances; The Valley of Decision; Sanctuary; The Touchstone; Italian Villas and their Gardens; The Descent of Man; The House of Mirth. Scr.
- Wharton, Henry Redwood. Pa., 1853- ——. A physician of Philadelphia. Text-Book on Minor Surgery and Bandaging; Practice of Surgery (with B. F. Curtis).
- Wheeler, Candace [Thurber]. N. Y., 18— - ——. An artist of New York city. Double Darling and Other Fairy Tales; Household Art; Content in a Garden; Decorators and Decorating; Domestic Weavings. Har. Hou.
- Wheeler, Charles Gilbert. Ont., 1836- ——. A chemist of Chicago. Outlines of Modern Chemistry; Elementary Guide to Determinative Mineralogy; Outlines of Determinative Mineralogy; Medical Chemistry; Chemistry of Building Materials.
- Wheeler, Edward Jewitt. O., 1859- ——. A New York prohibition editor. Stories in Rhyme for Holiday Time; Prohibition: the Principle, the Policy, the Party.
- Wheeler, Everett Pepperell. N. Y., 1840- ——. A lawyer of New York city. The Modern Law of Carriers; Real Bimetallism. Put. Rev.
- Wheeler, Henry. E., 1835- ——. A Methodist clergyman of Ocean Grove, New Jersey. The Memory of the Just; Methodism and the Temperance Reformation; Rays of Light in the Valley of Sorrow; Deaconesses, Ancient and Modern. Meth.
- Wheeler, Joseph. Ga., 1836- ——. A noted cavalry officer, who served with distinction in the Confederate service during the Civil War, and in the army of the United States in the war with Spain. The Santiago Campaign; A Revised System of Military Tactics; Alabama, in Confederate military history.
- Wheeler, Post. N. Y., 1869- ——. The Reflections of a Bachelor; The Writer; Love-in-a-Mist, a collection of verse.
- Whigham, Henry James. S., 1869- ——. A journalist of New York city. How to Play Golf; the Persian Problem; Manchuria and Korea. Scr. S.
- Whinery, Samuel. O., 1845- ——. A civil engineer of New York city. Municipal Works. Mac.
- Whipple, George Chandler. N. H., 1866- ——. A chemist and sanitary expert of Brooklyn. Microscopy of Drinking Water. Wil.
- Whipple, Henry Benjamin. N. Y., 1823-1901. The first Protestant Episcopal bishop of Minnesota, consecrated in 1859. The Indian Question; Lights and Shadows of a Long Episcopate. Mac.
- Whitaker, Walter Claiborne. N. C., 1867- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of Jackson, Mississippi. Dives and Lazarus: Six Studies; History of the Protestant Episcopal Church in Alabama.
- Whitaker, William Force. L. I., 1853- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman of Albany. Swiss Travel; Southold’s Centuries.
- Whitcomb, Merrick. N. Y., 1859- ——. An educator of Cincinnati. Source Book of the Renaissance; History of Modern Europe. Ap. Lgs.
- White, Charles Joyce. Ms., 1839- ——. A mathematician of Cambridge. Elements of Theoretical and Descriptive Astronomy. Wil.
- White, Edwin Augustine. Ct., 1854- ——. An Episcopal clergyman, now (1904) rector of Christ Church, Bloomfield, New Jersey, but in earlier life a lawyer. American Church Law.
- White, Eugene Richard. N. Y., 1872- ——. Songs of Good Fighting.
- White, Frances Hodges. Me., 1866- ——. Sea Tales; Helena’s Wonder World; Aunt Nabby’s Children.
- White, Henry Alexander. W. Va., 1861- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman, professor of history in Washington and Lee University. The Origin of the Pentateuch in the Light of the Ancient Monuments; Robert E. Lee and the Southern Confederacy; History of the United States. Put.
- White, Hervey. Ia., 1866- ——. A novelist of Chicago. Differences; Quicksand; When Eve was Not Created and Other Stories; Noll and the Fairies.
- White, John Stuart. Ms., 1847- ——. The head master of the Berkeley School in New York city. Boys’ and Girls’ Plutarch; Boys’ and Girls’ Herodotus; Boys’ and Girls’ Pliny; The Viking Ship. Put. Scr.
- White, Richard Edward. I., 1843- ——. A verse-writer of San Francisco. The Cross of Monterey, and Other Poems.
- White, Stewart Edward. Mch., 1873- ——. A novelist. The Claim Jumpers; The Westerners; The Blazed Trail; The Magic Forest; The Great Silent Places; The Mountains; Blazed Trail Stories. Ap. Scr.
- White, Trumbull. Ia., 1868- ——. A Chicago journalist. Wizard of Wall Street; The War in the East (1895); Free Silver in Mexico (with W. E. Curtis); Our War with Spain; Our New Possessions; Martinique and the World’s Great Disasters.
- White, Wilbert Webster. O., 1863- ——. A United Presbyterian clergyman of New York city. Thirty Studies in the Gospel by John; Thirty Studies in the Revelation; Inductive Studies in the Minor Prophets; Thirty Studies in Jeremiah; Studies in Old Testament Characters; Thirty Studies in the Gospel by Matthew.
- Whitehouse, Mrs. Florence Brooks. Me., 18- ——. A novelist of Portland, Maine. The God of Things, a novel; The House Party, a play. Lit.
- Whitelock, Mrs. Louise [Clarkson]. “L. Clarkson.” Md., 1865- ——. The wife of a prominent lawyer of Baltimore. The Shadow of John Wallace, a novel; A Mad Madonna, short stories of art life; How Hindsight met Provincialatis, contrasted stories of North and South; besides books of verse with colour illustration, such as Indian Summer; The Rag Fair; Heartease, and others. Pa.
- Whitham, Jay Manuel. Il., 1853- ——. A consulting engineer in Philadelphia. Steam Engine Design; Constructive Steam Engineering. Wil.
- Whitlock, Brand. O., 1869- ——. A lawyer of Toledo, Ohio. The Thirteenth District; Her Infinite Variety; The Happy Average. Bo.
- Whitman, William Edward Seaver. Me., 1832- ——. A journalist of Augusta, Maine. The Ship Carpenter’s Family, a Story; The Wealth and Industry of Maine; Maine in the War for the Union.
- Whitmarsh, H[ubert] Phelps. Q., 1863- ——. A Boston writer of stories, mainly for young people. The Young Pearl Divers; The Mysterious Voyage of the Daphne; The World’s Rough Hand; The Golden Talisman. Pa. We.
- Whitney, Mrs. Belle Armstrong. Ms., 1861- ——. A writer of New York city. The Art of Dress.
- Whitney, Mrs. Helen [Hay]. N. Y., 18- ——. Daughter of John Hay ([page 177]). The Rose of Dawn; Some Verses; Little Boy Blue; Beasts and Birds.
- Whitney, Henry Clay. Ms., 1831- ——. A lawyer of Boston. Life on the Circuit with Lincoln; Marriage and Divorce.
- Whitson, John Harvey. Ind., 1854- ——. A novelist of Somerville, Massachusetts. The Young Ditch Rider and Other Stories; Barbara, a Woman of the West; With Frémont, the Pathfinder; The Rainbow Chasers, a Story of the Plains. Lit.
- Whitten, Robert Harvey. Ind., 1873- ——. A librarian at Albany. Public Administration in Massachusetts; Taxation of Corporations in New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey.
- Wiechmann, Ferdinand Gerhard. L. I., 1858- ——. A lecturer in chemistry in Columbia University from 1883. Sugar Analysis; Lecture Notes on Theoretical Chemistry; Chemistry: Its Evolution and Achievements; The Maid of Montauk. Wil.
- Wiener, Leo. R., 1862- ——. A professor of Slavic languages at Harvard University. History of Yiddish Literature; Songs from the Ghetto; Anthology of Russian Literature. Put.
- Wigmore, John Henry. Cal., 1863- ——. A jurist and dean of the law school of Northwestern University from 1901. Digest of the Decisions of the Massachusetts Railway Commission; The Australian Ballot System; Land Tenure and Local Institutions in Old Japan; Materials for the Study of Private Law in Old Japan.
- Wilbor, William Chambers. N. Y., 1852- ——. A Methodist clergyman of Buffalo. Beauty for Ashes; Our Guests. Meth.
- Wilcox, Delos F[ranklin]. Mch., 1873- ——. A writer of Elk Rapids, Michigan. The Study of City Government; Municipal Government in Michigan and Ohio; The American Newspaper; Ethical Marriage; The American City. Mac.
- Wilcox, Earley Vernon. N. Y., 1869- ——. An agricultural expert in government service. The Farmer’s Cyclopedia of Agriculture; Handbook of Meat Inspection. Ju.
- Wilcox, Walter Dwight. Il., 1869- ——. An author of Washington city. Campaigning in the Rockies, reissued as The Rockies of Canada. Put.
- Wilder, Marshall Pinckney. N. Y., 1859- ——. A popular entertainer. People I’ve Smiled With.
- Wildman, Edwin. N. Y., 1867- - ——. A former vice-consul in the Philippines. Brother of R. Wildman, infra. Aguinaldo, a Narrative of Filipino Ambitions. Lo.
- Wildman, Rounseville. N. Y., 1864-1901. An American consul-general at Hong Kong. Tales of the Malayan Coast; Talked in the Sanctum; China’s Open Door. Lo.
- Wiley, Hiram Ozias. Vt., 1831-1873. A lawyer and verse-writer of Peabody, Massachusetts. Eternity, and Other Poems.
- Wiley, William Halstead. N. Y., 1842- ——. A publisher of New York city. Yosemite, Alaska, and the Yellowstone.
- Wilkinson, Florence. N. Y., 18— - ——. Daughter of W. C. Wilkinson ([page 424]). A Chicago novelist. The Lady of the Flag Flowers; The Strength of the Hills, and several plays. Har.
- Will, Arthur Percival. Ont., 1868- ——. A lawyer of Chicago. A treatise on the Law of Circumstantial Evidence.
- Willard, Josiah Flynt. “Josiah Flint.” Il., 1869- ——. Nephew of F. E. Willard ([page 425]). Tramping with Tramps; Powers that Prey (with F. Walton); Notes of an Itinerant Policeman; The World of Graft; The Little Brother; The Rise of Ruderick Clowd. Cent. Pa.
- Willard, Julius Terass. Kan., 1862- ——. A professor of chemistry in the Kansas State Agricultural College. Organic Compounds of Everyday Life.
- Willcox, Mary Alice. Me., 1856- ——. A professor of zoölogy at Wellesley College from 1883. Pocket Guide to Common Land Birds of New England. Le.
- Willet, Herbert Lockwood. Mch., 1854- ——. A professor of Semitic languages in the University of Chicago from 1896. Life and Teaching of Jesus; The Teaching of the Books; Prophets of Israel; The Ruling Quality. Rev.
- Williams, Alvin Dighton. Pa., 1824-1894. A Free Baptist clergyman in Nebraska. History of the Free Communion Baptists; Four Years’ Co-operation in Nebraska; The Church and its Institutions.
- Williams, Dwight. N. Y., 1824-1898. A Methodist clergyman in Cazenovia, New York. The Beautiful City in Song, and Other Poems; A Book of Rondeaux.
- Williams, Edward Higginson. Vt., 1849- ——. A mining engineer, lecturer at Lehigh University from 1902. Manual of Lithology. Wil.
- Williams, Egerton Ryerson. 18— - ——. A lawyer of Rochester, New York. The Hill Towns of Italy. Hou.
- Williams, Espy William Henry. La., 1852- ——. A New Orleans playwright. He has published A Dream of Art (verse); and among his plays are Parrhasius; The Duke’s Jester.
- Williams, Eustace Leroy. Va., 1874- ——. A Louisville journalist. The Substitute Quarterback; The Mutineers; That Kentucky Campaign. Clke. Est. Lo.
- Williams, Francis Churchill. Pa., 1869- ——. Son of F. H. Williams ([page 426]). J. Devlin: Boss; Smith of “Pennsylvania”; The Captain. Lo.
- Williams, Frederick Benton. See Hamblen, Herbert.
- Williams, Frederick Wells. Ch., 1857- ——. Son of Samuel W. Williams ([page 427]). A professor of modern oriental history at Yale University from 1900. The Middle Kingdom (with S. W. Williams); Life and Letters of Samuel Wells Williams.
- Williams, George Forrester. Sp., 1841- ——. A journalist of New York city. Bullet and Shell; Lucy’s Rebel; The Memorial War Book; Unfair in Love and War; Across the Lines. Fo.
- Williams, Gorham Deane. Ms., 1842- ——. A lawyer of Boston. The Penal Statutes of Massachusetts; The Massachusetts Peace Officer; Massachusetts Insolvent Law. Hou.
- Williams, Harold. Ms., 1853- ——. A physician and novelist, dean of Tufts Medical College, Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Morton; Silken Threads; Climatic Treatment of Phthisis.
- Williams, Henry Smith. Il., 1863- ——. A physician of New York city. The Story of Nineteenth Century Science; History of the Art of Writing. Har.
- Williams, John. S. C., 1809-1886. A Presbyterian missionary in Africa. Western Africa: its History, Condition and Prospects (1857).
- Williams, John Whitridge. Md., 1866- ——. A professor of obstetrics in Johns Hopkins University from 1889. Text Book of Obstetrics. Ap.
- Williams, Mrs. Mary Bushnell. La., 1826- ——. Tales and Legends of Louisiana.
- Williams, Ralph Olmsted. 1838- ——. A lawyer and philologist of New York city. Our Dictionaries and Other English Language Topics; Some Questions of Good English Examined.
- Williams, Rufus Phillips. Ms., 1851- ——. A teacher of chemistry in the English High School, Boston, from 1885, who has published a valuable series of chemical text-books. Gi.
- Williamson, Mrs. Mary Lynn [Harrison]. Va., 1850- ——. A Virginia educator who has published a Life of Gen. T. J. (Stonewall) Jackson.
- Willing, John Thomson. Ont., 1860- ——. An artist of New York city. Some Old Time Beauties; Dames of High Degree.
- Willis, Richard Storrs. Ms., 1819-1900. Brother of N. P. Willis ([page 427]). A journalist and musician. Church Chorals and Choir Studies; A Waif of Song.
- Willoughby, Hugh L[aussat]. N. Y., 1856- ——. A writer of travels. Across the Everglades. Lip.
- Willoughby, Westel Woodbury. Va., 1867- ——. An associate professor of political science in Johns Hopkins University. The Rights and Duties of American Citizenship; The Nature of the State; The Supreme Court of the United States; Government and Administration of the United States; Social Justice; The Political Theories of the Ancient World; The American Constitutional System. Am. J. H. U. Lgs. Mac. Cent.
- Willoughby, William Franklin. Va., 1867- ——. Twin brother of W. W. Willoughby, supra. A professional expert in the United States Department of Labour in Washington city. Workingmen’s Insurance. Cr.
- Willson, Frederick Newton. L. I., 1855- ——. A professor of geometry at Princeton University from 1883. Theoretical and Practical Graphics; Note-Taking, Dimensioning and Lettering; Practical Engineering; Perspective of Reflections. Mac.
- Wilson, Bird. Pa., 1777-1859. An Episcopal clergyman from 1829, but previously a noted lawyer of Philadelphia. Abridgment of the Law by Matthew Bacon; Memoir of Bishop White. See Memorial of, by Bronson, 1864.
- Wilson, Mrs. Calista. 18— - ——. Pedagogues and Parents. Ho.
- Wilson, Calvin Dill. Md., 1857- ——. A Presbyterian clergyman in Ohio. Bible Boys and Girls (with J. K. Reeve); The Child’s Don Quixote; The Story of the Cid for Young People; The Flight of the Hebrews. Cr. Le.
- Wilson, Daniel Munro. S., 1848- ——. A Unitarian clergyman of Brooklyn, New York. Where American Independence Began, an historical description of Quincy, Massachusetts. Hou.
- Wilson, Edmund Beecher. Il., 1856- ——. A professor of zoölogy at Columbia University. General Biology (with W. T. Sedgwick); The Cell in Development; Atlas of Karykonesis and Fertilization. Ho. Mac.
- Wilson, Edward Livingstone. N. J., 1838-1903. The editor of Wilson’s Photographic Magazine from 1864. In Scripture Lands; Wilson’s Photographics; The American Carbon Manual; Cyclopædic Photography; Quarter Century in Photography; Lantern Journeys. Scr.
- Wilson, Epiphanius. E., 1845- ——. An Episcopal clergyman of New York city. Nugæ: Greek and Latin Verses; Dante Interpreted; Cathedrals of France; and translations of the dramas of Balzac, the poems of Maupassant, the Moorish Ballads of Spain, and of Pugstall’s German version of The Rose and the Nightingale.
- Wilson, Floyd Baker. N. Y., 1845- ——. A lawyer of New York city. Uphill, a novel; Paths to Power. Fu.
- Wilson, Francis. Pa., 1854- ——. An actor of note. The Eugene Field I Knew; Recollections of a Player; Going on the Stage. Scr.
- Wilson, George Grafton. Ct., 1863- ——. A professor of social and political science in Brown University from 1891. Besides various professional monographs he is joint author with G. F. Tucker of a treatise on International Law. Sil.
- Wilson, Harry Leon. Il., 1867- ——. A New York journalist, editor of Puck from 1896. The Spenders, a novel; Zig Zag Tales; The Lions of the Lord; The Seeker. Dou. Lo.
- Wilson, Herbert Michael. S., 1860- ——. A geographical engineer in government service. Manual of Irrigation Engineering; Geographic and Topographic Surveying. Wil.
- Wilson, Lucy Langdon Williams. Vt., 1865- ——. A professor of biology at the Philadelphia Normal School from 1892. Domestic Science; Nature Study in Elementary Schools. Mac.
- Wilson, Rufus Rockwell. Pa., 1865- ——. A New York author. Rambles in Colonial Byways; New York Old and New; Washington: the Capital City; Lincoln in Caricature; Historic Long Island; New England in Letters. Lip.
- Wilson, Victor Tyson. Pa., 1864- ——. A teacher in Sibley College, Cornell University from 1893. Freehand Perspective; Free-hand Lettering. Wil.
- Wilson, William Huntington. D. C., 1870- ——. Rafnaland, a novel. Har.
- Wilson, William Robert Anthony. Il., 1870- ——. A physician and novelist. A Rose of Normandy.
- Winchester, Caleb Thomas. Ct., 1847- ——. A professor of English literature at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, from 1874. Some Principles of Literary Criticism. Mac.
- Winchester, Charles Wesley. Vt., 1843- ——. A Methodist clergyman. The Gospel Kodak Abroad; Wells of Salvation.
- Winfield, Charles Hardenburg. N. Y., 1829-1898. A lawyer of Jersey City. History of Land Titles; History of Hudson County, New Jersey; Adjudged Words and Phrases; The Founding of Jersey City.
- Winship, George Parker. Ms., 1873- ——. Son of A. E. Winship ([page 430]). A librarian of Providence. The Coronado Expedition; The Cabots; Early Mexican Printers.
- Winter, Mrs. Elizabeth [Campbell]. S., 1841- ——. Wife of W. Winter ([page 431]). A novelist of New Brighton, Staten Island. The Spanish Treasure; The Curse of Dangerfield; Hawthorn Lodge; The Mistress of the Grange.
- Winterburn, Mrs. Florence [Hull] [Brown]. Il., 1858- ——. A writer of New York city. Nursery Ethics; From the Child’s Standpoint; Southern Hearts; The Children’s Health. Ba.
- Wise, Barton Haxall. Va., 1865-1899. Grandson of Henry Alexander Wise ([page 432]). A lawyer of Richmond, Virginia. Life of Henry A. Wise of Virginia. Mac.
- Witmer, Lightner. Pa., 1867- ——. A psychologist, director of the laboratory of Psychology in the University of Pennsylvania from 1892. Experimental Studies in Psychology. Gi.
- Witthaus, Rudolph August. N. Y., 1846- ——. A toxicologist of New York city. Essentials of Chemistry; General Medical Chemistry; Laboratory Guide in Urinalysis and Toxicology.
- Wolf, Emma. Cal., 1865- ——. A San Francisco writer. Other Things Being Equal; The Joy of Life; A Prodigal in Love; Heirs of Yesterday. Mg.
- Wolf, Simon. Bv., 1836- ——. A lawyer of Washington city. The American Jew as Patriot, Soldier, and Citizen.
- Wolfenstein, Martha. 18— - ——. A writer of Columbus, Ohio. Idyls of the Gass, a Collection of Short Stories. Mac.
- Woll, Fritz Wilhelm. N., 1865- ——. A professor of agricultural chemistry in the University of Wisconsin from 1893. Agricultural Calendar; Dairy Calendar; A Book on Silage; Handbook for Farmers and Dairymen. Ra. Wil.
- Wood, Mrs. Edith [Elmer]. N. H., 1871- ——. A novelist of Washington. Her Provincial Cousin; Shoulder Straps and Sun Bonnets. Cas. Ho.
- Wood, William Converse. Ms., 1839- ——. A Congregational clergyman. Five Problems of State and Religion; Heaven Once a Week.
- Wood-Allen, Mrs. Mary. O., 1841- ——. A physician of Ann Arbor, among whose publications are Teaching Truth; Almost a Man; What a Young Girl Ought to Know; Marriage. Rev.
- Woodburn, James Albert. Ind., 1856- ——. A professor of American history and politics in Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. The American Republic and its Government; The Causes of the American Revolution. J. H. U. Put.
- Woodbury, Charles Jeptha Hill. Ms., 1851- ——. A civil engineer of Boston. Fire Protection of Mills. Wil.
- Woodhull, John Francis. N. Y., 1857- ——. A professor of physical science in the Teacher’s College, Columbia University. First Course in Science; Chemical Experiments; are among his works.
- Woodman, Alpheus Grant. Ms., 1873- ——. A Boston chemist. Air, Water, and Food from a Sanitary Standpoint. Wil.
- Woodman, Clarence Eugene. Me., 1852- ——. A Roman Catholic priest of New York, prominent as an orator. The Bridal Wreath; Manual of Prayer; Poets and Poetry of Ireland.
- Woodruff, Edwin Hamilton. N. Y., 1862- ——. A professor of law at Cornell University from 1896. Cases on Domestic Relations; Introduction to the Study of Law; Cases on Insurance.
- Woods, Robert Archey. Pa., 1865- ——. A University settlement worker of Boston. English Social Movements; The City Wilderness (edited). Hou.
- Wood-Seys, Roland Alexander. E., 1854- ——. An olive-grower of Southern California. A Woman with a Secret; Blacksmith of Voe; Cut with his Own Diamond; The Shepherdess of Treva.
- Woolf, Philip. N. Y., 1848-1903. A journalist and novelist of New York city. Who is Guilty?; The Trail of the Serpent; Satan’s Mirror; Three Women and a Dead Man; Goldenrod and Aster.
- Woollen, William Wesley. Ind., 1828- ——. Biographical and Historical Sketches of Indiana.
- Woolley, John Granville. O., 1850- ——. A Chicago lecturer. Seed; The Sower; Civilization by Faith; The Christian Citizen; A Lion Hunter.
- Woolsey, Theodore Salisbury. Ct., 1852- ——. Son of T. D. Woolsey ([page 436]). A professor of international law at Yale University from 1879. America’s Foreign Policy. Cent.
- Worcester, Dean Conant. Vt., 1866- ——. An assistant professor of zoölogy in the University of Michigan. The Philippine Islands and their People, a record of observation and experience. Mac.
- Worcester, John. Ms., 1834- ——. A Swedenborgian clergyman. A Year’s Lessons from the Psalms; Correspondences of the Bible; A Journey in Palestine; Matthew’s Gospel.
- Wright, Albert Allen. O., 1846- ——. A professor of zoölogy at Oberlin College from 1874. Geology of Holmes County, Ohio; Limits of the Glacial Area in New Jersey.
- Wright, Carrie Douglas. Il., 1862- ——. A music teacher in Chicago. Lincoln’s First Love. Mg.
- Wright, Charles Herbert. Ms., 1857- ——. A civil engineer of Cleveland. Bridge Drafting; Plate Girder Draw Spans; The Designing of Draw Spans. Wil.
- Wright, Mrs. Marie [Robinson]. Ga., 1860- ——. A writer of New York city. Picturesque Mexico; The New Brazil. Lip.
- Wright, Theodore Francis. Ms., 1845- ——. A Swedenborgian clergyman, professor in the New Church School at Cambridge from 1884. Life Eternal; The Realities of Heaven.
- Wulling, Frederick John. L. I., 1866- ——. A pharmacologist, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry in the University of Minnesota from 1892. Medical and Pharmaceutical Chemistry; Evolution of Botany. Am. Wil.
- Wyatt, Edith Franklin. Wis., 1873- ——. A Chicago novelist. Every One His Own Way; True Love.
- Wyckoff, Walter A[ugustus]. E. I., 1865- ——. A lecturer on sociology at Princeton University, born of American parentage at Mainpuri, in the northwest provinces of Hindustan. In order to ascertain the actual conditions surrounding the American workingman, he spent two years in toil as an unskilled labourer, an experience described in The Workers: an Experiment in Reality—The East—The West; A Day with a Tramp, and Other Days. Scr.
- Wylie, Samuel Brown. I., 1773-1852. A Reformed Presbyterian clergyman, pastor of the First Reformed Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, 1801-1852, and professor of ancient languages in the University of Pennsylvania, 1824-1845. (His sons, T. W. J. Wylie and T. A. Wylie, are mentioned on [page 438].) The Faithful Witness for Magistracy and Ministracy upon a Scriptural Basis; Covenanting; Life of Alexander McLeod ([page 243]); A Greek Grammar. See Memoirs by J. D. McLeod 1852; McMaster, 1852.
- Wynkoop, Richard. N. Y., 1829- ——. A writer of New York city. Wynkoop Genealogy; Schureman Genealogy; Clearance and Entrance of Vessels in the United States of America; Supplement to the preceding; Vessels and Voyages as Regulated by Federal Statutes.
- Wynne, Mrs. Emma [Moffett]. Al., 1844- ——. A Georgia writer. Craigfont, a novel.
- Y
- Yale, Cyrus. Ms., 1786-1854. A Congregational clergyman of New Hartford, Connecticut. The Godly Pastor: a Life of Rev. Jeremiah Hallock; Miniature of the Life of the Rev. Alvan Hyde; Biographical Sketches of the Ministers of Litchfield County after the year 1800.
- Yale, Leroy Milton. Ms., 1841- ——. A New York physician. The Century Book for Mothers. Cent.
- Yarnall, Ellis. Pa., 1817- ——. A Philadelphia writer who published Wordsworth and The Coleridges. Mac.
- Yates, Lorenzo Gordin. E., 1837- ——. A naturalist of Santa Barbara, California. California Digest of Masonic Law; The Ferns of Ceylon; The Channel Islands; All Known Ferns.
- Yechton, Barbara. See Krause, Lydia.
- Young, Abram Van Eps. Wis., 18— - ——. A professor of chemistry in Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, from 1885. The Elementary Principles of Chemistry. Ap.
- Young, Alfred. E., 1831-1900. A Roman Catholic clergyman of the order of Paulists. Catholic and Protestant Countries Compared; Catholic Hymns and Canticles; Carols for a Merry Christmas and a Joyous Easter.
- Young, Claiborne Addison. Ind., 18— - ——. A Unitarian clergyman in Canton, Massachusetts. Way Songs and Wanderings. Est.
- Young, Edward. E., 1818- ——. A watchmaker of Lexington, Georgia. Ladye Lilian and Other Poems.
- Young, Mrs. Ella [Flagg]. N. Y., 1845- ——. A professor of education in the University of Chicago. Isolation in the School; Ethics in the School; Some Types of Educational Theory.
- Young, Franklin Knowles. Ms., 1857- ——. A military inventor of Boston. The Minor Tactics of Chess; The Major Tactics of Chess; The Grand Tactics of Chess; Chess Strategics; Napoleon’s Campaigns. Lit.
- Young, George Curson. E., 1840- ——. A physician of Washington, New Jersey, resident in the United States from 1870. Ancient and Modern History of the Knights of Malta; Therapeutics in Nature; Physiology for the People.
- Young, Jacob William Albert. Pa., 1865- ——. A mathematical professor in the University of Chicago. Differential and Integral Calculus (joint author); The Teaching of Mathematics in Prussia. Lgs.
- Young, James Kelly. N. J., 1862- ——. A Philadelphia lawyer. Orthopædic Surgery; Synopsis of Human Anatomy.
- Young, John Philip. Pa., 1849- ——. The managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle from 1876. Protection and Progress.
- Young, Lucien. Ky., 1852- ——. A lieutenant in the United States navy. The Real Hawaii. Dou.
- Young, Robert Anderson. Tn., 1824-1902. A prominent Methodist clergyman of Tennessee. Personages; Twenty Thousand Miles, a record of travel; Sketchy Pages of Foreign Travel; Celebrities and Less.
- Young, Rose E——. Mo., 18— - ——. A journalist and novelist of New York city. Henderson; Sally of Missouri. Hou.
- Z
- Zeigler, Wilbur Gleason. 18— - ——. It was Marlowe (a novel in which the attempt is made to prove Marlowe’s authorship of the plays commonly attributed to Shakespeare); The Heart of the Alleghanies (with B. S. Grosscup).
- Zender, Joachim Denis Laurent. F., 1805- ——. A French physician and missionary who came to the United States in 1828, and in 1844 became a Congregational clergyman. Anthropometry; Abécédaire Français-Anglais Illustré; Guide des Etats-Unis. From 1848 to 1868 he edited the yearly Almanach et Directoire des Français aux Etats-Unis.
- Zilliox, James. N. J., 1849-1890. A Roman Catholic clergyman of the Order of Saint Benedict. Album Benedictinum.
- Zimmermann, Leander M.[8] Md., 1863- ——. A Lutheran clergyman of Baltimore. How to be Happy When Married; Paths that Cross; Sunshine; Daily Bread for Daily Hunger; The Little Grave; The Family; The Wedding Token; Expository Thoughts on Pilgrim’s Progress; Yvonne, a novel.
- Zinkeisen, Frank Edward. Wis., 1867-1895. An historical scholar of Chicago, who published Die Anfänge der Lehnsgerichtbarkeit.
- Zollars, Ely Vaughan. O., 1847- ——. A clergyman of the Christian (Disciples) denomination, president of Hiram College, Ohio, from 1888. Bible Geography; Holy Book and Sacred Day; The Great Salvation.
- Zollinger, Gulielma. See Gladwin, William Zachary.
- Zubly, John Joachim. Sd., 1725-1781. A Presbyterian clergyman of Savannah, prominent during the period of the American Revolution as an opponent of the Declaration of Independence. The Real Christian’s Hope in Death; Sermon on the Repeal of the Stamp Act; An Humble Inquiry into the Nature of the Dependency of the American Colonies upon the Parliament of Great Britain; The Law of Liberty: a Sermon on American Affairs.
- Zueblin, Charles. Ind., 1868- ——. A professor of sociology at Chicago University. American Municipal Reform. Mac.
- Zundel, John. G., 1815-1882. A musician, organist of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, 1850-1878. Modern Organ School; The Amateur Organist; Treatise on Harmony and Modulation.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Since the above was in type the firm name has become L. C. Page & Co.
[2] See Addenda, p. 441.
[3] A distinguishing initial only.
[4] A distinguishing initial only.
[5] A distinguishing initial only.
[6] A distinguishing initial only.
[7] A distinguishing initial only.