[1376] Vol. V. passim.
[1377] Such were the Travels of Alexander Henry, the Sufferings of Peter Williamson, and the long list of so-called “Captivities” (see Vol. V. 186, 490). Probably Mr. Samuel G. Drake was for many years the most assiduous promoter of this class of books. This compiler’s sympathetic sentiment clearly affected his rhetoric and sometimes the accuracy of his statements. Cf. titles of his books in Pilling, Sabin, and Field. Cf. Drake’s Aboriginal Races of North America, revised by H. L. Williams (N. Y., 1880).
[1378] Voyages: an account of his travels and experiences among the North American Indians, from 1652 to 1684. Transcribed from original manuscripts in the Bodleian Library and the British Museum. With historical illustrations and an introduction by G. D. Scull (Boston, 1885), a publication of the Prince Society.
[1379] Voyages, 2d ed., London, 1724.
[1380] See Vol. IV. p. 299.
[1381] In 1766-68.
[1382] Reise in das Innere Nord Amerikas (Coblenz, 1841); also in an English translation (London).
[1383] Border Reminiscences (N. Y., 1872).
[1384] Army Sacrifices.
[1385] Notes of the settlement and Indian wars of the western parts of Virginia and Pennsylvania, 1763-1783. See Vol. V. p. 581.