[734] 2d ed., 1727. Cf. Sibley’s Harvard Graduates, ii. p. 361; Carter-Brown, iii. 401.
[735] The History of the American Indians, particularly those Nations adjoining to the Mississippi, East and West Florida, Georgia, South and North Carolina, and Virginia: Containing an Account of their Origin, Language, Manners, Religious and Civil Customs, Laws, Form of Government, etc., etc., with an Appendix, containing a Description of the Floridas, and the Missisipi Lands, with their productions (London, 1775). His arguments are given in Kingsborough’s Mex. Antiq., viii. Bancroft (Nat. Races, v. 91) epitomizes them. Adair’s book appeared in a German translation at Breslau (1782).
[736] Observations on the language of the Muhhekaneew Indians, in which ... some instances of analogy between that and the Hebrew are pointed out (New Haven, 1788). Cf. on the contrary, Jarvis before the N. Y. Hist. Soc. in 1819.
[737] Essay upon the propagation of the Gospel, in which there are facts to prove that many of the indians in America are descended from the Ten Tribes (Philad., 1799; 2d ed., 1801).
[738] A Star in the West, or an attempt to discover the long lost Ten Tribes of Israel (Trenton, N. J., 1816).
[739] View of the Hebrews, or the tribe of Israel in America (Poultney, Vt., 1825).
[740] A view of the Amer. Indians, shewing them to be the descendants of the Ten Tribes of Israel (Lond., 1828).
[741] Discourse on the evidences of the Amer. Indians being the descendants of the lost tribes of Israel (N. Y., 1837). It is reprinted in Maryatt’s Diary in America, vol. ii.
[742] Hist. of the Wyandotte Mission (Cincinnati, 1840); Thomson’s Ohio Bibliog., 409.
[743] Manners, &c. of the N. Amer. Indians (Lond., 1841). Cf. Smithsonian Rept., 1885, ii. 532.