All the histories touch the story, but for original or distinctive treatment compare Smith’s New York, ii. 58; Stone’s Sir William Johnson, i. 52; Williams’ Negro Race in America, i. p. 144; and the legal examination of the case in Peleg W. Chandler’s American Criminal Trials (i. 211).

[535] See Lives of Penn noted in Vol. III.

[536] Proceedings, v. 312. They are now in the library of the Pennsylvania Hist. Society.

[537] Hildeburn, Century of Printing; Catal. of Works rel. to B. Franklin in Boston Pub. Library, pp. 26, 32, 38.

[538] Stevens, Bibl. Hist. (1870), no. 1,995.

[539] G. Clarke’s Voyage to America, with introduction and notes by E. B. O’Callaghan (Albany, 1867), being no. 2 of a series of N. Y. Colonial Tracts. Clarke remained in the province till 1745. The original MS. of his Voyage is in the State library at Albany.

[540] Portraits of Keith are in G. M. Hill’s Hist. of the Church in Burlington, New Jersey, and in Perry’s Amer. Episcopal Church, i. p. 209.

[541] The bibliography of the Quakers has been given in Vol. III. p. 503. Since that notice was made, Joseph Smith has added to his series of books on Quaker literature Bibliotheca quakeristica: a bibliography of miscellaneous literature relating to the friends (quakers), and biographical notices (London, 1883). Quaker publications in Pennsylvania can best be followed in Hildeburn’s Century of Printing in Penna., while entries more or less numerous will be found in Haven’s list (Thomas’s Hist. of Printing, ii.), and particularly respecting the tracts of George Keith, in Sabin, ix. p. 403; Carter-Brown, ii. and iii.; Brinley, ii. 3,406, etc.; Cooke, iii. 1,342, etc.

Mr. C. J. Stillé has printed a paper on “Religious Tests in Provincial Pennsylvania” in the Penna. Mag. of Hist., Jan., 1885.

[542] Collection of the Epistles and Works of Benjamin Holme, to which is prefixed an account of his life and travels in the work of the ministry, through several parts of Europe and America, written by himself (London, 1753). Carter-Brown, iii. no. 1,000.