[259] "Documentary History of American Industrial Society," II, 157, 158.
[260] African Repository, I, 23.
[261] See the Western Courier (Louisville, Kentucky), for October 26, 1815.
[262] Paul Cuffe manuscripts in the Public Library, New Bedford, Mass. Paul Cuffe to Samuel C. Aiken, August 7, 1816; Paul Cuffe to Jedekiah Morse, August 10, 1816.
[263] Ibid., Robert Finley to Paul Cuffe, December 5, 1816, Finley asked that the reply if mailed to him at Washington be sent in care of his brother-in-law, Elias B. Caldwell.
[264] Ibid., Paul Cuffe to Robert Finley, January 8, 1817.
[265] Printed in Brown, Finley, 66 ff. The pamphlet was written before he came to Washington.
[266] Spring, "Memoir of Mills," 131.
[267] Massachusetts Historical Society, Proceedings, First Series, XIX, 20.
[268] African Repository, I, 2, 3. Referring to Caldwell in an address at an annual meeting of the Society, January 20, 1827, Clay said: "It is now a little upwards of ten years since a religious, amiable and benevolent resident of this city, first conceived the idea of planting a colony, from the United States, of free people of color, on the western shores of Africa. He is no more, and the noblest eulogy that could be pronounced on him would be to inscribe upon his tomb, the merited epitaph, 'Here lies the projector of the American Colonization Society.'" Clay was historically mistaken. Similar things were said of Mills and Finley. This speech may be found in pamphlet form in the Library of the Ohio Historical and Philosophical Society.