On behalf of the University I beg to acknowledge the receipt of your courteous gift: Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Vol. VI, for which I am directed to return cordial thanks.
Yours with much esteem,
Henry J. Shandelle, S. J.,
Librarian.
Washington, D. C., April 6, 1907.
GENERAL INDEX.
- A bit of New York History, [76].
- A glance at some pioneer Irish in the South, [45].
- Annual meeting and dinner, [7].
- By way of introduction, [3].
- Emigration from New England to Ireland, [32].
- Executive Council of the Society, [5].
- Frontispiece.
- General information regarding the American-Irish Historical Society, [162].
- Historical notes and papers, [15].
- Irish Ability in the United States, [17].
- Irish Influence in the Life of Baltimore, [69].
- Leading Events in the Career of the Society for 1907, [103].
- Membership Roll of the Society, [127].
- Necrology, [117].
- Officers of the Society, [5].
- Other Vice-Presidents, [6].
- Praise for Volume VI, [165].
- Presentations of Volume VI, [163].
- Presidents-General of the Society, [161].
- State Vice-Presidents, [6].
- The Battle of New Orleans, [97].
- The Irish in Appleton’s Encyclopedia of American Biography, [22].
- The Kelts of Colonial Boston, [80].
- Walsh’s Irish Regiment of Marine Artillery, French Army, [59].
ANALYTICAL INDEX.
- A Bit of New York History, paper by Thomas F. Meehan, in N. Y. Catholic News, [76].
- A Calendar of John Paul Jones’ Manuscripts in the Library of Congress, [59].
- A Catholic was one of the Commissioners, [41].
- Ackland, Thomas, paper by, [80].
- Actors, list of, [31].
- Adventurous Irishman present “in all the early voyages of the English,” [47].
- Affair at Fort William and Mary, paper, [35].
- “A fleete of nine sayl of ships” with 800 for the plantations of Virginia, [57].
- Agitators who have distinguished themselves included, [22].
- A glance at some of the Pioneer Irish in the South, paper by M. J. O’Brien, [45].
- “A hulke of Dublin,” [48].
- Aiken, Lambert & Co., [121].
- Alknomac, from Sligo, Ireland; cast away at Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., [38].
- Allen, Capt., commander of a company, [89].
- Allied with many of the old families, [38].
- Allison, Dr. Patrick, first pastor of Presbyterian Church, [73].
- Alsop farm, Newtown, L. I., purchased for a burial ground, [80].
- “A magnificent stone residence,” [37].
- American Catholic Historical Researches, [36].
- American College at Louvain, Belgium, [117].
- American Ecclesiastical Review, [118].
- American frigate Constitution, [85].
- American-Irish Historical Society, [88], [103], [111], [112], [113], [115], [162].
- Americans of Irish blood, to, [81].
- Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, [84], [85], [89].
- An Early Dougherty Mentioned, [96].
- Anent the Shannon Family, paper, [101].
- Anglo-Saxon, the thing among some educators, [69].
- “An ideal soldier,” [42].
- “An Irish Man-of-War,” concerning, [95].
- Annual meeting of the Society, 1907, [104].
- Another Irishman who was not afraid to face the Indians, [46].
- Antwerp, [109].
- Appleton’s Encyclopedia tables, [31], [32].
- Appleton’s Encyclopedia of American Biography, classification in, [17].
- Appleton’s gives 65 names of Irish, [20], [21].
- Appleton’s list of actors, [31].
- Appleton’s list of Catholic clergy, [24], [25], [26].
- Appleton’s list of distinguished men, [29], [30].
- Appleton’s list of distinguished men in navy, [29].
- Appleton’s list of engineers, [30].
- Appleton’s list of inventors, [30].
- Appleton’s list of lawyers, [26], [27].
- Appleton’s list of musicians, [30].
- Appleton’s list of philanthropists, [30].
- Appleton’s list of physicians, [27].
- Appleton’s list of pioneers, [30].
- Appleton’s list of Protestant clergy, [26].
- Appleton’s list of soldiers, [23], [24].
- Appleton’s list of statesmen, [22], [23].
- Appleton’s list of those distinguished as educators, [29].
- Appleton’s list of those distinguished for art, [28], [29].
- Appleton’s list of those distinguished in literature, [27], [28].
- Appleton’s list of those distinguished in science, [29].
- A Providence, R. I. settler, [33].
- Archbishop Corrigan’s Catholic Cemeteries, [78].
- Archbishops Neale and Kenrick, [73].
- Ardea, Co. Kerry, Ireland, [92].
- Arthur, Chester A., “credited to the Irish race,” [20].
- Arthur, William H., president, [111].
- Artillery districts of Boston and Portland, [111].
- Art-men distinguished, list of, [28], [29].
- “A scene of unparalleled waste and ruin,” 1651, [32].
- A soldier of the Revolution, [96].
- Astor Library has Hakluyt’s famous work, [45].
- “Athwart the buttocks with my petronell,” [46].
- Bacon, Rt. Rev. David, D. D., bishop of Portland, [121].
- Baden-Baden, Germany, [117].
- Baker, Magistrate, [108].
- Baker, William F., president of civil service board, [108].
- Ballyhorick, County Cork, Ireland, [88].
- Baltimore and Maryland prominent during the Revolution, [71].
- Baltimore Gas Light Company, [72].
- Baltimore, Irish Influence in Life of, paper, [69].
- Baltimore, Md., [103], [108].
- Baltimore’s reputation for business honesty laid by, [70].
- Bannin, Michael E., New York, Indian commissioner, [110].
- Baptist Chapel, First, Baltimore, [73].
- Bar Association, Fitchburg, Mass., [107].
- Baratarian men, [98].
- Barbadoes Island, to which Cromwell exported Irish, [52], [53], [54], [56].
- Barber, Col. Francis, a soldier of the Revolution, paper by James L. O’Neill, [41].
- Barber, Col. Francis, killed, 1783, [43].
- Barber, Francis, commissioned by Congress major of Third N. J. Battalion, [42].
- Barber, Patrick, children of, [42].
- Barber, Patrick, of County Longford, Ireland, [41].
- Bard Bros, of Philadelphia, [121].
- Barrett, Robert, in expedition to Mexico, [47].
- Batchelder, Clark A., candidate, [107].
- Battle of Chippewa, [96].
- Battle of Fontenoy, [112].
- Battle of Lexington, [94].
- Battle of New Orleans, [97].
- Battle of New Orleans, detailed description of, [97], [98], [99], [100].
- Battle of New Orleans, forces engaged, [98].
- Battle of North Point, [74].
- Battle of the Boyne, [93].
- Battle of the Plains of Abraham, [86].
- Belcher, Jonathan, 1720, [101].
- Bellows Falls, Vt., [110].
- “Benburb Place,” [124].
- Berrian, Andrew, pen manufacturer, [121].
- Berry, John, apprenticed to Edward Keyly, [90].
- Bingham, Major, of Manila, [111].
- Blake, Col. John V. F., dies in New York City, [103], [104].
- Blodgett, Judge, chairman, R. I. commission, [108].
- Bodfish, Rev. Joshua P. L., rector, Canton, Mass., [103].
- Boer War, British army in, [103].
- Boies, Capt. James, promoter of papermaking, [86].
- Bon Homme Richard, [59], [60], [61], [62], [63], [64], [65], [66], [67].
- Book “suitable for a projected school in Virginia,” by John Brinley, [58].
- Boston artillery district, [111].
- Boston Associated Board of Trade, [119].
- Boston Chamber of Commerce, [119].
- Boston city charter, new, [120].
- Boston evacuated by British, [86].
- Boston Evening Transcript, [96].
- “Boston Massacre,” [93].
- Boston, no Irish among early settlers of, [82].
- Boston’s first naval officer, [101].
- Boston’s first store on Washington St., opposite the Old State House, [84].
- Boston’s great fire, 1760, [90].
- Boston’s oldest attorney, Charles A. Welch, [85].
- Boston’s Old Granary Burying Ground, [101].
- Boston the stronghold of the Catholic and Kelt, [83].
- Bourke, First Lieut., assistant surgeon, [111].
- Breen, Henry J., [108].
- Breen, Magistrate Matthew P., [108].
- Brigade under Gen. Clinton join the forces under Gen. Sullivan, [39].
- Brinsley, John, an English Puritan minister, [58].
- British army in the Boer War, [103].
- British defeated in battle of New Orleans, [99], [100].
- British evacuated Boston, [86].
- British formed along great drainage canal, [98].
- British government, [106], [107].
- British prisoners, memorial of, sent to the American commissioners, [65].
- British schooner, Margaretta, [116].
- British ship Losely, escaped prisoner from, [65].
- British strength about the same as Gen. Jackson’s, [98].
- British strength in battle of New Orleans, [98].
- Brooklyn Navy Yard, [104].
- Brown, Philip, appointed to command the prize Mellish, [63].
- Bruges, in Flanders, [36].
- Buffalo, N. Y., [104], [119].
- Buffalo Sunday News, and Nathaniel Shannon, [101].
- Bunker Hill Battle, [35].
- Burial place of Maj. Gen. John Sullivan, movement to restore, [115].
- Burton, Lieutenant, diary of, published, [94].
- Business men, list of, [29], [30].
- Butler, Captain of Raleigh’s largest ship, [47].
- Byrne, Thomas J., [108].
- Calhoun, first mayor of Baltimore, an Irish-American, [74].
- Calhoun, John C., “credited to the Irish race,” [20].
- Calvary Cemetery, New York City, [80].
- Cambridge (Mass.) Historical Society, [68], [75].
- Cambridge, Old, population practically all of New England origin, [75].
- Canadian frontier, so-called campaign on, [97].
- Canton, Mass., [103].
- Cape Cod, Mass., [106], [114].
- Captain Dominique You, a Baratarian, [98].
- Captain Stewart’s Irish brigade, [95].
- Captain Weaver’s artillery, detachment of, [95].
- Carberry, Brigid, widow of N. K. Connolly, [124].
- Carberry, Margaret, [124].
- Carberry, William, of Carrick-on-Suir, Ireland, [124].
- Carbray, Felix, children of, [124].
- Carbray, Felix, consul of Portugal, Port of Quebec, [124].
- Carbray, Felix, dean of Consular Corps, [125].
- Carbray, Hon. Felix, died, Quebec, [116].
- Carbray, Hon. Felix, M. R. I. A., obituary of, [121], [122], [123], [124], [125].
- Carbray, Niall, of Carrickcastle, [122].
- Carbray, Son & Co., Quebec, [123].
- Carey, James, town clerk of Charlestown, [90].
- Carmody, Gunner J. F., assigned to the Tacoma, [107].
- Carney Hospital, Boston, [108].
- Carney, Michael, co-partner, papermaking, Dorchester, [87].
- Carolinas and Virginia, a most diversified field for historical inquiry, [45].
- Carrell and Glaven, “two hardy Irishmen,” [48].
- Carrickcastle, near Dungannon, [122].
- Carrick-on-Suir, Ireland.
- Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton, [71], [72].
- Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton, credited to the Irish of pre-Constitution days, [19].
- Carroll, John, first archbishop, and Irish-American, [73].
- Carroll, Michael, his home destroyed, [90].
- Casey, John, of Muddy River, [88].
- Cassady, Michael, a patriot of Valley Forge, [94].
- Castle Garden, [120].
- Cathedral, Portland, Me., [121].
- “Catholic Address” to George Washington, [37].
- Catholic Burial Ground, letter regarding, [76], [77].
- Catholic cemeteries of New York, [78].
- Catholic churches, query as to rights of trustees, [76].
- Catholic clergy, list of, [24], [25], [26].
- Catholic Club, [120].
- Catholic priests, hundreds of, educated at St. Mary’s Seminary, [73].
- Celtic Irish origin, those of, not included, [22].
- Cemetery at Newtown Creek, [80].
- Chamillard, Capt. Paul de, [67].
- Chancellor Kent, trial before, [37].
- Chanler, Gov., [108].
- Charitable Irish Society, [88], [93].
- Charitable Irish Society oldest Irish Society in America, [94].
- Charlestown and Malden, corn mills in, [84].
- Chattanooga, U. S. cruiser, [113].
- Chidwick, Rev. Father, [108].
- Chowan County, near Edenton, N. C., [47].
- City of the Calverts, [75].
- Clancy, Boatswain J., detached from the Franklin and ordered to the Wasp, [103].
- “Classifies race by the paternal side alone,” [18].
- Clinton, Gen. James, went up the Mohawk with brigade, [39].
- Clinton, Gov. Dewitt, portrait of, [109].
- Clinton, Gov. George, portrait of, [109].
- Clogher, County Tyrone, [122].
- Clonard, Le Chevr. de, [64].
- Coast Artillery, [112].
- Cochran, James, Irish boy captured by the Indians, [91].
- Coffee, in battle of New Orleans, [99].
- Cogan, John, one of the founders of Boston, [84].
- Cogan, John, “The Father of Boston Merchants,” [81], [82], [84], [85], [86], [88].
- Cohalan, Senator John P., [108].
- Cohasset, Mass., [112].
- College libraries receiving Volume VI, [164].
- College of Virginia, founded by King James, 1622, [57].
- Collins, Capt. Palfrey, came into port, 1768, [89].
- Collins, Christopher, a shoemaker in Dedham, [89].
- Collins, Clement, lodged his arms with selectmen, [89].
- Collins, Edward, resident of Cambridge, [89].
- Collins, Henry, made freeman, 1636–’37, [89].
- Collins, John, a “freeman” in 1646, [89].
- Collins, Joseph, nominated a watchman, [89].
- Collins, Mathew, in Capt. Allen’s Co., 1698, [89].
- Collins, Mayor, [120].
- Collins, Thomas, a farmer, [89].
- Collins, William, in Boston, 1636, [89].
- Colonial Boston, the Kelts of, paper, [80].
- Colonists landed in North Carolina, names of, [50].
- Colonists massacred by Indians, 1622, [57].
- Columbia Oil Company, [120].
- Columbus barracks, [106].
- Columbus, O., [106].
- Colvin Institute, founded by daughter of Patrick Colvin, [74].
- Colvin, Patrick, member of old Light Street Church, [74].
- Comba, Brig.-Gen. Richard, U. S. A., died, [104], [105].
- Commissioners for Ireland, [32].
- Commodore Rodgers extended hospitality to 79 Irish passengers, [39].
- Conaty, Rt. Rev. Thomas J., D. D., bishop, [122].
- Concerning “An Irish Man-of-War,” [95].
- Concerning the Irish Montgomerys, article, [43].
- Connecticut, battleship, [113], [114].
- Connolly, Catherine, of Clogher, Ireland, [122].
- Connolly, Nicholas K., [124].
- Conolly, William, a Boston Kelt, [94].
- Connor, Patrick, co-partner, papermaking, Dorchester, [87].
- Constitution, American frigate, [85].
- Continental Congress, [86], [91], [92], [93].
- Conyngham & Nesbitt, Philadelphia merchants, [64].
- Copenhagen, T. J. O’Brien, minister to, [110].
- Copland, Rev. Patrick, a famous clergyman of London, preaches in Bowe Street Church, [57].
- Copland, Rev. Patrick, first president of the College of Virginia, [57].
- Copley, John Singleton, son of Irish parents, [92], [93], [94].
- Cork and Halifax, [89].
- Corlet, Elijah, master of Cambridge Grammar School, [68].
- “Cornelius the Irishman,” [48].
- Cornwallis, surrender of, [71].
- Cottineau, Capt. Denis Nicolas, gave account, [61].
- Cottineau, Denis Nicolas, Captain of Pallas, [67].
- County Clare, Ireland, [92].
- County Galway, Ireland, [96].
- County Tyrone, Ireland, [122].
- Court of Assistants, Cogan juror of, [84].
- Craddock, Matthew, of London, [89].
- Cranston, R. I., [117].
- Crehore, Benjamin, maker of the first piano-forte in America, [85].
- Crehore, Teague, stolen from his parents in Ireland, [85].
- Crehore, Thomas, a chair maker, [85], [86].
- Crehore, Thomas, maker of the first playing cards in America, [85].
- Creoles, [98].
- Crimmins, Hon. John D., of N. Y. City, speaks of John M. O’Conor, [96].
- Crimmins, Hon. John D., sold collection, [105].
- Crimmins, Thomas E., [108].
- Croghan, Chief Boatswain J. S., to command Wasp, [103].
- Cromwellian adventurers in Ireland attracted and become efficient aids in the barbarous work of the English commissioners, [55].
- Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland, [32].
- Cromwell’s government, many Irish people sent to New England under, [83].
- Cromwell, wholesale exportation of the Irish by, [52].
- Cronan, Lieut. William Pigott, [113], [114].
- Cronan, Patrick J., [114].
- Cronin, Cornelius, Gunner, U. S. Navy, [103].
- Cullen alludes to Irish spinners and weavers, [88].
- Cullen, Bernard, author of “The Story of the Irish in Boston,” [90].
- Cullen’s Story of the Irish in Boston, [80].
- Culpepper, John, succeeds O’Sullivan as surveyor-general, 1671, [51].
- Cunneen, Hon. John, died at Buffalo, N. Y., [104].
- Cyclopedia of Canadian Biography, [123].
- Danish West Indies, [48].
- Danvers, Mass., [113].
- Dawson building, [118].
- Declaration of Independence, [93].
- Declaration of Independence, John Hancock first signer, [91].
- “Dementia Americana,” [69].
- Democratic party, [120].
- “Derman Mahoone fined 20 shillings for intertaining two Irishmen,” [90].
- Desmonds, immense estates of in Munster, [49].
- “Determining the relative values of great men,” [19].
- “Dingen a Cos,” whole company brought ashore at, [48], [49].
- Dingle, a well-merited tribute, inhabitants of, [48], [49].
- Diocese of Raphoe, [44].
- Dismal Swamp, [106].
- Distinguished descendants of the original Irish settlers, [19].
- Doherty estate, New York City, sale of, [104].
- Dominick Lynch and his family, paper, [36].
- Dongan charter, [109].
- Donovan, First Lieut. John G., Coast Artillery, [112].
- Dorchester Heights, fortifying, [86].
- Dorchester, Mass., early papermaking at, [87].
- Dougherty, Lieut. Charles, children of, [96].
- Dougherty, Lieut. Charles, removed from Brookfield to Framingham, [96].
- Dover, N. H., stronghold of Shannons, [101].
- Downpatrick, Co. Down, Ireland, [91].
- Duffy, Col. Edward, [108].
- Dugan, Maj. Thomas B., 12th U. S. Cavalry, [110].
- Duncan, Abner, on Gen. Jackson’s staff, [99].
- Dungannon, Co. Tyrone, Ireland, [93].
- Durham, N. H., [115].
- Dwyer, Capt. Charles G., paymaster, [110].
- Earl of Mount Alexander could ride at the head of a regiment all Montgomerys, [44].
- Educators, list of, [29].
- Eleventh St. burial ground, number of interments, [77].
- Eleventh St. graveyard epitaphs, [79], [80].
- Elizabethtown’s first settlers, [42].
- Ellison, J. Taylor, lieut.-gov. of Va., [109].
- Emigration from New England to Ireland, [32].
- Emmet, Thomas Addis, credited to the “immigrant class,” [19].
- Engineer Corps, West Point, [109].
- Engineers, list of, [30].
- England’s choicest troops killed and wounded, [97].
- England’s hypocritical methods, aware of, [71].
- England’s unjust tariff laws, driven from Ireland by, [70].
- English adventurers in Ireland engaged in man-hunting, [56].
- English and Puritan colony has become a great city, [83].
- Englishmen left in Virginia, employments of, [45].
- English soldiers, prosecution of, [93].
- Episcopal Church, first in New England, founded, [89].
- Epitaphs in Eleventh St. graveyard, [79], [80].
- Estaign, Comte de, [62].
- Fall River, Mass., [104].
- Fall River Roman Catholic diocese, [117].
- Fairbanks, Vice-Pres., addresses Irish Club, [105].
- Fairchild, Leroy W., [121].
- Fairservice, Andrew, [75].
- Faneuil Hall, Boston, [94].
- Farley, Archbishop, [124].
- Favorite retaken and carried to the Bermudas, [64].
- Fernando, Simon, with Raleigh in first expedition, [48].
- Fifteenth U. S. Cavalry, [107].
- Fifth Avenue Cathedral, crypt of, holds remains of bishops, [78].
- Fifth Infantry in the Philippines, [105].
- “First-comers” meet Indians on Chowan River, [46].
- First Infantry, [106].
- First paper manufactured in America at Dorchester, [86].
- Fisher-folk of the Kerry coast, [49].
- Fitchburg, Mass., [107].
- Fitz-Maurice, Chevalier de, Letters to Capt. Paul Jones, [59], [60].
- Fitzpatrick, Brian, deserts to the Spaniards, [52].
- Fitzpatrick, Thomas B., presided, [104].
- Floating 220 boats on the Susquehanna, [39].
- Flynn, from County Galway, Ireland, [96].
- Foley, Capt. D. P., of revenue cutter service, [103].
- Fond du Lac, Episcopalian Bishop of, [85].
- Fontenoy, [112].
- Fort Adams, R. I., [111].
- Fort Carroll, [74].
- Fort Cumberland, [89].
- Fort Delaware, [108].
- Fort Hill, [84], [90].
- Fort Leavenworth, Kan., [106].
- Fort McHenry, Baltimore, Md., [74], [108].
- Fort of Red Men, [88].
- Fort Stanwix on the Mohawk River, [37].
- Fort William and Mary, affair at, paper by Rev. Thomas Gregory, [35].
- Fort William and Mary taken, 1774, [35].
- Fourteenth Infantry, [111].
- Fourth Voyage made to Virginia, [48].
- Foy, Julius L., a St. Louis member, dies, [103].
- Franklin and Wasp, [103].
- Franklin, Benjamin, [67].
- Franklin, Benjamin, consents to commission of brevet lieutenant, [62].
- Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, [36], [120].
- Fulton, Robert, has no recognition in “double star” table, [19].
- Fulton, Robert, son of a Kilkenny man, [20].
- Gallagher, Bernard, Master, Letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, [63].
- Gallagher, Bernard, Midshipman, Letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, [63].
- Gallager, Thomas F., judge police court, [107].
- Gardner, Capt. Robert, a wealthy citizen, [94].
- Garrett, John, in expedition to Mexico, [47].
- Gates, General, takes Capt. William Kilton prisoner, [63].
- Gen. Brown’s staff, O’Conor on, [96].
- General Keene killed in battle of New Orleans, [100].
- General Wolfe, [86].
- Gen. Sullivan’s house open for inspection, [115].
- Georgia, battleship, [113], [114].
- Gettysburg, [104].
- Gibbons, Cardinal, [73].
- Glaven and Carrell, “two hardy Irishmen,” [48].
- Glendy, Rev. John, first pastor of Second Presbyterian Church, [73].
- Glen’s Falls, N. Y., [112].
- Gookin, Daniel, an Irish Quaker, engaged in transporting cattle from Ireland to Virginia, [56].
- Gookin, Daniel, Jr., became superintendent of Indian Affairs, [57].
- Gookin, Daniel, received grant of 2,500 acres in Upper Norfolk, 1637, [57].
- Gookin, Daniel, “received patents for 300 people,” [56].
- Gookin’s Irish settlement, [57].
- Governor Bellingham, [88].
- Governor Dudley, [89].
- Governor Endicott marries John and Lysbell Morrell, 1659, both Irish, [90].
- Governor Hancock, [86].
- Governor Hutchinson, [86].
- Governor’s Island, [106].
- Grafton, Right Reverend Charles C., [85].
- Greaton, Gen. John, [94].
- Greaton, Mr., keeper of Greyhound Tavern, [94].
- Great Swamp in Rhode Island, [88].
- Greenhalge, Governor, [119].
- Greenville, Sir Richard, and second voyage, 1585, [45].
- Greenville’s list of “first-comers,” [46].
- Gregory, Rev. Thomas, paper by, [35].
- Grey Abbey stock of the early Ulster settlement, [44].
- Greyhound Tavern, Roxbury, [94].
- Griffin, Martin I. J., paper by, [40].
- Griffis, Rev. William E., D. D., oration by, [115].
- Guild, Gov. Curtis, Jr., [107].
- Guillouet, Gen. Louis, Comte d’Orvilliers, “on the road,” [66].
- Gulliver, Anthony, a Milton resident in colonial days, [94].
- Gulliver, Capt. Lemuel, once lived at Algerine Corner, [95].
- Gulliver’s Travels, published, 1726, [95].
- Guy de Vernon’s Science of War and Fortifications, translated by O’Conor, [96].
- Haggerty, Ogden, of New York, [104].
- Hakluyt, Richard, on Raleigh’s first voyage of discovery, 1584, [45].
- Hakluyt’s Voyages, Navigations, etc., [45].
- Haley, James S., re-elected mayor, [105].
- Halifax and Cork, [89].
- Hall, William, constable, 1730, [94].
- Hamilton, Alexander, [42].
- Hancock, Anthony, [92].
- Hancock, John, emigrant from Down Co., Ireland, [91].
- Hancock, John, had Irish blood in veins, [91].
- Hancock, John, of Lurgan, and family of president, [91].
- Hancock, Neilson, founder of Irish Statistical Society, [92].
- Hancock, Thomas, one of the starters of the paper industry, [86].
- Harney, Gen. William Selby, field officer, [100].
- Harris, Charles N., appointed magistrate, [105].
- Harrison, Rev. Mr., unable to return to Ireland, [33].
- Harvard College, [90].
- Harvard College received gift of 70 acres from John Cogan, [85].
- Hatteras Indians at Croatoan, [50].
- Havana, [112].
- Hawk, a historian of North Carolina, [50].
- Hawkins, Sir John, in expedition to Mexico, [47].
- Hayes, Capt. Edward, in expedition to Newfoundland, 1583, [47].
- Healy, Bishop, [122].
- Healey, Rev. John, first Baptist minister in Baltimore, [73].
- Healey, William, in real estate transactions, [89], [90].
- Heath’s regiment, [94].
- Heitman’s Officers of the American Revolution, [101].
- Hendricken, Bishop, [117].
- Hennessey, Lieut. Peter J., 5th U. S. Cavalry, [111].
- Heroes of Montgomery’s Army, [44].
- Hewatt’s Historical Account of the Rise and Progress of the Colonies of South Carolina and Georgia, [50].
- Hibbens, Mrs., hung for witchcraft, [88].
- Hibbens, William, an early citizen of Boston, [88].
- Higgins, Governor, of R. I., [108], [115].
- Higgins, James H., inaugurated governor of R. I., [103], [115].
- Histories of Boston ignore the story of John Cogan, [81].
- Hoban, James, “architect and builder of the president’s palace,” Washington, [40].
- Holy Cross College, [121].
- Holy Family School, [118].
- Holy Name Society, [118].
- Hongkong, [119].
- Hotel Brunswick, Boston, annual meeting at, [104].
- Hotten, John Camden, in his famous work gives list of those leaving Barbadoes, [52].
- Howes, Osborne, died, Brookline, Mass., [106].
- Howes, Osborne, Japanese consul, Boston, [120].
- Howes, Osborne, obituary of, [118], [119], [120].
- Humphreys, Col., “at the foot hereof,” [62].
- “Immortalized in becoming wood-cuts,” [20].
- Incident of an expedition under Gen.
- John Sullivan, article, by G. F. Radway, [39].
- Indianapolis, Ind., [163].
- Indians and Spaniards capture Miles Philips’ whole company, [47].
- Indians, at summer overflow of river, fled in terror, [39].
- Indian chiefs framed bill of expense to England, [109].
- Indians of North Carolina, first to set eyes on the white men who came to America, [45].
- Inniskillen Foot, Twenty-seventh, [97].
- Inventors, list of, [30].
- Ireland, [108], [120], [125].
- Ireland, County Galway, [96].
- Ireland, County Limerick, [105], [112].
- Ireland, County Tyrone, [122].
- “Ireland has always been a hive from which America has derived sturdy hewers of wood to subdue the forests,” [57].
- Irish Ability in the United States, paper by James Jeffry Roche, LL. D., [17].
- Irish ability, Lodge’s tabulated misrepresentation of, [21].
- Irish ability, true figures of, [32].
- Irish account, stellar classification of, on the wrong side, [20].
- Irish allowed nine statesmen in first list, [22].
- “Irish” allowed only one double star, [20].
- Irish-Americans, [71].
- Irish blood, a great infusion of, received in Virginia and the Carolinas, 1678, [54].
- Irish blood, men of, not prominent, [83].
- Irish brigade, battle of Fontenoy, [112].
- Irish builders of the White House, paper by Martin I. J. Griffin, [40].
- Irish business men long influenced the financial interests of Baltimore, [72].
- Irish castaways among the Indians of the Danish West Indians, [48].
- Irish Catholic charity, [124].
- Irish “convicts” under the vassalage of colonial masters suffered great privations, [55].
- Irish families invariably large, [54].
- Irish Fellowship Club, Chicago, [105].
- Irish gloriously prominent, [31].
- Irish in Boston, the story of, [80].
- Irish Influence in the Life of Baltimore, paper, by D. J. Scully, [69].
- Irish in the forefront in Catholic affairs in Baltimore, [73].
- Irish laid no claim to be Anglo-Saxons, [69].
- Irishman’s readiness to assimilate with other nationalities, [75].
- Irishmen among first settlers of the western world, [49].
- Irishmen in the Massachusetts colony, [93].
- Irish merchants, names of, who contributed to buy cloth and make uniforms, [71].
- Irish merchants who came to Baltimore, [70].
- Irish Montgomerys, concerning the, [43].
- Irish names among lists of Englishmen, [46].
- Irish names appear among earliest records of Boston, [82].
- Irish names of priests and bishops in Baltimore given, [73].
- Irish National Association, [124].
- Irish of New England encouraged to return to Ireland, [33].
- Irish political refugees sometimes classed as “convicts,” [55].
- Irish Presbyterian Church in Boston, [91], [93], [94].
- Irish Presbyterians of Boston, manufacturers, [87].
- Irish Protestants, [88].
- Irish race misrepresented by writers, [17].
- Irish rebellion, [44].
- Irish regiment of Marine Artillery, Walsh’s, [59].
- “Irish Romanists” in North Carolina, [50].
- Irish sailors manned Raleigh’s ships, [49].
- Irish Scots and Scotch-Irish, [87].
- Irish seamen manned ships, “not a few” sailing from English ports, [46].
- Irish settlers, distinguished descendants from, [19].
- Irish spinners and weavers, [88].
- Irish Statistical Society, [92].
- Iron Duke, brother-in-law of Gen. Pakeman, [97].
- Isthmian canal, [119].
- Ithaca, N. Y., [115].
- Jackson, Andrew, has no recognition in “double star” table, [19].
- Jackson, Andrew, son of Andrew of Carrickfergus, [20].
- Jackson, Daniel, children of, [35].
- Jackson, Daniel, query respecting, [34].
- Jackson, General, [100].
- Jackson, General, of Irish parentage, [97].
- Jackson, Stephen, a Providence, R. I. settler, [33].
- Jackson, Stephen, genealogy of family, [34].
- Jack’s Reef, Onondaga Co., N. Y., [96]. U. S. treasury, money deposited by will in, [96].
- Jamestown Exposition, [106], [108], [109].
- Japan, T. J. O’Brien, ambassador to, [110].
- Jay, Gov. John, portrait of, [109].
- Johnson, Pres. Andrew, [105].
- Jones, Capt. John Paul, certificate to Lieut. Edward Stack, [62].
- Jones, Capt. John Paul, letter to Capt. John Plaince, [65].
- Jones, Capt. John Paul, letter to “The Revd. Father John” Mehegan, [65], [66].
- Jones, Capt. John Paul, letter to “The Revd. John Mayhagan,” [65].
- Jones, Capt. John Paul, officers of auxiliary vessels under command of, [67].
- Jones, Capt. John Paul, orders to Lieut. Peter Amiel, [66].
- Journal of the Society, presentation of Vol. VI, [163].
- Kallahan, Capt. Charles, commands ship, True Friendship, sailing from Barbadoes, [54].
- Kansas City, Mo., [110].
- Keating’s Irish grenadiers, [95].
- Keenan, Hon. Patrick, N. Y. City chamberlain, died, [108], [109].
- Keleher, Maj. Timothy D., granted leave of absence, [110].
- Kelly, Edward A., died Cohasset, Mass., [112].
- Kelly, Michael, of New Hampton, N. H., [105].
- Kelts, names of in Colonial Boston, [82].
- Kennedy, John Pendleton, an Irish-American, [74].
- Kenrick, illustrious Archbishop, [73].
- Kentucky and Tennessee riflemen, 1500 of, [97], [98].
- Kenmare, Ireland, [120].
- Keyly, Edward, [90].
- Killeran, Captain, his home destroyed, [90].
- Kilton, Capt. William, taken prisoner by Gen. Gates, [63].
- King Frederick gave dinner, [110].
- King Philip’s War, [88].
- Kirle, Richard, “an Irish gentleman,” becomes governor, 1680, [52].
- Knox, Maj. Gen. Henry, a dashing soldier of the Revolution, [94].
- Lacey, Col. F. E., family of, [106].
- Lacey, Col. Francis E., died, N. Y. City, [105].
- Lafayette gives Barber a sword, [42].
- Lafayette helped by Purviance to clothe his half-starved and half-clothed army, [71].
- Lafayette, Marquis de, [62].
- Lane, Master Ralph, having charge of employments of the Englishmen in Virginia, [45].
- Langenbruchen, Baden-Baden, [117].
- Lawson, a historian of North Carolina, [50].
- Lawyers, distinguished, list of, [26], [27].
- Leading events in career of the Society, 1907, [103].
- Leary, Gen. Peter, Jr., wrote U. S. war department, [108].
- Lechford’s notebook, [84].
- Lenihan, Capt. Michael J., of general staff, [111].
- Letter of a Catholic resident of N. Y. City, [76].
- Letters to John Paul Jones, extracts from, [59], [60], [61], [63], [64], [67].
- Lewiston, Me., [115].
- Lexington, Eleanor, writes in the Buffalo Sunday News of Nathaniel Shannon, [101].
- Light Street Church, now Mount Vernon, Baltimore, [74].
- Limerick County, Ireland, [104], [106].
- Linehan, Col. John C., author of “The Irish Scots and the Scotch-Irish,” [87], [90].
- Linsmore castle, built by Raleigh, [49].
- List of those continuing Stevenson’s work, [70].
- List of those leaving Island of Barbadoes for Virginia and the Carolinas, [53], [54].
- Literary men, list of, [27], [28].
- Lodge, Henry Cabot, and Century Magazine, [17].
- Lodge must plead guilty to one of two charges, [32].
- Lodge’s tables, [31], [32].
- London, L. W., statement of Montgomery ancestry, [43].
- Long wharf, the oldest in Boston, built by Cogan, [84].
- Looking back at Old Cambridge, Mass., [75].
- Lords Proprietors had agents employed in seeking emigrants in Ireland, etc., [50].
- Los Angeles, Cal., [122].
- Louvain, Belgium, [117].
- Luzon, Northern, Philippines, [105].
- Lynch and Stoughton, articles of co-partnership, [36].
- Lynch, Dominick, children of, [38].
- Lynch, Dominick 3d, a naval officer, [38].
- Lynch, Dominick, 4th Lieut, in U. S. Cavalry, [38].
- Lynn, Mass., [108].
- Macarthy, Eugene, Captain, certificate regarding “Commodore” Paul Jones, [62].
- Macarthy, Eugene, letter to John Paul Jones, [60].
- Macarthy, Eugene, Lieut., [60].
- Macarthy, Eugene, recommended for lieutenant, [59].
- MacNamarra, Chevalier de, Lieutenant, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, [64].
- Maghera, Ireland, [91].
- Mahoney, Lieut.-Col., assigned to the Philippine Islands, [104].
- Malden and Charlestown, corn mills in, [84].
- Maloney, Judge Thomas, died, Ogden, Utah, [105].
- Manchester, N. H., [121].
- Manila, Philippines, [111].
- Manley, John and others, Captains, “Uniform dress for the navy agreed to,” [64].
- Manoville, Le Chevalier de, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, [67].
- Manuscripts of John Paul Jones, a calendar of, [59].
- Marcella Street Home, [89].
- Margaretta, British schooner, [116].
- “Margaret Noriss, an Irishwoman, is admitted to the town,” [90].
- Martin, John, a ship carpenter, [90].
- Massachusetts Bay commonwealth, [94].
- Massachusetts colonial records, [88].
- Massachusetts State Archives, [101].
- Mather, Cotton, in a sermon in 1700, [88].
- Mather, Increase, father-in-law of Nehemiah Walter, [68].
- Maxwell, Sarah, wife of Robert Montgomery, [43].
- McCarthy, Capt. William, ship-owner, [89].
- McCarthy, Florence, dealer in provisions, [89].
- McCarthy, Justice John Henry, [108].
- McCarthy, Maj. Daniel F., quartermaster, [111].
- McCarthy, Patrick J., inaugurated mayor of Providence, R. I., [103], [115].
- McCarthy, Thaddeus, of colonial Boston, [89].
- McCarthy, Thomas, chosen constable, [89].
- McClellan, Mayor, appoints magistrate, [105], [106], [108], [109].
- McClosky, Cardinal, parents of buried in St. Patrick’s Cemetery, [78].
- McClure, David, N. Y. City, died, [112].
- McDonald, Gen. William, first to run packets on Chesapeake Bay, [72].
- McDonnell, Peter, died on White Star steamer, Oceanic, [112].
- McDonnell, Peter, obituary of, [120].
- McDonough, Capt. Michael J., relieved, [109].
- McDonough, Capt. Michael J., U. S.
- Military Academy, [111].
- McGee, James, commander of vessel, [94].
- McGillicuddys, reunion of, [112].
- McGowan, Admiral, president-general of Society, [109].
- McGowan, Borough Pres. Patrick F., [108].
- McGowan, President, [106], [107].
- McHenry, James, first secretary of the navy from Maryland an Irishman, [74].
- McKim, Isaac, founded first free school in Baltimore, [72].
- McLean, Hugh, promoter of papermaking, [86], [87].
- McLean, John, a slater, [94].
- McMahon, Capt. John, monument to erected by the Montgomery Guards, [79].
- McMahon, Mayor James H., presided, [107].
- McPartland, Stephen, bought Doherty estate, [104].
- Meehan, Thomas F., paper by from Truth Teller, [76].
- Mehegan, John, clergyman, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, [64].
- Mehegan, John, ordered to obtain two hogsheads of porter, [65].
- Membership Roll, [126]–160.
- Mexico, early expedition to, [47].
- Meylan, James, is to be sent proportions of 8 and 18 pounders, [66].
- Miller, Ann, wife of Samuel Shannon, [101].
- Milton Lower Mills, house and factory of Thomas Crehore at, [86].
- Minnesota, steamer from Seattle, [112], [113].
- Minute men, first company in America, [94].
- Montgomery, Alexander, member of Irish Parliament, [43].
- Montgomery, Allerian, [44].
- Montgomery, Gen. Richard, ancestry and family of, [43].
- Montgomery Guards erect monument, [79].
- Montgomery’s army, Heroes of, [44].
- Montgomerys of Ballyleek, [44].
- Montgomerys of Grey Abbey, County Down, [44].
- Montgomerys, six in the Irish Parliament, “all over six feet in height and the handsomest men in Dublin,” [44].
- Montgomery, Thomas, family connections of, [43].
- Montpelier, Vt., mayor re-elected, [105].
- Montreal, Canada, [121], [122].
- Moore, John and Joseph, [88].
- Moore, John, servant of the governor, [90].
- Morehead, Rev. John, pastor of Irish Presbyterian Church, [94].
- Moroney, William, perished in great storm, [94].
- Morrison, Hon. A. L., paper by, [97].
- Morton, Alexander, [121].
- Moseley, Edward A., [106].
- Mount Vernon Place Church, Baltimore, [74].
- Moylan, James, merchant, letter to John Paul Jones, [61], [64].
- Mulcahy, Mrs. M. A., letter of, [96].
- Munster, estates of the Desmonds in, [49].
- Munstermen largely composing second colony, [57].
- Murphy, Col. Paul St. C., assumed command of Marine Corps, Brooklyn Navy Yard, [104].
- Murphy, First Lieut. John C., 4th U. S. Infantry, retired, [110].
- Murray, Thomas Hamilton, secretary of American-Irish Historical Society, [88].
- Murray, Thomas H., papers by, [59].
- Museum of Fine Arts, [92].
- Musicians, list of, [30].
- Musketo’s Bay, St. John’s Island, [48].
- Names of Kelts in colonial Boston, [82].
- Names of natives of Ireland in Greenville’s lists, [46].
- Names of persons leaving the Island of Barbadoes for the American colonies, [53], [54].
- Names of prominent New York families buried in St. Patrick’s Cemetery, [78].
- Names of some pastors and their assistants buried in St. Patrick’s Cemetery, [78].
- Napoleon won Waterloo, [100].
- Napoleon’s marshals in the Spanish Campaign, [99].
- Narragansett Hotel, Providence, R. I., [116].
- National Cemetery, Fort Leavenworth, [106].
- National House of Representatives, [116].
- Natives of Ireland in Greenville’s lists of “first-comers,” [46].
- Nautical Training School, [119].
- Naval men, list of, [29].
- Neale, Archbishop, [73].
- Necrology, 1907, [117], [118], [119], [120], [121], [122], [123], [124], [125].
- Neill’s History of the English Colonization of America, [57].
- Nesbitt, Jonathan, banker, letter to John Paul Jones, [61].
- New Bedford, Mass., [104], [118].
- Newbury, Mass., [112].
- Newce, Sir William, an English officer, offered the governor “to transport two thousand persons to Virginia,” [56].
- New England families arrive at Limerick, 1656, [33].
- New Hampshire State College, [115].
- New Hampton, N. H., [105].
- New London, Ct., [111].
- New Orleans, battle of, [97], [98], [99], [100].
- Newry, Hancocks long engaged in trade of, [91].
- N. Y. Catholic News, extract from, [76].
- New York City, [107], [108], [109], [111], [119], [121], [125].
- New York History, A Bit of, [76].
- New York Mortgage and Securities Company, [120].
- New York navy yard, [113].
- New York Times, [119].
- New York Tribune, [119].
- No Irish among the settlers of Boston in 1630, [82].
- Nolan, Capt. Dennis F., 30th U. S. Infantry, [115].
- North Carolina and early inhabitants, [50].
- Norton, Prof. Charles Eliot, extract from address by, [75].
- Nugent, Edward, “the bold Irishman,” [47].
- O’Brien, Jeremiah, erection of monument to, [116].
- O’Brien, Michael J., paper by, [45].
- O’Brien, Thomas J., U. S. minister to Copenhagen, [109], [110], [113].
- O’Callaghan, Rev. Eugene M., vicar general, [121].
- Oceanic, White Star steamer, [120].
- O’Connell, Archbishop, [103].
- O’Connell, Maurice, Captain, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, [67].
- O’Connor, Lieut. M., assigned 15th U. S. Cavalry, [107].
- O’Connor, 2d Lieut. James, assigned to Havana, [112].
- O’Conor, Lieut. John Michael, U. S. A., [96].
- O’Donnell, Gen. Columbus, [72].
- O’Donnell, John, named Canton, [72].
- Officers of auxiliary vessels, list of, [67].
- O’Flaherty & McPartland, firm of, [104].
- Ogden, Utah, [105].
- O’Kelly, James Gerard, Lieutenant of Grenadiers, [61].
- O’Kelly, James Gerard, resigned from Walsh’s regiment, [61].
- O’Killia, David, Cape Cod, Mass., [106], [118].
- Old Cambridge, Mass., Looking back to, [75].
- Old Granary Burying Ground, Boston, [101].
- Old South Church, Boston, Shannon member of, [101].
- Oliver Hibernian Free School, [72].
- Oliver, John, founded the Oliver Hibernian Free School, [72].
- O’Loughlin, William J., 2d U. S. Infantry, [111].
- O’Neill, Henry, of Dungannon, [93].
- O’Neill, James L., paper by, [41].
- O’Neill, Sir Neal, [93].
- “One of my Irish boys” who shot Pemisapan, [46].
- O’Reilly’s, John Boyle, visit to Dismal Swamp, [106].
- “Original settlers all who came to this country before the date of the adoption of the Constitution, A. D., 1789,” [18].
- O’Seanchain, first form of surname Shannon, [101], [102].
- O’Sullivan arrested by the town marshal, [52].
- O’Sullivan, Florence, “a true son of Ireland,” [51].
- O’Sullivan, Florence, surveyor-general of the province, [51].
- O’Sullivan had charge of “the great gun,” [51].
- Otsego Lake, New York, [39].
- Over 10,000 should be credited to the “English race,” [18].
- Overton, Tom, on Gen. Jackson’s staff, [99].
- Pacific Mail Steamship Company, [119].
- Paine, Robert, [93].
- Paine, Robert Treat, signer of Declaration of Independence, [93].
- Pakenham, General, killed, [97], [98], [99], [100].
- Pamlico Sound, entered by “first-comers,” [46].
- Panama, [119].
- Parson Adam’s pulpit, powder buried under, [36].
- Patterson, Thomas, grandson of Allerian Montgomery, [44].
- Patterson, William, gave Patterson Park to Baltimore, [71].
- Pelham, Peter, engraver, painter, etc., [94].
- Pemberton, Mr., a teacher, 1767, [42].
- Pemisapan, king of the Indians, [46].
- “Pemisapan’s head in his hands,” [47].
- Philadelphia, Pa., [119], [121].
- Philanthropists, list of, [30].
- Philippines, [104], [105], [106], [111], [115].
- Philip’s company haled before the governor, who “visited them with the terrors of the Inquisition,” [47].
- Philip’s company sentenced, [47].
- Philip’s men executed in City of Mexico, [47].
- Philips, Miles, put ashore with 68 men a little north of Panuco, Golf of Mexico, [47].
- Physicians, list of, [27].
- Pioneer Irish in the South, paper, [45].
- Pioneers, list of, [30].
- Pioneers of the South not all of Anglo-Saxon origin, [55].
- Plymouth Club, [118].
- Polk, James K., descendant of Irish Polk or Pollock, [20].
- Portland artillery district, [111].
- Portland, Me., [121].
- Portsmouth, N. H., [101].
- Prendergast’s Cromwellian Settlement, [32].
- Prendergast relates how agents throughout Ireland “were authorized by Parliament to seize women, orphans and the destitute to be transported to Barbadoes and the plantations of Virginia,” [55], [56].
- Prerogative Court of Ireland, [43].
- Presbyterian Church, First, Baltimore, [73].
- Presbyterian Church, Second, Baltimore, [73].
- President-Generals of the Society, [161].
- Presidio, San Francisco, [104].
- Prince of Ulster, Shane the Proud, [93].
- Prize ships at Brest, [65].
- Protestant clergy, list of, [26].
- Protestant Kelts in Boston, [93].
- Protestants leave Ulster for plantations in North America, [91].
- Providence apostolate, [117].
- Providence Cathedral, [117].
- Providence, R. I., [115], [116], [117].
- Province of Arba, Northern Luzon, [105].
- Province of Quebec, [123].
- Provincial authorities anxious to attract emigrants, [55].
- Public libraries receiving Volume VI, [163], [164].
- Purviance, Samuel, chief man of the town, [71].
- Quebec, Canada, [122], [123], [124], [125].
- Quebec, Canada, tablet in, to Gen. Montgomery’s soldiers, [44].
- Quebec Harbor Commission, [125].
- Queen of France, “She Is a Sweet Girl,” [65].
- Quinn, Col. James B., U. S. Engineer Corps, retired, [110].
- “Race distribution in the main correct,” [18].
- Race extraction of 14,243 persons named as deserving mention, [18].
- Radway, G. Frank, article by, [39].
- Raleigh’s charter from the English crown, [49].
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, [48], [49].
- Raleigh, Sir Walter, the famous navigator, [45].
- Reagan, John B. of Dorchester and Boston’s Keltic citizens, [83].
- Reamie, Marcus, the hair-cutter, [75].
- Records of the London Company, proprietors of Virginia, [56].
- Red Men’s fort, [88].
- Redpath Weekly, [123].
- Reeves, Mr., a teacher, 1767, [42].
- Reid’s History of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, [91].
- Reformers who have become distinguished included, [22].
- Regiment of Dillon fought at Savannah, [63].
- Regiment of Walsh fought at Savannah, [63].
- Representatives elected at Charlestown to make laws for the government of the colony, [52].
- Revere, Paul, in Durham, 1774, [35].
- Review of the Year, 1907, [103].
- Revolutionary Rolls of New Hampshire, [94].
- Revolution, prior to, most important men were Irish by birth, [69].
- Rhode Island building, Jamestown Exposition, [108].
- Rhode Island commission, [108].
- Rhode Island, Great Swamp in, [88].
- Rhode Island Historical Society, [33].
- Rhode Island national guard, [111].
- Roanoke Island, “first-comers” landed at, [46].
- Robert Emmet Association, Columbus, O., [106].
- Roberts, William Hugh, comment of Jackson’s letter, [100].
- Robin, Abbe, chaplain of French fleet, [87], [88].
- Rochambeau, Comte de, [62].
- Roche, James Jeffrey, LL. D., paper by, [17].
- Roche, James Jeffrey of Mass., U. S. consul, [108].
- Rochester, Minn., [117].
- Roosevelt, Pres. Theodore, [110], [120].
- Roosevelt, Theodore, and many others, sent pictureless to posterity, [19].
- Routh, Francis, son of Sir Randolph, partner of Felix Carbray, [122].
- Routh, Sir Randolph, [122].
- Roxbury, Mass., [89].
- Royal Academy in London, [92].
- Rule, the Scotch gardener, [75].
- Russell, Governor, [119].
- Ryan, First Lieut. John J., 12th U. S. Cavalry, [112].
- Ryan, First Lieut. Thomas F., 11th U. S. Cavalry recruiting officer, [110].
- Ryan, James W., chosen mayor of Vergennes, Vt., [105].
- Saint Simon, Marquis de, [62].
- San Francisco, [119].
- San Francisco, Cal., [104], [111], [119].
- Sarsfield, Count, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, [67].
- Scientific men, list of, [29].
- “Scotch-Irish” omitted, [22].
- Scully, D. J., paper by, [69].
- Seattle, [112].
- Second Battalion of Engineers, [112].
- “Second Colony” transported, [48].
- Second Infantry, Civil War, [105].
- Second U. S. Infantry, [111].
- Serapis and Bon Homme Richard, action between, [62], [63].
- Serapis, [26] seamen escape from, [61].
- Settlement, ruin of, threatened, [51].
- Settlers murmur against Proprietors, [51].
- Seventeenth Infantry, [106].
- Shane the Proud, Prince of Ulster, [93].
- Shannon, Ens. William, of Virginia, [101].
- Shannon family, anent the, [101].
- Shannon, Nathaniel, came to Boston, 1687, [101].
- Shannon, Nathaniel, first naval officer of Boston, [101].
- Shannon, Nathaniel, Jr., ship merchant of Portsmouth, [101].
- Shannon, Robert, mayor of Derry, [101].
- Shannon, Thomas, captain of N. H. militia, [101].
- Shaw, Mrs. Robert Gould, widow of Col. Shaw, died, Boston, [104].
- Shea, Denis, [121].
- Shea, John B., obituary of, [120], [121].
- Shepherd, Hon. William, ex-mayor, Lynn, Mass., died, [108].
- Sheridan, Philip, a “man without a race,” [19].
- Ship from Ireland cast away, article, [38].
- Sir John Hawkins in expedition to Mexico, [47].
- Sir Richard Greenville, voyage undertaken by, [45].
- Sir Walter Raleigh, a famous navigator, [45].
- Site of Boston’s first place of business ignored, [81].
- Sixty-Ninth regiment, N. Y. City, [107].
- Smerwick, a well-merited tribute, inhabitants of, [48].
- Smerwick Bay, entered by aid of “a hulke of Dublin,” [48].
- Smith, Gen. Samuel, U. S. Senate, [74].
- Smith, Jeremiah, promoter of papermaking, [86].
- Smith, Lieut.-Col. Lewis, U. S. A., died, [107].
- Smith, Robert, first secretary of state and attorney-general from Maryland, an Irish-American, [74].
- Soldiers, list of, [23], [24].
- Somersworth High School, [121].
- Somersworth, N. H., [121].
- Spaniards and Indians capture Miles Philips’ whole company, [47].
- Spaniards threaten invasion from the South, [51].
- Spanish authorities advance with an armed party as far as St. Helena Island, but soon retreat, [52].
- Springfield, Mass., [110].
- Stack, Edward, Captain, certificate regarding Capt. Paul Jones, [63].
- Stack, Edward, if he has served like a “gentleman and a soldier,” etc., [61].
- Stack, Edward, Lieut., [60].
- Stack, Edward, lieutenant, affidavit respecting escape of deserters, [61].
- Stack of Crotts, captain, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, [61].
- Stack, Edward, recommended for lieutenant, [59].
- Standard Oil Company, [120].
- Stang, Rt. Rev. William, D. D., death of, [104].
- Stang, Rt. Rev. William, obituary of, [117], [118].
- Stang, Rt. Rev. William, published works of, [117], [118].
- St. Anne’s Church, Cranston, R. I., [117].
- St. Anthony’s Church, [118].
- State Constitution of Massachusetts adopted, [93].
- Statesmen, distinguished, list of, [22], [23].
- St. Bridget’s Asylum Association, [125].
- St. Bridget’s Asylum, Quebec, [124].
- St. Dominic’s Church, Portland, [121].
- St. Edward’s Church, [117].
- St. Gabriel’s Church, [124].
- St. John’s Church, Canton, Mass., [103].
- St. Joseph’s Church, Lewiston, Me., [121].
- St. Joseph’s Hospital, [118].
- St. Lawrence’s Church, [118].
- St. Lawrence’s presbytery, [118].
- St. Mary’s Chapel, [118].
- St. Mary’s Home, [118].
- St. Mary’s Hospital, Rochester, Minn., [117].
- St. Mary’s School Alumni Association, Salem, [113].
- St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore, [73].
- Stevenson, Dr. John, laid foundation of Baltimore’s trade, [69].
- Stevenson’s work continued by the Purviances, etc., see names, [79].
- Stoughton, Don Thomas, made Spanish consul at New York, [37].
- St. Patrick’s Church, Lewiston, Me., [115].
- St. Patrick’s Church, New York City, [76].
- St. Patrick’s Church, Quebec, [125].
- St. Patrick’s Day, 1737, [93].
- St. Patrick’s Day celebration in Baltimore, [95].
- St. Patrick’s dead, the very flower of the pioneer families who built up the Church in New York, [78].
- St. Patrick’s graveyard, number of interments, [77].
- St. Patrick’s Literary Institute, [124].
- St. Peter’s Church in Barclay St., New York, [78].
- Strawbridge, Robert, the first Methodist preacher, an Irishman, [74].
- Stryker, Gen. president of Society of the Cincinnati, [42].
- St. Sulpice Theological Seminary, [121].
- Sullivan commemoration service, [115].
- Sullivan, Dr. M. F., Library of, [112].
- Sullivan, Gen. John, incident of expedition under, [39].
- Sullivan, Gen. John, New Hampshire’s most distinguished Kelt, [92].
- Sullivan, John B., death of, New Bedford, Mass., [104].
- Sullivan, John B., obituary of, [118].
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- Sullivan, John B., wives and children of, [118].
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- Sullivan, Maj.-Gen. John, burial place of, [115].
- Sullivan, Mark E., [118].
- Sullivan, Owen, sons of, [92].
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- Sullivan, the first man in active rebellion, [36].
- Sullivan, William B., reads paper, [113].
- Sunday Globe, Boston, [112].
- Sunday Herald, Boston, [115].
- Supplies and new settlers brought by ship from Europe, [52].
- Sweetman, the one Irish day-laborer, [75].
- Swift, Jonathan, author of Gulliver’s Travels, [95].
- Tablet in Quebec, under which “repose the remains of thirteen soldiers of General Montgomery’s army, who were killed in the assault on Quebec,” [44].
- Taft, William H., Secretary, arrived from Seattle, [112], [113].
- Taney, Roger Brooke, first and only chief justice of U. S. an Irish-American, [74].
- Tara Hall, Quebec, [125].
- Target practice, accident in, [113], [114], [115].
- Tarne, Myles, a leather dresser, [90].
- Taschereau, Cardinal, [122].
- Taschereau, Chief Justice, [122].
- Temple, Capt. Robert, with Irish Protestants, [88].
- Tennessee and Kentucky riflemen, 1500 of, [97], [98].
- Tenth Cavalry, [112].
- Tenth Infantry, Civil War, [105].
- “The American Vandyke,” [92].
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- The Boston News-Letter, 1725, [91].
- The Boston Sunday Herald, [106].
- “The Boy and the Flying Squirrel,” [92].
- “The Early Catholic Church in Massachusetts,” [113].
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- The Kelts of Colonial Boston, paper by Thomas Ackland, [80].
- “The most fashionable man in New York,” [38].
- “The Nehemiah Walter Elegy on Elijah Corler,” [68].
- The New York Times, [106].
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- The Story of the Irish in Boston, [95].
- The Tyrone, Ireland, Constitution, [91].
- They Fired Three Volleys, [95].
- Third Artillery, [107].
- Thirtieth U. S. Infantry, [115].
- Thomson, Charles, second signer of Declaration of Independence, [91].
- Tokio, [112].
- Treaty of Ghent signed Christmas Day, 1814, [97].
- Trustees, five, appointed to provide “a good and convenient location for a new graveyard” paid $37,050 to Alderman Charles Henry Hall for burial ground, [77].
- “Tweed ring,” [119].
- Twelfth Infantry in the Santiago campaign, [105].
- Twelfth U. S. Cavalry, [112].
- Twenty-seventh Inniskillen Foot, [97].
- “Ulster has many Montgomerys,” [44].
- Uniform dress for the navy, signers for, [64].
- United Irish League, [125].
- University Libraries receiving Volume VI, [164].
- U. S. Department of State, [106].
- U. S. Military Academy, [111].
- U. S. Ship Enterprise, [119].
- Valley Forge, [94].
- Vaughan, Abigail, wife of Nathaniel Shannon, [101].
- Vergennes, Vt., chooses mayor, [105].
- Veteran Corps, N. Y. City, annual banquet, [107].
- Virginia and the Carolinas, a most diversified field for historical inquiry, [45].
- Virginia College established at Henrico City, [57].
- “Virtually no immigration during the colonial period,” [17].
- Viscount Planelagh, [43].
- Volume VI of the Journal of the Society, [163].
- Volume VI of the Journal, praise for, [165], [166], [167], [168], [169], [170].
- Walker, Ex-Cong. Joseph H., died, Worcester, Mass., [105].
- Wallace, Rt. Rev. Mgr. Thomas H., died, [115].
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- Walsh, Magistrate, [108].
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- Walter, Nehemiah, article, [68].
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- Washington, General, [94].
- Washington, George, [37].
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- Washington, General, concerning transporting of fagots, [86].
- Washington, George, selecting site for the White House, [40].
- Washington summons all his officers to Newburgh, [43].
- Wasp and Franklin, [103].
- Waterford port established by Raleigh, [49].
- Waterloo, fatal field of, [97].
- Watson, Lilias, wife of Thomas Shannon, [101].
- Welch, Charles A., Harvard’s oldest alumnus, died at Cohasset, Mass., [85].
- Welch, John, tax-payer, 1682, [85].
- Welch, John, the progenitor of a distinguished family, [85].
- West, Benjamin, famous English painter, [92].
- West Indies, wanderers constantly leaving for the American coast, [54].
- West Point Academy, [109].
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- White, Capt. John, distributed potato plants to people, “the first ever seen in Europe,” [49].
- White, Capt. John, of “Fourth Voyage” to Virginia, [48].
- White House plan by Hoban accepted, [40].
- White’s fourth expedition, names of persons landed from, in North Carolina, [50].
- White Star steamer Oceanic, [120].
- Wiley, Congressman of Alabama, introduced bill, [116].
- Winthrop fleet, so called, brought several merchants from maritime ports of Ireland, [83].
- Winthrop’s History of New England, [95].
- Worcester County probate court, [107].
- Worcester First Church, Thaddeus McCarthy, pastor, [90].
- Worcester, Mass., [105], [121].
- Wylie, Rev. Dr. David G., [108].
- Yeamans, Governor, dies, 1674, [52].
- Yeamans, Sir John, and civil disturbance, [50].
- Yokohama, [112].
- Youghal port established by Raleigh, [49].