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THE DIARY AND LETTERS OF GOUVERNEUR MORRIS.

Edited by ANNE CARY MORRIS. With Portraits. Two vols., 8vo, $7.50.

BROOKLYN EAGLE.

BOSTON COURIER. NEW YORK HERALD.

NEW YORK TIMES. BOSTON TRAVELLER. PHILA. BULLETIN. BOSTON BEACON. THE EVANGELIST.

"There is no book of late years, historical and reminiscential at once, which surpasses-if any equals-in interest these two elegant volumes."

"It is perhaps the most important American diary ever published.”
"From beginning to end it is a notable book."

"Likely to be valued and read so long as histories of the closing years of the eighteenth century are read."

"In the charm of intense naturalness and frankness they surpass Franklin's autobiography.""
"Altogether the most entertaining book of its kind ever composed of American material."

"The volumes fairly bristle with bright judgments, and will be read with keen delight. They are a mine of gossip, wit, opinion, and historical allusions."

"An important contribution to the history not only of Morris's time, but of government, and of the growth of republican institutions."

MEN AND MEASURES OF HALF A CENTURY:

SKETCHES And commeNTS. BY HUGH MCCULLOCH, Secretary of the Treasury in the Administrations of Lincoln, Johnson, and Arthur. 8vo, $4.00.

REV. DR. THEODORE L.
CUYLER.

MILWAUKEE SENTINEL.
N. Y. MAIL and EXPRESS.
CONGREGATIONALIST.
BOSTON POST.
HARRISB'G TELEGRAPH

"In his old age, while his powers remain unimpaired, Mr. McCulloch has done what Mr. Seward, Mr. Sumner, Mr. Stanton, and some other civilians ought to have done; he has written out his recollections and observations of the public events in which he played a prominent part. The men who made history are the men to assist in writing history. A fascinating volume, which, in absorbing interest, wide observation, and historical value, is the most remarkable book of the season."

"A notable addition to the financial and general history of the United States from 1830 to the present. The sincerity and fearlessness of his opinion are no less noteworthy than the simplicity and terseness of his style. The work is one to stimulate thought and provoke discussion." "The portraits of individuals give special interest and value to the work."

"The volume is pre-eminently a thoughtful one, and is perhaps more profitable for the citizen than for the student." "His reminiscences have an historical value that will increase with the passage of each year."

By Rev. HENRY M. FIELD.

THE INDEPENDENT. NEW YORK TRIBUNE.

SPRINGFIELD

REPUBLICAN.

NEW YORK HERALD.

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"Since Bayard Taylor, no other man has written so many interesting and instructive books of travel."

"No one who takes up this volume will be likely to put it down until the last page has been mastered."

"The author understands what perspective is; his touch is graphic; his temper sympathetic and responsive to the aspects of nature no less than the story of men; while above all is the breadth of mind and tolerance of judgment that make this writer a man among men. Our guide is not the professional man, but the intelligent and helpful philosopher, whose memory of many other journeys is at our service, whose sight is the keenest, and who is always illuminating and never tiresome." "The best modern description and history of a small bit of territory which ranks next after Rome and Constantinople as a geographical center of romance and heart-burnings."

A HISTORY OF FRENCH PAINTING,

FROM ITS EARLIEST TO ITS LATEST PRACTICE.

BOSTON ADVERTISER.
REV. DR. S. STORRS.
REV. DR. T. DeWITT
TALMAGE.

DETROIT TRIBUNE.
CHICAGO TIMES.
NEWARK ADVERTISER.

By C. H. STRANAHAN.

Illustrations, 8vo, $5.00.

With 16 full-page

"This book deserves success anywhere as being at once the most comprehensive and most judicions book upon its subject. Readableness, comprehensiveness, and judiciousness mark it as of signal value." "A volume elaborate, learned, rich in the history of French art."

"Neither art student nor person of good taste can afford to be without this book, in which the author has compressed a Louvre and a Luxembourg, with the painters standing before their pictures, pencil in hand, the oldest artist as fresh as the youngest,'

"Every phase of the subject is treated with detailed fullness, and the work thus occupies a place that has long been vacant."

"There is no other work covering so comprehensively the same ground, and none on the subject at all as interesting."

"Until a better book is written this must stand as the best of its general kind."

For sale by booksellers, or sent, postpaid, upon receipt of price, by the publishers,

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 743-745 Broadway, New York.

Press of J. J. Little & Co., Astor Place, New York.

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In his publicly-stated prophecy that
Grover Cleveland could not be re-elected, he proved himself acquainted with the drift of public sentiment, even if he gave offense by so doing. ADVANCE
THOUGHT is a free lance, and one with a long reach, and well filled with most interesting matter. In it appears, with each number, a long chapter of the life
experiences of "Brick" Pomeroy. Those for the coming year will be descriptive of the rows, riots, and ruptures he was in with his paper, the LaCrosse
Democrat, during the war, and will be red hot reading. Send $1 to M. M. Pomeroy, 234 Broadway, New York, and for it receive POMEROY'S ADVANCE
THOUGHT for one year, and be sure to save every number.

"BRICK" POMEROY returned from London in November, where he made arrangements to raise all the money required to complete the Atlantic-Pacific Railway Tunnel in Colorado. From this time on he will devote more attention to his paper, POMEROY'S ADVANCE THOUGHT, $1 a year, and during the coming year will fully explain why the Democrats are so often defeated and the Republicans come again in power.

JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PENS

THE MOST PERFECT OF PENS.

THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY.

Vol. XXI.

CONTENTS FOR MARCH, 1889.

Portrait of the Earl of Dunmore.
Historic

Homes and Landmarks.
Chapter II.

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No. 3.

PAGE

Frontispiece.

177

Their Significance and Present Condition.
Mrs. MARTHA J. LAMB.
ILLUSTRATIONS.-Southern Point of New York in the Beginning-Southern Point of New York in
1889-The Old Fort and Gable-roofed Church-View of Same Site in 1889-Dutch Windmill-Castle
Garden in 1852-Destruction of Statue of George III., by Anderson-View from Bowling Green in
Revolution-Gold Box-The Ship Hamilton in Celebration of Constitution, 1788-The Kennedy
House, No. 1 Broadway-Field Building on Same Site in 1889-City Hotel and View of Old Trinity
Church-Boreel Building and Trinity Church in 1889-Portrait of Chancellor Livingston-Broadway
Looking North from Bowling Green in 1828-Historic Houses, Nos. 9 and 11 Broadway-The Clarkson
House-View of Southern Point of New York in 1790-Portrait of Mrs. John Jay-Portrait of Chief-
Justice John Jay-The Ludlow-Morton House in State Street-View of State Street in 1859-Ball
Ticket of the Canal Celebration.
America, the World's Puzzle in Geography.. Rev. WILLIAM Barrows, D.D.

The Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence. Reply to General Wilcox.
Hon. JAMES C. WELLING, President of Columbian University.
Du Pont De Nemours.

German Family and Social Life. .

Thrilling Adventure of a Kentucky Pioneer.
Colonel Henry Beekman Livingston.

208

221

J. G. ROSENGARTEN.
General ALFRED E. LEE.

234

240

252

256

ANNIE E. WILSON.
MATURIN L. Delafield.

Original Documents. Impressions of Washington. Letter from Calcutta, India, in 1797,
contributed by Rev. Dr. Van Rennselaer-Two Unpublished Letters of Chancellor
Robert R. Livingston to the President of Congress in 1781 and 1782, contributed by
Mrs. Ellen Hardin Walworth-Unpublished Letter of Andrew Jackson in 1815,
contributed by General Marcus J. Wright.

Notes. The Negro-Washington at Brandywine-An Interesting Relic.

Queries. Remarkable Monarch, Who Was He ?—The Mound Builders.

Replies. The Mecklenburg Declaration-The Oldest Statue in the World, 1 and 2.
Societies. New York Historical Society-Chicago Historical Society-Westport Historical
Society-Rochester Historical Society-Rhode Island Historical Society-Wisconsin
Historical Society-New York Genealogical and Biographical Society-Linnæan
Scientific and Historical Society, Lancaster, Pa.—The Minisinck Valley Historical
Society.

Historic and Social Jottings.

Book Notices. History of Delaware, by Dr. Scharf-The Chad Brown Memorial, by a
Descendant-American Literature, 1607-1885, Vol. II., by Richardson-New
Amsterdam, New Orange, New York, by Gen. Darling-The Life and Times of
Judge Caleb Wallace, by Whitsitt-Annals of the Van Rennselaers in the United
States, by Rev. Dr. Van Rennselaer-Records of the Dyer Family, by Mrs. Dyer-
Children's Stories of the Great Scientists, by Miss Wright.

Advertisements-Books, Schools, etc., 1 to 6-Periodicals and Miscellaneous, 7 to 16.

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BINDING THE MAGAZIne of ameRICAN HISTORY.-We can furnish Covers for Binding in dark green levant cloth, for 50 cents; sent by mail, postpaid. Back numbers exchanged, if in good condition, for bound volume in cloth (as above), $1.00; in half Turkey Morocco for $2.00-subscribers paying charges both ways. TERMS:-85.00 a year, in advance; 50 cents a number. Postmasters receive subscriptions.

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Communications should be addressed to

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Entered at New York Post Office as Second Class matter.

743 Broadway, New York City. Copyright, 1889, by Historical Publication Co.

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At the very front of the best class of periodical literature in America, stands the Magazine of American History, one of the chief leaders of public sentiment in all affairs concerning American history.

"The Magazine of American History is the most vigorous and valuable journal of its class in this country."-PITTSBURG CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE.

It has attained a solidity of position and an assurance of success that have been denied to any similar undertaking in this country."-COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER.

"Its contents always embrace papers of real worth and of deep interest."-NEW YORK TIMES, December 31, 1888.

OW is the time to read THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY. To each of the four latest issues-December, 1888, and January, February, and March, 1889 -the accomplished editor has contributed one of her brilliant and "incomparable" papers. Says the BOSTON HERALD: "Nowhere will be found easily accessible such a popular account of what the public wishes to know about, as in Mrs. Lamb's 'Inauguration of Washington, in 1789,' and no one could have given just the paper which she has written." Says the DARTMOUTH in speaking of the February magazine: "This number could not be improved from a literary standpoint, and its tasty interior appearance, fine paper and type, are unsurpassed by any American monthly." The articles of this magazine are always timely, admirably written, animated, vigorous, and readable. It is a periodical that is warmly commended by the ablest scholars and historians in all countries and climes. Subscriptions are now pouring in much more rapidly than ever before, and old subscribers are renewing, in many instances, their subscriptions for this and three years to come. Sustained by the best and most cultivated people of the country, this magazine has a remarkably flattering outlook for the future. PRESS COMMENTS. "The Magazine of American History is an honor to its accomplished editor, and to the country at large."—NEW YORK EVANGELIST. "This periodical is one of the most valuable undertakings in American journalism.”—THE CHURCHMAN, July 7, 1888. "We delight in this review, there are such choice chapters of American history told so vividly.”—ZION'S HERALD, July 20, 1888. "This excellent publication is a public benefactor as well as educator, exerting, as it does, an important influence in cultivating a taste for historic reading, and a desire for historic knowledge.”—FREEMASON'S REPOSITORY. "It is a superb work. There

is no kind of reading more refined and pleasing. If you wish to keep posted on all the important facts of history, nothing can be of more value than this magazine."-THE STUDENT, Cumberland University. "Romance and fiction pale before the glowing interest that is stirred up by raking the embers of our own historic lore."-CHRISTIAN OBSERVER. "What promises to be an unusually valuable series of papers on 'Historic Homes and Landmarks,' has been begun by Mrs. Lamb in the Magazine of American History."-NEW YORK TRIBUNE, Jan. 10, 1889.

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RELATING TO AMERICA, ITS HISTORY, GENERAL AND LOCAL, PARticularly the latter! Lives of Americans, obscure and illustrious, the former always preferred; Books throwing light, or claiming to throw light, on the misty origin and weird, romantic life of the Red Men-their ethnology, their tongues, their stone, metal, and earthen relics of past ages; Genealogy: Criminal Trials; The rude Rhymes illustrating the slow but sure growth of American Poetry; Narratives of Soldiers and Pioneers; and other odd, curious and out-of-the-way things peculiar to America. These, with a willingness to sell them at fair prices, constitute the specialty of

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