z N53t THE GIFT OF J^,..U^ JL^.r4:<^^ .A:.7^ Books not needed during recess ;periods should be returned to the library; or arrange- ments made for their return during borrovv- er's absence,if wanted. Books needed by more than one person are held on the reserve list. Books of special ^ value and gift books, when the giver wishes it, are not allowed to circulate. Readers are asked ^ to report all cases of books marked or muti- lated. Do not deface book^, by marks and writing. _ Cornell University Library Z8421 .N53 -I- Hudson-Fulton exhibition made by the New 3 1924 029 623 141 olin Overs H\ m Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029623141 LIST OF PRINTS, BOOKS, MANUSCRIPTS, ETC. REIiATING TO HENRY HUDSON, THE HUDSON RIVER ROBERT FULTON AND STEAM NAVIGATION EXHIBITED IN THE liENOX BRANCH, NEW YORK PUBIilC LIBRARY ON THE OCCASION' OF THE HUDSON-FUIiTON CEIiEBRATION Septembeb, 1909 NEW YORK 1909 HUDSON-FULTON EXHIBITION MADE BY THE NEW YORK. PUBLIC LIBRARY (lenox library building) SEPTEMBER, 1909 NEW YORK 1909 SIxe l^m lork fwMk pljmrg BOARD OF TRUSTEES John W. Alexander. J. Pierpont Morgan. William W. Appleton. -2'-tT/ Morgan J. O'Brien. John Bigelow. ' ' ' Stephen H. Olin. John L. Cadwalader. . / c-t-rr^ Alexander E. Orr. Andrew Carnegie. /JV— -^"^^ a-^ George L. Rives. Cleveland H. Dodge. Charles Rowland Russell. John Murphy Farley. Edward W. Sheldon. Samuel Greenbaum. George W. Smith. John Henry Hammond. Frederick Sturges. H. Van Rensselaer Kennedy. Henry W. Taft. John S. Kennedy. Lewis Cass Ledyard. George Brinton McClellAN, Mayor of the City of New York, ex officio, Herman A. Metz, Comptroller of the City of New York, ex officio. Patrick F. McGowan, President of the Board of Aldermen, ex officio. OFFICERS President, Hon. John Bigelow, LL.D. First Vice-President, John L. Cadwalader, LL.D. Second Vice-President, John S. Kennedy, Esq. Secretary, Charles Rowland Russell, Esq., 425 Lafayette Street. Treasurer, Edward W. Sheldon, Esq., United States Trust Company, 45 Wall Street, Director, John S. Billings, D.C.L., LL.D., 425 Lafayette Street. BRANCHES— REFERENCE Lafayette Street, 425. (Astor.) Fifth Avenue, 8qo. (Lenox.) CIRCULATION MANHATTAN. East Broadway, 33. (Chatham Square.) East Broadway, 197. (Educational Alliance Building.) Rivington Street, 61. Houston Street, 3S8 East. (Hamilton Fish Park.) Le Roy Street, 66. (Hudson Park.) Bond Street, 49. Near the Bowery. 8th Street. 135 Second Avenue. (Ottendorfer.) loth Street, 331 East. (Tompkins Square.) 13th Street, 251 West. Near 8th Avenue. '(J'ACKSON SqTJARE.) 23d Street, 228 East. Between 2d and 3d Avenues. (Epiphany.) 23d Street, 209 West. Near 7th Avenue. (Muhlenberg. Department Headquarters.) 36th Street, 303 East. East of 2d Avenue. (St. Gabriel's Park.) 40th Street, 501 West. Between loth and nth Avenues. (St. Raphael's.) 42d Street, 226 West. Near 7th Avenue. (George Bruce.) 50th Street, 123 East. Near Lexington Avenue. (Cathedral.) 51st Street, 463 West. Near loth Avenue. (Sacred Heart.) 58th Street, 121 East. Near Lexington Avenue. 67th Street, 328 East. Near ist Avenue. 69th Street. 190 Amsterdam Avenue. (Riverside. Travelling Libraries.) 78th Street. 1465 Avenue A. (Webster.) 79th Street, 222 East. Near 3d Avenue. (Yorkville.) 8ist Street. 444 Amsterdam Avenue. (St. Agnes. Blind Library.) g6th Street, 112 East. Between Lexington and Park Avenues. 100th Street, 206 West. Near Broadway. (Bloomingdale.) Iioth Street, 174 East. Near 3d Avenue. (Aguilar.) 115th Street, 201 West. Near 7tb Avenue. 124th Street, 9 West. (Harlem Library Branch.) 125th Street, 224 East. Near 3d Avenue. 135th Street, 103 West. Near Lenox Avenue. 145th Street, 503 West. (Hamilton Grange.) 156th Street. 922 St. Nicholas Avenue. (Washington Heights.) BRONX. 140th Street, 321 East, cor. Alexander Avenue. (Mott Haven.) i68th Street, 78 West, cor. Woodycrest Avenue. (Highbridge.) 169th Street, 610 East. McKinley Square. (Morrisania.) 176th Street. 1866 Washington Avenue. (Tremont.) 230th Street. 3041 Kingsbridge Avenue. (Kingsbridge.) RICHMOND. St. George. 5 Central Avenue. Tompkinsville P. O. Port Richmond. 75 Bennett Street. StAPLETON. 132 Canal Street, cor. Brook Street. Tottenville. 7430 Amboy Road. Near Prospect Avenue. ^ The Hudson- Fulton Celebration Commission Appointed by the Governor of the State of New York and the Mayor of the City of New York and chartered by Chapter 325, Laws of the State of New York, 1906 LIST OF OFFICERS President Gen. Stewart L. Woodford Presiding Vice-President Mr. Herman Ridder Vice-Presidents Mr. Andrew Carnegie Mr. John E. Parsons Hon. Joseph H. Choate Gen. Horace Porter Maj.-Gen. F. D. Grant, U.S.A. Hon. Frederick W. Seward Hon. Seth Low Mr. Francis Lynde Stetson Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan Hon. Oscar S. Straus Hon. Levi P Morton Mr. Wm. B. Van Rensselaer Hon. Alton B. Parker Gen. Jas. Grant Wilson Treasurer Mr. Isaac N. Seligman No, I William Street, New York Secretary Assistant-Secretary Mr. Henry W. Sackett Mr. Edward Hagaman Hall Art and Historical Exhibits Committee Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, General Chairman Sub-Committee in Charge of Scientific and Historical Exhibits Dr. George F. Kunz, Chairman 401 Fifth Avenue, New York Mr. Samuel V. Hoffman Prof. Henry Fairfield Osborn Mr. Archer M. Huntington Mr. Philip T. Dodge Sub-Committee in Charge of Arts Exhibits Hon. Robert W. de Forest, Chairman Metropolitan Museum of Art Sir Caspar Purdon Clarke Mr. George F. Hearn Dr. Edward Robinson Dr. George F. Kunz Headquarters : Tribune Building, New York Telephones : Beekman 3097 and 3098 Western Union Cable Address : " Hudfulco " List of Institutions holding Exhibitions under the auspices of or in cooperation with Scientific, Historical and Art Committees of the Hudson-Fulton Celebration Commission. AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, Seventy-seventh Street, from Columbus Avenue to Central Park West. Open daily, except Sun- days, from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Sundays from i to 5 p. m. Always free. Special Exhibition during the Hudson-Fulton Celebration, from September ist to December ist. Original objects showing the life and habits of the Indians of Manhattan Island and the Hudson River Valley. (Special illustrated cata- logue for sale, price 10 cents.) Take Sixth or Ninth Avenue Elevated Railway to Eighty-first Street, or Subway to Seventy-ninth Street; also reached by all surface cars running through Columbus Avenue or Central Park West. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS, Engineer- ing Building, 29 West Thirty-ninth Street. Robert Fulton Exhibition. Con- sists of paintings, drawings, books, decorations and furniture, and working models of John Fitch's steamboat, the first boat operated and propelled by steam; Robert Fulton's "Clermont," the first successful application of steam to navigation, and John Stevens' "Phoenix," the first steamboat to sail on the ocean. The exhibition will be shown in the Council Room of the Society, on the eleventh floor, and will be open from 9.00 a. m. until 5.30 p. m. during the entire period of the Hudson-Fulton Celebration, and from 9.00 a. m. imtil 5.00 p. m. daily until December 6th. BROOKLYN INSTITUTE, Eastern Parkway. Open daily, except Sun- days, from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. ; Sundays from 2 to 6 p. m. Thiu-sday evenings from 7.30 to 9.30 p. m. Free except on Mondays and Tuesdays, when admission fee is charged of 25 cents for adults and 10 cents for children under six years of age. Collection illustrating various departments of Archaeology, Mineralogy and Ethnography. Special Exhibition relating to past and present life of Indians on Long Island. Portrait of Robert Fulton painted by himself, the property of Col. Henry T. Chapman and loaned by him to the Museum. Open Sep- tember ist to December 31st. (Illustrated catalogue for sale.) Take Subway Express to Atlantic Avenue, or Flatbush Avenue Trolley from Brooklyn Bridge. St. John's Place surface car from Atlantic Avenue or Borough Hall. HUDSON-FULTON EXHIBITIONS 5 CHILDREN'S MUSEUM (Brooklyn Institute), Bedford Park, Brooklyn Avenue. Collection illustrative of the fauna of Long Island. Open free to the public from Monday to Saturday (inclusive) from 9 a. m. to 5.30 p. m., and on Sunday from 2 until 5.30 p. m. CITY HISTORY CLUB OF NEW YORK, 21 West Forty-fourth Street. Special Exhibition of Illustrations, Photographs, Maps and Plans, relating to the history of the City of New York, and all of the originals used in the City History Club Historical Guide Book of the City of N>aw York. COLLEGE OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, St. Nicholas Avenue and 139th Street. Hudson-Fulton Exhibit. During the Hudson-Fulton Celebra- tion and for some weeks thereafter, the College of the City of New York will have on exhibition in its historical museum a collection of charts, views, manu- scripts and relics representing old New York. Among the charts will be origi- nal prints of New Netherlands and New Amsterdam by Nicholas J. Visscher, about 1650; N. Visscher, 1690; Letter's "New Jorck," 1720; contemporary plans and views of the Revolutionary period showing the movements of Washington and Howe in this vicinity during the Campaign of 1776; Revolutionary battle relics; portraits, residences and letters of old New Yorkers; bronze busts of Washington, Lincoln and Fulton by Houdon and Volk; and other material sug- gested by the celebration. Take Sixth Avenue Elevated Railway to 140th Street, or Broadway Subway to One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Street. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS, BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN. Through the courtesy of Commissioner Michael J. Kennedy and his assistant arboriculturist, J. J. Levison, the different species -of trees have been labeled in Prospect Park, from the Plaza to the Willink Entrance; in Bedford Park; in Highland Park, and in Tompkins Park. An additional small enameled sign has been hung on those labeled trees that were indigenous to the Hudson River Valley in 1609. The special label reads : "This species is a native of the Hudson River Valley." FRAUNCES TAVERN, 54 Pearl Street, near Broad Street. Historic Revolutionary Building. Built in 1719. Scene of Washington's farewell to his officers on December 4, 1783. Restored December 4, 1907, by the New York Society of the Sons of the Revolution. Open daily, except Sundays, from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Special Exhibition of Revolutionary Relics by the New York State Society of the Sons of the Revolution, who are the owners of that his- torical building, September 15th to November ist. Take Subway to Bowling Green Station, or Third Avenue Elevated Railway to Hanover Square Station, or Broadway surface cars. LONG ISLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY, corner of Pierrepont and Clinton Streets, Brooklyn, between Brooklyn Bridge and Borough Hall. Open daily, except Sundays, from 8.30 a. m. to 6 p. m. Reference library of 70,000 6 HUDSON-FULTON EXHIBITIONS volumes; manuscripts, relics, etc. Autograph receipt of Robert Fulton and original manuscript volume of Banker's and Sluyter's "Journal of a Voyage to New York in 1679-80." Take Subway to Borough Hall, Brooklyn; Third Avenue Elevated Railway to Brooklyn Bridge, connecting with Bridge cars; or surface cars to Bridge. METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, Central Park East. Main entrance on Fifth Avenue at Eighty-second Street. Open daily, except Sundays, from 10.00 a. m. to 6.00 p. m. ; in winter to 5.00 p. m. ; Saturdays to 10.00 p. m. ; Simdays from i.oo to 6.00 p. m. On Mondays and Fridays an admission fee of 25 cents is charged, except to members and copyists. Collections illustrating all departments of Art and Archaeology. Special Exhibition of a magnificent Col- lection of over 130 of the works of Old Dutch Masters, constituting the finest Exhibition of this kind ever made. Products of Colonial Art : Industrial Art, Furniture, Pewter of the 17th and i8th centuries, etc. (Two illustrated cata- logues for sale, one of Dutch Exhibit and one of Colonial Arts; price 10 cents each. Also finely illustrated edition de luxe.) Take Fifth Avenue stages or Madison Avenue surface cars to Eighty-second Street, one block east of Museum; connection with Subway at Forty-second Street, and with Elevated Railway and West Side surface cars at Fifty-ninth Street. NATIONAL ARTS CLUB, Twentieth Street near Irving Place (Gram- ercy Park). This house was formerly the residence of Samuel J. Tilden, and is situated one block east of the birth-place of Ex-President Roosevelt. Open daily from September 20th to about October i8th, 1909, from 9 a. m. to 10 p. m. Special Loan Exhibition by the National Arts Club, in co-operation with the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, imder the management of the New York Zoological Society. Three centuries of New York City: Special Exhibition of Paintings, Photographs, Drawings and other interesting materials, illustrating the growth and progress of New York from the time of Henry Hudson to the present day. (Catalogue for sale.) Take Fourth or Madison Avenue surface cars to corner of Fourth Avenue and Twentieth Street, one block west of Club-house. Subway Station at Eigh- teenth Street and Fourth Avenue, three blocks away. NEW YORK AQUARIUM, in Battery Park. Open daily, including Sun- days, from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. until October 15th. (October i6th to April 14th, from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m.) This building was erected in 1807 by the United States Government as a fort and after the War of 1812 was called Castle Clinton ; later, as Castle Garden, it was the scene of Jenny Lind's triumphs, and from 1855 to 1890 it was the portal of the New World for 7,690,606 immigrants. This is the largest aquarium in the world and contains a greater number of specimens and IIUDSON-FULTON EXHIBITIONS 7 Species than any other. All tanks containing fish indigenous to the Hudson River will be so marked. Take Elevated Railway to Battery Place Station, or Subway to Bowling Green Station ; also reached by all surface cars which go to South Ferry. NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN, Bronx Park. Museums open daily, including Sundays from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. ; Conservatories from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. , Grounds always open. In the Grounds and Conservatories exhibits of Plants, Shrubs, Trees, and Natural Woodland; in the Museums, Plant Products utilized in the Arts, Sciences and Industries. All plants growing on Manhattan Island and Hudson River Valley at the time of Hudson's arrival are marked with the letter "H." (Special illustrated catalogue for sale.) Take Third Avenue Elevated Railway to Bronx Park (Botanical Garden). Subway passengers change at 149th Street; also reached by Harlem Division of the New York Central Railroad from Grand Central Station, Fourth Avenue and Forty-second Street. NEW YORK GENEALOGICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY, 226 West Fifty-eighth Street, between Broadway and Seventh Avenue. Open daily, except Sundays, from 10.00 a. m. to 5.00 p. m., until November ist. Special Exhibition of old Deeds, Manuscripts, Books, Portraits, etc., relating to the history of the United States up to and including the War of 1812. (Catalogue for sale.) Take Broadway surface cars to corner of Fifty-eighth Street. Subway sta- tion at Columbus Circle (Fifty-ninth Street), two blocks distant; Sixth Avenue Elevated station at Ninth Avenue and Fifty-ninth Street, three blocks away. NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY, corner of Seventy-seventh Street and Central Park West. September 25th to October 30th, open daily from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Robert Fulton Exhibition, of the New York Historical Society, in co-operation with the Colonial Dames of America. (Catalogue for sale.) Take Sixth Avenue Elevated Railway to Eighty-first Street and Columbus Avenue, or surface cars traversing Central Park West; also reached by any Columbus Avenue surface car to Seventy-seventh Street. NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, Lenox Branch, Fifth Avenue and Seventy-second Street. Open daily, except Sundays, from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Special Exhibition of Prints, Books, Manuscripts, etc., relating to Henry Hudson, the Hudson River, Robert Fulton, and Steam Navigation. (Special illustrated catalogue for sale; price 10 cents.) Take Fifth Avenue Stages, or Madison Avenue surface cars to Seventy- second Street, one block east of Library; connection with Subway at Grand Central Station and with Elevated Railway and West Side surface cars at Fifty- ninth Street. 8 HUDSON-FULTON EXHIBITIONS NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL PARK, under the management of the New York Zoological Society, in Bronx Park. Open daily, including Sundays, from 9 a. m. until an hour before sunset (November i to May i from lo a. m.). Free, except on Mondays and Thursdays, when an admission fee of 25 cents is charged. Exhibition of a splendid collection of Animals, Birds and Reptiles. The fauna of Henry Hudson's time on Manhattan Island and Hudson River Valley will be indicated by the flag of the Hudson-Fulton Celebration. (Special illus- trated catalogue describing same for sale.) Take Subway trains marked "Bronx Park Express" to terminus at i8oth Street, or Third Avenue Elevated to Fordham Station. The entrances are reached by numerous surface cars. REFORMED DUTCH CHURCH. The Reformed Protestant Dutch Church of the City of New York will make an exhibit in the chapel of the Church of St. Nicholas, Fifth Avenue and 48th Street, during the week of the celebration, 9 to 5 daily. This church was organized A. D. 1628, and the exhibit will comprise articles connected with its long history. VAN CORTLANDT HOUSE MUSEUM, in Van Cortlandt Park. This fine colonial mansion, built in 1748, with furniture of period, is one of the oldest houses within the area of Greater New York ; it is in the custody of the Colonial Dames of the State of New York. Open daily, 9.00 a. m. to" 5.00 p. m. Special Exhibition of Mezzotint Portraits of men prominent in political life prior to the Revolution; Wedgwood's Medallion Portraits of Illustrious Personages; Cartoons and Caricatures of political events, etc. (Special illustrated cata- logue on sale.) Take New York Central Railroad from Grand Central Station; Sixth Ave- nue Elevated Railway, connecting at iSSth Street with the Putnam Division of the New York Central Railroad ; or Subway trains marked Van Cortlandt Park; WASHINGTON'S HEADQUARTERS (The Jumel Mansion), Roger Morris Park, Edgecombe Avenue and One Himdred and Sixty-second Street. Built about 1760. Under the Department of Parks. Exhibition by the ladies of the Washington Headquarters Association, Daughters of the American Revo- lution. Open free daily, including Sundays, from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Special features: Collection of Colonial furnishings, objects and pictures; also the Bolton Collection of War Relics of the Revolution. Take Amsterdam Avenue surface cars; Sixth Avenue Elevated Railway to One Hundred and Fifty-fifth Street, or Broadway Subway to One Hundred and Fifty-seventh Street. LIST OF WORKS IN THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, THE HUDSON RIVER, ROBERT FULTON, EARLY STEAM NAVIGATION, ETC. A selection from the material here noted was exhibited at the Lenox branch in connection with the Hudson-Fulton celebration, September, iQOg. The order of arrangement is (i) Books, (2) Prints, (3) Maps. The arrangement of the individual groups is set forth in detail at the beginning of each. BOOKS. Order of Arrangement: Henry Hudson. The Hudson River. History of Hudson River counties in New York AND New J ERSEY. History of Hudson River cities and towns in New York and New Jersey. Robert Fulton. Robert R. Livingston. John Fitch. James Rumsey. History of Steam Boats and Steam Navigation. Henry Hudson". Asher (George Michael). Henry Hudson the navigator; the original documents in which his career is recorded, collected, translated and anno- tated with an introduction. (Hakluyt Soc. Pub., V. 27. London, iSsg. 8°.) Henry Hudson, the navigator. . . 4, (6) ccxviii, (2) 292 p., 2 maps. London: Hakluyt Sa- tiety, i860. 8°. Sketch of Henry Hudson, the navigator. Brooklyn, 1867. 23 p. 8° Bacon (Edgar Mayhew). Henry Hudson: his times and his voyages. New York: G. P. Put- nam's Sons, 1907. xii, i 1., 277 p., 2 maps. 13 pi., 7 ports. 12°. (American Men of Energy.) Bardsen (Ivar). See De Costa (B. F.) Brooklyn Public Library. List of Books and Magazine Articles on Henry Hudson and the Hud- son River, Robert Fulton and Early Steam Navi- gation in the Brooklyn Public Library. Brooklyn, 1909. 12 p. 12°. Life of Henry Hud- American Biography, Vol. 10, pp. 185-261. Hudson's voyage to W. Clowes &' Cleveland (Henry R.) son. (In: The Library of conducted by Jared Sparks. Boston, 1838. 12°. ) Conway (&> W. M.) Spitsbergen in 1607. [London: Sons, 1900?] ip.l., 10 p. 8°. Repr.: " The Geographical Journal," Feb. igoo. De Costa (Rev. Benjamin Franklin). Sailing directions of Henry Hudson, prepared for his use in 1608, from the old Danish of Ivar Bardsen. With an introduction and notes: also a dissertation on the discovery of the Hudson River. Albany: J. Munsell, 1869. vi, i 1., 9-102 p. 8°. Dinse (Paul). Die Anfange der Nordpolar- forschung und die Eismeerfahrten Henry Hudsons. Berlin: E. S. Mittler, Kjoi. 28 p. 8° (Meeres- Kunde. Jahrg. 2, Heft. 2.) Hall (Edward Hagaman). Hudson and Ful- ton. A brief history of Henry Hudson and Rob- ert Fulton with suggestions designed to aid the holding of general commemorative exercises and children's festivals during the Hudson-Fulton cele- bration in 1909. New York: Hudson-Pulton cele- bration commission [1909]. 8°. Bibliography. Hawks (F. L.) The adventures of Henry Hudson. By the author of " Uncle Philip's con- versations;" [i. e., F. L. Hawks]. New York: D. Appleton &= Co., 1852. 161 p. 16°. Horner (Harlan Hoyt). Hudson-Fulton cele- bration, September 25 to October 9, 1909. Albany: N. Y. State Education Department, 1909. 64 p., I map. illus. 8°. Bibliography. Hudson (Henry). Descriptio ac delineatio Geographica Detectionis Freti, sive, Transitvs ad Occasum, supra terras Americanas . . . Recens in- vestigati ab M. Henrico Hudsono Anglo. Item, Narratio . . . Avstrialise Incognitse . . . recens de- tecto, Per . . . F . . . de Quir. Vna cum descriptione Terras Samoiedarvm & Tingoesiorvm. . .[tr. fr. I. Massa by R. Vitellius] [Edited by Hessel Ger- ritszoon.] Amsterodami: Hesselij Gerardi, 1612. 23 1., 3 maps. 4°. Descriptio ac delineatio Geographica De- tectionis Freti, sive, Transitus ad Occasum, supri terras Americanas... Recens investigati ab M. Henrico Hudsono Anglo. Item, Narratio ... Avs- trialise incognitse . . . Per... P... F... de Quir. Vni cum descriptione Terrs Samoiedarvm & lO WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Henry Hudson, confd. Tingoesiorvm. . .[by I. Massa, tr. by R. Vitellius.] [Ed. by Hessel Gerritsz.] Amsierodami : H. Ge- rardi, 1612. 3 1., 3 maps, 21 1. 4°. Descriptio ac delineatio Geographica de- tectionis freti, Sive, Transitus ad Occasum supra terras Americanas . . . Recens investigati ab M. Henrico Hudsono Anglo. Item, Exegesis Regi Hispanise facta, super . . . Australis Incognita. Cum descriptione Terrarum Samoiedarum & Tin- goesiorum.. [Ed. by H. Gerritszoon.] Amstero- dami: Hesselij Gerardi, 1613. 25 1., 4 maps, i pi. 4°- Descriptio ac delineatio Geographica de- tectionis freti, Sive, Transitus ad Occasum supra terras Americanas . . . Recens investigati ab M. Henrico Hudsono Anglo. Item, Exegesis Regi Hispanise facta. Super . . . Australis Incognita. Cum descriptione Terrarum Samoiedarum & Tin- goesiorum. . . [Ed. by H. Gerritszoon.] Anistero- dami: Hesselij Gerardi, 1613. 25 1., 5 maps, i pi. 4°. Arctic (The) north-east and west passage. Detectio Freti Hudsoni or Hessel Gerritsz's collec- tion of tracts by himself, Massa and De Quir on the N. E. and W. Passage, Siberia and Australia. Reproduced, with the maps, in Photolithography in Dutch and Latin after the editions of 1612 and 1613. Augmented with a new English translation by Fred. John Millard... and an essay on the origin. . .of this collection by S. Muller. . . Amster- dam: F. Muller &• Co., 1878. 2 p.l., xxvii p. A-E4, A-C2 in 4s., 47 p., 3 maps. 4°. Diuers voyages and Notherne Discoueries of that worthy irrecouerable Discouerer Master Henry Hudson. . . [1607-1610, voyages towards the North Pole, to Nova Zembla, Hudson River, and for the discovery of the North West Passage] ended with his end. being treacherously exposed by some of the Companie. Reprint from Purchas his Pil- grimes. Lend. Fol. 1625, pp. 567-610. (In: N. Y. Hist. Soc, Collections, i. series, vol. i, 1811, pp. 61-188.) The third voyage of Master Henrie Hud- son toward Xoua Zembla, and at his returne, his passing from Farre Islands, to New-found Land, and along to fortie foure degrees and ten minutes, and thence to Cape Cod, and so to thirtie three de- grees; and along the Coast to the Northward, to fortie two degrees and an halfe, and up the Riuer neere to fortie three degrees. Written by Robert Ivet of Lince-house. (In: Purchas his Pilgrimes. Z/mdon, 1625. Part 3, Lib. 3, ch. 16. pp. 581- 595. f°.) Hudson sailed from Amsterdam 25 March 1609 (O. S.) and made the £nglish coast on his return 7 Xovember 1609 (N. S.) Extract from the journal of the voyage of the Half Moon, Henry Hudson, master, from the Netherlands to the coast of North-America, in the year i6og. By Robert Juet, mate. (In: New- York Historical Society, Collections, 2 series, vol. I, 1841, pp. 317-332.) The discoverer of the Hudson River, from " The third voyage of Master Henry Hudson, to- ward Nova Zembla. . ." 20 p. (Old South leaf- lets [general ser.] no. 94. Boston, 1898.) The discovery of the Hudson River by Master Henry Hudson in i6og and his death in 1611. The second voyage of the Half Moon. The search for the north-west passage. Netv York, 1907. 12 1. 8°. Repr.: v. 3, bk. 3, of Purchas' Pilgrimes, For a dinner of the Half Moon Dining Club at the Univ. Club, N. Y. City, 7 Feb. 1907. Voyage in i6og. Extract from "Verhael van de eerste Schip-vaert der HoUandsche ende Zeensche Schepen door't Way-Gat by Noorden, Noorwegen, Moscovien, ende Tartarien om, na de Coninckrycken Cathay ende China: &c. &c. : 't Amsterdam, voor Joost Hartgers, &c. 1643, in 4°." Transmitted to the N. Y. Historical Society, by Dr. M. F. A. Campbell... Translated by J. Romeyn Brodhead. (In: New- York Historical Society, Collections, 2. series. Vol. 2, p. 367-370. New York, 1849. 8°.) Hudson-Fulton Celebration Commission. Minutes. [Nos.] 28-29, 449. 477, 687, 721, 743, 769. (Apr. 22, May 6-27), Sept. 18, 23, Oct. 14- 28, Dec. 23, 1908; Jan. 7, Jan. 27, Feb. 3, 1909. New York, 1908-1909. 8°- Janvier (Thomas A. ) Henry Hudson : a brief statement of his aims and his achievements. To- which is added a newly discovered partial record, now first published, of the trial of the mutineers by whom he and others were abandoned to their death. New York: Harper and Bros., 1909. xiii, I 1., 147 (i) p., 4 facsim., 6 pi. 12°. Johnson (George). The Great Seamen of the North. Henry Hudson. (In: The Canadian Magazine, Vol. 18, 1902, pages 514-22. Toronto, 1902.) Juet (Robert). Journal. See above Hudson (Henry). Leupe (Pieter-Arend). Henry Hudson in Hol- land. 1608-1609. [Review in Dutch of work with this title by H. C. Murphy, n. t.-p. [5' Graven- hage, 1859.] 3 p. 4°. Miller (Samuel). A discourse, designed to commemorate the discovery of New- York by Henry Hudson; delivered before the New-York Historical Society, Sept. 4, 1809; being the completion of the second century since that event. (In: New- York Historical Society Collections, i. series, vol. I, pp. 17-45. New York, t8ll.) Morris (Gouverneur). An inaugural discourse delivered before the New-York Historical Society 4th September, 1816; the 206th anniversary of the discovery of New- York by Hudson. New York: T. &• W. Mercein, 18 16. 24 p. 8°. Murphy (H. C.) Henry Hudson in Holland, an inquiry into the origin and objects of the voy- age which led to the discovery of the Hudson river. With biographical notes. 72 p., i port. The Hague: Brothers Giunta d^ Albani, 1859. 8°. [Repr. with notes and tr. by Wouter Nihoff.] The Hague: M. Nijhoff, 1909. 8°. Ne'w York (State). Governor. Message to the Legislature concerning celebration of the 300th anniversary of the discovery of Hudson River by Hendrick Hudson in 1609 and of the centennial anniversary of the first use of steam in the naviga- tion of the Hudson River by Robert Fulton in 1807. Albany, Feb. 19, 1906. Albany, 1906. 2 f. f°. Typewritten copy. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. II Henry Hudson, confd. Read (John Meredith), jr. A historical in- quiry concerning Henry Hudson, his friends, rela- tives and early life. . .connection with the Mus- covy Company and discovery of Delaware Bay. vi, I 1., 5-209 p., 1 pi. Albany: J. Munsell, 1866. 4°. Delivered before the Hist. Soc. of Delaware, on its first anniversary. Willis (Nathaniel Parker). Romance of travel, comprising tales of five lands, by the author of, Pencilings by the way [i. e. Nathaniel Parker Willis]. New York: S. Colman. 1840. g-300 p. Contains: Oonder-Hoofden: A tale of the voyage of Hen- drick Hudson. Wilson (James Grant). Henry Hudson's voy- age and its results in trade and colonization. (In: Memorial History of the City of New York. . . Edited by J. G. Wilson. Vol. i. New York, 1892. pp. 108-151. 4°.) The discovery of the Hudson River. (Amer. Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, nth Annual report, p. 143-171. igo6.) The Hudson River. For material on discovery of the Hudson River, see the group above relating to Henry Hudson. Abert (John James). Report in favor of the improvement of the navigation of the Hudson River. Albany, 1846. 8°. Bacon (Edgar Mayhew). The Hudson River from ocean to source; historical, legendary, pic- turesque. With 100 illustrations, and with sec tional map of the Hudson River. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1902. xii, i 1., 590 p., 1 pi. 4°. (American Waterways.) Benignus (W. H. H.) Klange vom Hudson. [New York: " N. Y. &= Albany Hudson Riv. Day Line," cop. 1900.] 2 p.l.. 7-92 p., i 1. 12°. Verses. Bruce (Wallace). The Hudson. Illustrated by A. Fredericks, with photo-engravings. New York: Bryant Literary Union, co^. 1894. 4 p.l., 11-311 p., 3 1., 7 maps. 12°. The Hudson River and routes from New York to the White and Green Mountains, Montreal, Lake George, Saratoga, Newport and Niagara Falls. By Thursty McQuill [pseud, of W. Bruce]. New York, 1872. 78, 62 p. i6°. The Hudson river by daylight. New York to Albany, Saratoga Springs, Lake George, Lake Champlain, Plattsburg, the Adirondacks, Montreal, the Thousand Islands, Niagara Falls, Watkins' Glen, Richfield Springs, Cooperstown, Sharon, Howe's Cave, the Green Mountains, Manchester, Middletown and Lebanon Springs. . . 169 p., i map, ill. NewYork: G. Watson, qo^. 1873. 16°. New York: Amer. News Co., 1875. 2 p.l., 7-172 p., I map. 16° CoUes (C.) A survey of the roads of the United States of America. [New-York"] 1789, 86 [i. e.] pi. sm. 4°. Plates 34-30 are lacking. Two pi. are numbered 45, and two 46. On the inside of the cover is pasted a copy of CoUes' prospectus and advertisement of the work. Cooper (Susan Fenimore). The Hudson river and its early names. [Signed Susan Fenimore Cooper. New York ?: A . S. Barnes &' Co., 1 880 ?] 401-4 8 p., I map. 8°. Extr.: Magazine of American history, vol. iv, June, 1880. no. 6. Drake (Joseph Rodman). The culprit fay, and other poems. New York: G. Dearborn, 1836. I p.l, 92 p., I port. 8°. Biting (Irving). Dutch village communities on the Hudson River. Baltimore: J. Hopkins Press, 1886. 68 p. 8° (Johns Hopkins University Studies, 4. Series, no. i.) Hall (Edward Hagaman). The Palisades of the Hudson river. The Story of their Origin, Attempted Destruction, and Rescue. (American scenic and historic preservation society, nth an- nual report, pp. lgi-212. Albany, 1906. 8°.) Hine (Charles G.) Hine's annual, 1906. The west bank of the Hudson River, Albany to Tappan. Notes on its history and legends, its ghost stories and romances. Gathered by a wayfaring man who may now and then have erred therein. [New York: the Author, cop. 1907.] 2 p.l., iii, 174 p. 8°.) No. 48 of 52 copies privately printed. The New York and Albany post road. From Kings Bridge to " The Ferry at Crawlier, over against Albany," being an account of a jaunt on foot made at sundry convenient times between May and November, nineteen hundred and five. NewYork: the Author, 1905. 2 p.l., vi, 109 p. illus. 12°. Hudson (The) Highlands. New York: H. Cranston, 1883. I p.l., 32 p., I pi. 8°. Hudson (The) illustrated with pen and pencil; comprising sketches, local and legendary, of its several places of interest together with the route to Niagara Falls; forming a companion for the pleasure tourist. NewYork: J. W. Strong, 1852. 32 p. 4°. . — - Same. 1855. Hudson River (A) bridge for New York City. [By W. P. Rodgers. n.t.-f. 1886?] p.m. nar. 4°. Hudson (The) river, by pen and pencil. New York: D. Appleton and Co. [1875] ii, 52, xiv p. 4°. Hudson River Day Line. The most charming inland water trip on the American continent. [New York: Press of R.L.Siillson Co., cop. 1903.] 40 p., 2 1. illus. Ob. 8°. The evolution of a hundred years. [New York: the R. L. Stillson Co., cop. 1907.] 42 p., 2 1., I pi. illus. ob. 8°. Summer excursion routes, and Catskill mountain resorts, 1907. With supplementary lists of the resorts on the lines of the Poughkeepsie & Eastern Railway. [NiwYork,\^oi.'\ 194 p. nar. 12°. An historical souvenir, presented by the Hudson River Day Line, New York, on Robert Fulton day, August 17th, 1907, to commemorate the centennial of Fulton's "Clermont," the first successful steamboat in the world, which started up the Hudson at i p. m., August 17th, 1807. n. t.-p. [New York, igoT ?] 11 (i) p., I pi., illus. 4°. 12 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Hudson River, confd. Hudson (The) River guide; containing a de- scription of all the landings and principal places on the Hudson River, as far as navigable; stage, canal, and railroad routes. I 1., pp. 227-240, map. »./. [18— ] 32°. n. t.-p. »./. [188-] 28 p. 16°. Hudson River Railroad Co. Hudson River and the H. R. R.R. with a complete map and wood cut views of the principal objects of interest upon the line. NewYork: Wm. C. Locke &• Co., 1851. 50 p., I map. 8°. Summer routes to Lake Champlain and the Adirondacks. Plattsburgh: J. W. Tuttle [186-?]. 36 p., I map. i6°. Hudson River railway route. New York, Albany, Troy, Saratoga. NewYork: TaintorBros., n. d. V. p. 16°. (Taintor's route and city guides, no. 4.) New York to Albany, Saratoga Springs, Lake George, Lake Champlain, Adirondack Moun- tains, and Montreal, with descriptive sketches of. . . objects of interest along the route. NewYork: Taintor Bros.\i%ti)\ v. p., i map. 16°. (Taintor's route and city guides.) Hunt (Freeman). Letters about the Hudson River, and its vicinity; written in 1835 and 1836; by A citizen of New York [pseud, of Freeman Hunt]. NewYork: F.Hunt &■ Co., 1836. 209 p. 16°. [Same.] 3rd ed., with additions and en- gravings. New York, li^il ■ 252 p., 3 maps. 16°. IngersoU (Ernest). Rand, McNally & Go's illustrated guide to the Hudson River and Gatskill Mountains. Chicago: Rand, McN'ally &» Co., 1898. 245 p., 6 maps, 19 pi. 6. ed. 16°. Chicago: Rand, McNally &" Co., igoi. I 1., 5-246 (3) p., 7 maps, 17 pi. 12° Chicago: Rand, McNally &' Co., 1903. 245 p., 6 maps, 21 pi. II. ed. 12°. [Irving (Washington).] A book of the Hud- son. Collected from the . . . works of Diedrich Knickerbocker. Ed. by Geoffrey Crayon. New York: G. P. Putnam, 1849. i P-'-. "". 9-283 p., 3 pi. 16°. NewYork: G. P. Putnam, 1849. viii, 11-215 p. 16°. The Kaaterskill region. Rip Van Winkle and Sleepy Hollow, n. p.: Kaaterskill Pub. Co., 1887. 20, 16 p., I pi. ob. i6°. Rip Van Winkle ; a posthumous writing of Diedrich Knickerbocker. Illustrated. . .by F. Dar- ley. London: J, Cundall, 1850. 31 p., 6 pi. 8°. Loose leaves. James (Henry). New York and the Hudson: a spring impression. (North Amer. Rev. v. i S i , pp. 801-833. NewYork, 1905.) (Fortnightly Rev. v. 84 (n. s. v. 78), pp. 976-1004. London, 1905.) Johnson (Clifton). The picturesque Hudson. New York: Macmillan Co., 1909. 6 p.l., 227 p, pi. 12°. (Picturesque river series.) Eemp (J. F.) Buried channels beneath the Hudson and its tributaries. (Amer. Jour. Sci. New Haven, 1908. 8°. ser. 4, v. 26 (v. 176), pp. 301-323.) Knapp (S. L.) The picturesque beauties of the Hudson River and its vicinity, illustrated in a series of views from original drawings, taken ex- pressly for this work and engraved on steel by dis- tinguished artists, with historical and descriptive illustrations by K. 2 pts. 28 p., 7 pi. New York: J. Disturnell, 1835. sq. f°. No more published. Legends and poetry of the Hudson. New York: P. S. Wynkoop &■ Son, 1868. I 1., v-vii, g-87, V p. 16°. Link (William F.) The Hudson by daylight. Map showing the prominent residences, historic landmarks. ..&c., with descriptive pages... New York: IV. F. Link, cop. 1878. 16 1., imap. 16°. New York: Bryant Literary Union [187-]. 16 p., I map. 24°. New York: W. P. Link [1880]. 16 1., I map, 9 ft. X s% inches. 24°. Lossing (Benson James). The Hudson, from the wilderness to the sea. Illustrated . . . from drawings by the author. New York: Virtue &= For j-/(j« [cop. 1866]. vii (i), 464 p., I pi., ill. 8°. New York: Virtue 6= Yorston [1866]. vii, 464 p. [extra ill., 80 pi. inserted.] 8°. Xjyman (Seymour). Santa-Glaus' summer holiday. [Illustrated by J. H. Boston.] New York: Lyman 6" Curtiss, cop. 1882. 6 p., 5 pi. sq. 4. McQuill (Thursty). See Bruce (Wallace). Bleans (Edgar A.) A list of the birds of Hudson Highlands. Salem, 1878-81. 113 p. 8°. Milbert (Jacques Gerard). Itineraire pitto- resque du fleuve Hudson et des parties laterales de I'Amerique dn nord. . . Paris: H. Gaugain &• Cie., 1828-29. 2 V. & atlas. f° miller (James). Miller's new guide to the Hudson River. Illustrated by Thomas Addison Richards. New York: J. Miller, 1866. 131 p., 21 pi. 24°. Ne-dj York: J. Miller, 1882. 131 p., 1 8 pi. 16°. Miller (Samuel). A discourse designed to com- memorate the discovery of New- York by Henry Hudson; delivered before the New- York Historical Society, September 4, 1809. NewYork: I. Riley, 1810. 28 p. 8°. Munsell (Joel). The Hudson river overslagh, and Coeyman's bouwery. 8 p., ill. n, p. {1875] 8°. Reprinted from Albany Evening Times. 1875. Munsell's guide to the Hudson river by railroad and steamboat . . . from Staten Island to Troy... Albany: Munsell &' Rowland, \%^(j. 58 p., 8 maps, I tab. 24'. Ne^ York as it is, in 1835; containing. . .de- scription of the city and environs. . .and other. . . information . . . Also, the Hudson river guide .. . Third year of publication. iV>w York: J. Distur- nell, 1835. 240 p., 2 maps, I pi. 24°. New York central & Hudson river railroad. The Hudson river map via the New York central and Hudson river R. R. What the traveler wishes to see and know . . . New York: Bryant literary un. [18 — ?] 8 1., I map. sq. 24°. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 13 Hudson River, confd. Ne^w York News Letter. The Hudson River: Part one. — The Palisades. November-December, 1900. [New York] Igoo. 31 (i) p, 8°. The Hudson River: Part Two. — The Highlands. January-February, igoi. [A^ewyork] 1901. 32 p. 8°. Nevir York State Library. Van Rensselaer Bowler manuscripts. Being letters of Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, 1630-1643, and other documents relat- ing to the colony of Rensselaerswyck. Translated and edited by A. J. F. van Laer, archivist. With an introductory essay by Nicolaas de Roever, late archivist of the city of Amsterdam, translated by Mrs. Alan H. Strong, Albany: University of the State of NewYork, 1908. 909 p., I map. 8°. (New York State. — Education Dept.) Phelps (Humphrey). The traveller's steam- boat and railroad guide to the Hudson River de- scribing the cities, towns, and places of interest along the route, with maps and engravings. [By Humphrey Phelps.] New York: G. Watson [cop. 1857.] 50 p., I map. 8°. Steamboat and railroad guide to the Hud- son River. . . New York, 1866. il. map. 8°. Rafter (George W.) The economics of the Hudson River: lecture before the engineering classes of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, at Troy, Feb. 24, 1897. \^Troy? 1897?] 20 p. 8°. Title trom cover. Repr.: The Polytechnic, Apr. 24, 1897. Upper Hudson storage surveys. Report. . . Albany: Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co., 1896. I p.l., 89-195 p., 4 charts, 5 maps, 7 tab. 8°. (N. Y. S. Engineer & Surveyor.) Same, 2nd rept. 1897. Extr.: N. Y. S. E. &. S., annual report. 1895-96. Redfield (William Charles). Some account of two visits to the mountains in Essex county, N. Y.. .1836-7; with a sketch of the northern sources of the Hudson. 23 p., ill. n. p. ; n. d. 8°. Reprinted from American Journal of Science and Arts. No. 2. Vol. xxxiii. River Hudson together with descriptions and illustrations of the City of New York, Catskill Mountains, Lake George, Lake Champlain, Sara- toga. Nev) York: Alex. Harthill fir" Co. [n. d.] 63 p., I 1. 8°. Ruttenber (Edward Manning). Obstructions to the navigation of Hudson's river; embracing the minutes of the secret committee appointed by the Provincial convention of N. Y., July 16, 1776, and other original documents... Albany, N. Y.: J. Munsell, i860. I p.l., v, I 1., 210 p., map. sq. 8°. (Munsell's Hist, ser., no. 5.) Another copy — large paper. History of the Indian tribes of Hudson's river; their origin, manners and customs, tribal. . . organizations. . .etc., etc. v, 6-415 p., 5 port. Albany, N. Y.: J. Munsell. 1872. 8°. V, 6-415 p. Albany, N.^ Y.: J. Munsell, 1872. 8°. Footprints of the red men. Indian geo- graphical names in the valley of Hudson's River. The valley of the Mohawk, and on the Delaware: their location and the probable meaning of some of them. Albany: N. Y. State Hist. Ass'n., igo6. 241 p., I 1., 2 charts, 3 maps, 11 pi. 8°. Schoolcraft (Henry Rowe). Report of the aboriginal names and geographical terminology of the State of New York. Part I.— Valley of the Hudson. Made to the New York Historical So- ciety — by the committee. . .and read at the... meeting. ..Feb., 1844. New York: the Society, 1845. 43 p. 8°. Also in N. Y. Hist. Soc, Proceedings, 1844, pp. 77-115. Shelton (F. W.) Up the river. New York: C. Scribner, 1853. i p.l., xxii, 335 p. 12°. Sketches of the North River. New York: W. H. Colyer, 1838. 119 p., I map. 16°. Skinner (C. M.) Myths and legends of our own land. Philadelphia, 1896. 8°. "The Hudson and its hills, "v. i, pp. 17-106; " The Isle of Manhattoes and nearby," v. i, pp. 107-181. Slingsby. Incidents on the Hudson. (New Monthly Maga. and Lit. Jour. London, 1834. 8°. V. 41 (1834, pt. 2), pp. 465-470.) Smith (Richard). A tour of four great rivers, the Hudson, Mohawk, Susquehanna and Delaware in 1769. Being the journal of Richard Smith of Burlington, New Jersey. Edited, with a short History of the pioneer settlements, by Francis W. Halsey. New York: Charles Scribner' s Sons, 1906. Ixxiii, 102 p., 3 maps, 13 pi., 3 port. 4°. Sons of the American Revolution. Empire State Society. Souvenir of the historical pilgrim- age from New York City to Washington's head- quarters at Newburgh and to West Point. . .June 15,1896. [NewYork: The Republic Press, \'&at.^ 24 p. 8°. Spencer (J. W.) The submarine great canon of the Hudson River. (Geog. Jour. v. 25, pp. i8o-igo. London, 1905.) Van Loan (Benjamin). Narrative giving a new historic fact never before published. Pietre Van Loan, immigrant of 1581, hunted and fished on the upper waters of the Hudson River eleven years before its discovery by Hendrick Hudson. A posthumous article, written by Benjamin Van Loan, foot-notes from researches, by his cousin, Walton Van Loan. \_New York: Dudley Press, 1908.] 4 1. 8°. Van Vorst (Marie). The Hudson river. (Har- per's Magazine, March, 1905, pp. 543-555. New York, 1905. 8°.) Verplanck (William E.), and M. W. CoL- LYER. The sloops of the Hudson. An historical sketch of the packet and market sloops of the last century, with a record of their names; together with personal reminiscences of certain of the nota- ble North River sailing masters. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1908. xii, i 1., 171 p., 8 p.l., 6 port. 12°. Wade (W.) Panorama of the Hudson river from New York to Albany. New York: J. Dis- turnell, 1847. 38 p., i folded map. 16°. Wilson (H.) Wilson's illustrated guide to the Hudson River. 8. ed. New York: H. Wilson, 1850. 3-61 p., 27 p., I map. 24°. H WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. History of Hudson River Counties. The arrangement is geographical, from South to North. Hudson County, N. J. Historical Society of Hudson County [New Jersey]. Papers read before the. . .Society. . . [no. i]-4. Jersey City, N. J., \t)0?i-oc). 4 pms. 8° No. I. Brett (Cornelius). The Dutch settlements in Hudson County. [1908.] No. 2. Van Winkle (Daniel). The Dutch under English rule. [1908,] No. 3. MacLean (Alexander). The underground railroad in Hudson County. [1008.] No, 4. Van Winkle (Daniel). Hudson county during the Revolution. [1909.] Hudson Co. (N. J.) Health Board. Annual statement, 1877-79, 1881-82, 1884-87, 1889-1891. n.t.-p. 8°. Sanitary code ... adopted May 30, 1874. Hoboken, 1874. 36 p. 32°. A revision of the sanitary code of the board of health and vital statistics. . .approved June 6,1888. Jersey (7zVj/,i888. 70 p., (i) 13 p. 8°- Monthly statement of vital statistics , 1888-1904. n. t.-p. 8°. Imperfect file. Park Commission. Annual report, i (1903/8). S^Jersey Cify] 1908. 8°. Financial report, 1903/8. [Jersey City] 1908. 8°. Reports of the commissioners and engi- neer on the proposed county avenues in Hudson Co... maps and proposed act. Jersey City, 1869. 48 p., I map. 8°. Report of receipts and disbursements. 1849/50, 1869/70, 1872/3, 1875/6-1876/7, 1880/1, 1882/3, 1907/8. Jersey City, 1 850-1909. 8°. Superintendent of Schools. Directory of public schools for Hudson County, 1878. Jersey City, 1878. 8°. Shatr (William H.) History of Essex and Hudson counties, New Jersey. Compiled by W. H. Shaw. Illustrated. Philadelphia: Everts &' Peck , 1884. 2 v., maps, pi., portr. 4°. Winfield (C. H.) History of the land titles in Hudson county, N. J., 1609-1871... 2 v. xi, 443 p.. 3 maps; i fac-sim., 4 maps. New York: Wynkoop &" Uallenbeck, printers, 1872. 4° History of the county of Hudson, New Jersey, from its earliest settlement to the present time, vii (i), 568 p., 8 pi., 4 port. ill. New York: Kennard &" Hay, printers, 1874. 8°. Bergen County, N. J. Bergen County (N. J.) Annual report on the finances, 1881/2. Hackensack, 1882. 8°. Bergen County Historical Society. Papers and proceedings no. i. (1902-1905.) [Hacken- sack, N.J.] 1905. 8°. Clayton (W. Woodford). History of Bergen and Passaic Counties, New Jersey, with biographi- cal sketches of many of its pioneers and prominent men. Compiled under the supervision of W. W. Clayton, assisted by W. Nelson. Illustrated. Philadelphia: Everts &' Peck, 1882. i-io, 13- 577 p., 3 maps, 20 pi., 142 port. 4°. Harvey (C. B.) Genealogical history of Hud- son and Bergen counties, New Jersey. Edited by C. B. Harvey. New York: N.J. Geneal. Puk Co., 1900. 2 p.l., 617 p., 5 I.. I ™ap, 6 port. 4°. Linn (William Alexander). Baron Steubeti's estate at New Bridge, Bergen County, N. J. With some account of his European experience, and his services to the American Army. Read before the Bergen County Historical Society, February 22, 1904. [Hackensack?] Hackensack Republican Print, 1904. 8 p. 8°. Van Valen (J. M.) History of Bergen county. New Jersey. New York: New Jersey Pub. <5r" Engr. Co., igoo. 691 p., 4 pi., 45 ports. 4°. Van Winkle (Daniel). Old Bergen; history and reminiscences. . . Jersey City: J. W. Harrison [cop. 1902J. ix, 2 1., 319 p. 8°. Westchester County, N. Y. Biographical history of Westchester county, New York Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Com- pany, i8gg. 2 V. 4°. Bolton (Robert), jr. A history of the county of Westchester, from its first settlement to the present time. . . New York: A. S. Gould, printer, 1848. 2 V. xxxii, 559 p., 12 charts, I map, 2 pi., 1 port.; I 1., 582 p., 9 charts, 2 pi. 8°. The history of the several towns, manors, and patents of the county of Westchester, from its first settlement to the present time. Edited by C. W. Bolton. New York: C. F. Roper, 1881. 2 vol. pi., tables, maps, ill. 8°. Da'n'son (Henry Barton). Rambles in West- chester county. New York. A fragment. Yonkers, N. Y., 1866. I p.l., 43 p. 4°. (In: The Gazette series... Yonkers, 1866. v. 4.) Westchester- county. New York, during the American Revolution. Morrisania, New York city, 1886. vi (2), 281 p., I port., 2 maps. 4°. De Iiancey (Edward Floyd). Origin and "his- tory of manors in the province of New York and in the county of Westchester. New York, 18S6. 3 1., 31-160 f., 4 maps, I port. 4°. Hamilton (J. C. L.) Poverty and patriotism of the neutral grounds. A paper read before the Westchester County Historical Society, upon the one hundred and twenty-third anniversary of the battle of White Plains, by J. C. L. Hamilton, October the twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine. Elmsford, N. Y., 1900. 39 p., i pi., I port. 4°. Hoyt (William H.) and Co. To capitalists, in- vestors, manufacturers, and all persons desiring homes in the country and suburbs of New York. A brief historical and topographical description of that portion of Westchester and Putnam counties immediately contiguous to the N. Y. City & North- ern Railroad. New York: IV. H. Hoyt &• Co. [cop. 1882.] I p.l., 1-38, 43-44 p., I 1. 12°. Little visits to historical points in Westchester County [N. Y. Monthly.] v. i, nos. 1-6. (Jan.- June, ig02) Mamaroneck, N. Y., 1902. 12°. No more published. Pelletreau (William Smith). Early wills of Westchester County, New York. .. 1664 to 1784. .. also the genealogy of " The Havilands" of West- WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 15 Westchester County, cont'd. Chester County and descendants o£ Hon. James Graham (Watkinson and Ackerley families) . . . New York: F. P. Harper, 1898. xii, 488 p., t port, sq. 8°. Scharf (John Thomas). History of West- chester county, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York city. Philadelphia: L. E. Preston 6" Co., 1886. 2 v. pi., port., maps., ill. 4°. Sherman (Arthur Outram). Westchester county and the town of Rye. An address. ..delivered be- fore the Woman's Club of Port Chester, N. Y., February 8, 1909. \_Rye, New York: the West- chester Press, \^oq^ 32 p. 8°. Shonnard (F.), and W. W. Spooner. His- tory of Westchester County, New York; from its earliest settlement to the year igoo. New York: The New York History Co., 1900. vi, 638 p., I fac-sim., i map, 2 pi., 5 port. 4°. Spooner (W. W.) See Shonnard (F.), and W. W. Spooner. Waldron (W. W.) Huguenots of Westches- ter and Parish of Fordham; [with] introduction by. .. Stephen H. Tyng, Jr. New York: W. H. Kelley Ss' Brother, 1864. 126 p. ill. 12°. Westchester County. Proceedings of the board of Supervisors, 1871, 1873, 1877-1882, 1894. New York, [i872-]i895. 8°. Westchester County Historical Society. Con- stitution and by-laws. \_White Plains, \.'i'&\>\ I 1., 8 p. 8°. Rockland County, N. Y. Cole (D.) History of Rockland County, New York, with laiographical sketches of its prominent men. i 1., ii, 3-344, 75 p., map, pi., port. New York: J. B. Beers &= Co., 1884. f°. Green (F. B.) The history of Rockland county. New York: A. S. Barnes &= Co., 1886. vi, 444 p., I map. 4°. Rockland county [N. Y.] distance table. [By R. F. O'Connor.] n. t.-p. [New York, 1854.] 20 p. 8°. Annual report of the board of supervisors, 1877-1882. v.p., 1878-1883. 8°. Putnam County, N. Y. Blake (W. J.) The history of Putnam county, N. Y. ; with an enumeration of its towns, villages, rivers, creeks, lakes, ponds, mountains, hills and geological features; local traditions; and short bio- graphical sketches of early settlers, etc. New York: Baker &• Scribner, 1849. iv, 13-368 p. 12°. Hoyt (Wm. H.) Son, print- ers, 1875. 8°. Ruttenber (E. M.), and others. History of Orange county. New York, with ... biographical sketches. . . xii, 9-820 p., 2 maps, 4 pi,, 203 port. Philadelphia: Everts Si' Peck, 1881. 4°. Dutchess County, N. Y. Ackert (Alfred T.)' Dutchess County in colo- nial days. \_New York?, 1898?] (8) p. 8°. Read before " The Dutchess Co. Soc. in the City of N. Y.," Feb. 28, 1898. Dutchess County. Paper . . . read before the Dutchess County Society. . .Feb. 24, 1899. [ Tarrytown: Tarrytown Press ■ Record Print, 1899.] . 30 p. 8°. Bailey (H. D. B.) Local tales and historical sketches. 431 p., i port., ill. Fishkill Landing: J. W. Spaight, 1874. 8°. Bayley (Guy Carleton). An historical address delivered before the Dutchess County Medical So- ciety at its centennial meeting, at Vassar Institute, January loth, 1906. With a record of the medical profession of Dutchess County from 1740 to 1906. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. [^Enterprise Print], 1906. 81 (5) p. 8°. Census of the counties of Orange, Dutchess & Albany. 1702, 1714, 1720. [Albany, 1849.] pp. 365-373. 8°. From: O'Callaghan's Doc. Hist, of N. Y. S. Vol. I. Commemorative biographical record of Dutchess County, New'York, containing. ..sketches of prominent and representative citizens, and of many of the early settled families. Illustrated. Chicago: J. H. Beers &• Co., 1897. 2 p.l., 950 p., 14 pi., 176 port. 4°. Dutchess County. Book of the supervisors of Dutchess County, N. Y., A. D. 1718-1722. Pough- keepsie, N. Y.: Vassar Bros'. Inst. [1908] 4 p.l., (1)6-72 p., I 1. 4°. Proceedings of the board of supervisors, 1875,1877-1882. Poughkeepsie [l^^t-'\l?>i3. 8°. 1 6 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Dutchess County, confd. Dutchess County Society in the City of New York. An historical sketch. The charter. The by-laws and list of officers and members af the So- ciety. l^New York: L. F. Eggers, 1904.] 48 p., I 1. 12°. Huntting (Isaac). History of Little Nine Partners of North East Precinct and Pine Plains, New York. Dutchess county. Amenia, N.Y.: C. Walsh &• Co., printers, 1897. 3 p.l., 3-411 p. 4°. Papers relating to Ulster and Dutchess coun- ties. [New York? i.Z—'i] i p.l., 961-996 p. 8°. Smith (James H.) History of Duchess county. New York, with illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pio- neers. Assisted by Hume H. Cale and William E. Roscoe. Syracuse, JV. Y.: D. Mason &• Co., 1882. 562, XXX p., 68 pi., 22 ports. 4°. Smith (P. H.) General history of Duchess County, from 1609 to 1876, inclusive. Pawling, N. Y.: the author, 1877. 507 p., 4 pi., i map. ill. 8°- Ulster County, N. Y. Clearwater (Alphonso Trumpbour). The history of Ulster County, New York. Edited by A. T Clearwater. Kingston, N. Y.: W. J. Van Deuser, 1907. i p.l., (i) 6-712 p., i 1., xii p., 13 pi., 8 port. 8°. Commemorative biographical record of Ul- ster county. New York ... containing biographical sketches of prominent and representative citizens, and of many of the early settled families. Illus- trated. Chicago: J. H. Beers &= Co., 1896. 2 p.l., 1330 p. ports. 4°. Olde Ulster. An historical and genealogical magazine. Vol. 1-5. Edited by Benjamin Myer Brink. Kingston, N. Y.: the editor, 1905-09. 8°. Sylvester (N. B.) History of Ulster county. New York, with. . .biographical sketches. . . i p.l., 5-311. 339 P-> I ™ap> 17 pl-' l°2 port. Phila- delphia: Everts &• Peck, 1880. 4°. Ulster County. Proceedings at the annual session of the board of supervisors, 1877, 1879- 1882, 1899, 1907-1908. Kingston [i878-]igo8. 8°. Ulster County, N. Y. Probate records in the office of the surrogate, and in the county clerk's office at Kingston, N. Y By Gustave Anjou. With introduction by Judge A. T. Clearwater. New York: G. Anjou, igo6. 2 v. pi., facs. 4°. (American Record Series A. v. i, 2.) Title-page of v. 2 reads . . . Probate records in the office of the surrogate at Kingston, N. Y,, in the surrogate's office, New York, and in the library of Long Island Historical Society . . . V. z. Exhaustive indexes of persons and localities, facsimiles of wills, etc. v. 2. Exhaustive indexes of persons and localities, of signa- tures, etc. Columbia County, N. Y. Columbia County. Proceedings of the board of supervisors, 1877-1880, 1882, 1889. Hudson, Chatham [r878-]i889. 8°. Columbia county at the end of the century, a historical record... Published. . .under the aus- pices of the Hudson Gazette. Hudson, N. Y.: Record Pr. &° Pub. Co., 1900. 2 v. 4°. [Ellis (F.)] History of Columbia County, New York, with. . .biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers. 447 P-, 46 pi-, 31 port., I map. Philadelphia: Everts Is- Ensign, iSyi. sq. 4°. Raymond (W.) Biographical sketches of the distinguished men of Columbia County, including an account of the most important offices they have filled in the State and general governments, and in the army and navy. Albany: Weed, Parsons &• Co., 1851. I p.l. vi, 119 p., I port. 8°. Greene Co., N. Y. De Lisser (R. L.) Picturesque Catskills, Greene county... Northampton, Mass.: Pic- turesque pub. CO. [cop., 1894.] 160 p. f°. Greene County. Proceedings of the board of supervisors, 1877-1882, 1903. v. p. [i877-]i904. 8°. History of Greene county. New York, with biographical sketches of its prominent men. 462 p., pi., port., map. New York: J. B. Beers & Co., 1884. f°. Albany County, N. Y. Albany County. Journal of the board of su- pervisors. 1877-1881, 1884, 1898. Albany, 1877- 1898. 8°. Census of the counties of Orange, Dutchess & Albany. 1702, 1714, 1720. [Albany, 1849.] pp. 365-373- 8°. From: O'Callaghan's Doc. Hist, of N. Y. S., Vol. i. Democratic-Republican General Commit- tee, Albany, N. Y. Address of the. . .committee. [Albany, N. Y.. iS74.] 8 p. 8°. Reprinted from " The Evening Times," of Aug. 20, 1874. FernoTT (Berthold). Calendar of wills on file and recorded in the offices of the clerk of the Court of Appeals, of the county clerk at Albany, and of the Secretary of State. 1626-1836- Com- piled . . . under the auspices of the Colonial Dames of the State of New York. New York: The So- ciety of Colonial Dames, 1896. i 1., xv, 657 p. 4°. Hcwell (G. R.), and others. Bi-centennial his- tory of Albany. History of the county of Albany, N. Y., from 1609 to 1886. With. . .biographies. .. [By] Howell [and] Tenney, assisted by local writers. 2 11., xxx, 997 p., port. New York: W. W. Munsell &• Co., 1886. f°. Parker (A. J.) Landmarks of Albany county. New York. Syracuse, N. Y., 1897. vi, 557, 418 p., 101 port. 4°. Statistical (A) report of the county of Albany, for the year 1 820. Written by a friend of agricul- ture, at the request of a patriotic member of the society. Albany: Packard 6* Van Benthuysen, 1823. 30 p. 8°. Tenney (J.) See Howell (G. R.), and others. Rensselaer County, N. Y. Anderson (G. B.) Landmarks of Rensselaer county. New York. Syracuse, N. Y.: D. Mason 6^ Co., 1897. xi, 735. 460 p., 154 port. 4°. Gazetteer and business directory of Rens- selaer County, N. Y. for i87o-'7i. Syracuse, 1870. 8°. WORKS' RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 17 Rensselaer County, cont'd. Ne^w York State Library. Van Rensselaer Bowier manuscripts. Being the letters of Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, 1630-1643, and other documents relating to the colony of Rensselaerswyck. Trans- lated and edited by A. J. F. van Laer, archivist. With an introductory essay by Nicolaas de Roever, late archivist of the city of Amsterdam, translated by Mrs. Alan H. Strong. Albany: University of the State of New York, 1908. 909 p., i map. 8°. (New York State. -Education Dept.) Pepper (C), jr. Manor of Rensselaerwyck. Albany: Albany and Rensselaer Anti-rent associa- tions, 1846. 34 p. 8°. JRepr.; Albany Freeholder. Rensselaer County, Proceedings of the board of supervisors, 1877-1882. Troy [1877-I 1883. 8°. Sylvester (N. B.) History of Rensselaer co.. New York, with ... biographical sketches of its prominent men and pioneers. Philadelphia: Everts In- man, 1876. 47 p. 8°. Sylvester (N. B.) 1609. History of Sara- toga county. New York. With . . . biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers. 514 p., 63 pi., 41 port., 5 maps, ill. Philadelphia: Everts fir" Ensign, 1878. f°. Washington County, N. Y. Corey (A.) Gazetteer of the county of Wash- ington, N. Y., comprising a correct statistical and miscellaneous history of the county and several towns. . . Schuylerville, N. Y.: 1849 & 50. 2 p.l., 264 p., 17 maps. 8°. Fitch (A.) Survey of Washington county. New York. [Taken under the direction of the New York State Agricultural society.] pp. 875-975, I map. \Albany, 1849.] 8°. (N. Y. -Legislature. Assem. no. 200.) Gresham (The) Publishing Company. His- tory and biography of Washington County and the town cA Queensbury, New York, with historical notes on the various towns... Richmond, Jnd.: Gresham Publishing Co., 1894. xii. 436 p., illus. sq. 4°. [Johnson (Crisfield).] 1737. History of Wash- ington CO., New York, with illustrations and bio- graphical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers, [by Crisfield Johnson]. Philadel- phia: Everts &= Ensign, 1878. 504 p., 131 pi., 6 ports., I map. 4°. Stone (William L.) Washington county. New York. Its history to the close of the nineteenth century. . . Associate editor Hon. A. Dallas Wait ... [JVewYork:] The New York Hist. Co., 1901. xiii, 570. 318 p., I pi., 34 ports. 8°. Washington county. Proceedings of the board of supervisors, 1877-1882, 1884-1889, 1891- 1905. Granville, Salem, [1878-] 1906. 8°. Essex County, N. Y. Essex County. Journal of proceedings of the board of supervisors, 1877-1882, 1889-1905. v. p., 1877-1905. 8°. Redfield (W. C.) Some account of two visits to the mountains in Essex county. New York, in the years 1836 and 1837; with a sketch of the northern sources of the Hudson. [New Haven ? : B. L. Hamlen?, 1838?] 23 p. 8°. Extract from the American Journal of Science and Arts, No. 2. Vol. xxxiii. January, 1838. Smith (H. P.) History of Essex county. [N. Y.] XV, (i) 17-754 p., 2 pi., 31 port., I map. Syracuse, N. Y.: D. Mason &' Co., 1885. 4°. Watson (W. C.) The military and civil history of the county of Essex, New York; and a general survey of its physical geography, its mines and minerals, and industrial pursuits, embracing an ac- count of the northern wilderness; and also the military annals of the fortresses of Crown Point and Ticonderoga. vii (i) 504 p., I pi., 3 port., I map. Albany, N. Y.. J. Munsell, 1869. 8°. Fart I. Military and political history. Part II. Physical geography. Part III. Natural history. Part IV. Industrial progress and resources. History of Hudson River Cities ani> Towns. The arrangement is geographical, from South to North. Jersey City. Durant (C. F.) C. F. Durant's objections to the commissioners' report and proceedings in the opening of Montgomery street, numbers from i- 162 consecutively, and both inclusive, together with appendix A. . . New York: Barnes fir" Martin [1863?]. 108, 13 p. 8°. Eaton (H. P.) Jersey City and its historic sites. [Jersey City:^ IVoman' s Club [iSgg\. 144 p., 26 pi. 12°. Farrier (G. H.) Memorial of the centennial celebration of the battle of Paulus Hook, Aug. 19, 1879; with a history of the early settlement and present condition of Jersey City, N. J. Jersey City: M. Mullone, 1879. i p.l., 182 p., 22 pi., 4 port. 8°. 1 8 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Jersey City, confd. Jersey City (N. J.) Annual message and ac- companying reports o£ city officers, 1841, 1856, 1858-1861, 1863, 1865, 1867-1869, 1872-1874. Jer- sey City, i84r-i875. 8°. Charter. Charter of and acts relating to Jersey City, and tlie ordinances thereof; together with some statistical information, &c. Jersey City, 1844. (2) 6-92, 80 p. 8°. Charters of and acts relating to Jersey City. Jersey City, 1853. 155 p. 8°. The charter of Jersey City, . . .passed March 18, 1851, and amended ... March 26, 1852, and acts amendatory of and supplementary thereto, to 1861 inclusive. Jersey City, 1861. 75 p. 8°. Charter of, and acts relating to or affecting Jersey City. Jersey City, 1863. 589 p. 8°. Same. Jersey City, 1868. 777 p. 8°. Charter of the consolidated city of Jersey City. Jersey City, 1870. 92 p. 8°. Charter of Jersey City, and supple- ment. Printed by order of the Board of Public Works. Jersey City, 1871. 94 p. 8°. Charter of Jersey City, and supple- ments. [Jersey City}, 1873. (2), 6-117 p. 8°. New charter of 1889, accepted by Jersey City, April g, i88g. Jersey City [i88g]. 20 p. 8°. Comptroller' s Office. Annual report, 1883- 1888, 1890-1905. Jersey City [1883-1905]. 8°. Education, Board of . Annual report, (2) {i868/g), 7(1874/5), 9-14 (1875/6-1 880/1), 16-28 {18 82/3-1 894/5), 30-31 (1896/7-1897/8). Jersey City, i869-[i898]. 8°. Fire Department. Annual report, 2-5 (1872- 1875), 7 (1877), 10 (1880), 12 (1882), 25-28 (1894- 1898). Jersey City, 1873-1899. 8°. None printed since 1898. Mayor. Annual message, 1852, 1854-1855 (Manners), 1869 (O'Neill), 1875 (Traphagen), 1883 (Taussig), 1884-1885 (Collins). Jersey City, 1852- 1885. 8°. Ordinances. Ordinances. Jersey City, 1844. 80 p. 8°. Ordinances. . . 1871. New York, 1874. 115 p. 8°. Revised ordinances of Jersey City. . . as amended up to July i, 1899. Compiled by H. C. Griffiths. Jersey City, 1899. xvi, 381 p. 8°. Police Commission. Annual reports, 1874, 1882, 1887, 1896/7-1897/8. Jersey City [1875- 1898]. 8°. None printed since 1898. Public Works, Board of. Annual report of the chief engineer, 1871-1886. Jersey City, 1872-1887. 8°. Formerly Board of Water Commissioners. Succeeded by Board of Street and Water Commissioners. Street and Water Commissioners, Board of. Annual report, [6-] 18 (1894/5-1907/8). \Jersey City, 1895-1908.] 8°. Succeeds Board of Public Works. Water Commissioners, Board of. Annual report, 1-23 (1852-1870). Jersey City, [1852-] 1870. 8°. Semiannual, 1852-1861. Succeeded by Board of Public Works. Jersey City, Hudson county, N. J. The rail- road centre of the east. New York: J. A . Sackett, prtr., 1875. 8 p., I map. 8°. McLean (A.) History of Jersey City, N. J. A record of its early settlement and corporate progress. . . Jersey City, N. J. : Press of the Jersey City Printing Co., 1895. 462 (2) p., 58 plates, 3 port. f° NeTT Jersey. — Judiciary Committee. Report on the subject of ceding lands of the state to Jersey City. Trenton: Sherman &= Harron, prtrs., 1846. 5 p. 8°. Hoboken, N. J. Hoboken (N. J.) Annual reports and financial statements, 1890/1, 1895/6. Hoboken, 1891-1896. 8°. Charter. Charter of the City of Hoboken . . .passed March 28, 1855, with the several supple- ments. . . Compiled by J. C. Besson. Hoboken, 1871. 192 p. 8°. Fire Department. Annual report of the chief engineer, 12-17 (1900/1-1905/6). Hoboken, igoi-igo6. 8°. New Jersey. An act to incorporate the Ho- boken Land and Improvement Co. Supplements and other acts. Hoboken, N. J. : Hudson County Democrat Print, 1859. 47 P- 8°. Patton(A. S.) Hoboken; or. Our city, viewed with reference to some of its religious aspects and wants. New York: E. F. Pruden, 1855. 22 p. nar. 12°. The Palisades. Hall (Edward Hagaman). The Palisades of the Hudson River. The story of their origin, attempted destruction, and rescue. (Amer. Scenic and His- toric Preservation Society, nth Annual report, pp. 143-171. igo6.) (Magazine of History with Notes and Queries, Vol. 3, pp. 2ig-233. igo6.) [Hudson River Realty Co.] Palisade. A story of one thousand acres of beautifully wooded land transformed into a model suburb. [New York, igo6?] 42 p., I map, illus. 8°. Northern Railroad of New Jersey. Summer in the Palisades. . . New York: Lange, Little &' Co., 1875. 4gp. 16°. Palisades Park Company. Map of Palisades Park and Palisades Heights. New York, 1900. fold. 16°. Way (A) to save the Palisades, n. t.-t. \New Kur/S? 1897?] 2I. 8°. Repr.: The Century, June, 1897. Fort Washington. Sawyer (Azariah H.) The battle of Fort Washington. An address... at the dedication of the Fort Washington Memorial, New York City, November 16, igoi. (In: American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, Seventh Annual Re- port, 1902. pp. 91-102. Albany, 1902. 8°. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 19 Fort Washington, cont'd: Sons of the American Revolution. — Empire State Society. Fort Washington Nov. 16, 1776. A Memorial. . .to the Honorable Mayor and Mu- nicipal Assembly of the City of New York, praying for the erection of a suitable monument to mark the site of Fort Washington. {New York], i 898. 28 p. 8°. This memorial marks the site of Fort Wash- ington, constructed by the Continental troops. . . 1776, taken by the British. . .1776, repossessed by the Americans, 1783. Erected through the gener- osity of J. G. Bennett by the Empire State Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Nov. 16, Igor... l^Mew Yor/i: Lotus Press, 11)01.^ gp. 8°. Fort Washington. An account of the identification of the site . . . the erection and dedi- cation of a. monument. . .Nov. 16, igoi...with a history of the defence and reduction of Mount Washington by R. P. Bolton, /^ew York: the So- ciety, 1902. 123 p. 4 maps, 3 pi. 4°. Fort Lee. Allbee (Burton H.) The memory of Fort Lee. (Magazine of History with Notes and Queries, 1907, vol. 6, pp. 175-181. New York, 1907. 8°.) Englewood. Engle\rood Cliffs on the Palisades. \^New York, 1875.] 2 maps [containing description of the property of Lewis W. Leeds]. i8>^ x 11 in. folded in nar. 8°. Vanderbeck (John B.) New Jersey Supreme Court, Bergen county circuit. December term, 1876. Before Hon. Jonathan Dixon, Justice. John B. Vanderbeck vs. The inhabitants of the township of Englewood, in the county of Bergen. Assumpsit. State of the case, [and ruling of the court], n.p., [1876]. 6 p. 4°. New Jersey Supreme Court. John B. Van- derbeck vs. The inhabitants of the township of Englewood, in the county of Bergen. Assumpsit. On rule to show cause. [By George R. Dutton, Plaintiff's attorney.] »./., [1877]. 4 p. 4°. Yonkers. Allison (C. E.) The history of Yonkers from the earliest times to the present. . .its aborigines. . . its discovery, and early settlement by the Dutch and other Europeans; a record of events within its borders. . . New York: W. B. Keicham [cop. 1896]. 4 11., 454 p., I port. ill. f°. Atkins (T. Astley). The manor of Philips- burgh. A paper read before the New York His- torical Society, June 5th, 1894. Yonkers, N.Y.: The Yonkers Hist, and Lib. Assoc., l8g4. 23 p. 8°. Balch (S. W.) Map of central portion of the town of Yonkers, showing all buildings. . .as they stood in. . .1847. . .[and] the streets... in i8g2. [With an explanation by David Cole. [ Yonkers^ 1892. From the Yonkers Daily Herald, Jan. 2, 1892. Bi-centennial celebration, [1682-1882] of the settlement of Yonkers, and of the erection of the Philipse manor house ... on ... Oct. 18, 1882. Yonkers: J. W. Oliver, print, {lii^l 2 1. f°. H. (W. W.) Some account of the celebration of the fourth of July, 1857, by the citizens of Yonkers and Glenwood... [Preface signed W. W. H.] New York, 1857. 41 p. 8°. Loan exhibition of the bi-centennial cele- bration of the Manor Hall, Yonkers, N. Y., Octo- ber 18-28, 1882. {^Yonkers: JohnW. Oliver, 1S82.] 32 p., I p.L 8°. Hall (Edward Hagaman). Philipse Manor Hall, Yonkers, N. Y. The site, the building and its occupants. (In: American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, Thirteenth Annual Report, 1908. pp. 161-247. Albany, 1908. 8.) [Hope (J. B.)] Chronicles of Yonkers. [By J. B. Hope.] Yonkers, N. Y.: printed for the benefit, of the Sanitary Commission, 1864. 22 p., i 1. 8°. Philipse Manor on-the-Hudson: its natural beauties and historical surroundings. A country community upon modern plans. \_Irvington-on-the- Hudson: The Cosmopolitan Mag. Press, 1903.] 16 1. ob. 16°. Yonkers, N. Y. — History and Historical Relics Committee. [Prospectus. Yonkers, N. Y., the Committee, 1882.] 2 1. 4°. Dobbs Ferry. Tarrytown Press-Record. [Special historical number.] v, 8, no. 18 & Extra (June 15, 13, 1894.] Tarrytown, N. Y., 1894. 4 1. f°. Irvington. Carpenter (WiLrd),and San. Report of Messrs. Ward Carpenter & Son on Sunnyside brook and Sheldon brook, in the villages of Irvington and Tarrytown. Also, letters and other documents connected with the sanitary condition of Irvington . . . New York: J. W. Pratt, 1878. 76 p. 8. Tarrytown. Bacon (Edgar Mayhew). Chronicles of Tarry- town and Sleepy Hollow. New York: G. P. Put- nam's Sons, 1897. X, I 1., 163 p., I map, 18 pi. 16°. Brief (A) history of Tarrytown, from 1680 to . . . 1880... Tarrytown: G. L. Wiley, 1880. 24 p., I map. 8°. Carpenter (Ward), and Son. Report of Messrs. Ward Carpenter & Son on Sunnyside brook and Sheldon brook, in the villages of Irving- ton and Tarrytown. Also, letters and other docu- ments connected with the sanitary condition of Irvington... New York: J. W. Pratt, 1878. 76 p. 8°. Coutant (Richard B.) The action at Tarry- town July 15, 1781. Read before the Tarrytown Historical Society, July 15,; 1890. Tarrytown, N. Y.: The Society, i8gi. 11 p., I facsim., I map. 8°. Guilbert (E.) A reminiscence of Sleepy Hol- low. ]_New York ? 187-] 8 p. 8°. Repr.: Harper's new monthly magazine. Hoyt (Wm. H.), &■ Co. Description and map of Castle Ridge, Tarrytown, Westchester county, New-York. [New York: P. F. McBreen, 18—?] 8 p. 8°. 20 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Tarrytown, contd. Lyon (C. H.) Description of Irving Park, Tarrytown; the property of C. H. Lyon. New York: Wynkoop, Hallenbeck 6^ Thomas, 1859. 16 p., I pi. 8°. Mabie (Hamilton Wright). Tarrytown-on- Hudson. Its historic associations and legendary lore. (In: Historic towns of the Middle States. Edited by Lyman P. Powell. New York, 1899. pp. 137-167. 8°.) Miller (Harry Edward). In the Sleepy Hollow Country. [Fragment from New England Magazine. Boston, Dec. igoo.] 449-469 p. illus. 8°. Ne'w York (city) — Board of Aldermen. Re- port of the Committee on Arts and Sciences, on the subject of reprinting the report of the Paulding Monument Committee, of December 4, 1826. (2) 797-850 p. New York: McSfedon dr" Baker, printers, 1850. 8°. (Document no. 53.) Kaymond (M. D.) Souvenir of the Revolu- tionary soldier's monument dedication at Tarry- town, N. Y. October 19, 1894. \New York: Monument Committee^ 1894. 208 p., 2 1., 10 pi., 8 port. 4°. Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, at Tarrytown, on the Hudson River ... 3 1. , 7-29 p. , 3 pi. New York: C. S. Westcott &■ Co., 1866. 8°. Tarrytow^n. Water Commissioners. Annual report, 14-15 (1902/3-1903/4), 18 (1906/7). Tarry- town, 1903-1907. 8°. Tarrytown, on the Hudson. Sleepy Hollow, Washington Irving's Home, Old Dutcli Church, Old Mill , etc . . , Photo-gravures. Tarrytown, N. Y.: P. A. Weber [cop. 1898]. i 1., 22 p. ob. 24°. Ossining. [History of Ossining.] (In: Little Visits to Historical Points in Westchester County. Vol. i, no. 5, pp. 122-149. 1902.) Croton. [History of Croton.] (In: Little Visits to His- torical Points in Westchester County. Vol. i, DO. 5> pp. 122-149. 1902.) Stony Point, N. Y. Dawson (H. B.) The assault on Stony Point by General Anthony Wayne, July 16, 1779. Pre- pared for the New York Historical Society, and read at its. . .meeting, April I, 1862... Morris- ania, N. Y., 1863. viii, 156 p., 37 facsim., i map. 4°. (Gleanings from the harvest-field of American history, Pt. 11.) Firman (Sidney G.) Historic Stony Point. One hundred twenty third anniversary of the cap- ture of the fort by Anthony Wayne, July sixteenth 1779-1902. Oneonta, N. Y.: Oneonia Herald, cop. 1902. 16 p. 16°. Hall (Edward Hagaman). Stony Point battle- field. . . New York: American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, 1902. 40 p., i map, i port. 12°. Johnston (H. P.) The storming of Stony Point on the Hudson, midnight, July 15, 1779. Its importance in the light of unpublished docu- ments. New York: J. T. White &■ Co., 1900. I p.l., 231 p., I map, I plan, 5 pi., i port. 8°. With autograph letter of the author. Society for the Preservation of Scenic and His- toric Places and Objects. Stony Point battlefield. Report of the committee. . . With maps and illus- trations. \^New York, 1900. 4°.] Report ... on the battlefield of Stony Point. (In: Society for the Preservation of Scenic and His- toric Places and Objects, Fifth annual Report, 1900. pp. 73-84. Albany, 1900. 8°.) Walcutt (William). My grandfather's recol- lection of the revolution. No. ii. Storming of Stony Point, n. p., n. d. 259-261 p. 4°. From the Republic. The Highlands. Bruce (W.) The Hudson Highlands. By the author of "The Hudson by daylight" [«. c, W. Bruce]. New York: G. Watson, cop. 1876. 13 1. 16°. West Point. Abbott (W.) The crisis of the Revolution: being the story of Arnold and Andre . . . Issued under the auspices of the Empire State Soc, Sona of the American Revolution. New York: W. Abbott, 1899. 6 p.l., 119, (i) pp. , 3 facs., 5 maps, 45 pi., 21 port. sq. f°. Andr^ Q.), major. The trial of major John Andre, adjutant-general of the British army, September 29, 1780. With an appendix, contain- ing sundry interesting letters interchanged on the occasion. Palmer: Printed by E. Terry for capt. J. Warner, 1810, 8 p. 8°. A fragment only. Andreana. Containing the trial, execution and various matter connected with the history of Major John Andre... A.D. 1780. Philadelphia: Horace W. Smith, 1865. 2 p.l., 67 p., 2 1., 14 pi., 6 port. f°. Arnold (Benedict), major-general. The present state of the American Rebel Army, Navy, and Finances. Transmitted to the British Government , in October, 1780. . . Edited by P. L. Ford. Brooklyn: Historical Prtg. Club, 1891. 17 p. 12°. (Winnowings in American history. Revolu- tionary narratives. No. 5.) Barb^-BIarbois (Franyois), Marquis. Com- pjot d'Arnold et de Sir Henry Clinton contre les Etats-Unis d'Aineriqtie et contre le general Wash- ington. Septembre 1780. 2 p.l., xliv, 184 p., I map, 2 pi. Paris: P. Didot, I'aini, print., i8l6. 8°. 2 p.l., xlvii, 163 p., I map, 2 port. Paris: Delaunay, li^l. nar. 8°. Baxter (Sylvester). The new West Point. Ext. from the " Century Magazine," vol. 68, July, 1904, pp. 333-349. 8°. Blackshaw (Randall). The new naval acad- emy. New York, 1905. pp. 878-891, illus. 8°. "Ext. from the Century Magazine, Oct. 190s." Boynton (E. C.) History of West Point and its military importance during the American Revo- lution and the origin and progress of the United States Military Academy, xviii (2)9-408 p., 3 pi., 7 maps, ill. New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1864' 4°. WORKS' RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 21 IVest Point, confd. Coxe (Macgrane). The Sterling furnace and the West Point chain. An historical address de- livered at Sterling Lake, on. . .June 23, 1906, on the occasion of the unveiling of a tablet at that place by the Daughters of the Revolution of the state of New York in commemoration of the fur- nace and of the making of the chain. ATew York: privately printed, 1906. I p.l., 54 p., 3 fac, 1 map. 4°. Dane (Henry C.) The West Point centennial. Historic oration, delivered at the decoration of the graves of the immortal heroes who lie in the Na- tional cemetery at that memorable post, on Deco- ration day, May 30, 1878. New York: G. W. Carleton ^ Co., 1878. 31 p. 8°. Larned (Charles W.) History of the Battle Monument at West Point together with a list of the names of those inscribed ... to which is added a description of the quarrying, working transporta- tion and erection of the shaft, by Edward F. Miner. West Point, N. Y. [ The Battle Monu- ment Assoc.'], lit)?:. 6 p.l., 237 (2) p. 8°. Park (R.) A sketch of the history and topo- graphy of West Point and the U. S. Military Academy. 140 p. Philadelphia: H. Perkins, 1840. ie°. Roll of cadets admitted into the United States Military Academy from its establishment to the present time. Washington: Govt. Print. Office, 1870. 57 p. 12°. Smith (Joshua Hett). Record of the trial of Joshua Hett Smith, Esq., for alleged complicity in the treason of Benedict Arnold. 1780. Edited by H. B. Dawson. Morrisania, N. Y., l856. 3 p.l., 116 p. 8°. United States. The centennial of the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. 1802-1902. Washington, 1904. 4°. (58. Cong. 2 sess. H. Doc. no. 789.) v. 1-2. West Point battle monument: history of the project to the dedication of the site, June 15th, 1864. Oration of Maj.-Gen. McClellan. 35, (4) p. New York: Sheldon Sf Co., 1864. 12°. Cornwall. Beach (L.) Cornwall. Newburgh, N.Y.: E. M. Ruttenber &= Son, i^Ti. 200 p. 8°, Wright (Addie A.) The standard guide of Cornwall. Compiled by A. A. Wright, n.t.-p. Cornwall-on- Hudson: T. Pendell [l8g-?]. 63 p. 8°. • Newburgh. Bayard (Thomas Francis). Remarks of Hon. T. F. Bayard of Delaware at Newburgh, New York, October 18, 1883, at the opening of the Centennial celebration of the disbanding of the revolutionary army. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1889. 14 p. 4°. Caldwell (Richard). A true history of the ac- quisition of Washington's headquarters at New- burgh, by the state of New York. Salisbury Mills, N. Y. 46 p. 8°. Decision (A) of Judge Tappen's which saved the city of Newburgh one million dollars, n. p. [1872]. broadside. f°. Historical Society of Newburgh Bay and the Highlands. Historical papers no. [i]-i3. New- burgh, N. Y., 1 884-1906. 8°. Hull (Rev. William). History of the Palatine Parish by Quassaick, in Orange County, N. Y. Gettysburg: J. E. Wihle, 1880. 19 p. 8°. Newburgh. Mayor's message and city clerk's annual report, 1892/3-1894/5, 1 896/7-1906/7. Newburgh, 1893 [-1907]. 8°. Fire Department. Annual report, i8g3, 1895-1906/7. Newburgh, 1893-1907. 8°. Health Board. Annual report, 33-34 (1899/00-1900/1). Newburgh [1901-] 1902. 8°. Water Commissioners. Annual report, (l868), 13-15 (1879-1881), 17-26 (1883-1892), 28- 43 (1894-1908.) Newburgh, 1868-1908. 8°. Nutt (John J.) Newburgh; her institutions, industries, and leading citizens. Historical, de- scriptive and biographical. Newburgh, N. Y.: Ritchie and Hull, 1891. 335 p., map. 4°. Ruttenber (E. M.) History of the town of Newburgh. vi (2) q-322 (2) viii, xi (i) p. 2 pi. Newburgh, E. M. Ruttenber &• Co., printers, 1859. History of the county of Orange: with a history of the town and city of Newburgh ... 424 p. , I 1., 3 maps, 14 pi., 3 port. Newburgh, N. Y.: E. M. Ruttenber &= Son, printers, 1875. 8°. City of Newburgh. A centennial historical sketch. I 1., 9-56 p., I pi. »./. [1876] 8°. Catalogue of manuscripts and relics in Washington's Headquarters, Newburgh, N. Y. With historical sketch. Newburgh, N. Y. : E. M. Ruttenber, for the Trustees, 1874. 74 p., i pi. 8°. Skeel (Adelaide). Newburgh the Palatine parish by Quassaick. (In: Historic towns of the Middle States. Edited by Lyman P. Powell. New York, 1899. pp. 107-135. 8°.) Washington (George). General orders of Geo. Washington. . . issued at Newburgh on the Hudson, 1 782-1 783. Compiled. . .by E. C. Boyn- ton. 112 p. Newburgh, N. Y.: E. M. Ruttenber &» Son, 1883. 12°. Marlborough. Cochrane (Charles H.) The history of the town of Marlborough, Ulster County, New York: from the first settlement in 1712, by Capt. Wm. Bond, to 1887. Poughkeepsie: W. F. Boshart, 1887. 2 p.l., 1-126, 3 1., 127-202 p., I map, 8 pi. 8°. Jagger (Rev. S. H.) A centennial discourse, delivered June 3d, 1864; and a quarter century dis- course delivered June 26th, 1867; in the Presby- terian church of Marlborough, New- York. Also, the anniversary exercises at the parsonage. New- burgh: Ruttenber &= Co., 1867. 36 P- 8°. Woolsey (C. M.) History of the town of Marlborough, Ulster county, N. Y., from its earli- est discovery. Albany: J. B. Lyon Co., :9o8. 471 p., 6facsim., 2 maps [one in pocket], i plan, 17 pl.. 3 port- 8°. Autograph letter of author inserted. Fishkill. Bailey (H. D. B.) Local tales and historical sketches. Fishkill Landing: J. W. Spaight,\%-]1^. 431 p., I port. ill. 8°. 22 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Fishkill, cont'd. [BrinckerhofiF (Thomas Van Wyck).] His- torical sketch and directory of the town of Fish- kill, with an appendix of much useful information, [by T. Van W. Brinckerhoff.] Fishkill Landing: Dean &" Sfaight, 1866. [sl-io, [5o]-i52 (i) p. 12°. Fishkill (The) centennial. June 2, 1883. Addresses by T. R. Westbrook, J. H. Cook, J. G. Graham. Fishkill Landing, N. ¥.: J. W. Spaight, 1883. 36 p. 12°. Kip (F. M.) A discourse delivered on the 12th of September, 1866, at the. . .150th anniversary of the First Reformed Dutch Church, Fishkill, with an appendix. . . New York: Wynkoop &• Hallen- beck, 1866. 64 p., I pi., I port. 8°. Ladd (Horatio Oliver). Historical address of the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Trinity Church, Fishkill, New York, September 14, 1906. {^Fishkill. N. Y., 1906?] 10 1. 8°. Reformed Dutch Church (First). An account of the exercises in connection with the one hun- dred and seventy-fifth anniversary. Sept. i6th, i8gi, including the addresses delivered on that occasion . . . Fishkill, N. Y. : Fishkill Weekly Times' Print, i8gl. 47 p., 4 p.l., 8 port. 8°. Poughkeepsie. [Eastman (H. C. )] Suburban homes with city comforts and conveniences, on the Hudson, in the most delightful residence city of America. Pough- keepsie, N. Y., the city of schools and beautiful homes. Its attractions and advantages. The new residences of Eastman Terrace . . . [By H. G. Eastman.] Albany: Weed, Parsons &' Co., 1872. 28 p., 1 1., maps. 4°. Piatt (Edmund). The Eagle's history of Poughkeepsie from the earliest settlements 1683 to 1905. Poughkeepsie \N. F,].- Piatt df Plait, 1905. 328 p. illus. f°. Poughkeepsie. Annual reports of the sev- eral departments of the city government, 1875, 1878. Poughkeepsie, 1876-1879. 8°. Chamberlain. Annual report exhibiting the expenditures of the city government, 24(1877). Poughkeepsie, 1878. 8°. Charter. Charter and ordinances of City of Poughkeepsie. With opinions by city attorneys, 1901. Poughkeepsie, n. d. I p.l., 232, 37 p. 8°. The charter of the City of Pough- keepsie, N. Y., being the act of incorporation passed March 28, 1854, as amended, and the re- vised ordinances of the Common Council. Pough- keepsie, 1881. 229 p. 8°. The charter of the City of Pough- keepsie, including the amendatory acts of May i, 1869, and April 27, 1870. Together with the act for the better support of the poor ... and an act to provide for a supply of water. . .also the ordinances, passed by the Common Council. ..to July i, 1871. Poughkeepsie, 1871. 201 p. 8°. Education, Board of. Annual report, 1888, 1890, 1897, 1899-1903. Poughkeepsie, 1889 [-1904]. 8°. teachers, and [Poughkeepsie, 1905 (Hine). Course of study for the public schools of the City of Poughkeepsie, 1904. [Poughkeepsie, 1904.] 531 p. 8°. [List of commissioners with school organization. March 7. 1894.] [Poughkeepsie, 1894.] 2 leaves, nar. 4°. Schedule of officers, employees. September, 1904. 1904.] 4 leaves, obi. 16°. Mayor. Annual message. Poughkeepsie, 1905. 22 p. 8°. Ordinances. An act to provide for a sup- ply of water in the City of Poughkeepsie. n. p., 1869. 12 p. 8°. For collection of ordinances see above under Charter. Public Works, Board of. Annual report, 3-10(1898-1905), 11(1905/6), 13 (1907/8). Pough- keepsie [1899-1908]. 8°. 3-10 for the year ending Dec. 31; thereafter for year ending Nov. 30. 12 (1906/7), was not issued. Water Commissioners. Annual report. 4-5 (1872-1873), 8-27 (1876-1896). Poughkeepsie, 1873-1896. 8°. Discontinued. Superseded by Board of Public Works. Water Supply Committee. Statement and report on supply of City of Poughkeepsie with water. Poughkeepsie, 1855. 29 p. 8°. Poughkeepsie (The) Eagle. The City of Poughkeepsie historical and descriptive, with illus- trated sketches of its institutions. . .industries. . . trade and leading citizens ; the Poughkeepsie bridge . . .how built. . .souvenir ed. Poughkeepsie: Piatt &= Piatt, Oct., i&Sg. 44 p. i°- Note: Issued on the opening of the through line from New Eng. to the coal fields and the West via this Bridge. Esopus. List of Dutch Settlers in Esopus. In: The Holland Society Year Book, 1897, p. 117. Kingston. Brink (Benjamin Myer). The founding of Kingston. (Old^ Ulster, 1907, v. 3, pp. 353-361. Kingston, N. Y., 1907. 8°.) The celebration in Kingston. (Olde Ulster, 1908. vol. 4, pp. 240-248. Kingston, N. F., 1908, 8°.) Hendricks (Howard). The City of Kingston, birthplace of New York State... [Kingston']: Board of Trade, [cop. 1902]. 70 p., I 1. 8°. Fully illustrated. Kingston. Charter. Charter of the City of Kingston, passed March 29, 1872. Kingston, 1872. 68 p. 8°. liounsbery (William). Historical address del livered at the city of Kingston, at the centennia- anniversary of American independence, July 4, 1876... Kingston, M Y.: W. H. &= J. C. Po- meyn, 1876. 31 p. 8°. Old (The) Senate House of Kingston, N. Y. [Views. Kingston, 1904]. 4 pi. ob. 48°. Pratt (George W.) An account of the British expedition above the Highlands of the Hudson River, and of the events connected with the burn- ing of Kingston in 1777. [Kingston, N. Y., i860.] 107-176 p., I 1. 8°. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 23 Kingston, cont'd. Schoonmaker (M. ) The history of Kingston , New York. From its early settlement to the year 1820. ix, (3) 558 p., I pi., ill. JVew York: Burr Printing House, 1888. 4°. Views of Kingston [N. Y.] {Portland, Me.: L. H. Nelson Co., 1904.] 16 1. ob. 8° Westbrook (F. E.) The two hundredth an- niversary of the erection of the building occupied as the Senate House of the state of New York in 1777, the year of the adoption of the first state con- stitution, at Esopus (now city of Kingston), to- gether with sketches of old prominent citizens of Kingston, etc., etc. 48 p. Kingston, N. K. . Journal &' Freeman Branch Office Print, 1883. 8°. Rhinebeck. Hammick (J. T.) Rhinebeck the beautiful. Revised and enlarged. Rhinebeck, N. Y.: Rhine- beck Gazette Job Prig, off., 1897. 31 p., I port. 16°. Morse (Howard H.) Historic old Rhinebeck. Echoes of two centuries. A Hudson river and post road colonial town. When; where; by whom set- tled and named. . .who's who and was. . . An au- thentic summary of collated facts... of value to those interested in this " old home town." Rhine- beck, N. Y.: the author, igo8. 4 p.l. , 448 p., I map, 14 pi., 4 port. 12°. Saugerties. Brink (Benjamin Myer). The early history of Saugerties. 1660-1825... Kingston, AT. Y.: R. W. Anderson &= Son, 1902. viii, I 1. ,365 p., 14 pi., 2 port. 12°. Catskill. Brown (Clark). A topographical description of Catskill in the state of New York, 1803. (Mass. hist. soc. Collections, v. 9, pp. in-120. Boston, 1804.) Catskill Mountain House [Catskill, N. Y.]. Eighty-third season, 190S. [^Catskill, N. Y,: Re- corder Print, 1905.] 12 I. 32°. Pinckney (James D.) Reminiscences of Cats- kill. Local sketches . . . together with interesting articles by Thurlow Weed, Edwin Croswell, S. Sherwood Day and Joseph Hallock, Esqrs. Cats- kill: J. B. Hall, 1868. 79 p. 8°. Hudson. Hogeboom (John T.) Oration at the centen- nial celebration, at Hudson, N. Y., on the fourth day of July, 1876. Hudson: Bryan &■ Goeltz, 1876. 2 p.l., 32 p. 8°. Hudson. Charter. City charter and ordi- nances. Hudson [1905.] 144 p. 8°. Civil Service Commission. Rules for the classified service of Hudson. Hudson, 1899. 28 p. . 2 leaves. 8°. Same, 1905. Hudson [1905]. 34 p., 3 leaves. 8°. Common Council. Officers of the city and rules and orders of the Council, igoo. [Hudson, 1900.] II p. 24°. Same, 1903. «./., n. d. 6 leaves. 24". Same, 1904. «./., n. d. 6 leaves. 24°. Same, 1905. Hudson, n. d. 6 leaves. 24°. Same, igo6. n.p., n. d. 6 leaves. 24°. 1895-1899, 1901-1905. Annual report, 1892/3. Annual report for the Hud- Proceedings, Hudson, i896[-igo6.] 8° Education Board. Hudson, 1893. 8°. Fire Department. fiscal year ended Dec. 31, 1899, 1903-1904. son, iqoo-1905. 8°. Health Board. Rules and regulations . . together with the code of sanitary ordinances. Hudson, 1896. 32 p. 24°. Public Works Commission. Annual re- port for the year ended Dec. 31, 1899, igoi. Hudson [1900-1902]. 8°. Rules, regulations and ordinances. . . Adopted Oct. 14, 1895. \Hudson, 1895.] 9 p. 24°. Industrial (The) Advertising Company of America. Hudson of today: its history, resources and institutions. Illustrated [and compiled by The Industrial Advertising Co. of Amer.] n. t.-p. Kinderhook, N. Y., 1905. 24 p. ob. 8°. Miller (S. B.) Historical sketches of Hudson, embracing the settlement of the city, city govern- ment, business enterprises, churches, press, schools, libraries, &c. Hudson: Bryan &" Webb, printers, 1862. 120 p. 8°. Worth (G. A.) Recollections of Hudson. 78 p. [Albany: C. Van Benthuysen, 1850.] 8°. Coeymans. Munsell (Joel). The Hudson river overslach, and Coeymans Bouwery. k./. [1875.] 8 p. 12°. Greenbush. Callender (Will). Souvenir of the old Dutch mansion, [Van Rensselaer house] Riverside Ave- nue, Greenbush, N. Y. Built 1642. [Greenbush?, 189-?] 18 p. illus. sq. 16°. Albany. Albany. Chamberlain. Report showing re- ceipts and expenditures, 1838/9, 1840/1, 1843/4, 1847/8-1848/9, 1850/1, 1853/4, 1856/7-1857/8, 1897/8. Albany, 1839-1898. 8°. Charter. Charter of the city of Albany. New York: H Gaine, 1T]1. 24 p. f°. City Engineer. Annual report, 1-9(1890/1- 1899). Albany, [l892-]i900. 8°. Discontinued. Succeeded by Engineering Bureau. City Registrar. Annual report of mar- riages, births and deaths, 8-10 (1877/8-1879/80). Albany, 1878-1880. 8°. Comptroller. Annual report, 1900-1904. Albany, 1901-1905. 8°. Education, Board of. Annual report, 14 (1857/8), 18(1861/2). Albany, 1858-1862. Continued as: Annual report of the board of public instruction, 6-11 (1871/2-1876/7), 14 (1879/80), 16-21(1881/2- T886/7), 24 (1889/go), 29-31 (1 894/5-1 896/7), 33- 34(1898/9-1899/00). ^»a»7, 1872-1900. 8°. Continued as: Annual report of the board of education, 1900/1- 1907/8. Albany, 1901-1908. 8°. 24 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Albany, contd. Engineering Bureau. Report, 1-2 (igoo- IQOl). n.p.,n.i. 8°. Succeeds City Engineer. Mayor. Annual message, 1863, 1865 (Perry), 1866-1867, 1870-1872 (Thatcher), 1874 (Judson), 1880 (Nolan), 1894 (Wilson), 1896 (Thacher). Albany, 1863-1896. 8°. Ordinances. Laws and ordinances of the mayor, recorder, aldermen and commonalty of the City of Albany. Albany: A. and J. Robertson, 1773- 64 p., I leaf. 4°. A summary of the laws and ordinances of the city passed in common council. . .1812. n. p., 11. d. 24 p. 8°. Laws and ordinances of the Common Council. . .revised and revived, Sept. 1832. To which are prefixed the charter of the city... and the several laws relatingto the city. Albany, 1832. 81, (i), iii, xi p. 8°. Laws and ordinances. , .revised. . . •Dec. 1 841. Albany. \%i\.z. 189 p. 8°. The Dongan charter, present charter, city laws and ordinances, and laws of the state. . . applicable to... Albany. Compiled by M. Dele- hanty, A. Hessberg, and M. D. Conway. Albany, 1885. xi, (I), 732 p. 8°. Laws, ordinances and regulations of the city of Albany governing . . . buildings . . . Com- piled by L. J. Miller. Albany, 1903. vi, 188 p., I map, 89 plates. 8°. Parks, Bureau of. Report, 1899/00- 1903/4. Albany, [1900-] 1905. 8°. Public Safety Department, Annual report, 1-9 (1900-1907/8). [Albany'], 1900-1909. 8°. Water, Bureau of. Annual report, 50-53 1899/00-1902/3. Albany, 1901-1904. 8°. Succeeds Water Commissioners. Water Commissioners. Annual report, 1852-1857, 1860-1861, 1863-1864, 1866, 1868- 1870, 1872, 1873, 1875, 1877-1878, 1887, 1895- 1899. Albany, 1853-igoo. 8°. Succeeded by Water Bureau. Albany Chamber of Commerce. The great western staircase at the Capitol, and the rooms and art gallery of the Albany Institute and Historical and Art Society. . . Albany: the Chamber of Com- merce, 1903. 6 11. nar. 8°. Albany, N. Y. Some of its interesting places and how to see them. Albany: the Chamber of Commerce, 1903. 6 11. ob. 32°. A window view of progress. Albany: Chamber of Commerce [kjohI], 4 p. 16°. An editorial reprinted from Tlie Argus of Nov. 8, 1903. Albany, New York. A beautiful and at- tractive city in which to live... Albany, N'. Y., [190-?] 12 1. obi. 24°. Albany Freie Blaetter, Albany, N. Y. Estab- lished April 6th, 1852, by Augustus Miggael. Fiftieth anniversary souvenir. [Albany, N. Y., 1902]. 32 p. f°. Albany the progressive. [Albany •] W. H. Benjamin, 1904. 6 1., 14 pi. 8°. Banks (A. Bleecker). 1686. 1886. Albany bi-centennial. Historical memoirs. Albany: Banks &■ Brothers, 1888. viii, 461 p., 14 pL. 2 port. 8°. Barnes (William). The settlement and early history of Albany ; a prize essay, delivered before the Young Men's Association, December 26, 1850. Albany: Gould, Banks &• Gould, 1851. i p.l., 25 p. 8^ The settlement and early history of Albany. 100 p. I pi., 3 maps & plans. Albany, N. Y.: J. Munsell, 1864. 8°. Battershall (Walton W.) Albany [N. Y. An historical sketch]. (In: Historic towns of the Middle States. Edited by Lyman P. Powell. New York, 1899. pp. 1-37. 8°.) Butler (Benjamin C.) The new Capitol. A criticism. Remarks of Benj. C. Butler, of Warren County, in Assembly, Jan. 20, 1881, on the gov- ernor's message, n. t.-p. Albany, 1881. 9 p. 8°. Clark (Rufus Wheelwright). The heroes of Albany. A memorial of the patriot-martyrs of the city and county of Albany, who sacrificed their lives during the late war in defense of our nation, 1861-1865. .. Albany: S. R. Gray, 1867. viii, i 1., (i), 12-870 p., 3 pi., 6 port. 4°. Danaher (Franklin M.) Early Irish in old Albany, N. Y., with special mention of Jan An- driessen, " De lersman van Dublingh"... Paper . ..before the American-Irish Historical Society. . . New York. ..1903. Boston: Am. ..Hist. Soc, 1903. 44 p. , I port. 8°. Dorsheimer (William). Address of W. D. , Lieutenant Governor, etc., etc., before the Joint convention of the Legislature, February 12, 1879 . . . [on departure . . . from the old Capitol to the newone...] k./. [1879?] 9 ff. 8°. (N. Y. S. Governor.) Fancy (The) ball: a letter from the portfolio of a young lady of Albany. A Ibany: W. C. Little 53 port. 4°. Gabriels (Henry). Historical sketch of St. Joseph's Provincial Seminary, Troy, N. Y. With an introduction. I. Life of Bishop Henry Gabriels II. Early New York Seminaries by C. G. Herber- mann...andan epilogue by Rev. T. F. Myhan. New York: The U. S. Catholic Historical Society, 1905. 4 p.l., 5-188 p., 9 pi., 10 port. 8°. (U. S. Catholic Historical Society, Monograph series, no. 3.) Geschichte der Deutschen in Albany und Troy nebst Kurzen Biographien von Beamten und hervorragenden Buergern. Illustrirtes Handbuch wissenswerthen Inhalts. Herausgegeben von Al- bany Taeglicher Herold. {Albany, N. K, 1897.] 274 p., I 1., illus. 8°. 26 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Troy, cont'd. Strecker (Werner). Zur Erinnerung an die Centennial-Feier. [1789-1889 in Troy, N. Y. Troy, N. Y., 1S89.J vi, 7-22 p., i 1. 8". Troy. [City Documents,] 1S66. Troy, 1866, 8°. Chamberlain. Annual report, 30 (1855). Troy, 1855. 8°. Charter. Charter of and laws relating to the City of Troy. Municipal ordinances. Opin- ions of the corporation counsel. Troy [i8gi]. 1263 p.- 8°. Same. Troy, 1897. 363 p. 8°. Common Council. Manual, 1859, 1868. Troy, 1858-1867. 8°. Comptroller. Annual report, ~8 (1879), lO-li (1880/1-1881/2), 14-15 (1885-1886), lg-20 (1890-1891), 22(1892/3), 27-29 ( 1 897/8-1 899/00), 32-33 (1902-1903), 36-37 (1906-1907). Troy, I879[-I907]. Education Board. Manual, 1869. Troy, l86g. 16°. Health Department. OfiScial report (month- ly), 1900-1905. Troy, 1900-1905. 4°. Imperfect file. Mayor. Annual message, 1907-1909. Troy, 1907-1909. 8° 1907 Jan. E. P. Mann. 24 p. lOoS ' " 16 p. i^ " " " " 20 p. Ordinances. Ordinances of the City of Troy; and the several acts of the Legislature of the State of New York relative to the City of Troy, passed since 1838. Troy, 1855. 167 p. 8°. Public Improvement Commission. Annual report, 2 (1890/2). Troy, 1892. 8°. Public Safety Department. Annual re- port, 4 (1903). Troy, 1904. Public Works Department, Annual re- port, 2-4 (1901-1903), 7 (1907). Troy, 1902 [-1907]. 8°. Water Commissioners' Office. Annual re- port, 1-3 (1855/6-1857/8), 6 (1860/1), 13 (1867/8), 16 (1870/1), 18 (1872/3), 20-21 (1874/5-1875/6), 23 (1877/8), 28 (1882/3). Troy, 1858-1883. 8°. The ist report was republished in the 13th report. A water supply for the City of Troy: a report made to the Water Comrs. by W. J. McAl- pine, together with analyses of the water from the different sources examined. Troy, 1872. 50 p. 8°. Weise (Arthur James). History of the city of Troy from the expulsion of the Mohegan Indians to the present centennial year... 1876, with maps and statistical tables by A. G. Bardin... 400 p., 19 pi., S maps, ill. Troy, N. Y.: W. H. Young, 1876. 8°. The city of Troy and its vicinity. Troy: E. Green, 1886. 3 p. 1., 376 p., i 1., i map. lUus. 12°. Troy's one hundred years. 1789-1889. vii (l), 453 p.. I pl., ill. Troy, N. Y.: W. H. Young, 1 891. sq. 4°. Woodworth (J.) Reminiscences of Troy from its settlement in 1790 to 1807, with remarks on its commerce, enterprise, improvements, state of political parties, and sketches of individual character... 39 p. Albany: J. Munsell,i9,S3. 8°. Second edition, with notes, explana- tory, biographical, historical, and antiquarian, iv, 112 p. Albany, N. Y.: J. Munsell, i860, sq. 8°. Lansingburgh. Weise (Arthur James). History of Lansing- burgh, N. Y., from the year 1670 to 1877. Troy, N. Y: W. II. Young, iZlT. 44 P- 8°. Saratoga, N. Y. Brandow (Rev. J. H.) The story of old Sara- toga and history of Schuylerville. Albany: Bran- dow Print. Co., 1900. xxiii, 396 p., 2 maps, 2 pl. 8°. Burgoyne (Lieut.-Gen. J.) Orderly book of . . . Burgoyne, from his entry into the state of N. Y. until his surrender at Saratoga, i6th Oct., 1777. From the original manuscript deposited at. . .New- burgh, N. Y. Edited by E. B. O'Callaghan. Al- bany, N. Y.: J. Munsell, i860, xxxiv, 221 p., map, I pl., 4 port. sq. 8°. (Munsell's hist. ser. no. 7.) Curtis (George William). Burgoyne's surren- der: an oration delivered on the 100. anniversary of the event, Oct. 17, 1877, at Schuylerville, N. Y. New York: Baker &" Godwin, print., \iTl. 27 p. 8°. Neilson (C.) An original, compiled and cor- rected account of Burgoyne's campaign, and the memorable battles of Bemis's Heights, Sept. 19, and Oct. 7, 1777. ■■ xiv, 15-291(1) p., i map. Albany: J. Munsell, print., 1844. I2°- Ostrander (William S.) Old Saratoga and the Burgoyne campaign. A brief sketch of the early history of the famous hunting grounds and the campaign which ended in the surrendering of the British army at Saratoga, October 17, 1777. . . Schuylerville, N. Y., 1897. 42 (i) p., i map, 5pl. 16°. Seelye (Elizabeth Eggleston). Saratoga and Lake Champlain in history. Lake George, N. Y.: Elwyn Seelye [1898]. iv, ill p., i map, 14 pl. 16°. Stevens (J. A.) The Burgoyne campaign. An address delivered on the battle-field on the one hundredth celebration of the battle of Bemis Heights, September 19, 1877. New York: A. D. F. Randolph (St" Co., 1877. 43 p. 8°. Stone (W. L.) The campaign of Lieut.-Gen. John Burgoyne, and the expedition of Lieut.-Col. Barry St. Leger. Albany: J. Munsell, 1877. 12, 9-461 p., I fac-sim., i map, 7 port. 12°. Memoir of the centennial celebration of Burgoyne's surrender, held at Schuylerville, N. Y., under the auspices of the Saratoga Monument As- sociation on the 17th of October, 1877. Albany: J. Munsell, 1878. 189 p., i pl. 8°. Wilson (D.) The life of Jane McCrea, with an account of Burgoyne's expedition in 1777. New York: Baker, Godwin &' Co., 1853. 155 P- 12°. Luzerne. Butler (B. C.) 1776-1876. From home-spun to calico. A centennial address delivered at Lu- zerne, July 4, 1876. Albany: Weed, Parsons and Co., 1877. 52 p. 8°. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 27 Queensbury, Gresham (The) Publishing Company. His- tory and biography of Washington County and the town of Queensbury, New York, with historical notes on the various towns. Richmond, Ind.: Gresham Publishing Co., 18(34. xii, 436 p., illus. sq. 4°. Holden (A. W.) A history of the town of Queensbury . . . New York, with biographical sketches of many of its distinguished men, and some account of the aborigines of northern New York. . . viii, i 1., 519 p., 5 pi., 15 port. Albany, N. Y.: J. Munsell„lS^4. 8°. Robert Fulton Books by Fulton. Fulton (Robert). Account of the Powles Hook steam ferryboat, in a letter to Dr. David Hosack, from Robert Fulton, Esq. Fellow of the American Philosophical Society, &c. (In: The American Medical and Philosophical Register. . . Vol. 3. NewYork, 1813. pp. 196-203. 8°.) The advantages of the proposed canal from Lake Erie, to Hudson's river, fully illustrated in a correspondence between the Hon. Gouverneur Mor- ris, and Robert Fulton, Esq. n. p. [1814?] 13 p. 8°. Plan for supplying the City of New-York with fuel. By the New-York Coal Company. [By Robert Fulton.] NewYork: T. Sf J. Swords,i?iin. 16 p. 8°. Torpedo war, and submarine explosions. New York: W. Elliott, i8io. 57 (3) p., 5 pi. sq. 8°. Same. Reprinted Papers," Vol. [i.] Naval 1834. pp. 211-227. f° A treatise pn the improvement of canal navigation; exhibiting the numerous advantages to be derived from small canals. . . London: I. &' J. Taylor, 1796. xvi, 144 p., 17 pi. 4°. Another copy, on the fly leaves of which are written in Fulton's hand (i) a letter to Bonaparte dated 12 floreal an 6 [l May 1798], (2) Observations sur les avantages dont jouiroit la France en adoptant le systeme des petits canaux, (3) Sur la liberie du commerce et pourquoi les pos- sessions et les droits sur les importations, loin d'etre un bien pour les nations, ne font que leur nuire. It in ' ' American State Affairs. Washington,- This copy is bound in the original calf, gilt tooling, bears the armorial boolc plate of Cnles. de Recicourt. Fulton's letters were printed from this text in the " Bulletin of the New York Public Library," v. 5, pp. 348-365 (New York, igoi). Manuscripts Connected with Fulton. (The arrangement is chronological.) Fulton (Robert), Father of the Inventor. Note, II June, 1761, to Seth Duncan, for 16 1. Pennsyl- vania currency, due i June 1762. A. D. S. Re- ceipt on back. 8°. Recherches sur les moyens de perfectionner les canaux de navigation, et sur les nombreux avantages de petits canaux... Paris; Dupain- Triel, an VII [1799]. xvi, 224 p., map, 6 pi. 8°. Fulton (Robert), and Robert R. Livingston. Licence, 20 Aug. 1808, to John R. Livingston, al- lowing him to operate a steam ferry between New York and New Jersey, the grantee to pay the grantors one-sixth of his gross monthly receipts. Certified copy, dated Albany, 22 Mar. 1814, at- tested by William James. Endorsed. 3 p., 1 1. f°. Fulton (Robert). Washington, Oct. 12, 1808. To . In answer to his correspondent's letter from New York; feels the force of his arguments on concave bottoms, Smallman's opinion being to same effect; refers to three accompanying draw- ings to show his own ideas as to boilers. A. L. 2 p. f°. Fulton (Robert). Estimate of the expence of a steam ferry boat for one year. 22 Jan. 1810. Total amount $4,160. A. D. S. i p. 4°. Emmet (Thomas Addis). Opinion given to Livingston and Fulton, dated New York, 19 Jan. 1 8 II, to the effect that (i) after the adoption of the Federal Constitution no state legislature had any authority to grant an exclusive right of making any machine or invention, (2) even supposing such state laws valid there exists no pecuniary penalty to be enforced. D. S. Endorsed. 6 1. f°. Hudson River Steam-Boat Stock. Subscrip- tion certificate of Samuel Jones, jr., for one share, $500. $200 paid in and receipted for by Robert Fulton, I Aug. 1814. Printed form tilled in. No. 334. D. S. I p. 8°. Fulton (Robert). New York, 7 Nov. 1 814. To Commodore [Isaac] Chauncey. Requesting infor- mation as to whether ice on Lake Ontario would bear sledges carrying 2-4 tons, what numbers and classes of boats Chauncey has; wishes Chauncey had a good steam frigate such as Fulton is about finishing. A. L. S. Endorsed. 2 p. 4°. Fulton (Robert). New York, Nov. 23, 1814. To Gen. Jonathan Williams, Philadelphia. In an- swer to Williams' letter of 19th; gives his estimates of dimensions and costs of steam frigate; hull might be built at Philadelphia, but he cannot entrust the construction of the machinery to any one but himself. A. L. S. 4 P- 4°. Emmet (Thomas Addis) . New York, 23 Mar. 1815. To Henry Baldwin, Pittsburgh. Explain- ing that Robert Fulton in his examination at Tren- ton was not guilty of proving falsely a letter said to have been written by him to Lord Stanhope about 1793. A. L. S. Endorsed. 3 p. 4°. New York (State). — Fulton, Heirs of. Commit- tee on. Report of Select Committee on petition of Harriet Dale, widow of Robert Fulton, in behalf of his infant children, recommending favorable action. [2 Feb. 1825.] Holograph of S. L. Gou- verneur, chairman. 3 1., and endorsement. 4°. Printed in New York Assembly Journal, 48th Session, pp. 440-44=. Works about Fulton. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Trinity Church, New York. Form of service De- cember 5th, igoi. . .on the occasion of the unveil- ing of a monument erected . . .by the Society to the memory of Robert Fulton. \New York: A. Liv- ingston, igoi.] 4 1. 8". 28 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. IVorks about Fulton, confd. Robert Fulton memorial. [Dedication cere- monies of monument.] i port. (Amer Soc. Me- chanic. Engineers. Transac. v. 24, pp. 1493- 1538. New York, itjo^,.) Robert Fulton. Memorial erected by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. (Iron Age. V. 68, pp. 5-8. New York, 1901.) Bryson (J. H.) The inventors of the Scotch- Irish race. (In: Scotch-Irish Society of America, Proceedings and Addresses of the 4. Congress, 1892, pp. 174-188. 8°.) Robert Fulton, on pp. 175-178. Carey (Mathew). To the citizens of the United States. Robert Fulton, [Appeal for the collection of a fund for the benefit of F's children, signed Philo-Fulton, i.e., M. Carey. Philadelphia, \'i'2.%.'\ 2 p. 8°. ■ The life of Robert Fulton . . . account of the invention, progress, and establishment of steam- boats; of improvements in the construction and navigation of canals, and other objects of public utility. With an appendix, vi, 371 p., 2 port., I tab. New York: Kirk 6r= Mercein, 1817. 8°. Read before the Literary and Philosophical Soc. of New York. A vindication of the steamboat right granted by the state of New York, in the form of an answer to the letter of Mr. Duer. . . Albany: Weisters &• Skinners, 1818. 2 p.l., 3-178 p. 8°. Dickinson (H. N. ) Fulton in England, illus. (Cassier's Maga. New York, 1908. 8°. v. 33, pp. 602-613.) Duer (William Alexander). Letter addressed to C. D. Colden, in answer to the strictures in his " Life of R. Fulton," upon the report of the select committee, relative to steam navigation. Albany, 1817. 8°. — — A reply to Mr. Colden's Vindication of the steamboat monopoly, etc. Albany, i8ig. 7-184, xxiv p. 8°. Examination of the chancellor's opinion in the case of Rob. R. Livingston and Rob. Fulton, vs. James Van Ingen, Lansing & others. \Albanyi\ Albany Register, 1812. 54 p. 8°. Fulton (Robert), awi^ Edward P. Livingston. In Assembly, March 18., 1814. Memorial & peti- tion of R. Fulton & E. p. Livingston, in behalf of themselves, and the heirs of the late Robert R. Livingston. {Albany, 1814?] 15 p. 8° Fulton Trust Company of New York. Life of Robert Fulton. New York: Fulton Trust Co., 1906. 16 p. 8°. Hubert (Philip G.) Inventors. New York: Chas. Scribner's Sons, 1896. i p.l., 299 p. illus. 8°. (Men of Achievement Series.) ■ Has a chapter on Robert Fulton. Livingston (Edward P.) See Fulton (Rob- ert), and EdVITARD P. LIVINGSTON. Living^ston (Robert R.) The invention of the steamboat, an historical account of the application of steam for the propelling of boats; a letter to the editors of the " American medical and philosophi- cal register," published in that journal in January, 1812, V. 2, p. 256. 16 p. (Old South leaflets [general ser.] no. 108. Boston, 1900.) Contains also, Robert Fulton to Aaron Ogden (1814) on the invention of the steamboat; Fulton's letters on the first voy- age of the Clermont; Reminiscences of H. Freeland in a let- ter to J. F. Reigart, 1856. Melville (George W.) Robert Fulton. Ad- dress read at the Fulton memorial exercises, by George W. Melville, Rear-Admiral and Engineer- in-Chief, U. S. N., December 5, 1901. (Scientific Amer. suppl. v. 52, pp. 21716-21717. NewYork, 1901.) niontg^ry ( ). Notice sur la vie et les travaux de Robert Fulton. Paris: Bachelier, 1825. I p.l., 70 p. 8°. With autograph ol author. Morrison (J. H.) Robert Fulton and the sidewheel steamboat. (Scientific Amer. suppl. V. 97, pp. 282-283. iVVw York, 1907.) New York (State). Courts. In Chancery. Robert R. Livingston & Rob. Fulton vs. James Van Ingen, Lansing and others. [Chancellor's Decision.] «. /. [1812] 15 p. 8°. The opinions of the judges of the supreme court, delivered in the court of errors, in the cause of Robert R. Livingston and Robert Ful- ton, vs. James Van Ingen, and twenty others. Albany: S. Southwick, 1812. 12, 12, 24 p. 8°. Governor. [Message to the Legislature concerning celebration of the 300th anniversary of the discovery of Hudson River by Hendrick Hudson in 1609 and of the centennial anniversary of the first use of steam in the navigation of the Hudson River by Robert Fulton in 1807.] Al- bany Feb. 19, 1906. Albany, 1906. 2 f. f°. Pascal (Felicien). Napoleon i^r contre les torpilleurs. (Rev. polit. & litter, ser. 5, v. i, pp. 274-278. Paris, 1904.) ■ Reigart (J. Franklin). The life of Robert Fulton... Philadelphia: C. G. Henderson &" Co., 1856. xxvii, 29-40, 2 1., 41-297 p., 23 pi., 2 port. 8°. Renwick (James). Life of Robert Fulton. (In: The Library of American Biography, con- ducted by Jared Sparks. Vol. 10, pp. 1-89. Bos- ton, 1838. 12°. ) Review (A) of the letter addressed by William Alexander Duer. . .to Cadwallader Colden. . .in an- swer to strictures contained in his "Life of Robert Fulton," relative to steam navigation. With an appendix containing the acts of the legislature. NewYork, \'i\'i. 27 p. 8°. Richards (T. Addison). The Fulton folly, or, The first steamboat: a romance of American biog- raphy. (Orion: a monthly magazine of literature and art. Athens &• Penfield, Ga., 1843. v. 3, pp. 29-39.) Loaned by Seymour Dunbar. Robert Fulton Centennial. A portion of the addresses delivered at the public meeting held under the auspices of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society in the building of the New York Historical Society. .. November 14, 1907, upon the one hundred and forty-second anni- versary of the birth of Robert Fulton... (In: American Scenic and Historic Preservation So- ciety, Thirteenth Annual Report, 1908, pp. 249- 268. Albany, 1908. 8°.) WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 29 Works about Fulton, cont'd. Suplee (Henry Harrison). Fulton in France, illus. I port. (Cassier's Maga. v. 32, pp. 405- 419. New York, 1907.) Thompson (Waddy). Speeches ... on the bills for the relief of the heirs of Robert Fulton, and to remove the new Treasury building. Delivered in the House of Representatives, March 30 and April 17, 1838. Washington: Gales &' Seaion, 1838. 8 p. 8°. Thurston (R. H.) Robert Fulton: his life and its results. New York: Dodd, Mead, dr' Co. [cop. 1891] 2 p.l., 194 p., I port. 12°. (Makers of America.) Todd (Charles Burr). Life and letters of Joel Barlow, LL.D. Poet, Statesman, Philoso- pher. With extracts from his works and hitherto unpublished poems. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1886. iv, 306 p., I fac. , i port. 8°. Contains material relative to Robert Fulton, and his steamboat. The beginning of steam navigation, 1807- 1812. (In: Memorial History of the City of New York... Edited by J. G. Wilson. New York, 1893. Vol. 3, pp. 184-214. 4°.) United States. Report [favorable] of the select committee on petition for relief of the orphan children of Robert Fulton. Feb. 2, 1829. n.t.-p. 6 p. 8°. (2oCong., 2 sess. H. rpt. 64.) Report [favorable of] the select committee to which was referred the petition of the orphan children of. . .Robert Fulton, Mar. 3, 1830. n. t.-p. 3 p. 8°. (21. Cong., I sess. H. rpt. 267.) Documents relating to the claim of the heirs of Robert Fulton, January 26, 1841. n. t.-p. Washington: Blair df Rives [1841]. 22 p. 8°. (26. Cong., 2. Sess. S. doc. 193. Navy Depart- ment.) Report [unfavorable of] the Committee of Claims on memorial, and sundry documents per- taining to the claim of the heirs of Robert Fulton, against the United States. Feb. 17, 1842. n.t.-p. 4 p. 8°. (27. Cong., 2. sess. S. doc. 127.) Report [favorable] 'of Committee of Claims on petition of heirs of Robert Fulton ... Apr. 12, 1842. ». t.-p. 40 p. 8°. (27. Cong., 2. sess. H. rpt. 588.) Robert R. Livingston. De Peyster (Frederic). A biographical sketch of Robert R. Livingston. Read before the N. Y. Historical Society, Oct. 3, 1876, by the President. 38 p., I port. New York: the Society, 1876. 4°. Fleming (Walter L.) The public career of Robert Livingston. (N. Y. Geneal. and Biog. Rec. V. 32, pp. 129-135; 193-200. New York.) Francis (J. W.) An address delivered on the anniversary of the Philolexian society of Columbia College, May 15, 1831. 2 I., 7-43 P- New York: G. &' C. &• H. Carvill, 1831. 8°. Iiivingston (Robert R.) Essay on sheep; their varieties — account of the mermoes of Spain, France, etc. . .with. . .remarks on sheep and woolen manufactures. Printed by order of the Legislature of. . .New York. New York: T.andJ. Swords, 1809. 186 p., I port. 8°. Instructions of Mr. Livingston, secretary of state, to Dr. Franklin, January 7, 1782, taken from the original manuscript in the department of state. \^Washingtori\ n. d. 17 p. f°. (United States — State department.) Letters to Chancellor Livingston from Richard Montgomery, John Jay, Washington, Gouverneur Morris, members of the Livingston fam- ily, and others: and some by Livingston, 1775- 1799, dealing with the revolution and its effects in New York, the northern campaigns of 1776 and 1777, and national affairs after the war. 180 tran- scripts. 1840? 2 vol. 4°. nioore (John Bassett). Robert R. Livingston and the Louisiana purchase. I pi. (Columbia Univers. Quar, v. 6, pp. 221-229. A'ck; York, 1904.) Palmer (Erastus Dow). Palmer's statue of Robert R. Livingston, first chancellor of the State of New York. \_New York, 1884.] 16 p. sq. 16°. John Fitch. Barnes (Joseph), Remarks on Mr. John Fitch's reply to Mr. James Rumsey's pamphlet. Philadelphia: Printed by J. James, 1788. xvi, 16 p. 4°. Fitch (John). The original steam-boat sup- ported; or, A reply to Mr. James Rumsey's pamphlet, shewing the true priority of John Fitch, and the false datings, &c., of James Rumsey. Philadelphia: Zachariah Paulson, junr., 1788. 34, 20 p. 8°. First issue, with contemporary manuscript corrections in ink. The 20 pages at the end contain Fitch's reprint of Rum- sey's Plan. Philadelphia: Zachariah Paulson, junr., 1788. 34 p. 8°. Second issue, partly reprinted, with corrections. The re- print of Rumsey s Plan is lacking. (Reprinted in Documentary History of the State of New York. Albany, 1850. v. 2, 4. ed., pp. 603-626. 8, ed., pp. 1040-1078.) [Philadelphia? Month? 22, 1792.] To John Nicholson. Fitch had called on Voigt but failed to see him. He will make Nicholson a con- veyance as partner ; it will not be possible for Voigt to make any disturbance for Fitch can take the pat- ent from him at any time. A. L. S. Endorsed. I p. 4°. Manuscript. Stearns (E. S.) Address [at the dedication of the Fitch memorial tablet, July 4th, 1894]. (In: Fitchburg hist. soc. Proceedings.... Fitchburg, Mass., 1895. V. I, pp. 234-252.) Westcott (Thompson). Life of John Fitch, the inventor of the steamboat. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincatt b' Co., 1857. I p.l., xxiv, 25-415 p., I pi. 12°. Newspaper clippings relating to the inventor of the steam- boat inserted. Whittlesey (Charles). Justice to the memory of John Fitch: who in 1785 invented a steam engine and steam boat, planned, constructed and put in operation the steamboat "Perseverance"... in 1788. Cincinnati: Daily Atlas off., 1845. 12 p. 4°. Repr. ; West. lit. journ. & month, rev. Feb. 1845. 30 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. John Fitch, cont'd. Fugitive essays. . .relating to the early his- tory of Ohio. . .with a biography of the first suc- cessful constructor of steamboats; a dissertation upon the antiquity of the material universe, and other articles, being a reprint from various peri- odicals... Hudson, 0... Sawyer, Ingersoll (Sr" Co., 1852. 397 p. 12°. pp. 205-16 wanting. James Rumsey. Rumsey (James). A Short Treatise on the application of Steam, whereby is clearly shown, from actual experiments, that Steam may be ap- plied to propel Boats or Vessels of any burthen against rapid current with great velocity. Great Velocity \sic\. The same principles are also intro- duced with effect by a Machine of a simple and chep [«V.] Construction, for the Purpose of raising Water sufficient for the working of Grist-Mills, Saw-Mills, &c. And for Watering Meadows and other Purposes of Agriculture. By James Rumsey, of Berkeley County, Virginia. Philadelphia, Printed ty Joseph James: Chestnut- Street, 1788. 26 p. 8°. [Second issue.] Philadelphia, Printed iy Joseph James: Chestnut- Street, 1788. 26 p. 8°. " Great Velocity " is not repeated; "cheap" is printed correctly. (Reprinted in : Documentary History of the State of New York. Albany, 1850. 4°. V. 2, pp. 585-600. 8°. V. 2, pp. 1011-1035). Same, separate. 4° and 8°. A Plan wherein the power of steam is fully shown. By a new constructed Machine, for propel- ling Boats or Vessels, of any burthen, against the most rapid streams or rivers, with great velocity. Also, a machine constructed on similar philosophical principles, by which water may be raised for Grist ■or Saw-Mills, watering of Meadows, &c., &c. 20 p. 8°. (Reprinted in John Fitch's Original steam boat supported. Philadelphia, 1788.) Steamboats and Steam Navigation. Account of the origin of steam-boats, in Spain, Great Britain, and America; and of their introduc- tion and employment upon the river Thames, be- tween London and Gravesend, to the present time. London, 1831. pi. 8° Almeida (Camena d'). Le centenaire de la navigation A vapeur et L'Exposition Maritime de Bordeaux. (1807-1907.) (Correspondant. Annee 79, pp. 653-678. Paris, 1907.) Anty (Pierre Bons d'). Etat actuel de la navi- gation a vapeur sur le haut Yang-tseu-Kiang. (La geog. annee 1902, pp. 89-94. Paris, 1902.) Armstrong (Robert). High speed steam navigation and steamship perfection... London, 1859. 8°. Battle (A. E.) The history and development of the marine engine. 2 pi. (Nautical Mag. v. 77, ,pp. 32-39; 102-108; 188-192; 287-291; 380-385; 490-495; v. 78, pp. 28-33, 89-94,228-232, 277- 283, 399-40Z, 465-469. London, 1907.) Buckman (David Lear). Old steamboat days on the Hudson River. Tales and reminiscences of the stirring times that followed the introduction of steam navigation. New York: The Grafton Press [1907]. vi, 3 1., 143 p., 20 p.l., I port., I table. 12°. (The Grafton historical series. ) Bullock (Seymour). The development of steam navigation... (In: Connecticut Magazine, vol. 9, pp. 440-455, 765-774; vol. 10, pp. 97-108, 298-315, 439-460, 695-714; vol. II, pp. 49-64, 246-249. New Haven, iijOS-'oT. 8°.) The "miracle" of the first steamboat. The tragedy of an American genius. . .illus. (Jour, of Amer. Hist. v. i, pp. 33-48. New Haven, 1907.) Who built the first steamboat ? (Cassier's Maga. V. 33, p. 280-292. New York, 1907.) Anniversary of American commerce. Ter- centenary of the building of the " Virginia, " the first ship constructed on the western continent. Centennial of the " Clermont." Rise of the Ameri- can merchant marine and the development of navi- gation since John Fitch of Connecticut and Robert Fulton. (In: Connecticut Magazine, Vol. 11,1907. New Haven, 1907. pp. 361-398. 8°.) Busley (Carl). The development of the marine engine in the last decades. [Read before the So- ciety of German Engineers, in 1888, extracts trans- lated by F. C. Bieg.] (Amer. Soc. Naval En- gineers. Jour. V. I, pp. 151-162. Washington, 1889.) Claxton (Christopher). Logs of the first voy- age, made with the unceasing aid of steam, be- tween England and America, by the Great Western, of Bristol; also an appendix and remarks. Bristol [1838?]. 8°. Cleland (J.) Historical account of the steam engine and its application in propelling vessels: with an account of the number and uses of the steam engines in Glasgow, and number of steam boats on the Clyde, in the years 1825 and 1829; population and statistical tables, births, marriages, and burials. Glasgow: E. Khull &= Son, 1829. I p.l., 68 p., I 1. 8°. Cochrane (Robert). William Symington and the beginnings of steam navigation, illus. (Cas- sier's Maga. V. 32, pp. 525-538. New York, 1907.) Colden (Cadwallader David). Account of the Invention, Progress, and Establishment of Steam- boats. (In Colden's Life of R. Fulton. New York, 1817. 8°.) Dewey (T. M.) Early navigation of the Con- necticut River. The first steamboat. ( In : Conn. Valley Hist. Soc, Papers and Proceedings, 1876- 81, pp. 114-122.) Dodd (George). An historical and explanatory dissertation on steam-engines and steam packets, with the evidence. . .given. . .to the select commit- tees of the House of Commons;. . .with a narrative by Isaac Weld, Esq. of the interesting voyage of the Thames steam yacht from Glasgow. . .to Dublin and London.. London: J. Asperne,\i\.%. 2 p.l. , XXV, I 1., 280 p., 3 pi. 8°. Fitch (Winchester). American pioneers of steam navigation. (American scenic & historic preservation Society, nth annual report, pp. 213- 238. Albany, 1906. 8°.) (Mag. of Hist, with Notes and Queries. vol. 4, pp. 326-343. 1906.) WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 3 1 Steamboats and Steam Navigation, cont'd. Try (H.) The history of North-Atlantic steam navigation with some account of early ships and shipovinets. . .London: Samson Low, Marston &= Co., 1896. xiv, 324 p., 36 pi., I map. 12°. Geschichte des Dampfschiffs-wesens im Nord- atlantischen Ozean. (Archiv. f. Post u. Tele- graphic. V. 27, pp. 461-471. Berlin, 1900.) Goddard (Dwight). A short story of William Symington. Worcester, Mass.: Wyman &= Gor- don, 1904. 4 1., pi. 12°. Has'well (Charles H.) Early marine engineer- ing in the United States. (Engineering. London, 1898. f°. V. 65, pp. 5I5-5I6.) Reminiscences of early marine steam en- gine construction and steam navigation in the United States of America, from 1807 to 1850. (Marine Engineering, v. 4, pp. 6-9. New York, 1899.) The early marine steam engine. (Sci. and Industry, v. 6, pp. 229-234. Scranton, Pa., 1901.) Hulls (Jonathan). A Description and Draught of a new-invented Machine For carrying Vessels or Ships Out of, or Into any Harbour, Port or River, against Wind and Tide, or in a Calm... London: Printed for the Author, ITJJ. 48 pp., 1 pi. 12°. [Reprinted (at London ?) in 1855, for J. Sheepshank.] 4°. This copy is no. 2 of the 12 reprinted on old paper, large paper size; it has a presentation inscription to James Lenox in J. Sheepshank^s autograph. Jouffroy [d' Albans] (A. [F. t.} de). Des bateaux a vapeur. Precis historique de leur inven- tion, essai sur la the'orie de leur mouvement et de- scription d'un appareil palraipWe applicable a tons les navires. . . Precede des deux rapports de I'Aca- demie des Sciences. Paris: L. M. Augusiin, 1841. 2 p.l., xxvi, I 1., 108 p., I pi., I table. 8°. Konigl. (Die) wurttembergischen Staatseisen- bahnen und die Bodenseedampfschiffahrt in Etats- jahre 1899. (Archiv. f. Eisenbahnwesen. Jahrg. 24, pp. 1045-1060. Berlin, 1901.) Latrobe (John Hazlehurst Boneral). A lost chapter in the history of the steamboat. Balti- more, 1871. 44 p. 8°. (Fund Publication No. 5.) The first steamboat voyage on the western waters. (Maryland Hist. Soc. Fund-pub., no. 6.) Baltimore, 1871. 8°. liloyd (James T.) Lloyd's Steamboat directory . . .containing the history of the first application of steam, as a motive power: the lives of John Fitch and Robert Fulton . . . being a valuable statistical work, as well as a guide-book for the. . .public. Cincinnati, Ohio: J. T. Lloyd Ssf Co., 1856. vi, 326 p. 8°. ISacFarlane (R.) History of propellers and steam navigation, with biographical sketches of the early inventors. Netu York, 1851. 12°. IVIaginnis (A. J.) The Atlantic ferry, its ships, men, and working, xviii, 304 p., 14 port., 15 diagrams [folded], illus. London: Whittaker Elliot, ■i.'&i^. 12 p. 16°. Tourasse ( ), and F. N. Mellet. Essai sur les bateaux 4 vapeur appliques a la navigation de I'Europe. Considerations. . .sur les chemins de fer. Paris, 1828-29. 4°- Ward (John). Chronologically arranged events in the evolution of the marine steam engine. Ap- pendix to presidential address, Oct. 1907. i table. (Inst. Engineers and Shipbuilders. Scotland. Transac. sess. 51 (1907-08). Glasgow, 1908. 8°. V. 51, pp. 24-50.) Ward (John D). An account of the steamboat controversy between citizens of New York and citizens of New Jersey, from 1811 to 1824, origi- nating in the asserted claim of New York to the exclusive jurisdiction over all the waters between the two states. Read before the New Jersey His- torical Society, May 15, 1862. (In: New Jersey Hist. Soc, Proceedings, vol. 9, 1864, pp. 117-134.) Watkins (J. Elfreth). The log of the Savan- nah. (In: U. S. National Museum. Report, 1890. pp. 611-639, I fac sim., 4 pi., 2 port. Washing- ton, 1891. 8°.) White (Sir William H.) The progress in steam navigation. (Cassier's Maga. v. 17, pp. 48-64. New York, 1899.) (Smithsonian Inst. Annual rept. 1899, pp. 567-590- Washington, I901.) [The characteristic features of the progress made in steam navigation.] (Jour. Roy. United Service Inst. v. 44, pp. 18-40. London, 1900.) Progress in shipbuilding and marine engi- neering since 1859. i port. (Min. of Proc. Inst, of Civil Engineers, v. 155, pp. n-169. London, 1904.) Whittemore (H.) Advance sheets of Origin and progress of steam navigation in America, con- taining an historical sketch of the ship building operations of Isaac and William H. Webb, during a period of over half a century. Together with a description of Webb's academy and home for ship- builders. New York: The Original if Progressive Pub. Co., 1890. xvii, 9 1., I port. 4°. Past and the present of steam navigation on Long Island Sound. . . {New York, 1893] 8°. Wilson (John Henry). Facts connected with the origin and progress of steam communication between India and England. London, 1850. 8°. Woodcroft (Bennet). Sketch of the origin and progress of steam navigation. London, 1848. pl. 8 . PRINTS. . Henry Hudson and the Discovery of the Hudson River. , The Hudson River from New York City to the Source. Robert Fulton and Early Steam Navigation. With the exception of a number of prints, mainly relating to steam navigation, loaned by Mr. Seymour Dunbar, which are indicated by an asterisk at the beginning of the title, the prints here listed are the property of the Library. The letters E M followed by a number, after a title, indicate that the print in question bears that numtjer in the collection of extra-illustrated volumes formed by Dr. T. A. Emmet and now in possession of the Library. The notes following items marked with the asterisk are by Mr, Dunbar. Sizes are given in inches, height always first. Henry Hudson and the Discovery of THE Hudson River, 1. [Henry Hudson, by Count Pulaski.] 8 9/16 x 7 1/16. Photograph of the painting attributed to Count Pulaski in the City Hall, New York. All the engraved portraits of Hudson are based on this original. An article on this portrait in the Sun (N. Y.) April i, iqo6, recounts the attempts of Meredith Read and Gen. J. G. Wil- son to trace the source of the painting. Its authenticity has not been established, though B, J. Lossing once thought ("The Hudson," N. Y., 1866, p. i) that " conjecture shrewdly guesses *■• that it was by Paul Van Someren! Gen. J. Meredith Read, in his article on Henry Hudson in " Appieton's Cyclopsedia of American Biography," vol. 3, N. Y., 1892, says, p. 298: "There is no authentic portrait or autograph of Hudson ... It is possible, however, that his intimate friend, Jodocus Hondius, engraved Hudson's por- trait, and that it may yet be found." 2. HENDRICK HUDSON: Left: S,W. [mon- ogram]; right:/. W. ORR N. K Vign. 4X X3%. Wood engraving after Samuel Wallin. At head of printed biographical sketch, be- ginning: " Hendrick or Henry Hudson, as he is more usually known." Picture and text enclosed in a border of two lines. From '* The Illustrated American Biography ... By A. D. Jones," vol, 2, N. Y., 1854, p. 23. 3. Same, without border. From "The American Portrait Gallery," N. Y., 1858, p. 287. 4. HENR V HUDSON. \ Designed and etched for Bancroft' s History of the United States, On rock in foreground: Sep. i6og. 3^ x 6^. Vign. Line engraving. 5. HENRY HUDSON. Centre: Eng^, by E, G. Williams &" Bro N. Y. 4 15/ib x 3 13/16. Line engraving. In Tames Grant Wilson's " Memorial History of the City of New York," vol. i, New York, 1892, opp. p. 108. 6. HUDSON RECEIVING HIS COMMIS- SION FROM THE DUTCH EAST INDIA COMPANY. I From the original painting by Chappelin the possession of the publishers. Cen- tre above title: Entered according to act of Con- gress AD i8yo by fohnson. Fry &^ Co in . . . New Yor h J- centre below, fohnson J Fry ^ Co. — Publishers^ New York. 5 3/16 x 7^. Line engraving. 7. THE FLAG OF THE DUTCH EAST INDIA COMPANY. \ D. T. Valentine's Manual 1 86 J. Lithograph, colored. In " Valentine's Manual," 1863, opposite p. 834. '' The flag under which [Hudson] sailed was that of the Dutch East India Company, which was the flag of the United Provinces of the Netherlands — orange, white, and blue, ar- ranged in three equal horizontal stripes; in the centre of the white stripe the letters A, O. C. — Algenteene Ost-Ivdise Co->n- J>a£yi7e—The General East India Co."— D. T. Valentine (who availed himself of information gathered by A. K. Gardner) in his " Manual " for 1863, p. 835. Some issues of the man- ual have this flag reproduced opposite p. 834, while in others the flag of the Dutch West India Company appears instead. The latter has the same colors, but the letters G. W. C. in- stead of A. O. C. The lettering is corrected by A. J. F. Van Laer, Archivist, New York State Library, who writes in a letter of July 28, igog, that the flag bore presumably in the centre the mono- gram of the Dutch East India Company, VOC, meaning Vereenigde Ost Indische Compagnie, with an A above it, to indicate that the ship was sent out by the Amsterdam Cham- ber of that company." 8. HENDR YK HUDSON ON THE DECK OF THE'' HALF MOON." \ From a paints ing, copyright^ 1904.^ by George Wharton Ed- •wards. sH x 4^. Half-tone. In "The Lamp," June, 1904, p. 424. The painting is a panel decoration in the officer's mess hall at West Point. Reproductions in half-tone appeared also in the " International Studio," vol. 23, 1904, p. cccxl (6% x 5^, showing an ornamental frame lettered HENDRYK HUD- SON \i6og). " The Critic," vol. 45, Aug., 1904, p. 108, and the " N. Y, Tribune," April 10, 1904. 9. Arrival of Hudson at Sandy Hook, i6og, p. j. In lower left corner: MUMFORD. 2^x3 15/16. Wood engraving. In John F. Watson's '* Annals and occurrences of New York City and State ..." Phila., 1846, oppos. p. 48. 10. *' Henry Hudson entering New York Bay.'' Half-tone reproduction of a painting by Edward Moran. 3 9/16 x6_K. From T. Sutro's " Thirteen Chapters of American his- tory," 1905. 10 W. DISCOVERY OF THE HUDSON BY HENDRICK HUDSON \ PAINTED B Y \ ALBERT BIERSTADT, 5 3/i6x 8 3/16. Photograph of painting and frame. The original painting is in the House of Representatives^ Washington, in a panel near the South doors. 11. THE HALF MOON. Vignette. 3 i/i6x 3^. Wood engraving. The ship surrounded by Indian canoes; the Palisades to the 33 34 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Henry Hudson, confd. right. In "^ew York City during the American Revolu- tion. . . . From manuscripts in the possession of the Mercan- tile Library Association," 1861. Extra-illustrated; frontis- piece. The scene has naturally been often illustrated: for in- stance in " Munsey's Magazine," July, 1909, p. 465, and in a small wood-cut by Whitney & Jocelyn, on the cover of " New York Historical Society, Fifty-third anniversary ..." 1857. The Henry Hudson memorial window, presented to the New York Historical Society by the Society of Holland Dames, also shows the " Half-Moon " surrounded by Indian canoes. A picture of it appears in N. Y. Herald, Feb. 21, 1909. Another stained glass window, picturing the " Half Moon,''' is in the rooms of the Albany Chamber of Commerce, and IS reproduced in "Albany, New York," a pamphlet pub- lished in 190-? by the Chamber. Wm. Elliot Griffis, in his "Story of New Netherland," Boston and N, Y., 1909, oppos. p. 78, reproduces the title- page of ^ Redres van de Abuysen ende Faulten in de Colonie van Rensselaers-wijck," Amsterdam, 1643, on which is pic- tured a ship " bearing dutch colonists." 11^. " The '* Half-Moon " on the Hudson — 1609 From a painting by L. W. Seavey." 3^ x 5^. Photogravure. In Edgar M. Bacon's " The Hudson River," N. Y., 1902, frontisp. Reproduced also, with the title THE '^HALF MOOy" ON THE HL'DSO.V,- left, below: From the painting by L,. W. Seavey in State Capitol, Albany^ in " The Sloops of the Hudson,*^ by \V. E. Verplanck and M. W. CoUyer, N. Y., 1908, frontisp. 12. TffE HALF MOON. \ Pictures from BUITEN.—DECK VIEW LOOKING AET.— LOOKING FOR WARD BETWEEN DECKS SHO WING OLD CANNON. Three half-tones. Proofs. Pictures r,f the reproduction of the " Half-Moon," built for the Hudson-Fulton celebration of igog. Published in the *' New York Herald," igog. Reproduced from " Buiten," a Dutch publication. Other pictures of this modern '* Half- Moon," in various stages of construction, appeared in the '" Xew York Times," May 30, igog, and July 11, igog, and the "New Yorker Staats-Zeitung, July 23, igog, and July 24, igog, and the " N. Y. Herald," Aug. i, igog. 12%. Hudsondiscovering the North River , 3^x6^' Wood engraving. Caricature. 13. LANDING OF HENDRICK HUDSON. \ From the original Picture by R. W. Weir in the possession ofGulian C. Verplanck^ Esq. 5^ x "}%. Line engraving. a. As described- em. i037g. b. With oblique lines added in the sky, title as above, and rest of inscription changed to; left: Painted by: right: RobH W. Wier \sic!'\\ centre, below title: Entered according to act 0/ Congress AD.., iSbO by Johyison^ Fry &r' Co. in . . . Ne-w York. 14. Landing of Hendrick Hudson.: centre above. Below : September 8th j6og. Jledallion, title in ornamental border, on certificate of membership of The St. Nicholas Society of the City of New York, issued to \\ illiam F. Van Wagenen, Lith. &" Pr. in Colors by T. Sinclair, Phil<^ 2^x1^. EM. 12264. 15. INTERVIEW OF HENDRICK HUD- SON WITH THE INDIANS. Left: Capt. S. Eastman U. S. A rmy ; right : Robert Hinshel- wood; centre, above title ; PI. 2 ; centre be- low : PUBLISHED BY LIPPINCOTT, GRAMBO&'CO.PHILADA 5 9/16x8 5/16. Line engraving, em. 10384. a. As described. From H. R. Schoolcraft's " History of the Indian tribes of the U. S.", Phila., 1857, oppos. p. 100. b. Without publication line. 16. The Half Moon ascending the river. 3 9/16 x 4j^. Arched top. Wood engraving. In Mary L. Booth's " History of the City of New York," N. Y. 1867? p. 34. 17. THE HALF MOON A T YONKERS. A wood engraving, arched top; width, 4^; at left, for a width of 2)^. it continues downward in a bust portrait of HENR Y HUDSON: height at left 5J^, centre 6, right 3. Wood engraving. In *' Harper's Magazine," Sept. 1854, p. 433. " Henry Hudson founding Nova Belgia." See no. 420. 18. Hudson, on his return to Holland received with great welcome by the Merchants and Burgomasters of Amsterdam. Left: Lith. G. Hay ward 120 Water St.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual for 1851. 3^x5 15/16. Lithograph, one tint. 19. HUDSON'S LAST VOYAGE. Painting by the Hon. John Collier, in the National Gal- lery, London (Tate Gallery). CARBON PRINT FROM THE ORIGINAL BY FRANZ HANFSTAENGL, MUNICH. 13^x11%. Frequently reproduced; e.g., in E. M. Bacon's "Henry Hudson," N. Y., igo7, in '"Harper's Weekly," Jan. 14, 1882, p. 2g (wood engraving by C. Roberts), and in "L'Art,'^7e ann^e. tome 3, Paris, 1881, p. 203 (from a drawing by Charles E. Wilson). The Hudson River. This list is one of prints illustrating the Hud- son River from Nevp York City to the Source. In order to fix some limit, only such have been included as actually show the river. (That ex- cludes a picture of the Dutch church at Tarry- town, for instance, or the historic house at Tap- pan, and includes pictures of the Philipse manor at Yonkers, in which the river appears.) As the purpose was to illustrate the river at ever}- possible point along its banks, and at every possible time, not only the more important prints have been included, but also inferior wood-cuts and modern half-tones, whenever they served that purpose, and particularly whenever no bet- ter material was known or available. A par- ticularly interesting publication, on account of its comprehensiveness, is the "Panorama of the Hudson," showing both sides of the river from New York to Albany as seen from the deck of the Hudson River Day Line Steamers repre- sented from eight hundred consecutive photo- graphs (copyrights 1906, by Wallace Bruce, N. Y.). 19^- WADE & CROOME'S 1 PANORAMA | of the I HUDSON RIVER \ FROM | NEJi^ YORK TO ALBANY. \ Drawn from Nature and Engraved by | WILLIAM WADE. \ NEW YORK: I PUBLISHED BY J. DISTURNELL. I 102 Broadway between Pine Sf Wall Streets \ 1846. I Copper Plates Printed by Burton. ] Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1845, by William Wade in . . . New York. I $2.00 Colored) — Drawn to a scale of One Mile to the Inch — ($1.50 Plain) Engraved title-page and plan enclosed in a ruled border. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 35 Prints, Hudson River, confd. Size, including border, width sJ^, length about 133. Folded in covers. Uncolored copy. Near the Palisades, the " Hendrik Hudson " is steaming up the River. ao. Same, title re-engraved, with ALBANY changed to WATERFORD and a view of Cohoes Falls added beneath title. About 12 inches added to length. Colored copy. The Bay, Harbor and Narrows. See also views of the Battery and Castle Garden, e.g; no. 249. 3oJ'2. [New York Harbor, 1776. The lower bay by moonlight; ships riding at anchor.] "An original sketch by an English officer on board of one of Adra'. Howe's Fleet, while at anchor in the lower bay, previous to landing on Long Island at Graves-End." 9 x i\%. Water- color drawing, em. 2583. The inscription is in the handwriting of Dr. Emraet. From Lord Rawdon's collection. 21. [A view of New York Harbor, 1776.] "An original sketch by an English officer on board of one of Adml Howe's Fleet, while at anchor in New York Harbor, just after the battle of Long Island." 8^^x14^^. Water-color draw- ing. EM. 2584. The inscription is in the handwriting of Dr. Emmet. From Lord Rawdon^s collection. On the back is written in a con- temporary hand: " When the Ships of War was going through the Narrows in New York Harbour." 22. DENYSE'S FERRY, \ the first place at luhich the Hessians and British landed on Long Island Aug. 22nd, 1776. NOW FORT HAMIL- TON. Left: Lith. of A. Brown 9 & II Thames St., N. Y.; right: for Henry McClos- ley's Manual of 1867. 4 11/16x6 15/16. Lithograph in tints. EM. 8149. 23. "Fort Lafayette (New York Harbor) 18 so." S. Hollyer. Copyright 1908. 3^xsJ4. Etch- ing. HoUyer's " Views of old New York." 24. The NARROWS, (between Red and Yel- low Hook, on Long Island, & the East Bluff of Staten Island,) bearing S. b. W. 3 s/i6x 1854 in. Aquatint, colored. In '' Atlantic Neptune/' vol. 4, London, 1781, folio 25, no. 5. Same, uncolored, EM. 10668. 25. THE NARROWS, \ From the Pavilion, near the Quarantine Ground, Staten Island. Left: Drawn by E. W. Clay; over left upper border: PLATE I; right: Engraved by R. Hinshel- wood; right below: Printed by A. King. 4 13/16 X 7^4- Line engraving. a. With scratched lettering. Centre: TA^ Narrows; left: Drawn by E. W. Clay; right: Engraved by R. Hinshelwood; right, below: Printed by A. King. India paper. In S. L. Knapp's " The picturesque beauties of the Hudson River and its vicinity," Proofs, N. Y., 1835, oppos. p. 11. b. As described. 26. THE NARROWS FROM STATEN IS- LAND. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: E. Fin- den; centre below: London. Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue 26 Ivy Lane 1837. 4 11/16x7. Line engraving. From Bartlett's " American Scenery," vol. i, London, 1840, oppos. p. 34. Same, EM. 11354. 27. THE NARROWS FROM STATEN IS- LAND. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: En- graved by J. White; centre, below: Engraved for the Columbian Magazine; right, below: W. L. Ormsby Printer. In " Columbian Magazine," June, 1847, oppos. p. 280. Sam.e design as preceding, with changes of figures in fore- ground, and in foliage at leftin foreground; also with steam- ships and sailing vessels added. 28. THE NARROWS. \ (From Fort Hamilton.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Wallis; centre, below: London. Published for the Proprietors, by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, 1838. 4 13/16 x 75^. Line engraving. In W. H. Bartiett's '■ American Scenery . . ." vol. 1. London, 1B40, oppos. p. 130. 29. THE NARROWS. | {From Fort Hamilton.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: Dick; centre, be- low: Engraved for the Ladies Companion. Same design as preceding. In " The Ladies' Companion,'* vol. 12, New York, 1840, frontispiece. Same, without names of artist and en- graver, and with inscription in centre, below, changed to: Engraved expressly for the Rover. 30. THE NARROWS. \ {From Fort Hamilton.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: M. Osborne; centre, below: Engraved for the Ladies Wreath. ^y^sLjVi. Line engraving. Same design as no. 28, with minor figures removed and added work on water at left. 31. Fort Hamilton and the Narrows. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: £. 0. Freeman. 413/16x7. Line engraving. [185-?] Same design as no. 28, steamer substituted for sailing vessel in front of Fort Lafayette, and three soldiers in foreground at right. 32. VIEW OF THE NARROWS \ FROM STATEN ISLAND. Left: From Nature & on Stone; right: by Chas. Gildemeister ; centre: Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1851 by Emil Seitz, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the South. Disi. of N. Y. Border of one line. 75^x10 5/16; to border, 8 ii/i6xiij^. Lithograph, colored. EM. II937. 33. Bay and Harbour of New York from Staten Island. Left: Drawn by E. W. Clay; right: Engraved by J. A. Rolph; centre, below: Pub- lished for the New York Mirror. 4 9/16 x 7%. Line engraving. 183- ? a. With scratched lettering. Centre: New York from Staten Island; left: E. W. Clay Delt.; right: J. A. Rolph Set. India paper. In S. L. Knapp's "The picturesque beauties of the Hudson River," Proofs, N. Y., 183s, oppos. p. 17. b. As described. Same. EM. 11906. 34. STAATEN-ISLAND \ bei New York. Right: Ahrens sc; left below: Aus d. Kunstanst. d. Bibl. Inst, in Hildbh; right, below: Eigenthum 36 WORKS' RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. d. Verleger; right, above: DCCF. Border of one dotted line. 4 3/16x6 3/16; to border, 45^ X 6 J^. a. As described. In " Meyer's Universum . . . Amerikanische Ausgabe," 4 Band, N. Y., 1852, oppos. p. 38. b. With inscription changed to: STAATEN-ISLAND Left: DRAWN AFTER NATURE; right: For the Proprietor HERMANN J. MEYER; left, below: Published for HERMANN J. MEYER, 164 William Str., NEW YORK; right, below: Copyright secured according to ACT of CONGRESS. In " The United States Illustrated," vol. i, parts 8 and g, New York [185-?], oppos. p. 151. 35. NEW YORK-BAY \ VON STATEN-IS- LAND AUS GESEHEN. \ Left: W. HEINE, NEW YORK, 1850, DEL.; right: JOHN POPPEL SCULPIST; centre, below: In Mey- er's Monatsheften (Published for HERMANN J. MEYER, NEW YORK). With border of one dotted line. 4 5/16x6 7/16; to border line, 4 7/16 x 6J^. Line engraving. a. As described. b. With inscription: NEW-YORK-BAY \ FROM STATEN-ISLAND, NEAR THE LIGHTHOUSE... Left: W. HEINE, NEW YORK, 1850, DEL.; right: JOHN POPPEL SCULPIST. em. 12050. 36. VIEW OF THE MARINE HOSPITAL AND QUARANTINE GROUNDS, STATEN ISLAND, NEW YORK. Left: Lith. from Nature by G. Wenige, 333 Broadway, N. Y.; right: Printed by Brown & Quinlan, lyg Broadway, N. Y. 13^^x365^. Lithograph, in tints. EM. 11819. 37. CITY OF NEW-YORK, BROOKLYN, JERSEY CITY & QUARANTINE STA- TION ON STATEN ISLAND. Above, key to view. 3 r5/i6xio^. Line engraving in color. EM. 12370. 38. NEW-YORK QUARANTINE, STATEN ISLAND. Right: S. Stiles & Co., N. Y. iYi-x. i 15/16. Line engraving. About 1840. EM. 12246 and 12271. 39. NEW-YORK BAY AND THE NARROWS. Left: Drawn from Nature by Aug. Kollner; right: Lith. by Deroy. — Printed by Cottier; centre, above title: New-York & Paris pub- lished by Goupil, Vibert & Co. | 37; centre, below: Entered according to act of Congress, in the year 1850, by Aug. Kollner, in the clerk's office of the District Court for the Southern District of New-York. Border of two lines. 7_7/i6xiiJ^; to border, 8 i/i6xn n/i6. Lithograph, one tint. em. 11909. 40. VIEW OF THE NEW YORK QUARAN- TINE, STATEN ISLAND. Left: Lith. G. Hayward 1 20 Water St., N. Y.; right: For D. T. Valentines Manual 1851. 7 9/16 x 10 15/16. Lithograph, in color, em. 11393. 41. VIEW OF THE QUARANTINE GROUNDS AND BUILDINGS, STATEN ISLAND, MAY, 18 S8. Left: Lith. by Geo. Hayward, 120 Water St., N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valen- tine's Manual for l8SQ. 5^x17. Lithograph. EM. 6947. In "Frank Leslie's" for Sep. 11, 1858, p. 238, there appears a picture of " The Quarantine buildings as they appeared be- fore their destruction by the residents of Staten Island, Sep. i, 1858." The ferry boat " H. B." is shown in the foreground. 41^. NEW BRIGHTON \ STATEN ISLAND. I P. A. Mesier's Lith. 28 Wall St., New-York. Vign. 75^ X i8§i. In "Description of New Brighton,'' (N. Y., April 15, 1836). On p. 18 the statement is made that the " two swift and beautiful steamboats, the New Brighton and the "Water Witch," will make the trip to New York " in twenty minutes "T 42. Glimpse of New York, from the Narrows. [Showing the old Fort Tompkins Light-house, Staten Island.] 2 15/16x9^. Wood engrav- ing. From " Picturesque America," N, Y., vol. 2, 1874, p. 547. 43. VIEW OF NEW YORK BAY FROM PAVILION HILL, LOOKING OVER ST. GEORGE AND TOMPKINSVILLE, STATEN ISLAND (RICHMOND BOROUGH). 67/16 X2I 9/16. Half-tone from photograph. In " The New Metropolis, 1600-1906 . . . edited by E. I. Zeislofc " (N. Y., copyright 1899). 44. Castle Williams from the Battery. [182-?] Aquatint by C. F. W. Mielatz, 1905, from a "nine-inch plate by Stubbs," Staffordshire pot- tery. 5 7/16x6 13/16. Published by the Society of Iconophiles, Series vii, no. 5,. 1905. R. H. Lawrence, in his Catalogue (igoSJ of the Society's Publications, says: *' Castle Williams . . . was designed in 1B07 by Col. Jonathan Williams, and completed just before the War of 1812. ... In the foreground appears a portion of the lower end of the city with its shores in their natural beauty." 45. WHITE-HALL, VICTORIOUS MAY 20th, 1825. Left: Cummings, Fecit; right: Eng. by S. Maverick & J. F. Morin; on a rock in iois- gTound: HOWARD. 35^x4^. Line engrav- ing. In the distance is seen Castle William. In C. D. Colden's " Memoir . . . presented ... at the celebration of the com- pletion of the New York canals," N. Y., 1825, oppos. p. 236. 46. CASTLE WILLIAM, NEW YORK HAR- BOR. Centre, within border: Gunn del; right, within border: WORCESTER CO. Vig- nette 3^x95^. Wood engraving. 1851. From an illustrated journal. 47. "Castle William." Etching by Henry Far- rer. 7^x1154. 48. VIEW FROM BATTLE HILL. | (Gowanus Heights, near New York.) [Looking across Gowanus and New York Bays, Governor's Island and the City in the distance.] Centre, above title: Draiun & Engraved by James Smillie. 4^4 x 7 i/i6. Line engraving. a. As described, em. 9188 and 10922. b. [Gowanus Heights near New York) re- placed by {Greenwood Cemetery). Right, below: Printed by Rice & Buttre, N. Y. 49- NEW YORK BAY. Left: /. P. Houston, R.S.A.; right: J. T. Smyth. 41^x6^. [1840-?] Line engraving. Trimmed close to engraved portion. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 37 Prints, Hudson River, cont'd. 50. "N. Y. Bay, off Staten Island. By W. J. Bennett, 1839:" in pencil on back. 145^ x 19^. Aquatint, em. 11839. 51. NEW YORK BAY. \ {From the Telegraph Station.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Wal- lis; centre, below: London. Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 I-vy Lane, 1838. 4^ X yYs. Line engraving. a. As described. In Bartlett's " American Scenery," vol. i, New York, 1840, oppos. p. 59. b. Without publication line. em. 12114. 52. NEW YORK BAY. Left: W. H. Bartlett; tishX:M. Osborne. 4^x71/16. Line engrav- ing. Same design as preceding, with minor changes in figures at left beyond and added work on landscape. 53- NEW YORK HARBOR. | As seen from the Heights of Staten Island. New York City ap- pears in the centre; East River, Governors Island and City of Brooklyn on the right; \ Hudson River, Bedloes Island and Jersey City on the left. Numerous craft are floating on the water, among which in the near distance, is an I Ocean Steamer and at anchor a Man of War. Left: Jas. Hamilton del; right: Dougal sc. i^^■x.^yi. Line engraving. [184-?] 54. View of the Bay of New York from the Bat- tery. Centre, below: Designed & Engraved expressly for the New Mirror by W. J. Ben- nett. 4 13/16x7 7/16. Aquatint. From the " New Mirror," vol. z. New York, 1844, oppos. p. 273. 55. BAY OF NEW YORK \ (From the Nar- rows.)'Leit: Beckwith; right: Beckwith; right below: Printed by W. Pate; centre below: NEW YORK G. P. PUTNAM & CO. Vig- nette. 4^ X 6J4- Line engraving. From Irving's " Life of George Washington," vol. 3, New York, 1858, oppos. p. 84. Same. em. 11907 (India paper) and EM. 11364. 56. View from Trinity-Church Steeple. 4 3/16 x 9 7/16. Wood engraving. From " Picturesque America," vol. 2, N. Y,, 1874, p. 552. 57. "LIBERTY ENLIGHTENING THE WORLD"— BARTHOLDI'S COLOSSAL STATUE ON BEDLOW'S ISLAND, NEW YORK HARBOR.— DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. Left: SUPPLEMENT TO HARP- ER'S WEEKLY, OCTOBER 30, 1886; right: COPYRIGHT, 1886, BY HARPER & BROTH- ERS; above: [names of places shownT] 13 J^ x 40 15/16. Wood engraving after Harry Fenn. 58. THE CENTENNIAL NAVAL PARADE IN THE UPPER BAY— THE U. S. S. "DE- SPATCH" AND HER CONVOY PASSING GOVERNOR'S ISLAND, AS SEEN FROM THE WASHINGTON BUILDIN G.— DRAWN BY CHARLES GRAHAM. Wood engraving. Supplement to Harper's Weekly, May II. 1889. In the foreground is the Battery, with Castle Garden seen from above. General Views of Manhattan Island: Fanciful views of i6th and 17th centuries. 59. MANHATTAN ISLAND IN THE SIX- TEENTH CENTURY. Wood engraving. In J. G. Wilson's " Memorial History of New York," vol i N. Y., 1892, p. 33. 1 ■ , 60. MANHATTAN ISLAND BEFORE THE DUTCH. Right, within border: W. T. Wil- son. Centre.below: Reproduced by permis- sion from Todd's "The Story of the City of New York": \ G. P. Putnam's Sons. I THE CITY HISTORY CLUB OF NEW YORK. 3/4 X5^. Process plate. 61. [Manhattan Island from the Long Island shore, showing the lower end of the island thickly wooded, a small sailing vessel in the river, and eight canoes; two Indians in the foreground on the Long Island shore.] 4 5/16 x 7 1/16. Wood engraving after J. D. W[ood- ward.'] A similar fanciful view of " The Island of Mana-hat-ta in the year 1600," by Anthony, appears in " The New Metropo- lis, 1600-1900 . . . , edited by E. I. Zeisloft," (N. Y., copy- right 1899J. • 1-/ 62. September 13th, l6og. [View of the lower end of Manhattan Island; a sailing vessel is anchored at the left, and four wigwams are seen on the east shore of the Island.] Border of two lines. 3 15/16x6 11/12; to border, 45^ x 6%. Lithograph, one tint. In Hoffman's " A treatise upon the estate and rights of the Corporation of the City of New York... N. Y., i8S3, frontis- piece. 63. Purchase of Manhattan Island by Peter Minuit 1626. Left, over upper border: Copy- right 1902 by Title Guarantee & Trust Co., N. Y.; right, within lower border: Alfred Fredericks; right: Gubelman Gravure Jersey City; centre: From the Painting by Alfred Fredericks for the Title Guarantee & Trust Company. ^% x 8. Photogravure. " New Amsterdam, 1643,'^ from a drawing by E. L. Henry, appears in " The Story of the Fort," issued by the Title Guarantee and Trust Co., igoo. General views of New York City: 17th Century. These views are grouped according to the approximate dates at which they represent the city. Date of publication is often much later, as in the case of the Hartgers view (no. 64). Hartgers, about 1630. 64. t'Fort nieuw Amsterdam op de Manhatans: title at left above within border. 3 3/16 x SfYi. About 1630. Line engraving. In " Beschrijvinghe van Virginia, Nieuw Nederlandt, Nieuw Engelandt, en d'Eylanden Bermudes, Berbados, en S. Christoffel," published by Joost Hartgers. Amsterdam, 1651, p. 21. This is the earliest known engraved view of New York. A worn impression of the plate appears in the first edition of Adriaen vander Donck's " Beschryvinge van Nieuw-Neder- landt," Amsterdam, 1655, p. 9. J. H. Innes ("New Amster- dam and Its People," N. Y., 1902, note 2, p. 2), says: " A slight examination of this view by any person acquainted with the early topography of New Amsterdam will show that it is a reversed one, and as such must, in all probability, have been taken by means of a plain camera obscura, — no doubt from some point on the Long Island shore, — and never restored to its true position. The correct view appears by simply holding a mirror to the reversed one." Opposite p. 2 in the work just quoted from the Hartgers view appears reversed and en- larged. The three following, nos, 65-67, are based on this view: 65. NIEUW NEDERLANDT : centre, above; centre: This view of Fort Amsterdam on the 38 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, cont'd. Manhattan is copied from an ancient Engrav- ing executed \ in Holland. The Fort was erected in 1623 but finished upon the above model by Governor Van \ Tioiller in 1635. 2^x4 15/16. Line Engraving. About 1850. Same design as preceding. 66. NIEUW NEDERLANDT: centre, above. Left: Lith. by H. R. Robinson; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manuel; centre: This view of Fort Amsterdam on the Manhattan is copied from an ancient Engraving executed \ in Hol- land. The Fort was erected in 1623 but finished upon the above model by Governor Van \ Twil- ler in 1635. z 13/16x65^. Lithograph, one tint. Same design as no. 64, with minor changes. 67. A view of Fort Amsterdam in 1635, being \ 26 Years after the discovery of Henry Hud- son. 2% X 3. Line engraving. About 1850. Same design as no. 64. A copy of the Hartgers view, in line engraving by E. D. French, was published in "Views of early New York, pre- pared for the New York Chapter of the Colonial order of the Acorn," N. Y., 1904, oppos. p. 11. Block, about 1650. 68. NOVUM AMSTERODAMUM: title at cen- tre above vfithin upper border on banderole. 2fix7j4; with frame, 3^x9 1/16. Photo- graph from painting by Block, from the origi- nal in the possession of the Nevp York His- torical Society. 69. Half-tone reproduction of preceding. 15^x4^- 70. "New Amsterdam about 1650." Novum Amsterodamum on banderole within upper border line. Below: ENGRAVED FOR THE SOCIETY OF ICONOPHILES OF NEW YORK, igo6. Underneath, engraving of up- per part of carved wood frame surrounding the painting, with Int Schip Lydia door Lau- rens Hermanz Block A. l6so on a banderole. Below: Engraved by Sidney L. Smith. 313/16 X754. Publication of the Society of Iconophiles, Series ix, no. 6. A copy of no. 68. 71. A VIEW OF NEW AMSTERDAM IN 1656. I THE CHURCH BUILT IN THE FORT, INOW THE BATTERY,'] IN 1642. Right: HOWLAND, SC. 3^x6?^. Wood engraving, em. 12681. Partly based on the Block view (no. 68). ViSSCHER, ABOUT 1652. 72. NIEUWAMSTERDAM \ op t Eylant Man- hattans: centre above, within border. Below: A — K, key to structure shown in print. 2 7/16x12 3/16. Line engraving. On map: NOVI BELGII I NOVJEQUE ANGLIM NECNON I PARTIS \ VIRGINIA-TABULA I multis in locis emendata a \ Nicolao Joannis Visschero. Published about 1652. The church which, as J. H. Innes says (" New Amsterdam and Its People,'' N. Y., 1902, note 2, p. 2), was erected in 1633, appears in this print. Same. EM. 10518. Same, colored. 73. NIEUW AMSTERDAM \ op t'Eylant Man- hattans: centre above within border. Sur- rounded by ornamental border. 2^ 3£ 12. Line engraving. At foot of map of " Novi Belgii | Novaeque Anglise nee non partis Virginise tabula multis in locis emendata par Nico- laum Visscher." A reissue by N. Visscher, the son, of N. J. Visscher's map of Novum Belgium {names of Philadelphia and other towns added) in " The English Atlas," volume 3. . , By Will Nicolson. .. Oxford, 1683. 74. NIEUW AMSTERDAM \ op f Eylant Man- hattans: centre above. Left, within border: E. Nieuwenhff. lyi's.yyi Line engraving. At toot of map of " Nova Belgica sive Nienw-Nederlandt " in Adriaen vander Donck's " Beschryvinge van Nievw-Ned- erlandt," 2nd edition, Amsterdam, 1656. According to J. H. Innes, copied from N. J. Visscher's map of 1655. See his " New Amsterdam and Its People," p. 49, note 2. Danckers, 165-^ ■jt.. NEW AMSTERDAM {NOW NEW YORK) . I As it appeared about the year 164.0, while under the Dutch Government. Left: Copied from an ancient Etching of the same size, Published by Justus Danckers, at Am- sterdam. 3 3/16x11%. Line engraving. EM. 10453. From " A history of New York ... by Diedrich Knick- erbocker," vol" I, New York, 1809, frontispiece. Dancker's view was a copy of the Visscher view of New York. A worn impression of the same plate appears in vol. 2 of the 2d edition of the Knickerbocker history, N. Y., 1812. frontispiece. J. H. Innes {" New Amsterdam and Its People," New York, 1902, p. 347) says: " The date given to the print is ' about the year 1640,' but as a matter of fact it represents a period about ten years later than that date. . . Several of the topographical features of the town are brought out with much greater dis- tinctness upon this Dancker's view than on the ' Vanderdonck View,' [which is a copy of the Visscher view]." Mr. Innes concludes that although this view corresponds quite closely in general appearance with the Vanderdonck View, a minute ex- amination shows many points of dissimilarity. 76. NIEUW -AMSTERDAM 1659: title at cen- tre above. Centre: Lith by G. Hayward I Piatt St. for D. T. Valentine. EM. 10476. Same design as preceding, with minor changes. MONTANUS, ABOUT 167O. 77. NOVUM AMSTERODAMUM on bande- role above, within upper border. 4 15/16 x 65^. Line engraving. In " De Nieuwe en Onbekende Weereld of Beschryving van America . . . Door Arnoldus Montanus," Amsterdamy 1671. The same plate, — a worn impression, appears in John Ogilby's " America," London, 1670-1671, p. 171, and in ' Die Unbekante Neue Weldt . . . Durch Dr. O. D[apper]," Am- sterdam, 1673. Same. em. i68i and 10414. 78. VIEW OF THE CITY OF NEW AM- STERDAM (NOW NEW YORK). Left: Copied (in Fac Simile) from the Plate in Montanus Niewwe en Onbekende Weereld (in State Library); right: Engraved and Printed by J. E. Gavit; above, within upper border, NOVUM AMSTERODAMUM, on banderole. 79. NEW YORK, 1671, FROM THE ORIGI- NAL IN THE POSSESSION OF THE PUB- LISHER. Above, within upper border: NO- VUM AMSTERODAMUM, on a banderole. 4 13/16x65^. Etching. A modern copy of the Montanus view [published by J, F. Sabin?] A wood-engraving by Hoivland., " New Amsterdam (New WORKS' RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 39 Prints, Hudson River, confd. York) in 1656," illustrates the confusion arising from the placing of different dates on modern copies of the same origi- nal. A copy of the Montanus view, line engraving by E. D. French, was published in "Views of early New Yoric, pre- pared for the New York Chapter of the Colonial Order of the Acorn," N. Y., igo4, oppos. p. 27. Hugo Allard, 1673. 80. Niewu)- Amsterdam onlangs Nieww jorci gen dint, I ende hernomen by de Nederlanders op den 24. Aug: 1673. \ eindelijk aan de Engelse lueder afgestaan: title at centre, above, within ornamental border; latter surmounted by ornamental device at left of which, on shield: Typis CAROL! ALLARD Amstelodami cum Priml. Upper corners cut. i^ x loT Photo- graph of line engraving. Reproduction of the entire map. 75^x11 11/16. 81. Niewui-Armterdam onlangs Nieuw jorck genaemt, \ ende hernomen bij de Nederland- ers op den 24 Aug: 1673. \ eindelijk aan de Engelfe mieder afgestaan: centre above, within border. Below: A — T, key to structures shown. 2%xis}i in. .[About 1673.] Line engraving. On map: TOTIUS NEOBELGII NOVA ET ACCURATISSIMA TABULA. Apud I Reinier & Josua \ OTTENS \ Am- stelodami. [About 1740.] A copy of the view on Hugo AUard's second map, 1673, usually called the fourth view of New Netherlands. 82. NEW-YORK, I in 1673. Left: {Jos. W. Moulton, del.) ; right: {Robt. M. Ca4 X 7'i/i. Lithograph in color. See note to No. go. Same, without PI. IX. Separate, large paper. Same, em. 10701. 97. THE WATER GATE, FOOT OF WALL ST. NEW YORK, 1679. Right: G. Hayward & Co., lyi Pearl St., N. Y.; over right upper corner: PI. X. 4^4x7^. Lithograph in color. See note to No. 90. Same, without PI. X. Separate, large paper. 98. VIEW OF THE EAST RIVER SHORE, NORTH OF THE WATER GATE, N. Y., 1679. Left: T^ith. of Hayward & Co., 171 Pearl St., N. Y.; over right upper corner: PI. XI. 4 7/16x7 5/16. Lithograph in color. See note to No, 90. Same. Separate, large paper copy. 99. VIEW OF THE HOUSE OF SIMON AERTSEN DE HART \ still standing on Gowanes Bay in 1867. Left: Lith. of Hay- ward & Co., 171 Pearl St., N. Y.; over right upper corner: PI. XII. 6 7/16x8?^. Litho- graph in color. See note to No. go, 100. SOUTH PROSPECT of the CITY of NEW YORK I BY WILLIAM BURGIS, 1717- Cen- tre, within lower border, ornamental device enclosing dedication to Gov. Robert Hunter; below lower border twenty-four printed titles, numbered, and indicating points of interest in city, harbor, and Long Island, n x 37%. Lithograph, one tint. The original is in the possession of the New York Historical Society. W. L.Andrews [" New Amsterdam, New Orange, New York," iSgy, p. 62] says : " This is believed to be the first view of New York engraved in America and it is undoubtedly an entirely original production. The importance of this en- graving in the pictorial annals of our city cannot well beover- estimated. It is beyond question, an accurate representation of the place it claims to depict and in the key at the foot of the print ... is embraced the name of every building of note of which the city at that time could boast." loi. VIEW IN NEW YORK, 1746. \ (Lower Market.) Left: Lith. by Geo. Hayward, 120 Water St., N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual for 1858. Border of one line. 3j4x6; to border, 3 11/16x6%. Lithograph. This view, like that of "The Ferry House, 1746 (Fulton Street, Brooklyn)," which appears in the same volume of Val- entine's Manual," is taken from the Burgis view. Same. em. 10449. 102. BROOKLYN, SITE OF FULTON FERRY, AND NEW YORK OPPOSITE. \ 1717. 1454x13^. Water color. Copy of a portion of the Burgis view of 1717. 103. "New York Harbor & Yacht Fancy, 1717." S. Holly er. Copyright 1905. 3^x5^. Etch- ing. Hollyer's '"Views of old New York," 4th series. Copy of a portion of the Burgis view [No, loo] . 104. The South Prospect of the City of New York in America: on banderole above, within upper border. Border of two lines. 6 i/i6x 20 5/16; to border S^xzoyi. Line engrav- ing. In " London Magazine," Aug., 1761, oppos, p. 400. Evidently founded on the Burgis print of 1717, showing the same general view and with the ferry house in foreground ; but changes in the water front as well as in the arrangement of the streets point to a later date, 105. A copy of the preceding, with North America instead of America. EM. 2593 & 6970. This is essentially a close copy of the preceding ; the differ- ences are matters of technique mainly. For instance, there are none of the vertical lines which in the " London Maga- zine " print occur under most of the vessels. Shading almost obliterates the "21 " near the lower right corner. And there is only one loop at the end of "America" instead of two. io6. A SOUTH PROSPECT OF YE FLOURISH- ING CITY OF NEW -YORK IN THE PROVINCE OF NEW YORK, NORTH AMERICA. Left: Copied for D. T. Valen- tine's Manual; right: Lithd. by G. Hayward 7S Nassau St. New York 184.9; centre: Re- duced from the original Copy, which is 6 Feet 6 in. in length and 28 in. wide . . . Pre- sented to the New York Society Library 1848 by Mrs. Maria Peebles of Lansingburgh, N. Y. At centre inscribed within lower border on ornamental work a dedication to Governor George Clinton, by Thos. Bakewell, of the original picture, published in 1746. Below title an historical sketch of the city and pro- vince, followed by an enumeration and descrip- tion of the principal buildings, etc. 6yi x i8j4- Lithograph, one tint. Reduced, with slight changes, from the William Burgis view of 1717, [No. 100], Same, em. 6850. 107. NEW YORK: centre, above on banderole. In upper right corner, enclosed on ornamental work, a key to the principal buildings and points of interest. Right, within border: /r, H. Toms. Sculp. 4 13/16x10^. Line engraving. On sheet 4 of the " Map of the British empire in America," WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 41 PrintSj Hudson River, cont'd, by Henry Popple, London, 1733. Based on the Burgis view of 1717. A copy of the Popple view, line engraving by E. D. French, was published in "■ Views of early New York, prepared for the New York Chapter of the Colonial Order of the Acorn," N. Y., igo4, oppos, p. 89. 108. NEW YORK: centre, above, i i/i6x 2 3/16. Line engraving. A small view, based on the preceding, and published in the same volume. It is in the upper right corner of the general map preceding the twenty sheets of the Popple " Map." 109. NEJr YORK; on banderole, upper centre, within border. 4 11/16x10 5/16. Line en- graving. EM. 13183. A igth century copy of no. 107. no. NEJV YORK. Left, over upper border in manuscript: "King's Maps CXXL 38. B;" centre and right, below lower border: "Copied from the Original MS. in the British Museum, for Mr. George H. Moore, Librarian of the New York Historical Society, and compared by Mr. Richard Sims." 4. 11/16 x loj^ Wash drawing. This view, while closely resembling, is slightly smaller than that on sheet 4 of the Popple map, and it also lacks the name of the engraver, W. H. Toms. There are also minor changes in the ships in the harbor, and in the waterfront. 111. A lithographic copy of the preceding, with- out the written inscription over the upper left corner, and with the cei'tification "Copied ... by me, Richard Sims," in the centre instead of at the right. Left: Draivn & Liih. by G. Hayvjard, 17 1 Pearl St., N. Y.; right: for D. T, Valentine's Manual for 1863. 4 11/16x10 3/16, Lithograph. Same with one tint, filling in a sky, etc. 112. South West Vieixii5^. Lithograph, India paper. In " Itin^raire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson. . ." par J. Mil- bert, 1828-29. 15 s. View of the City of New York. Left, with- in border: Martens del.; right: Anderson Sc. S}ixS}i. [183-?] Wood engraving; text on back. A view from the West. 156. NEW YORK. Left: J. H. Dakin; right: Engraved by Barnard & Dick; over upper right corner: PI. I. Border of one line at right and top, two at left and bottom. 3 '5/16 x5 13/16; to border line, 3 7/16x5 15/16. [1831.] Line engraving. View from Governor's Island. a. On same sheet with, and separated by a horizontal line from, pi. 2. In " Views in New Vork . . . Taken on the spot ... by Dakin," N. Y., 1831. b. Separate. 157. /. Vue eloignee de New-York. 35^x4^. Etching. Same design as preceding, with slight changes. 158. NEW YORK. Left: Drawn by J. Dupree; right: Engraved & Printed by Fenner Sears 6 Co.; centre, below: London. Published June 15 1831 by I. T. Hinton fif Simpkin & Mar- shall; over right corner of upper border: 5<5. Border of one line at left and top, two at right and bottom. 4x5 9/16; to border, 4J4 X S%- Line engraving. a. As described. From J. H. Hinton's " History and topography of the United States, vol. 2. Phila., 1832, oppos. p. 483. Same. em. 11910. b. Some changes in clouds, addition of birds in flight, etc., without the border lines, and set in an ornamental frame. On Tablet on frame: NEW YORK; Centre below: THE LONDON PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY. 4x5 9/16; with frame 6^4 x 7 5/16- 159. NEW YORK. Right: S. Davenport Sculp; centre, below: LONDON: PUBLISHED BY THOMAS KELLY, 17 PATER NOSTER ROW. 4x6%. Line engraving. Looking south from St. Paul's. 160. NEW-YORK. Left: Drawn by J. R. Smith; right: Engraved by J. B. Neagle. sJ^x? 15/16. Line engraving. EM. 11913. A view from the Bay. 161. NEW YORK. Left: W. G. Wall, pinxU; right: Peter Maverick set. 2 13/16x4 9/16. Line engraving. A view from Weehawken. From "The Traveller's Guide," N. Y., 1833, according to D. McN. Staufler C' American Engravers," part 2, N. Y., 1907. p. 370). a. As described. In " Sketch of the life . . . of John Lacey," by W. W. H. Davis, Privately printed, 1868, extra-illustrated by T. A. Emmet, oppos. p. 23. b. With faint traces of a border. 2 15/16 x 4 7/16.. c. With added work in upper left corner. Without New York, and with border of one line at top and right, two at left and bottom. 2 15/16x454; to border 3 1/16x4 11/16. In "American engravers: Peter Maverick," scrap-book, p. 24. 162. NEW YORK FROM WEEHAWK. Left: Painted by IF. G. Wall; right: On Steel, J. Smillie. J 11/16x5 13/16. Line engraving. [183- f] Same design as preceding, 163. NEW YORK, I from Jersey City. Left: Drawn by J. Bur ford; right: Engraved by J. Smillie, 4x6^4. Line engraving. a. As described. India paper, em. ii93i' b. With title changed to VIEW OF NEW WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 45 Prints, Hudson River, cont'd. YORK, FROM JERSEY CITY. \ Dravjn and engrwved for the Neio York Mirror, 1831, and with Printed by R. Miller below, to the right. In ^' The New-York-Miiror," April 30, 1831, oppos. p. 337, A windmill is a prominent feature in this view. A wind- mill appears also in a small wood engraving by J. A. Adams, " View from Jersey City," on p. 17 of S. L. Knapp's '' Pictur- esque beautiesof the Hudson River," N. Y., 1835,'* i6^. NEW-YORK. Left: J. R. Smith del.; right: J. Archer Sc. Border of one line at right and top, two at left and bottom. 5 3/16 x 7 13/16; to border line, 5 7/16x8. Line en- graving. A view from the harbor. From J. H. Hinton's " History and topography of the United States," new edition, vol. 2, Boston, 1834, oppos. p. 184. 165. New York from Brooklyn Heights. Left: T. K. Wharton DelU; centre: Steel Plate; right: A. W. Graham Sculpt.; below to right: R. Miller Print.; centre, below: PAINTED fif ENGRAVED FOR THE NEW YORK MIRROR 1834. 6x8 13/16. Line engraving. From " New-York Mirror," April 19, 1834. 166. Neiu York. Left: J. A. Davis del.; right: J. Archer Sc. Right of centre, below title: Vol. II, page 384; centre: Boston, Samuel Walker. 5/Cx 7 13/16. Line engraving. EM. 11914 and 13178. A view from the Bay. 167. VIEW OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, \ as it appeared from WEEHAWK a distance of about one Mile during the NIGHT OF THE FIRE, Wednesday December l6th, 1835. — This a. T. Valentine's Manual — l86j. 5 13/16x8. Lithograph, two tints. EM. 11329. 209. FIEfT OF MARKET SLIP \ taken from the Corner of Cherry St. iSsg. Right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual i860. 5^x8. Lithograph; one tint In *' New York City during the American Revolution . . . From manuscripts in the possession of the Mercantile Library Association," 1861, extra illustrated, oppos. p. 134. Same. em. 11296. 210. CATHERINE MARKET N. Y. 1850. Left: Lith. by G. Hayward, 120 Water St. N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual for 1857. 35^x6 1/16. Lithograph, in color. EM. 1 1297. 211. "Catherine Market." igos. 9^4x6^. Etch- ing by C. F. W. Mielatz. 212. PECK SLIP, N. Y. 1850. Left: Lith. by G. Hayiaard 120 Water St. N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual for 1857. 3 7/16x6. Lithograph, em. 10466. 213. "Fulton Market." Etching by Charles Henry White. 7% x 9. A reproduction of this print appears io Harper^ s Magazine for September, 1905. 214. Brooklyn Ferry, Fulton Street, New York. [182-?]. Aquatint by C. F. W. Mielatz, '05. From a small platter of Staffordshire pottery by Stevenson. 5 7/16x6%. Published by the Society of Iconophiles, Series vii, no. 6, 1905. R. H. Lawrence, in his catalogue [1908] of the Society's publications, says :'* On the left [right in the engraving] of this view is pictured the entrance to Fulton Market, erected upon a site purchased by the city in iSzr, In the centre the ' Ferry Slips ' and the ' Nassau,' the first steam ferry-boat which ran between New York and Brooklyn. . . . The ' Nassau ' was launched in 1814 and built on the lines of a catamaran : her motive power being supplied by a large wheel in the center between the two hulls." 215. BROOKLYN FERRY, FULTON ST. \ NEW YORK. Left: Drawn by C. Burton; right: Engraved by Hatch & Smillie. 2 11/16 X 3J4. [1831.] Line engraving. 216. VIEW OF BROOKLYN, L. L \ FROM U. S. HOTEL, NEW YORK. Leit, within border line: PRINTED IN COLORS; right: BY F. MICHELIN, III NASSAU ST.; cen- tre: DRAWN FROM NATURE Sf ON STONE BY E. WHITEFIELD; centre, be- low: Entered according to act of Congress, in the year 184.6, by E. Whitefield, in the Clerics Office of the District Court of the Southn. Dist. of N. Y. Border of one line. 15x36^4; to bord€r line, 15}^ x 36^4. Lithograph in color. Mounted on linen. New York slip of Fulton Ferry in foreground. Steamboats " Oregon," "Worcester" and " Rhode Island" among craft in river. 217. SOUTH ST. from MAIDEN LANE. 1834. Left: Wm. I. Bennett Pinxt. et Sculpt.; centre, below : Henry I. Megary, New York. 9 J^ x 13J4. Aquatint, colored. Same, uncolored. em. 11430. 217J4. SOUTH ST. FROM MAIDEN LANE, 1828. Left: Lith. G. Hayward 120 Water St. N. Y.; right: For D. T. Valentine's Manual 1854. 3^x6. Lithograph, one tint. A copy of the preceding. 2i8. THE DOCK AND RIVER FRONT TO WALL STREET, 1667. 2x3^^. Wood en- graving, em. 10516. 219. THE BLOCK-HOUSE AND CITY GATE (FOOT OF PRESENT WALL STREET), 1674. 3 3/16x3 7/16. Wood engraving. em. 10516. 220. TONTINE BUILDING, WALL STREET, NEW YORK I7Q7. Left: Copied for D. T. Valentine's Manual 1852; right: Lith. by G. Hayward, 120 Water Street, N. Y. 6^4 x 9 7/16. Lithograph, one tint. EM. 12728. 221. COFFEE HOUSE SLIP. Left: Drawn by A. I. Stansbury; right: Engd. by M. I. Dan- forth; centre, below: Engraved for the Pic- ture of New York and Strangers guide Pub- lished by A. T. Goodrich. Border of two lines. 2 13/16x3 13/16; to border, 2%x S%. [1828.] Line engraving. 222. COFFEE-HOUSE SLIP. \ (Foot of Wall Street). Centre: Drawn & Engraved by H. Fossette; over upper right corner: PI 75. Border of one line at left and top, two at right and bottom. 3 3/16x5 13/16; to border line, 3 5/16x5%. [1831?] Line engraving. a. On same plate with PI. 16. In " Views in New York . . . Taken on the spot ... by Dakin," N, v., 1831. b. Separate. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 49, Prints, Hudson River, confd. 222^. COFFEE HOUSE SLIP AND NEW YORK COFFEE HOUSE. Left: LITH. BY G. HAYWARD 120 WATER ST. N. Y.; right: FOR D. T. VALENTINE'S MANUAL 1856. 3^x5 15/16. Lithograph, one tint. Copy of preceding, with lettering on signboards omitted. 223. FRANKLIN MARKET, OLD SLIP N. Y. l8so. Left: Lith. for D. T. Valentine's Man- ual, for 186 J.; right: by Geo. Hayward, I'jl Pearl St. N. Y. 3^x5 15/16. Lithograph, one tint Same. em. 11295. 224. VIEW OF THE "SCHOEINGE" OR- STREET PILING ON THE EAST RIVER SHORE NEAR \ PRESENT COENTIES SLIP, 1658. 354x3 9/16. Wood engraving. EM. 10516. 225. South Street, from Coenties' Slip. Litho- graph by C. F. W. Mielatz. 1898. Society of Iconophiles of New York, Publication No. VII, new series. 8x7j4. 226. Coenties Slip in 1901. Photogravure re- production of a monotype in color by C. F. W. Mielatz, 1905. Published by the Society of Iconophiles of New York, ^^/i x 5^. Various artists have found interesting subjects along the water front of New Yorlc City. The Library possesses prints by or after the following: Bonsonge, R. C. Coxe, Ozias Dodge, Henry Farrer, C. F.W. Mielatz, Dr. C. H. Miller, J. C. Nicoll, B. J. Olssen Nord- feldt, C. A. Piatt, C. H. White and Henry Winslow, but in the present list only those have been given a place which dis- tinctly illustrate locality. 227. VIEW OF THE "GRAFT," OR CANAL, IN BROAD STREET, AND THE FISH BRIDGE, 1659. 3 3/16x3 7/16. Wood en- graving. EM. 105 1 6. From " Valentine's Manual," 1862, p. 515. 228. "Broad St. 1659." S. Hollyer, Copyright 1905. 35^x5 ii/i6. Etching. Hollyer's " Views of Old New York," series 4. Copy of the preceding. 229. SOUTH STREET AND NEW YORK HARBOR. Left: N. Y. RECORDER SOUVE- NIR; 5j4x8. [188-?] Half-tone in color, from photograph. 230. STEAM BOAT WHARF, WHITEHALL STREET. I NEW YORK. Left: Drawn by C. Burton; right: Engraved by Hatch & Smillie. 211/16x35/^. [1831.] Line engrav- ing. India paper. 2JI. No. I. The residence of Jacob Leisler on "the Strand" [now Whitehall Street, N. Y.) \ THE FIRST BRICK DWELLING ERECTED IN THE CITY. 454x7^. Lithograph in color. EM. 10560. The Battery and Castle Garden. 232. VIEW OF THE SITE OF THE PRES- ENT BATTERY, IN J656. Vign. 2%x 3/4- Wood engraving. EM. 10469. 233. GOV. STUYVESANT'S HOUSE, ERECT- ED 1658, AFTERWARDS CALLED "THE WHITEHALL." zysii.i%. Vignette. Wood engraving, em. 10468. From " Valentine's Manual," 1862, p. 500. 234- S. "Peter Stuyvesant's Hollyer. i^i x 554. Town House Etching. 1658." Hollyer's " Views of Old New York," series i, no. 29. Same design as preceding. 235. BATTERY & BOWLING GREEN, N. Y. | as it appeared during the Revolution. Left: Lith. by Geo. Hayward, 120 Water St., N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual 1858. Border of one line, 3 7/16x6; to border, i% X 6J^. Lithograph, one tint. In "Valentine's Manual," 1858, oppos. p. 633. 235^. EVACUATION OF NEW YORK \ NOV. 25, 1783.^ 15^x254. Line engraving on same plate with portrait of Washington, a decorative border surrounding both, ij^s^Ji. Centre: DESIGNED AND ENGRAVED FOR I THE SOCIETY OF ICONOPHILES \ NEW YORK 1899; left: F. S. KING \ DEL. & SC. " The picture of Evacuation is based on the background of the full-length portrait of Wasl^ington by John Trumbull, now in the City Hall, New York." The old fort is shown, and Staten Island in the distance. 236. RECEPTION OF PRESIDENT WASH- INGTON AT NEW YORK. | APRIL 23RD, 1789. Left: J. McNevin; right: J. Rogers; centre, below title: New York, Virtue, Em- mins £f Co. \ Entered according to act of Con- gress, in the year 1857 * * » New York. 4 11/16x6^. Line engraving. a. Without the two publication lines. India paper. EM. 11114. b. As described. From B. J. Lossing's /' Life of Washington," vol. 3, New York, i860, oppos. p. 88. 237. WASHINGTON TAKING LEAVE OF HIS OFFICERS. Left: Darley; right: G. R. Hall; centre, below: NEW YORK, G. P. PUTNAM; right, below: Printed by W. Pate. Vignette. 4x65^. Line engraving. EM. 8858. In foreground, Washington standing up in rowboat; be- yond, the officers on shore. From Washington Irving's " Life of Washington,'' vol. 4, N. Y., 1861, oppos. p. 441. 238. A View of the BATTERY and HARBOR of New York and the AMBUSCADE FRI- GATE. [1793.] Left: J. Drayton Delin; right: S. Hill Set. Boston. sH^sJi. Line en- graving. In " Letters Written During a Tour Through the Northern and Eastern States of America," Charleston, S. C, 1704, p. 20. A copy of this plate was engraved on copper by E. D. French as a frontispiece for " The Journey of the Icono- philes," New York, 1897, by W. L. Andrews, who says: "To the best of my knowledge this picture is the earliest view of the Battery from the land side, and the only print that shows this point of the island, except from the water, as it appeared after the removal of Fort George and before the erection of the present Castle Garden — i. e., between the years 1790 and 1810. Another copy of the print was engraved on copper by Sidney L. Smith as " Facsimile no. 10 of the Society of Iconophiles," New York, published in March, 1903. "Departure of the 'Clermont.' See no. 620. Launch of "Fulton the First," See no. 628, 1 8 14. 50 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. 239. The Battery, New York, Esplanade and Castle Garden. [182-?] Aquatint by C. F. W. Mielatz, 1904, from a platter of Staffordshire pottery by Stevens-on. 5 7/16x6 15/16. Published by the Society of Iconophiles, Series VII, no. 2, 1904. R. H. Lawrence, in his Catalogue (1908) of the Society's publications, says: ^' The title * Esplanade ' was that given to the central walk in the Battery, long the favorite society promenade, ♦ * * In the harbor and to the left [right in the engraving] of Castle Garden the artist has inserted a picture of the steamship ' Aetna,' which was destroyed by the explo- sion of her boilers in 1825," 240. LANDING OF GEN. LAFAYETTE, \ At Castle Garden, New York, l6th August, 1824. Left: Imbert Del.; right: Saml. Maverick Set. Border of one line at right and top, two at left and bottom. 2 11/16x45^; to border, 2 13/16x4 13/16. Line engraving, em. 11395. 24oK- LANDING OF GEN. LAFAYETTE, \ At Castle Garden, New York, l6th August, 1824.. I 9/16 x2j^. Line engraving on same plate, vrith portrait of Lafayette, a decorative border surrounding both, 85^x4 11/16. Cen- tre: THIS PLATE MADE FOR | THE SO- CIETY OF ICONOPHILES \ NEW YORK igoo; left: F. S. KING \ DEL. & SC. " The view of the Battery js a reduced fac-simile of a cop- per-plate engraved by Samuel Maverick." 241. Castle Clinton and the Battery. [About 1825.] Aquatint by C. F. W. Mielatz, 1906, from "a large platter by Enoch Wood," Staf- fordshire pottery. 5^ x 6^. Published by the Society of Iconophiles, series vii, no. 8, 1906. R. H. Lawrence, in his Catalogue (.1908) of the Society's pub- lications, says: " The foundations of [the fortifications] were laid in 1807 upon a ledge of rocks three hundred feet distant from the shore. The fortress was completed in i8ri, and was named the Southwest Battery. In i8r6 it was renamed Castle Clinton, after George Clinton, ... In the same year the Battery was extended seaward; still two hundred feet of the "bridge remained. Six years later Castle Clinton was dis- mantled and ceded back to the city. In 1824 it was leased to one Marsh at an annual rental of $1,400. Its top was decked over and made into a promenade, where, during the summer, the Castle Garden Band played nightly." A sketch of the history of Battery Park, by Edward Hagaman Hall, forming Appendix D of the 8th annual report, 1903, of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, is accompanied by a map showing artificial growth of the water-front. Such a map appears also in J. W. Gerard jr.'s " Treatiseon the title of the corporation and others to the streets, wharves [etc.]," N. Y., 1872. 242. GRAND CANAL CELEBRATION. \ VIEW OF THE FLEET PREPARING TO FORM IN LINE. Lithograph, em. 11423. Left: Imberfs Lithography, New York, 1825; right: Arch. Robertson delt. 8 7/16x40 1/16. Lithograph. From Cadwallader D. Colden's " Memoir . . . presented ... at the celebration of the completion of the New York canals," N. Y., 1825, oppos. p. 137. 243. ERIE CANAL CELEBRATION \ NEW YORK NOVEMBER 4th 1825. i 3/16x2 7/16. Line engraving on same plate with por- trait of De Witt Clinton, decorative border surrounding both, 85^^x5. Centie: DRAWN & ENGRAVED FOR \ THE SOCIETY OF ICONOPHILES I NEW YORK 1900; left: F. S. KING I FECIT. *' The view of the battery is part of a large plate in Cad- wallader D. Colden's ' Memoir . . ., celebration of the com- pletion of the New York Canals.' New York, 1825." 244. Castle Garden, New York. Left, within border: Breton del.; right, within border: Gilbert. [183-?] Border of one line, 2 15/16 x45^; to border, 3 1/16x4^^. Wood engrav- ing. ■ Same. em. 11394. 245. VIEW OF THE BAY AND HARBOUR OF NEW-YORK, FROM THE BATTERY. Left: C. Burton, Del.; right: Wm. D. Smith, Sc; centre, below: Drawn and Engraved for the New York Mirror, 1830. Border of one line at left and top, two at right and bottom. 6x9; to border 6 3/16 xgj^. Line engraving. EM. 11434. From " The New York Mirror," Jan. 15, 1831. 246. ST A TEN ISLAND FERRY & U. S. BARGE OFFICE, 183I. Left: Lith. for D. T. Valentine's Manual, 1853; right: by Geo. Hay- ward, 120 Water Street, N. York. 3^x6. Lithograph. 247. BAY £f HARBOUR OF NEW YORK, | FROM THE BATTERY. Centre: Drawn & Engraved by J. Smillie, from a Sketch by C. Burton. [1831.] 2^4x3^4- Line engraving. a. On same plate with JUNCTION OF BROADWAY Sf THE BOWERY; the lat- ter view at top, with Plate 8th over upper right corner. India paper. b. Separate. India paper. 248. CASTLE GARDEN, \ From the Battery. Left: Wade Del; right: Dougal Sc; centre, below: Published by J. Disturnell 102 & 253 Broody. N. Y. [1849.] 25^x4^^. Line en- graving. a. On same plate with "Steamboat Landing, Pier No. i," with general title: VIEWS IN NEW YORK, No. 2. Disturnell was at these addresses in 1848-9, according to the New York Directory. b. Separate, without the general title. c. Same as the preceding, without the publi- cation line. In " New York as it was and as it is, compiled by John Disturnell," N. Y., 1876, oppos. p. 155. 249. BATTERY & CASTLE GARDEN. Left: Geo. Miller del. right: J as. Smillie Sc; centre, below: Published by J. DISTURNELL, New York. 2 5/16x3 7/16. Line engraving. India paper. a. On same plate with vignette title of "The Pocket Annual, 1848," J. Disturnell, N. Y. b. Separate. India paper. The plate was published also as a frontispiece in J. Distur- nell's " The Northern Travellers," N. Y., 1844. 250. NEW-YORK HARBOR FROM THE BATTERY. Left: W. Wade; right: Booth; centre, below: Published by J. Disturnell 102 & 233 Broady. N. Y. [1849?] 2^x4^^. Line engraving. a. On same plate with vignette title-page "The picturesque tourist," published by J. Dis- turnell at 333 Broadway in 1858. b. Same, separate. c. Same. In "New York as it was and as it is . . ., compiled by John Disturnell," N. Y., 1876, frontispiece. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 51 Prints, Hudson River, cont'd. 251. NEfT YORK BATTERY CASTLE GARDEN BAY NARROWS STATEN ISLD. [185-?] 3%^3l4 Vignette. Line engraving. Same. em. 10840 & 12344. 252. CASTLE GARDEN, FROM THE RIVER. Leit: LEBRETON. 41^x8^. [185-?] Wood engraving. 253. LANDING AT CASTLE GARDEN. 3 3/16 X sH- Wood engraving. From " Report of the Special Committee . . ., Common Council of New York, , . . for the reception of Louis Kos- suth," N. Y., 1852, p 56. 254. The Battery, and Castle Garden. Left: W. F. P. [.?]; right: H. H. DEL. Vignette. 2x4. Wood engraving. In J. W. Barber's ^' Historical Collections of the State of New York," improved edition, N. Y., 1852, p. 200. 235- CASTLE GARDEN. NEW YORK, 1852. Left: Dranun from Nature by G. Hayward, 120 Water St. N. Y.; right: jor D. T. Valen- tines Manual l8s2. .5^xi2j4. Lithograph. 256. PACIFIC STEAMER GOLDEN GATE. Vign. 4 7/16x7 1/16. Wood engraving. Castle Garden at Ithe right. From *' Gleason's Pictorial Drawing Room Companion," p. 304 (185-?). 257- VIEW of STATE STREET, | fronting the Battery, 1859. Left: A. Weingartner's Lithy. N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual l8s9; on margin, in pencil: "No i. STATE ST I FULTON'S HOUSE." 5^4x8 1/16. Lithograph, one tint. "State Street and Battery Park, 1852." S. Holly er. Copyright 1903. 3 9/16x5^. Etching. Hollyer's "Views of Old New York," series 2, no. 2. A copy of the preceding. 258. GALE IN NEW YORK BAY, FEBRU- ARY 10, 1861. Right, within border: J. FILMER SC. 454x7 7/16. Wood engrav- ing. 259. ART SUPPLEMENT TO APPLETONS' JOURNAL— VIEW OF CASTLE GARDEN, AND NEW YORK BAY. Left, lower corner: H. Fenn Del.; right, lower corner: /. FILMER, SC; centre: Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1869, by D. APPLETON & CO., in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. ij^xz^Ji. Wood en- graving. Same. em. 11573. 260. THE BATTERY, 1869. Right, within border: F. A. Liebler [?] Border of one line. 8 i/i6xi3j^; to border, 8J4 x 12 9/16. Litho- graph, in color. 260J4. The Old Revenue Office. Left: H. Far- rer 1870. 6 13/16x55^. Reproduction of pen drawing. From " Manual of the Corporation of the City of New York, 1870," oppos. p. ig8. 261. BATTERY, 1870. 3 9/16x10 13/16. Be- low: BATTERY, 1871. 3 9/16x10 3/16. Lithographs in color. 262. The Battery \ from No. I Broadway: left lower corner; right lower corner: Eliza Grea- torex. 411/16x7%. Reproduction of pen drawing. em. 11820. From Greatorex's " Old New York, . . ." N. Y., 1875. [v. i] , oppos. p. 9. 263. The Battery and Castle Garden. Lower right corner: N. A. CRANSTON SC. 3 15/16 X 9. Wood engraving. From "Picturesque America," vol. ^, N. Y., 1874, p. 549. 264. [Castle Garden.] sH^7}i- [188-?] Photo- graph. Surrounded by a fence when used as emigrant station. 265. State Emigrant Landing Depot, Castle Garden, N. Y. In lower left corner: ROY- LANCE-PURCELL, N. Y. 3 13/16 x 6%. Wood engraving, em. 11833. 266. CASTLE GARDEN LANDING FOR EMIGRANTS, BARGE OFFICE, BAT- TERY. Right, over upper, border: Gover- nor's Island; left: 100 Views of New York and Environs; right, below: Charles Magnus, Publisher. [About 1880.] sJ^ x 8. Wood en- graving, in color. At top of sheet of writing paper. 267. BATTERY-TERMINUS OF NEW YORRK ELEVATED RAILROADS. Left: 36 Views of New York and Environs; right: Charles Magnus, Publisher; between centre and right: CASTLE GARDEN, Landungsplatz der Ein- wanderer. [About 1880?] 4 15/16x7 13/16. Wood engraving in color. At top of sheet of writing paper. 268. "The Battery." Mielatz \ '89 in lower left corner. 6 13/16 x 954- Etching by C. F. W. Mielatz. 269. The Battery and Castle Garden. Litho- graph by C. F. W. Mielatz. 9 5/16x65^. 1898. Society of Iconophiles of New York. Publication no, i, new series, 270. The Aquarium, formerly Southwest Bat- tery, New York. 4^ x 7. Half-tone from photograph. In 13th annual report, 1908, of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, oppos. p. 88. Points on the West Shore of New York City. 271. STEAMBOAT LANDING. \ Pier No. I North River. Left: Wade Del; right: Dougal Sc; centre, below: Published by J. Disturnell 102 fif 233 Broady. N. Y. 2V%-si\ 1/16. [1849?] Line engraving. a. As described. On same plate with "Castle Garden." See 248a. b. Separate, without the general title VIEWS IN NEW YORK, No. 2. c. Without publication line. In " New York as it was and as it is . . ., compiled by John Disturnell," N. Y., 1876, oppos. p. 191. 272. STEAM BOAT WHARF, BATTERY PLACE, I NEW YORK. Left: Burton delt; right: Gimber Set. [About 1830.] 2 11/16 X3>^. Line engraving. India paper. 52 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. 273. "No. I Broadway — Washington Hotel 1851." S. Hollyer. Copyright 1904. i^/i x 5 7/16. Etching. The river is seen at the left. Hollyer's " Views of Old New York," series 3, no. 2. 274. GREENWICH ST. BELOW THAMES ST. 1861. Left: Lith. of Sarony, Major & Knapp, 449 Broadway, N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual, 1863. Border of one line. 3J^ x 5 11/16; to border, 3 7/16 x 5 13/16. Lithograph, in two tints. EM. 12760. A glimpse of the river is shown. 275. Old Jersey Ferry House | corner of Green- loich and Cedar Streets: left lower corner. Above title: begun on \ Washington's Birth- day, iSjs; right lower corner: Eliza Grea- torex. \Yt, X 7 1/12. Reproduction of pen drawing. EM. 11298. From Greatorex's "Old New York . . ." N. Y., 1875. [v. i], oppos. p. 32. " The landing-place of Washington when ... he first came to New York as general of the Revolutionary army," 276. Jersey Ferry House \ Cor. Greenimch & Cedar St.; left lower corner: finished on | Washington's Birthday \ Eliza Greatorex 1875. ^% X 5. Reproduction of pen drawing. A different view of the building. 277. LANDING PLACE, FOOT OF COURT- LA NDT ST. I NEW YORK. Left: Dra-um by G. Burton; right: Engraved by J. Smillie. 2 11/16x3 9/16. £1831.] Line engraving. India paper. 278. VIEW of WASHINGTON MARKET \ from the S. E. cor. of Fulton & Washington Sts. i8sQ. Left: A. W eingartner" s Lithy. 87 Fulton St. N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual 1859. 5^x8 1/16. Lithograph; one tint. In " New York City during the American Revolution . . . From manuscripts in the possession of the Mercantile Library Association," 1861; extra-illustrated, opposite p. 24. 279. "Washington Market," 1859. S. Hollyer. Copyright 1907. 3 11/16x5 11/16. Etching. Hollyer's " Views of Old New York," series 6. A copy of the central portion of the preceding. 280. FALL RIVER BOAT AT THE PIER. 2^ x 4^4. Half-tone from photograph. Pier 18 and surroundings seen from the water. Id " The New Metropolis, 1600-1900 . . . , edited by E. I, Zeisloft^' (N. Y. copyright iSggJ, p. 109. 281. North Battery, foot of Hubert St., New York. Left: Robert W. Weir Pinxit; centre: Steel Plate; right: James Smillie Sculpsit.; centre below: Painted & Engraved for the New York Mirror 1833. 6>|x9. Line en- graving. From *' New York Mirror," July 6, 1833. Same. em. 11360. 282. NORTH BATTERY, FOOT OF HUBERT ST.—1812. Left: Lith. for D. T. Valentine's Manual, 185S; right: by George Hayuiard, 120 Water Street, N. Y. 3j4x6J^. Litho- graph. 283. NORTH BATTERY, FOOT OF HUBERT ST. LOOKING SOUTH. 1820. Left: Lith. by Geo. Hayward; right: for D. T. Valen- tine's Manual for 1859. 6x15 3/16. Litho- graph, one tint. In " Valentine's Manual," 1859, oppos. p. 252. 284. The Hay-sloops of the North River. Centre below: From an original picture. Designed and Engraved expressly for the New Mirror by W. J. Bennett. S^ix 7%. Aquatint en- graving. From the " New Mirror," vol. 2, New York, 1843, opp. p. 146. From note at top of page, left column: *' The scene rep- resented by the artist is the well-known hay-market at the foot of Duane Street, which is most accurate in all its details. Fanny Kemble thought the sloops of the North River the most picturesque things she had seen in this country," 285. PANORAMA OF THE EMBARKATION OF THE FIRE ZOUAVES ON BOARD THE BALTIC APR. 29TH 1861. I TAKEN FOOT OF SPRING & CANAL ST. Left: Lith. of Sarony, Major & Knapp, 449 Broadway, N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual, 1862. sH XII. Lithograph, in color. EM. 11682. 286. A photograph, 12x155^, of pier 43, Spring St, North River, with "Great Southern Freight Line" over top of pier, and "Empire Line * * * No. 5, Bowling Green" on the wall below, to the right. The "Empire Line" appears with both these addresses only in the 1876 volume of "Goulding's Business Directory" of New York City. 287. Oyster Market on West Street. Photo- gravure reproduction of a monotype in color by C. F. W. Mielatz, 1905. Published by the Society of Iconophiles of New York. 7 13/16 x5 7/16. Published by the Society of Iconophiles of New York, 288. Oyster Market, near Christopher Street. 6j4x9^. Lithograph by C. T. W. Mielatz. Society of Iconophiles of New York, Publication no. VIII, new series. 289. West Street, New York, from the Hudson, showing the docks at West loth St Photo- graph, probably taken by P. Van der Weyde, about 1887. 49^x75^. 290. WHITE STAR LINE, SHOWING THE TEUTONIC AT HER PIER. ^Vs x 7. Half- tone from photograph. In " The New Metropolis, 1600-IQ00 . . . , edited by E, I. Zeisloft " (N, Y., copyright 1899), 291. THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY BETW. 20TH & 2iST STS. & 9TH & loTH AVES. Left: Lith. of Sarony, Major & Knapp, 449 Broadway, N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentines Manual 1863. Border of one line. 5^4 x 8 ; to border 6 x 8^4. Lithograph in colors. A glimpse of the river is caught on the left. In Valentine's " Manual," N. Y,, 1863, oppos, p. 298. 292. "Theological Seminary, 1833." S. Hollyer. Copyright 1906. 6^ x $%. Etching. Hollyer's "Views of Old New York," 5° series. The build- ing is not entirely the same as in the preceding print; it is crenellated at the top, 293. THE RAPELYEA ESTATE {PROP- ERTY OF MRS. CARNS). \ CALLED THE WHITE COTTAGE— FOOT OF 35TH ST. NORTH RIVER. Left: THE MAJOR WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 53 Prints, Hudson River, confd. & KNAPP, ENG. MF'G. & LITH. CO. ■71 BROADWAY, N. Y.; right: FOR D. T. VALENTINE'S MANUAL, 1866. 3^x554. Lithograph, in colors. Same. em. 13195. 394. DESTRUCTION OF THE WEEHAWKEN FERRY-HOUSE, FORTY-SECOND STREET, BY THE RIOTERS, JULY 15. 4 7/16 x 6 3/16 in. Wood engraving. EM. 11732. 295. Stryker Mansion \ Hudson River at Sjd Street \ View from the Rocks: left lower cor- ner. Right lower corner: Eliza Greatorex. 4 9/16 X 75/^. Reproduction of pen drawing. In: Greatorex's "Old New York . . ." N. Y., 187s, [v. i], oppos. p. iig. 396. "North River from 15th floor of Carnegie Music Hall." 9% x 12. Etching by B. J. Olsson Nordfeldt. 396^- Perrit Mansion \ At 76th St. In Bloom- ingdale: lower left corner. Lower right cor- ner : Eliza Greatorex \ Sep. 1868. 4^4 x 754- Reproduction of pen drawing. In Eliza Greatorex's " Old New York," N. Y., 1875. oppos. p. 192. 397. Soldiers' and Sailors' Memorial Monu- ment, Riverside Park, foot of West Eighty- Ninth St. Photograph taken by P. E. Duboy. for Stoughton and Stoughton, Architects, g^i X 125^. About 1906. 398. THE HUDSON RIVER AND RIVER- SIDE PARK 3 is/iSxjVs-— RIVERSIDE DRIVE AND RIVERSIDE AVENUE, LOOK- ING TOWARD GRANT'S TOMB. 3 13/16 X 10 3/16. From a drawing by C. Graham i&9^.— RIVERSIDE PARK ALONG THE HUDSON RIVER, 7x5 9/16.— RIVERSIDE DRIVE AND GRANT'S TOMB, OVER- LOOKING THE HUDSON RIVER, 6 x^Vs.— VIEW OF MORNINGSIDE (CATHED- RAL) HEIGHTS, THE HUDSON RIVER, AND NEW JERSEY PALISADES, 8^x 21 H- From drawings by Charles Graham 1898. Half-tones from photographs, except- ing two from drawings as indicated. In *' The New Metropolis, 1600-igoo . . ., edited by E. I. Zeisloft" (N. v., copyright 1899). 3981^. THE OLD ABBEY HOTEL ON BLOOMINGDALE ROAD (1847.) Left: LITH. OF MAJOR & KNAPP 449 BROAD- WAY N. Y.; right: FOR D. T. VALEN- TINE'S MANUAL, 1864. 3^x5^. Litho- graph in colors. View neario2d St. In " Valentine's Manual," 1864, oppos. p. 386. 399. STRAWBERRY HILL HOTEL, NOW WOODLAWN. Left: LITH. BY G. HAY- WARD, 120 WATER ST. N. Y.; right: FOR D. T. VALENTINE'S MANUAL 1856. 3 7/16x57/^. Lithograph, one (int. In Valentine's "Manual," 1856, p. 314; text on p. 514 states *'The house commands a . . . view of the lordly Hudson for many miles north and south . . ., from Sing Sing to the Nar- Tows." A glimpse of the river at the left. This house stood on Eleventh Avenue, between io6th and 107th Sts., according to H. S. Moct ("The New York of Yes- terday," N. Y., 1908, p. 47), who says also that it was subse- (^uently opened as the "Woodlawn Hotel," and adds that the title " 'Strawberry Hill Hotel,' by which Valentine dubs it, was never used, although it might easily arise as a local designation because the enormous quantities of wild berries along the river caused the locality to be known as Strawberry Hill." ' 300. "Strawberry Hill Hotel (now Woodlawn) 1852." 5. Hollyer. 3^x5^. Etching. Hollyer's "Views of Old New York," series i, no. 32. A copy of the preceding. 30054. STRIKER'S BAY MANSION, 1852 \ From the painting in possession of the author. 4x6 9/16. Half-tone. In H. S. Mott's " The New York of Yesterday," N. Y., 1908, oppos. p. 118. 301. Lunatic Asylum, New York. Left: Robert W. Weir Pinxt.; right: James Smillie Sculpt.; centre, above title: Steel Plate; below title: PAINTED & ENGRAVED FOR THE NEW- YORK MIRROR, 1834. 6 3/16x9 1/16. Line engraving, em. 12783. From "New-York Mirror," Feb. i, 1834. ioiyi. Lawrence Mansion | In Bloomingdale : lower left corner. Lower right corner: Eliza Greatorex \ Sep. 1868. 4/4x7 7/16. Repro- duction of pen drawing. In Eliza Greatorex's " Old New York," N. Y., 1875, oppos. p. 198. 302. RESIDENCE OF THE POST FAMILY,— NOW CLAREMONT HOTEL. \ Blooming- dale Road near Manhattanmlle, i860. Left: Lith. of Sarony, Major & Knapp, 449 Broad- way, N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentines Manual, 1861. 3 5/16x5 13/16. Lithograph. EM. 1 1 160. 303. Clairmont \ Bloomingdale \ 1870: left lower corner. Right lower corner: Eliza Greatorex. 6 13/16x45^. Reproduction of pen drawing. In Greatorex's "Old New York . . ." N. Y., 187s [v. ?], oppos. p. 203. 303^. "MOTT'S POINT ON THE HUD^ SON," 1884 \ From an oil painting by W. L. Sonntag, N. A. in possession of the author. 4x5 7/16. Half-tone. In H. S. Mott's '• New York of Yesterday,-' N. Y., igo8, oppos. p. 356. 304. THE DEVELOPMENT OF MORNING- SIDE HEIGHTS, NEW YORK CITY— HOW IT WILL LOOK ON THE COMPLETION OF THE BUILDINGS NOW IN COURSE OF ERECTION.— Drawn by G. W. Peters. 13 X 19 3/16. Half-tone. From "Harper's Weekly," 1897, v. '41, no. 209s, pp. 156-1S7. 305. PANORAMIC VIEW OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS ON MORN- INGSIDE HEIGHTS. 4^x15^. Half- tone after photograph. From "New York Tribune lUus. Suppl." Oct. 23, 1904, pp. 6-7- 30554. HUDSON TOWER AND LORD COURTNAY'S, 18 14 \ From a water color accompanying General Swift's Report | "Hud- son Tower was commenced July 16, 1814, and was located at Monte Alta, on the river near 123d St." I GUERNSEY. sH^ sVs- Half- tone. In H. S. Mott's " The New York of Yesterday," N. Y., igo8, oppos. p. 76. 54 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. 306. A PART OF GREATER NEW YORK.— BIRD'S EYE VIEW OF THE MAUSO- LEUM AND ITS NEIGHBORHOOD AS IT WILL APPEAR. Right, within border: G. W. Peters; below: REMOVING THE BODY OF GENERAL GRANT TO ITS FINAL REST- ING-PLACE. Copyright, 1897, by Leslie's Weekly. 9^xi3j4- Half-tone after draw- ing by G. W. Peters. 307. VIEW OF MANHATTANVILLE, TAKEN FROM FORT HAIGHT, i860. Left: Lith. of Sarony, Major & Knapp, 449 Broadiuay, N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual 1861. With border of one line. 5^4x8 1/16; to border line, 5^x8^^. Lithograph, with one tint. 308. THE AUDUBON ESTATE on the Banks of the Hudson, Foot of is6th St. at Carmans- ville. Left: LITH. OF MAJOR & KNAPP, 449 BROADWAY, N. Y.; right: FOR D. T. VALENTINE'S MANUAL, 1865. 5 13/16 x iYs,. Lithograph, in colors. 309. "Audubon Estate (Carmanville) 1850.'' S. Hollyer, Copyright 1903. 3^x55^ Etch- ing. Hollyer's "Views of Old Xew York," series 2, no, 3, A copy of the preceding. 310. Fort Washington. 25^x5 3/16. Wood en- graving after J. D. Wl_oodward]. From "Tlie Art Journal," N. Y., 1875, p. 7. 311. VIEW FROM FORT WASHINGTON. Right: J. W. ORR N. Y. Vign. 35^x3 9/16. Wood engraving, em. 7925. 312. OLD EARTHWORKS ON CHITTEN- DEN'S ESTATE— WEST ANGLE OF FORT. Above: RELICS OF THE PAST ON WASHINGTON HEIGHTS. sH^sH- To border line. 35^x6. Lithograph in colors. EM. 10951. From Valentine's Manual, 1866, oppos. p. 657. iij. JEFFREY'S HOOK. \ iH^sH- Vignette. Wood engraving. [1866.] From Benson J, Lossing's "The Hudson, from the Wilder- ness to the Sea," K, Y., 1866, p. 379. Shows the Palisades. 314. Jeffr/s Hook. 5x5 3/16. Wood engrav- ing after J. D. Wloodward]. From "The Art Journal," 1878, p. 7. 315. THE HUDSON RIVER AT IN WOOD. 7 X Syi- Half-tone from photograph. In "The New Metropolis, 1600-igoo . . ., edited by E. I. Zeisloft" (N. Y., copyright 1899). 316. SPUYTEN DUYVIL CREEK. 3^x3 5/16. Vign. EM. 10950. Wood engraving. The Palisades seen beyond. 317. SPUYTEN-DUYVIL CREEK. [Near the entrance where the Palisades can be seen ris- ing in the distance.] 6^ x 65^. Wood en- graving. From "Picturesque America," vol. 2, N. Y., 1874, p. 560. Points on the Jersey shore, opposite New York City. 318. 5. E. VIEW OF JERSEY CITY, FROM NEW YORK. I The above shows the appear- ance of Jersey City, as seen from near the Battery, in New York. The Works of the Jersey City Glass Co. \ are seen on the left; the Car House of the New Jersey Railroad is seen on the right. Border of one line, 3 3/16 x6 s/i6; to border line, 3 5/16x65^. [185- ?J Wood engraving. Ferry boat " Jersey City " on the river, 319. HOBOKEN. Left: Drawn by James Smil- lie; right: Engraved by Robert Hinshelwood. 4 13/16x7 5/16. Line engraving. a. With inscription in scratched letters, and Eng'l- for Engraved. Right, below: Printed by A. King. India Paper. In S. L. Knapp's " Picturesque beauties of the Hudson River . , , Proofs," N, Y,, 1835, oppos. p, 21. b. As described. In "A history of the Tammany Society. Illustrated by Wm, L. Andrews," oppos, p, 16. 320. The Ferry house at Hoboken. Near right upper corner: 43. The ferryhouse is labeled CHRISTOPHER, CANAL, BARCLAY. Trim- med close at left, top, and bottom; border line at left and right. 55^x8^. [184-?]. Lithograph. 32o>^. HUDSON RIVER FROM HOBOKEN. Centre, below title: Drawn & Engraved by A. Dick; below title: New-York, Published March 1832, by Peabody & Co. London, 0. Rich No. 12 Red Lion Square; over upper right corner: PI. 14. Border of one line at top and right, two at left and bottom, 3^x 5^; to border, 3j^x5^. Line engraving. On same plate with pi, 13, In "Views in New- York . . . Taken on the spot ... by Dakin," N, Y., 1831. 321. HUDSON RIVER, FROM HOBOKEN, N. Y.: title above engraving. Border of one line, 3 7/16 X 5^4; to border, 3^x5 9/16. [184-?]. At head of printed page of text. 322. HUDSON RIVER FROM HOBOKEN. Left: Lith. by Geo. Hayward, 171 Pearl St. N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual, for i860. Border of one line. 3j^x6 1/16; to border, 3 11/16x6 3/16. Lithograph, one tint Same design as preceding. 323. Hoboken in New Jersey, the Seat of Mr. John Stevens. \ Drawn, Engraved & Published by W. Birch, Springland, near Bristol, Penn- sylva. 4 7/16 X 5^. Line engraving, colored. EM. 799. From Birch's " Country Seats of the U. S.," Springland* Pa., iSoS. 324. Castle Point, Hoboken. Wood engraving by W. H. M. after /. D. W[_oodward'\. zYiJi sYa- From " The Art Journal," X. Y,, 1875, p, 6, 325. View up the Hudson \ FROM SYBYL'S CAVE, HOBOKEN. Left: R. Gignoux; WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 55 Prints, Hudson River, cont'd. right: fT. G. Jackman. 4 ti/i6x6Ji. Line engraving. In " New York Illustrated Magazine," vol. 3, 1347, oppos. p. 97- 326. ELYSIAN FIELDS, HOBOKEN. \ (New York in the distance.) Centre: Draiun (S En- graved on Steel by A. Dick. Border of one line at top and right, two below and left. 3?^x55^. [184-?]. Line engraving. a. As described. Plate 9, not numbered; on same plate with "City Hotel, Trinity and Grace Churches." Below: NevJrYork, Pub- lished Novr. 1831 by Peabody & Co. London, O. Rich No. 12 Red-Lion Square. In "Views in New York . . . Taken on the spot... by Dakin," N. Y., 1831. b. Separate. EM. 11830. c. With second centre line replaced by For the Ladies Companion. d. With ELYSIAN FIELDS, HOBOKEN, and no other lettering. 327. VIEfF AT THE ELYSIAN FIELDS. Vign. 45^ X 35^. Wood engraving, em. 12799. 328. A Wood Scene, — Hoboken. Left: Painted by Robt. IV. Weir; right: Engraved by James Smillie; right below: Printed by J. & G. Neale; centre below: Painted and Engraved for the New York Mirror, 1832. 5 15/16x8^. Line engraving. From "New- York Mirror," July 7, 1832. 329. WEEHAWKEN. Left: Painted by W. J. Bennett; right: Engraved by A. B. Durand; centre: Engd. for the New York Mirror \ Steel Plate. Enclosed in ornamental border. 4^x5 15/16; to border, 5^x85^. Line en- graving. From " New York Mirror," April 20, 1833. According to the " Catalogue of the engraved work of Asher B. Durand," issued by the Grolier Club in 1895, this is one of " six plates engraved in 1830 for Part I. of what was projected as a serial publication called American Landscape . . . ^ Only one number was issued. These plates were afterwards issued with the New York Mirror, being enclosed in ornamental borders and inscriptions changed from ; Puhlished by Elattt Bliss^ etc., to Engraved for the New York Mirror.^' a. As described. b. Without the border, and with inscription changed to: SCENE ON THE HUDSON, \ For the Ladies Companion. Right: Printd. by Cammeyer & Clark, N. Y. Same. EM. ii934. 330. WEEHAWKEN BLUFF. Left: From a Sketch by Davis; right: W. S. Barnard Sc. Border of one line. 2^x3 13/16; to border line, 2^ X 4. Line engraving. 331. VILLA ON THE HUDSON, NEAR WEE- HAWKEN. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: J. C. Bentley; centre, below: London. Pub- lished for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, 1838. From W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. i, London, 1840, oppos. p. 123. 332. Weehawken. Left: Painted by John G. Chapman; right: Engd. by A. Dick; below right: King, Printer. 5x7 9/16. ,£184-?]. Line engraving. India paper, em. 11313. Inscription in scratched letters. , From S. L. Knapp's " Picturesque beauties of the Hudson River... Proofs," N. Y., 1835, oppos. p. 25. 333. View of Weehawken Bluff from the Hud- son I [Looking up). Centre, below: Designed & Engraved expressly for the New Mirror by W. J. Bennett. 454x7 5/16. Aquatint. From the " New Mirror," vol. 2, N. Y., 1844, oppos. p. 321. 334. WEEHAWKEN, | From the Elessian Fields, Hoboken. Left: Painted by John G. Chapman; right: engraved by A. Dick; right below: King, Printer. 5x17^4. Line engraving. EM. 12126. a. As described. b. With Elessian changed to Elysian. 335. HAMILTON-BURR DUELLING GROUND, WEEHAWKEN, N. J. 454x6^4. Half-tone from photograph. In nth annual report, 1906, of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, oppos, p. 176. 336. VIEW OF THE HUDSON RIVER \ FROM FORT LEE. Left: From Nature^ & on Stone; right: by Chas. Gildemeister ; cen- tre : Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1851, by Emil Seitz, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the South Dist. of N. Y. 754 X 105^. Lithograph, colored. EM. 11936. 337. FORT LEE, ON THE HUDSON. Lower left corner: Beech; lower right corner: J.FIL- MER SC. Rounded upper corners. 6}i x 5 15/16. Wood engraving, em. 10956. 338. Fort Lee. Right, within border: J. D. «^[oodward]. iVA^sVi- Wood engraving. From "The Art Journal," N. Y., 1875, p. 6. 339. VIEW OF THE HUDSON, FROM FLAT ROCK, FORT LEE, WITH NEW-YORK CITY IN THE DISTANCE. 4 3/16 x 6 3/16. Wood engraving. Signed T. B. [mono- gram]. Same. EM. 10955. 340. Manhattan Island from Fort Lee Bluff (Douglas Point). 4/4x7- Half-tone from photograph. In 13th annual report, 1908, of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, oppos, p, 80, 341. Title, above: VIEW OF T. POPES FLY- ING LEVER BRIDGE. Centre: Let the. Broad and the spacious Hudson stride [and three more lines of verse]; \eit: Pope delt.; right: Leney set. Border of two lines, 3 1/16 x7 7/16; to border, 3 3/16 X75^. In Thomas Pope's " Treatise on bridge architecture," N,Y., 1811 frontispiece; the same plate appears also opposite p. 203. The little plate (13/16 x 2 5/16), under which four lines of , verse, beginning " Like half a Rainbow rising on yon shore, opposite p, 35, and opposite p, 282 is evidently the one referred to on p. 208 thus: " See the eastern abutment of a Bridge repre- sented over the Hudson, in the Frontispiece of this work. The Palisades. Pictures of the " Clermont " and other boats passing the Palisades, nos. 614, 622, 623, 697, 698, 71s- 342. "The landing of the British Forces in the Jerseys on the 20th of November 1776 under 56 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. the command of the Rt. Honl. Lieut. Genl. Earl Corniuallis. Border of two lines, io5^ x i65^. To outer border, lo ii/i6xi6J^. Draw- ing, colored. EM. 7815. Manuscript note by Dr. T. A. Emmet: "An original draw- ing which is supposed to have been done by Lord Rawdon, who served at the time as engineer officer on Cornwallis's staff. It was purchased at the sale of the effects of the late Marquis of Hastings who was a grandson." 343. LANDING OF THE BRITISH FORCES IN THE JERSEYS, NO/EMBER zo, 1776. 4/4 X 7^^. Wood engraving. a. Proof before letters. India paper. EM. 2097 & 10957. b. As described. EM. 5574. A reproduction of the preceding, published in "Harper's Monthly," vol. 47, 1873, p. 25. 344. Characteristic Scenery of the Hudson River. Centre, above title: Engraved by George Cooke; centre below: London; Published by Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orne S" Brown, Pater- noster Row, April I, 1812. Border of three lines, 35^x6; to border 3 9/16x6 3/16. Line engraving. In John Pinkerton's " General collection of . . . voyages and travels," vol. 13, Loodon, 1812, oppos. p. 271. 345. CHARACTERISTIC SCENERY of the HUDSON RIVER. 3?^x6. Line engraving. From "The Port Folio, new series, by Oliver Oldschool, Esq.," vol. 7, May, 1812, oppos. p. 411. Same design as preceding, with minor changes; sailboat in foreground at right omitted. 346. VIEW on the HUDSON. Left: Eraser Delt.; right: Hill Sculp. Border of one line. 2 15/16x4 7/16; to border 3x4 9/16. Aqua- tint. From "Analectic Magazine," N. Y., 1817. 347. PALISADES. I No. iq of the Hudson River Port Folio. I Left: Painted by W. G. Wall; right: Engraved by J. Hill; centre, below: Published by Henry I. Megarey, New York. Border of two lines, 13 15/16x20 15/16; to border line, 14 5/16 xzij^. Aquatint. [About 1828?]. 348. THE PALISADE ROCKS ON THE HUD- SON RIVER, WEST BANK, NEW YORK. | Left: Drawn by G. Oakley Esqr.; right: En- graved and Printed by Fenner Sears & Co.; centre, below: London, Published May I, 1831, by I. T. Hinton £f Simpkin & Marshall; above right upper corner, within border: 4$. Border of one line at right and top, two at left and bottom. 3 9/16x5 11/16; to border 3^4x5 15/16. From "History and topography of the U. S.," edited by J. H. Hinton, vol. 2, Phila., 1832, oppos. p. 492. 349. THE PALISADE ROCKS ON THE HUD- SON RIVER, WEST BANK, NEW YORK. \ Left: Drawn by G. Oakley Esqr.; right: En- graved by T. Illman. One border line at right and top, two at left and bottom. 55^ x 734; to border, 5^x7 9/16. Line engraving. Same design as preceding, a. As described. From "History and topography of the United States," edited by J. H. Hinton, nesv edition, vol. 2, Boston, 1834, oppos. p. 372. b. With added cross-hatching in sky, with- out the border lines, and with Vol. II, page 372 below title to right. 350. Entree de la Riviere d'Hudson. At centre, over upper border line: tTATS-UNIS; over upper right corner : 48. Border of one line, 3 9/16x5 9/16; to border 3^x5 13/16. Line engraving. Same design as preceding, with slight changes, 351. Palisades naturelles de I'Hudson. Left: Milhert. Over upper right corner: 26. Border of four lines, 3^x5^^; to border 3^x5^. Line engraving. Apparently this belongs to the same series as the preceding, a. As described. b. With Palizadas naturales del Hudson added after the title, em. 8015. 352. View on the Hudson. \ (The Palisades.) Left: J. G. Chapman Pt; centre: Steel Plate; right: M. Osborne Sc; centre, below title: ENGRAVED FOR THE NEW YORK MIR- ROR I 1838. 7 13/16 X 634- Line engraving. 353. THE PALISADES— HUDSON RIVER. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: C. Cousen; cen- tre, below: London, Published for the Pro- prietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, 1837, 454 X 7. Line engraving. a. As described. In W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. i, London, 1840, opp. p. 14, b. With birds in flight added over Pali- sades. 354. The Palisades, \ From the Landing at Fort Lee, Centre, above title: Drawn Sf Engraved by Jos Smillie; centre, below: NEW YORK. Vign. 3^x4. Line engraving. a. With following inscription in scratched letters: The Palisades | From the Landing at Fort Lee; right: J. Smillie Pinxt. el Sculpt; right, below: Printed by A. King. In S. L. Knapp's " Picturesque beauties of the Hudson River... Proofs," N, Y,, 1835, preceding title-page. b. As described. 355. THE PALISADES ON THE HUDSON RIVER. Centa-e, below title: Engraved ex- pressly for the Family Circle and Parlor An- nual. 4 10/16 X 7. Line engraving. 1849. 356. THE PALISADES. Vign. 45^x3^. Wood engraving. [About 1870.] 357- THE PALISADES OF THE HUDSON. In lower right corner: PAUL DIXON. Up- per corners arched. 55^x6. em. 3542. From "Appleton's Journal," vol, 5, N. Y., 1871, p. 665. 358. A Pinnacle of the Palisades. 75^x5 3/16. Wood engraving after J. D. IF[oodward]. From "The Art Journal," N, Y., 1875, p, 8. 359. Views of the Palisades of the Hudson, show- ing the "Eastern Face of Palisade Cliff at King's Point, Weehawken;" "The Palisades at Linwood, from Bulkhead;" "... Looking North from the Cliff at Linwood;" "... from the River Road, opposite Englewood;" "... Looking North from the Cliff, opposite Englewood;" "... Looking North from near WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 57 Prints, Hudson River, confd. Alpine;" . . . "From the River, nearly oppo- site Yonkers;" "The Palisades and Talus Quarry south of Alpine;" "The Palisades and Quarry at Rockland, N. Y.;" "The Palisades South of Alpine;" "...at Alpine;" "Carpen- ter Brothers' Quarry, on Palisades, at Lin- wood;" . . . [same] "from the River;" "... Looking North from Bulkhead at Lin- luood;" "... Looking North, near Alpine;" "... One mile North of Alpine;" "... One mile South of State Line." 17 photographs reproduced in half-tone. From the "New- York News-Letter," igoo. Yonkers to Sing Sing. 360. PHILLIPSE MANOR HOUSE, YONK- ERS, N. Y. I {Present residence of Judge Woodnuorth.) \ Dravin and engraved for Irv- ing' s life of Washington. \ NEW YORK, G. P. PUTNAM. Centre: Draiun & En- graved by James Smillie. Upper corners rounded. 3^x5 11/16. Line engraving, em. 3541- From Washington Irving's "Life of Washington," vol. 31 N. Y., 1861, oppos. p. 47T. 361. "A View of Phillipp's Manor and the Rocks on the Hudson, or North River, in N. America, June l8th, 1784." I From a sepia drawing in possession of Hon. D. McN. K. Stauffer. 4^4 X 7. Half-tone. In 13th annual report, igoS, of the American Scenic and ' Historic Preservation Society, oppos. p. 224. 362. THE PHILLIPSE MANOR-HOUSE AT YONKERS. Upper corners rounded. sYs x CYs. Wood engraving by Richardson, N. Y. From "Appleton's Journal," vol. 11, N. Y. 1874, p. 385. Same. em. 3600. 363- ON THE WAY TO TOWN— BELOW HASTINGS. In lower left corner: T B, monogram. iYi'x.S 15/16. Wood engraving. EM. 11525. 364. A View in Hudson's River of the Entrance of what is called the Topan Sea: title to left in English, and same to right in French. Centre, below: Sketch' d on the SPOT by his Excellency Governor Pownal. Painted by Paul Sandhy, Engraved by Peter Benazech. . London, Printed for Jno. Bowles at No. 13 in Cornhill, Robert Sayer at No. $s in Fleet Street, Thos. Jefferys the corner of St. Martins Lane in the Strand, Carington Bowles at No. 69 in St. Pauls Church Yard, and Henry Parker at No. 82 in Cornhill. Right: C. I. 13 X 19%. Line engraving, em. 5525. a. As described, em. 5525. b. With different publication line, viz.: London, Published according to Act of Parlia- ment May 20 1761 by Thos. Jefferys the Cor- ner of St. Martin's Lane. em. 2455. 365- SCHOOL HOUSE, TAPPAN. Leit: Painted by Robert W. Weir; right: Engraved on steel by James Smillie; centre, below: Engraved for the New York Mirror; right, below: Printed by J. Neale \ at Illman & Pilbrovfs. 4% X 6%. Line engraving. From " New York Mirror," Dec. 15, 1832. A glimpse of the river m the distance. 366. Bourg de Tarry-Town ou Major Andrl fUt pris [same in English, Latin & German.] No. 4. I Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel aine et Cie; left: Lithographie par Bichebois, fig. par V. Adam; right: Dessine d'apris nature par J. Milbert. Above: Ire Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTENTRIONALE—ETAT DE NEW YORK PI 4. Border of two lines, 75^x115^; to border line, 75^x11^. Litho- graph, India paper, em. 5519. From "Itindraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson. . .," par T. Milbert, 1828-29. 367. THE CAPTURE OF MAJOR ANDRE. \ From a painting by A. B. Durand in the pos- session of the Honble James K. Paulding \ Published by the American Art Union ex- clusively for the members 184.5. I Entered ac- cording to Act of Congress in the year 1846 by the American Art Union in... New York. Above title, left: PAINTED BY A. B. DU- RAND; centre: FIGURES ENGD. BY AL- FRED JONES; right: LANDSCAPE ENGD. BY SMILLIE & HINSHELWOOD; right, below: PRINTED BY W. E. SMITH. 13 3/16x17%. Line engraving. The river is seen in the distance. The library has also the ist proof, showing the figures only. Same. em. 8373. 368. PICTURESQUE VIEWS IN TARRY- TOWN, WESTCHESTER COUNTY, N. Y. \ [FROM SKETCHES BY OUR SPECIAL ARTIST AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY ROG- ERS.} Eleven views occupying full page in " The Daily Graphic," New York, September 24, 1877. No. 9 : " View from the Castle," shows the river beyond. 369. THE MILL POND. SLEEPY HOLLOW, TARRYTOWN, NEW YORK. Left: W. R. MILLER, DEL.; right: MAJOR, SC. Rounded upper corners. Trimmed close to top of the "age. 6 5/16x95^. Wood engraving. Possibly from " Gleason^s Pictorial Drawing Room Compan- ion." About 1853. The creek winds into the river beyond. 370. Wolfert's Roost, p. 12. | Sleepy Hollow. Vignette. 3 x 4.%. Wood engraving by RICH- ARDSON after W. H[art]. The river is shown in the distance. 371. HOOK MOUNTAIN. Half-tone fron» photograph, in THE MAIL AND EXPRESS ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE for August 3, 1901. 4x6%. 372. HOOK MOUNTAIN, "POINT-NO- POINT" OR "ROCKLAND POINT" | ON THE HUDSON RIVER \ Now being de- stroyed by Stone Crushing Works. Above: Presented by \ The American Scenic and His- toric Preservation Society \ Headquarters Trib- une Building, New York. 9/4 x 13%. Photo- graph. A reproduction in half-tone, 3 J^ x 7, was published in the loth annual report, 1905, of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, oppos. p. 81. 58 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. 373. Bourg de Sing-Sing ou Mount Plaisant ..[and same in English, Latin & German.] No. 5 I Imp. Lith. de Bo-ve dirigee par Noel aine £f Ce.; left: Lithographie par L. Sabatier. fig. par V. Adam; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 2 Li-vraison. AM6RI- QUE SEPTENTR10N\ALE—6TATDE NEW YORK PI. I. Border of two lines, 7 9/16 x iiJ4; to border line, 7 15/16x115^. Litho- graph. India paper. In *'Itineraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson . . . ,," par J. Milbert, 1828-29. 374. SING SING PRISON AND TAPPAN SEA. [Same title in French and English.] Left: T. Creswick; centre: after a sketch by W. H. Bartlett; right: H. Adlard; centre, be- low: London, Published for the Proprietors by Geo Virtue 26 Ivy Lane 183Q. 4^4 x 7^. Line engraving. EM. 11204. From W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. 2, London, 1840, oppos. p. 47. To the right, across the river, is seen Hook Mountain. 375- VILLAGE OF SING-SING. \ [Hudson River.) Left: fV. H. Bartlett; right: R. Wal- lis; centre, below: London, Published for the Proprietors by G. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, l&SJ. 4j^x7 1/16. Line engraving. From Bartlett's ''American Scenery,*' vol. ±, London, 1840, oppos. p. 49. 376. VILLAGE OF SING-SING. \ (Hudson River.) Left; W. H. Bartlett; right: M. Os- borne. 4 9/16x7. Line engraving. Same design as preceding. 377. VIEW FROM SING SING. In the fore- ground near centre two men; beyond, Sing Sing Prison and Tappan Sea. 2 15/16x4 11/16. Line engraving in color. A print of the kind published in " Nelson's guide to the city of New York " (1858 and 1S59). Croton to the Highlands. 378. MOUTH OF THE CROTON. 3^x3^^. Wood engraving, em. 1Z130. 379. "Junction of Croton and Hudson." Etching by J. Henry Hill, 1886, signed in pencil. 95^ X 1354. Z%o. VIEW NEAR CROTON, N. Y. \ Hudson River. Centre: From nature by E. White- field. Border of one line. 65^x9^^; to border line, 6J4 x 9^. [185-?] Lithograph, one tint. i%x. A Representation of MAJOR JOHN ANDR£ Adjutant General to the Kings Forces in North America going from the VULTURE SLOOP OF WAR to the shore of Haverstraiu Bay in Hudson's River the Night \ of the 2srd of September, 1780, in a Boat which was sent for him [accompanied by a Mr. Smith) under the sanction of a flag of Truce, by Major GENERAL ARNOLD, who then commanded the Rebel Forces in that dis- trict. I The above is an exact Copy of a Draw- ing sketched with a pen by MAJOR ANDRt. himself the morning on which he was to have been executed, with a desire _ [it is supposed) of perpetuating \ a Transaction which termi- nated most fatally for him, and found on his Table with other Papers the next Day [being that of his Death) by his servant and de- livered by him on his Arrival \ at New York to Lieut. COLONEL CROSBIE of the 22nd Regiment, who has caused this Engraving to be taken from the Original in his possession, as a small Mark of his Friendship for that very valuable and unfortunate officer. Right, within border: J. A. fee 1st Oct 1780. 7x11^; with title and description, 7 15/16 x 11 J^. Photograph of line engraving. A wood-cut (9 X 12 y^) after BfNevin, " The tempter and the traitor " (em, 11036), representing " the treason of Arnold on the night of September 2r, 1780," shows Arnold and Andre, with a glimpse of the river beyond. 382. Port d'Haverstraw ou de Warren [same in English, Latin & German] No. 6. \ Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel aine & Ce. Left: Lithographie par Bichebois fig. par V. Adam; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 2e Livraison. AMSRIQUE SEPTEN- TRI0NALE—6TAT DE NEW YORK PI 2. Border of two lines. 7 13/16x11 s/i6; to border, 8J4xii 11/16. Lithograph. India paper, em. 10461. From '' Itin^raire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson, . . ." par J. Milbert, 1828-29. 383. STORMING OF STONY POINT. Left: J. M'Nevin; right: 7. Rogers. 4§/^ x 6^. Line engraving, em. 9174 & loiaS. Glimpses of the river at right and left. 384. IMPROVEMENTS AT STONY POINT RESERVATION— STEAMBOAT LANDING. 4x6. Half-tone from photograph. In 9th annual report, 1904, of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, oppos. p. 30. Other pictures of the Reservation, not showing the river, appear in the loth report. 385. Arnold's escape to the Vulture. 2j^x3fi — Verplank's Point, where Arnold passed in his flight to the Vulture. 25^x3 7/16. Trial proofs of two etchings by W. H. W. Bicknell, pub- lished in ''The Varick Court of Inquiry . . ., edited by A. B. Hart," Boston: The Bibliophile Society, 1907. 38554. Verplanck's Point. — "Proposed site for the permanent exposition of igoQ." Half-tone from photograph, showing the Hudson from Peekskill to Stony Point. 386. PEEKSKILL LANDING. \ [Hudson River.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: E. Benjamin; cen- tre, below title: London, Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, 1838. 4 13/16x75^. Line engraving. In W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. i, N. Y., 1840, oppos. p. 61. 387. VIEW FROM PEEKS KILL LANDING. "Peekskill" divided by support of banner above, with map: PLAN OF | THE ATTACK OF f FORTS CLINTON \ & \ MONTGOMERY. 5 5/16x4^. Wood engraving, em. 8101. Printed foot-note : This view is from Peekskill landing, looking up the river. On the left is the Dunderberg, or Thunder Mountain, over which the troops marched to Forts Clinton and Montgomery. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 59 Prints, Hudson River, confd. 388. LIGHT HOUSE NEAR CALDWELL'S LANDING. I {Hudson River.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: H. Adlard; centre, below: London, Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, l8jS. 4^4 x y}i. Line engraving. From W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. i, London, 1840, oppos. p. 63. 389. Entrance of the Highlands. Border of four lines. 3^x3 13/16 ;_ to border line, 3^^ x 4 1/16. Line engraving. In "Sketches of scenery and manners in the United States," by the author of the "Northern Traveller" [i, e. Theodore Dwight, jun.], N. Y., 1829, opp. p. 173. At centre of page 173 is the following reference ; "The annexed sketch may give a general idea of the form of the mountains which mark the southern extremity of this romantic pass." This, taken with the context, clearly refers to the southern gate or entrance to the Highlands; and the engraving must, there- fore, be taken to repiesent that part of the Hudson between Caldwell's Landing and the Dunderberg on the west side and Anthony's Nose on the east. 390. DONDER BERG POINT: title within border. 3x3^4- Vignette. Wood engraving. [186-?] 391. VIEW on the HUDSON RIVER. Left: /. Weld delt.; right: S. Springsguth Sculpt.; Published Dec. 22, 1798, by I. Stockdale, Pic- cadilly. 6 3/16x8 11/16. Line engraving. The view is evidently of that part of the river near An- thony's Nose. In Isaac Weld's " Travels through the States of North America, and the Provinces of Upper and Lower Canada, during the years 1705, 1796, and 1797," 4th edition, vol. I, London, 1807, oppos. p. 268. In the 2d edition of the book, vol. r, 1799, oppos. p. 268, this view appeared with the title VIEWontkePA TOIVMAC RIVER^ frOTn Mount Vernon. A foot-note to the list of ' plates, on the verso of p. xxiii, says : "In some of the im- pressions, by mistake, called "View of the Patowmac River from Mount Vernon." 392. View of St. Anthony's Nose, on the North River. \ Province of Ne^ XII 15/16. Lithograph. India paper. In "Itin6raire pittoresque du ileuve Hudson...," by J. Milbert, 1828-29. 415. Plaine de West Point an moment de I'exer- cice [same in English, Latin & German] No. 7. I Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel aine Gf Ce. Left: Lithographic par L. Sabatier WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 6l Prints, Hudson River, cont'd. fig. par V. Adam; right: Dessine d'a-pris na- ture par J. Milbert. Above: 2e. Livraison. AMMIQUE SEPTENTRIONALE—MTAT DE NEW YORK, PI 3. Border of two lines, 754xiiJ4; to border, 8 3/16x11 ii/i6. Lithograph. India paper. In " Itin^raire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson . . .,'* par J. Milbert, 182S-29. 416. WestPoint. Lithograph. zJ4x4. [183-?] 417. The Sugar Loaf. Lithograph. 2^x4. [183-?] On same sheet as preceding. 418. WEST POINT MILITARY ACADEMY. Right: Illman fef Pilbroiu Sc; centre, below: Published by A. K. White. Border of one line, 2^x4%; to border line, 2 15/16 x 4 15/16. Line engraving. 419. MILITARY SCHOOL. WEST POINT, N. Y. Right: Engraved & Printed by \ Fen- ner Sears & Co.; centre, below: London, Pub- lished Nov. 15, 1831, by I. T. Hinton & Simpkin & Marshall. Over upper right cor- ner: 77. One border line at right and bottom, two at left and top. 45^x6 5/16; to border line, 4^4 x 6J4. Line engraving. India paper. From "History and topography of the United States," edited by J. H. Hinton, vol. 2, Phila., 1832, oppos. p. 492. 420. MILITARY SCHOOL, WEST POINT, N. Y. Rectangle with bottom and half of left and right sides surrounded by ornamental frame enclosing two small scenes: HENRY HUDSON FOUNDING NO FA BELGIA OR NEW NETHERLANDS and PETER STUY- VESANT THE DUTCH GOVERNOR RE- PROACHING THE BURGOMASTERS WITH COWARDICE ON THE APPROACH OF THE BRITISH FLEET. At centre, top, small vignette, 45^x6 5/16; with frame, 6 11/16x8 15/16. Line engraving. Same design as preceding. Apparently from " History of the United States, edited by J. H. Hinton," London [183—?]. 421. MILITARY SCHOOL, WEST POINT, N. Y. Right: J. Archer Sc. Border of one line at right and bottom, two at left and top. sVa'^'iV2\ to border, 5 9/16x7^. Line en- graving. a. As described. From " History and topography of the United States," edited by J. H. Hinton ; new edition, vol. 2, Boston, 1834, oppos, p. 370. b. With Vol. II, page 370 below title, to right. c. Without the border lines. 422. RIVIERE DU HUDSON. Left: J. Noel, del. right: Outhwaite Sc; centre, above title: Imp. Ch. Chardon aine Paris. 4 7/16x6 3/16. Line engraving. About 1850. Looking toward West Point from the east shore. Railway train and ferry boat " West Point " in foreground. 423. WEST POINT I (HUDSON) Left: DRAWN AFTER NATURE; right: For the Proprietor HERMANN J. MEYER; centre, below title: Published far HERMANN J. MEYER, J64 William Str., NEW YORK; right, below: Copyright secured according to ACT of CONGRESS. Border of one dotted line. ^Yixeys; to border, 4 5/16x6 5/16. In " United States Illustrated," edited by Charles A. Dana, vol. I, the East, New York [185-?], opp. p. 37. 424. THE HUDSON, FROM WEST POINT. | Grounds of the U. S. Military Academy. Left: F. F. PALMER, DEL.; centre: Entered according to act of Congress A. D. 1862, by Currier & Ives, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York; right: LITH. CURRIER & IVES, N. Y.; half way between left and centre: BRASS MORTARS, TAKEN IN THE I MEXICAN WAR; half way be- tween right and centre: COLD SPRING. \ CONSTITUTION ISLAND; centre, below: New York, Published by Currier Sf Ives 152 Nassau Street. Border of one line, 10^ x 15^ ; to border, 11 1/16x15 11/16. Lithograph. 425. West Point, from the River. %^ x 6%. Wood engraving after J. D. IF[oodward]. 426. THE TOMB OF KOSCIUSKO. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Young; centre, be- low: London, Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue 26 Ivy Lane 1837. 4?4 x 6 15/16. Line engraving. In AV. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol.'i, London, 1840, oppos. p. 30. 427. THE TOMB OF KOSCIUSKO. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Wallis; centre,, within border line: PYNE. 4^x7 1/16. Line engraving. \ The tomb occupies the same position as in the preceding print, but the general design is different. a. As described. In W. H. Bartlett's " History of the United States," vol. i. New York, 1856, oppos. p. 418. b. With title KOSCIUSKO'S MONU- MENT. Margin trimmed close to title. 428. KOSCIUSZKO'S GARDEN. Vign. 3^/2 x 3^4- Wood engraving. 429. Das GRAB COSCIUSCO'S \ zu Westpoint am Hudson. \ (VEREIN. STAATEN). Left: Aus d. Kunstanst d. Bibl. Instit. in Hildbh.; right: Eigenthum d. Verleger. Over right upper corner: DCCIII. Border of one dotted line, 4x6; to border line, 4 1/6 x 6}i. Line engraving. From Meyer's '^ Universum,'' Amerikanische Ausgabe, 6 Bd, I. Lieferung, N. Y,, 1854, oppos. p. i. 430. View of the Hudson Highlands from West Point. Left: Painted by Robert W. Weir; right: Engraved by James Smillie; centre: Steel Plate; centre, below: PAINTED AND ENGRAVED FOR THE NEW YORK MIR- ROR 1836. Entered according to the Act of Congress in the year 1836 by G. P. Morris in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. 6^, x 9. Line engraving. a. Trial proof, before letters. b. As described. India paper. Published in " New York Mirror," May 14, 1836. 431. VIEW FROM WEST POINT. \ (Hudson River.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Wal- lis; centre, below: London, Published for the 62 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson Ri-ver, confd. Proprietors by Geo. Virtue 26 Ivy Lane l837- 4 11/16x7. Line engraving. From Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. *., London, 1840, oppos. p. 6. 432. VIEJV FROM WEST POINT. \ {Hudson River.) Left: JV. H. Bartlett; right: A. L. Dick; centre, below: Engraved expressly for Graham's Magazine. 4j4 x 6T/i. Line engrav- ing. Same design as preceding. 433. View from West Point \ on the Hudson. Left: T. Creswick; right: J. T. Willmore; centre, below: London, Published for the Pro- prietor by Longman £f Co. Paternoster Row October I, 1841 \ and Lea & Blanchard, Phila- delphia. 4^4 X 694- Line engraving. a. As described. b. Without names of artists. Trimmed close to second line of inscription. 434. VIEW FROM WEST POINT ON THE HUDSON. 4X5>^. Lithograph printed in colors. [185-?] Same design as preceding. 435.* HUDSON RIVER. | NEAR WEST POINT. Right: J. H. BUFFORD & SONS LITH. BOSTON, MASS. 5 15/16x9 13/16. Lithograph, one tint. About 1855. A three-decked steamboat is shown. 436.* View on the Hudson, near West Point. Left: Printed by Kimmel & Voigt, N. T. Centre, below title: Engraved expressly for Demoresfs Magazine. 6J4 x gj^. Line en- graving. 437. "View from West Point" by J. F. Kensett. 1863. Canvas, 20x34. Oil-painting in Stuart Gallery, New York Public Library. 438. "View of the Highlands from West Point" by J. F. Weir. 1862. Canvas, 19x33. Oil-painting in the Stuart Gallery, New York Public Library. 439. "A Window, House on Hudson River," by W. Whittredge. 1863. Canvas, 27x19. Oil-painting in the Stuart Gallery, New York Public Library. 440. West Point and the Highlands. Left: Painted by Henry Fenn; centre: Entered according to act of Congress A. D. i86g by D. Appleton & Co. in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York; right: Engraved by S. V. Hunt. In lower left corner: H. Fenn, 1868; centre, below: New York, D. Appleton & Co. 5^ x 754- Line engraving. Same. em. 11962. From "Picturesque America," vol. j, N. Y., 1872, oppos. p. 9. 441. VIEW FROM WEST POINT. Hill cov- ered with foliage in most of foreground; steamer beyond, centre, going up the river. 2^4x4 3/16- Line engraving. 442. VIEW FROM WEST POINT— LOOKING NORTH. Fortifications, with four cannon, in foreground. Over upper border, at left of centre: Croix6^. Wood engraving by KARST after J. D. ^[ood- ward.] From "The Art Journal," 1875, p. 204. 462. Distant View of the Highlands from below Newburg. 5^4x53/16. Arched top. Wood engraving after J. D. /^[oodward.] From " The Art Journal," N. Y., 1875, p. 205. 463. VIEW FROM RUGGLE'S HOUSE, NEW- BURGH. I {Hudson River.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Brandard; centre, below: London, Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue 26 Ivy Lane, 1838. 5 x yyi. Line en- graving. From W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. 1, London, 1840, oppos. p. 51. 464. VIEW FROM RUGGLE'S HOUSE, NEW- BURGH. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: J. N. Gimhrede. 5 x ^Yi^. Line engraving. Same design as preceding. Trimmed close to title. 465. VIEW of the HUDSON RIVER. \ NEAR NEWBURG. At right, portico in foreground with two women and a man ; at left, in fore- ground, trees. Centre, below: Published for HERMANN J. MEYER, 8 North William Street NEW YORK. Border of one line. 4 1/16x6 1/16; to border, 4 3/16x6 3/16. Line engraving. 466. Washington's Head-quarters, Newburgh, N. Y. Left: Robt. W. Weir pinxt.; centre: Steel Plate; right: James Smillie Sculpt.; cen- 64 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. tre, below: PAINTED & ENGRAVED FOR THE NEW YORK MIRROR 1834. Entered according to the Act of Congress in the year 1834 by George P. Morris in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. 6x9. Line engraving. 467. Washington's Head Quarters near New- burgh. I From an original Sketch on the Spot by J. W. Hill. 35^x4^. Line engraving. Vignette on engraved title-page of W. H. Bartlett's " History of the U. S.," vol. 1, N. Y., 1856. 468. WASHINGTON'S HEAD QUARTERS NEAR NEW BURGH. Centre below: New York. Virtue, Emmins & Co. \ Entered ac- cording to act of Congress in the year 1857 by Virtue, Emmins & Co. in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of N. Y. 454 x7j^. Line engraving. 469. HEAD QUARTERS AT NEWBURGH. Centre: Drawn & Engraved by James Smillie; below title: FOR IRVING'S LIFE OF WASH- INGTON; right: Printed by W. Pate. Upper corners rounded; top rises slightly on both sides to centre. 4^ x 7J4- Line engraving. India paper. From Washington Irving's *' Life of George "^Washing- ton," vol. 4, New- York, 1861, oppos. p. 400. The woodcut, signed ifumford, oppos. p. 48 of J. F.Wat- son's " Annals ... of New York " (Phila. , 1846), also gives a view of the river. 470. VIEW NEAR FISHKILL. \ No. 17 of the Hudson River Port Folio. Left: Painted by W. G. Wall; right: Engraved by J. Hill; centre, below: Published by Henry I. Megarey New York, and transferred to G & C & H. Carvill, New York. Border of two lines. 14 x 2x5^; to border, 147/16x215^. Aquatint [1824?] 471- VIEW FROM FISHKILL LOOKING TO WEST POINT. Left: Painted by W. G. Wall; right: Engraved by J. Hill. 14^ x 20?^. Aquatint EM. 4278. Trimmed close to title. No. 1 of the " Hudson River Portfolio." 472. A VIEW ON HUDSON RIVER. Left: ALANSON Sc. N. Y. Border of one line. 45^x5%; to border line, 4 3/16x5 15/16. Wood engraving. [184-?] Printed text on page below title; at bottom: Vol. II — No. 5. One passage reads: •' When one ... is wafted along at the rate of twelve miles an hour in the wonderful steam-boat without sails." The steam-boat is shown in the print. Poughkeepsie to Cruger's Island. 473. A View in Hudson's River of Pakepsey & the Catts-Kill Mountains | From Sopos Island in HudsoTi's River [same in French]. Right: C. 3.; centre: Sketch' d on the SPOT by his Excellency Governor Pownal, Painted & En- graved by Paul Sandby; centre, below: Lon- don, Printed for John Bowles at No. 13 in Cornhill. Robert Sayer at No. 53 in Fleet Street. Thos. Jeffreys the Corner of St. Mar- tin's Lane in the Strand. Carington Bowles at No. 6q in St. Pauls Church Yard and Henry Parker at No. 82 in Cornhill. 12 13/16 x 20 3/16. Line engraving. [About 1759.] a. As described. Same. EM. 4822 & 10781. b. Without C 3, and with publication line changed to London, published according to Act of Parliament, May zo, 1761, by Thos. Jefferys, the Corner of St. Martin's Lane. 474. VIEW ON THE HUDSON FROM POUGHKEEPSIE. \ Hudson Highlands in the distance. 3x4 15/16. Line engraving in color. 475- POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. ON THE HUD- SON. THE CITY OF SCHOOLS: title above engraving. Centre: Hatch & Co. Trin- ity Building, III Broadway N. Y.; below: PUBLISHED BY EASTMAN NATIONAL BUSINESS COLLEGE. 354 x 7^4. Line en- graving. At head of printed prospectus. 476. POUGHKEEPSIE, FROM LEWISBURG. In foreground in centre, a house ; at right a sailing vessel, ^yi x 4. Wood engraving. EM. 13301. 477. WESTERN VIEW OF POUGHKEEP- SIE, N. Y. The above shows the appearance of Poughkeepsie as seen from the elevated bank on the luest side of the Hudson, a short distance below Neio \ Paltz landing. The Hotel at the Steamboat landing is seen on the extreme right. Left: E. BARTLETT. Border line. 3/4 x6J^; to border, 3 5/16x6 7/16. Wood engraving. From J.W. Barber's " Historical Collections of the State of New York," Improved Edition, N. Y., 1852, p. 84. 478. Call Rock, Poughkeepsie. Arched top. 4 15/16x3. Wood engraving after J. D. /F'[oodward.] From " The Art Journal," N. Y., 1875, p. 206. 479.* Poughkeepsie Locomotive Engine Factory. In lower right corner: LOSSING D. 4 i/i6x 6 15/16. Wood engraving. About 1855. 479^4- VIEW FROM HYDE PARK. | {Hudson River.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: G. K. Richardson; centre, below: London, Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, 1837. ^Vi, ^ 7- Line engraving. From W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery, vol. 1, Lon- don, 1840, oppos. p. 47. 480. VIEW FROM HYDE PARK. \ (Hudson River.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: M. Os- borne. 45^ X 6^. Line engraving. Same design as preceding. Trimmed close to words " Hudson River." 481. VIEW FROM HYDE PARK. \ {Hudson River.) Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: A. L. Dick; centre, below: Engraved for the Ladies Wreath. 4 7/16x6^. In " Ladies Wreath," July, 1850. Same design as pre- ceding. 482. Hudson River. \ (above Hyde Park). Left: W. H. Bartlett; right; Alfred Jones; centre, below : Engraved Expressly for the Evergreen. 45^ X 6 1/16. Line engraving. Same design as preceding, curtailed a little at the right. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 65 Prints, Hudson River, confd. 483. VIEW FROM HYDE PARK. \ {HUDSON RIVER). Large tree in foreground; beyond, at left, steamer going down the river. 2 13/16 X4J^. Line engraving. Centre portion of same view as preceding, with steamer added. 484. VIEfV FROM HYDE PARK | (HUDSON RIVER) I NEfV YORK. Left: DRAWN AFTER NATURE; riglit: For the Proprietor, HERMANN J. MEYER; left, below: Pub- lished for HERMANN J. MEYER, 164 Wil- liam Street, NEW YORK; right, below: Copyright secured according to Act of CON- GRESS. Border of one dotted line. 3 15/16 x 6%; to border, 4 1/16x6 5/16. Line engrav- ing. In the "United States Illustrated," vol. 1, Part 3, N. Y., oppos. p. 51. 485. "On the Rondout Creek. The Hudson River in the distance. June 1838." In lower left corner: Wilbur, June l8s8, Smillie House on the Rondout Creek. 9 1/16x13. Wash drawing. 486. RONDOUT CREEK, zj^ x iY^. Vignette. Wood engraving. From B, J. Lossing's " Hudson from the Wilderness to the Sea," N. Y., 1866, p. 184. 487. KINGSTON, NEW YORK.—KRUSE- MAN VAN ELTEN. 454x6 9/16. Wood engraving by C. Morand. 488. Summer-House, Cruger's Island. 3/4x5^4' Wood engraving by Richardson after /. D. /^[oodward]. Prom '■ The Art Journal," N. Y., 1875, p. 206. The Catskills to Coxsackie. 489. SKETCH of the TOWN of KAATS'- KILL, HUDSON'S RIVER. Left: B. T. sc; right: A. P. Fecit. 3^x6^. Line engraving by Benjamin Tanner. In "The New-York Magazine," Sept., 1797, opposite p. 449. 490. VIEW FROM THE MOUNTAIN HOUSE, CATSKILL. [title also in French and Ger- man]. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Brand- ard; centre, below: London, Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue 26 Ivy Lane, iSsQ. 4 11/16x6 13/16. Line engraving. InW. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. 2, Lon- don, 1840, oppos. p. 102. The river is seen in the distance. 491. Catskill Mountains and the Steam Boat — on the Hudson River. Left: Sketched by J. Glennie Esqr.; right: Hewitt Sc. Border of two lines at left, top and right. 3 13/16x6^; to border, 3^x65^. Line engraving. *a. With sails on the steam-boat. Proof. Same. In "The Port Folio, third series, conducted by Olivet Oldschool, Esq.," vol. 2, no. 5, Nov. 1818, oppos. p. 453. b. With a border of two lines at left, top and right. Size to border 3^x65^. A dif- ferent boat substituted, violently churning the water, flying the American flag and without sails; but the reflection of the sails still re- mains on the water. The boat is not mentioned in the text. See note to no. 626. 493. Catskill Mountain House. Left: ^Dravm by G. Harvey, right: Engraved by J. Smillie. 4 13/16x654. Line engraving. In "Graham's Magazine," Phila., Deo. 1850, oppos. p. 361. 493- THE K ATS KILL MOUNTAINS (FROM HUDSON). Right: Lith. of Sarony & Major 117 Fulton St. N.Y. 3y2X5yB. Lithograph. [About 1850.] 494. VIEW NEAR HUDSON. \ No. 12 of the Hudson River Port Folio. Left: Painted by W. G. Wall; right: Engraved by J. Hill; centre, below: Published by Henry I. Megarey New York and transferred to. Border of two lines. 14 1/16 X2ij^; to border, 14^4x215^. Aquatint. [1824?] 495. Ville d'Hudson [same in English, Latin & German] No. II \ Imp. Lith. de Bove, dirigee par Noel aine & Ce.; left: Dessine d'apres nature par Milbert; right: Lithographic par L Sabatier. Above : se Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTENTRIONALE—ETAT DE NEW- YORK. PI 3. Border of two lines. 7 9/16 x II 3/16; to border line, 7^x115^. Litho- graph. From "ItinSraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson... par J. Milbert," 1828-29. 496. Vue du port de la ville d'Hudson et des montagnes Catskill [same in English, Latin & German]. No. 12 \ Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel aine & Ce.; left: Lithographic par Bichebois fige. par V. Adam.; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 3e Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTENTRION- ALE—ETAT DE NEW-YORK. PI. 3. Border of two lines. 7 ii/i6xii 5/16. Litho- graph, India paper. EM. 4277. From " ItinSraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson . . .," par J. Milbert, 1828-29. 497. VIEW OF HUDSON CITY AND THE CATSKILL MOUNTAINS. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Brandard. 4 13/16x7^4- Line engraving. From W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. 2, London, 1840, oppos. p. 67. 498. VIEW OF HUDSON CITY AND THE CATSKILL MOUNTAINS. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: ^. L. Dick. 4^x7 1/16. Line engraving. Same design as preceding. 499. VIEW OF HUDSON-CITY AND THE CA TSKILL MO UNTAINS. Left : DRA WN AFTER NATURE; right: For the Proprietor: HERMANN J. MEYER; left, below: Pub- lished for PAUL BERNHARD, 164. William Street, NEW YORK; right, below: Copy- right secured according to ACT OF CON- GRESS. Border of one line. 4 9/16x6%; to border, 4 11/16x7. Line engraving. Design adapted from Bartlett's (no. 497). a. As described. 66 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. b. With HERRMAXN J. MEYER instead of PAUL BERN HARD. In the " United States Illustrated." edited by Charles A. Dana. Vol. 1, Part 2, N. Y. [ISo-:-], oppos. p. 37. 500. SOUTH EASTERN VIEW OF HUDSON CITY, X. Y., FROM ACADEMY, OR PROS- PECT HILL. I The principal street in Hudson, one mite in length, is seen in the central part of the engraving. The village of Athens ap- pears on the opposite \ bank of the Hudson; the Cattskill Mountains are seen in the ex- treme distance, on the left. Border line. 3%yi6j4', to border, 3 5/16x6^4. Wood en- graving by E. Bartlett. From J. W, Barber's ' ' Historical Collections of the State of New York," improved edition, N. Y., 1852, oppos. p. 76. 501. At HUDSON, iV. Y. Over right upper corner: 12. At right in foreground a small house; at left a railway train and railway bridge. About 1828? 5;^x8j4- Lithograph. 503. Hudson, from Four-mile Point. 3x7. Arched top. Wood engraving after /. D. W[oodward]. 503. riEfF NEAR COXSACKIE. HUDSON RIVER. Right: Leney Set. Border of one line at left and top, two at right and bottom. 3 7/16x5 11/16; to border 3 9/16x5 13/16. Line engraving. From " The Port FoUo," .3d series, conducted by Oliver Oldschool, Esq., v. 1, no. 1, Jan. 1813, oppos. p. 1. Albany. 50+. A VIEW of REXSSELAERFILLE MANU- FACTORY I The property of Mr. JAMES CALDWELL of the City of \ Albany, Mer- chant, with a distant Prospect of Hudsons River \ and the Seat of Stephen Van Rens- selaer Esquire. Left: In possession of Gavit & Co., Albany, N. Y.; right: Tiebout Sculp, lygs. 6 7/16x11^. Reproduction of line engraving. EM. 35+7. 505.* CITY OF ALBANY, in the STATE OF NEW YORK. Centre, above title: Dravm by G. Kane, June 4, iSig — Engraved by T. Dixon.; centre, below: Published by Henry Fisher, Caxton, Liverpool, Octr. 21, 181Q. Border of two lines. 5 12/16x8; to border 5 15/16 x 8 3/16- A view of the city from the east shore. The steamboat is probably the " Chancellor Livingston." 506. EXTRAXCE OF THE CAXAL INTO THE HUDSON AT ALBANY. Lett: J. Eights del. 2 15/16x5 13/16. Line engraving. On plan. " Geological profile extending from the At- lantic to Lake Erie," in \V. L. Stone's " Narrative of the festivities observed in honor of the completion of the grand Erie Canal," N. Y., 1825. Same, cut from map. em. 11421. Reproduced in M. A. Hamm's ' ' Famous families of New York," X. Y., [1902], vol. 1, p. 4S. The river itself is not shown. 507. fille d'Albany, Capitale de I'etat de Nev! York [and same in English, Latin & German] No. 13. I Imp. Lit/i. de Bove dirigee par Noel aine & Cie.; left: Lithographie par Deroy; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 4.6 Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTEN- TRI0NALE—£TAT de NEW-YORK PI I. Border of two lines. 7j^xiiJ^; to border line, 7 15/16 X II J4- Lithograph. India paper. EM. 11468. From " Itinfiraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson, par J. Milbert," 1888-29. 508. A riEir OF ALBANY, N. Y. At the left, in foreground, a steamer going up the river; at the right, two sailing vessels. 5^4 3C 8^. Wood engraving. [183-?] 509. ALBANY, FROM VAN-UNSSELAENS ISLAND. Left: Drawn by G. Wall.; right: Engraved & Printed by Fenner Sears & Co.; centre, below: London, Published Jan. 1831 by I. T. Hinton & Simpkin & Marshall. Over upper right corner: 15. One border line on left and top and two on right and bottom. 3 7/16x6; to border, ^^■s6 5/16. Line en- graving. a. As described. India paper. EM. 10396. b. With —UXSSELAENS changed to REXXSELAER'S. From " History and topography of the United States," edited by J. H. Hinton, London, 18.32, vol. 2, op. p. 489. u. With added work as in reflection of cows. Ornamental border added, with vig- nettes below to left {DUTCH TREATY KITH THE INDIANS) and to right {SUR- REXDER TO THE ENGLISH). Former lettering replaced bv ALBANY, FROM VAN REXSSALAER'S ISLAXD. Centre, below: J. & F. TALLIS, LONDON & NEW YORK. Size with border 6^^x75^. 510. ALBANY, FROM VAN-UNSSELAENS ISLAXD. Left: G. Wall del; right: /. Archer, Sc. One border line at left and top and two at right and bottom. 4 11/16 x 7 11/16; to border line, 4 15/16x8 1/16. Same design as preceding, engraved on a larger scale. a. As described. From " History and topography of the U. S.. edited by J. H. Hinton," new edition, vol. 2, Boston, 1834, oppos. p. 387. b. With Vol. II, page 384 below title to right. c. With Albany from Van-Unsselaen's Is- land in script; no other lettering. Many added vertical lines in water, beneath trees and boat. EM. 4298. 5101^. VIEW of ALBANY. Left: Wall del; right: Ch: Daumerlang sc; centre, above title: Fr: Geissler direx:; centre, below: Philadelphia: X. .1. Bibl. Inst.; over upper right corner: LIIII. 3?sx6. Line engrav- ing. In "Our Globe. A Universal picturesque albmn. Edited by the North- American Bibliographic Institution in Phila- delphia," vol. 1 [185-?]. 511. .■iLBAXY: Two men in foreground at right; beyond, steamer FULTON going up the river. Border of one line. 3 5/16 x 5^4; to border, 3 5/12 x 5^^. Line engraving. Same. em. 12470. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 67 Prints, Hudson River, cont'd. 512. ALBANY. Man in foreground at right; two boys in foreground centre. Left: IV. H. Bartlett; riiglit: C. Cousen. Line engraving. 4 17/24x7 1/16. From W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. 1, London, 1840, oppos. p. 82; also in W. H. Bartlett's " His- tory of the United States of North America," vol. 1., N. Y., 1866, oppos. p. 188. 513. ALBANY. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: A. L. Dick. 4 11/16x7 1/24- Line engrav- ing. Same design as preceding. 514. Vieix! of Albany. Centre: Eng'd by D. G. Thompson. 413/16x7. Line engraving. Same design as preceding, except that figm'es in fore- ground have been replaced by two men, rowing, in a boat. 515. CITY OF ALBANY. Left: B. F. Smith, del.; right: Gavit & Duthie; centre: Entered according to Act of Congress, Nov. 23, 1847, by E. Van Scaack in the Clerk's Office of the Northern District of the State of New York. 4 5/12 X 7 5/16. Line engraving. 516. ALBANY. Left: Dra-wn by J. R. Smith; right: C. A. & Co. Sc. Lancaster. Border of one line at left and top and two at right and bottom. 5 7/16x7^; to border, 55^x7 15/16. Line engraving. 517. ALBANY above. Centre, below: New- York & Paris published by Goupil, Vibert & Co. J 39 I GENERAL VIEW \ Entered ac- cording to act of Congress, in the year 1850, by Aug. Kollner in the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern District of New York. Border of two lines. 7 7/16 x n 1/16; to border, 7 13/16x11 7/16. Litho- graph. 518. 5. E. VIEW OF ALBANY, FROM GREEN BUSH FERRY. \ The City and State Halls, each surmounted with a dome, are seen tower- ing above the other buildings on the hill on which Albany is mostly built. The \ entrance of the Erie Canal is seen on the right; the South Greenbush Ferry Landing on the left. Left: J. W. Barber, del.; right: Sherman & Smith, sc. N. Y. 35^ x 6J4. Line engraving. From J. W. Barber's "Historical Collections of the State of New York," improved edition, N. Y., 1858, oppos. p. 48. 519. VIEW OF ALBANY, N. Y., FROM GREENBUSH. At right in the foreiground, figures of four men and a woman ; to the left, a railway train. s}i^9H- Wood engraving. From " Gleason's Pictorial Drawing Room Companion." S20*. SNOW SCENE IN ALBANY, NEW YORK. 5 13/16x9^. Wood engraving. Pub- lished about 1856. View of the city from the east shore. The river is frozen over, and railway passengers, with their baggage, are being carried across the ice in very large bob-sleds drawn by horses. 521. VIEW OF ALBANY FROM BATH. Left: Drawn by J. Kirk; right: Engd. & Printed by J. E. Gavit. Vign. i 3/16x6. Line engraving, em. 11320. 522. ALBANY AS SEEN FROM THE HUD- SON RIVER. 5 x/i6xisys. Half-tone from photograph. 1899? In " Albany, New York," a pamphlet issued in 190-? by the Albany Chamber of Commerce. Troy to the Source. 523. VIEW FROM MOUNT IDA. \ {Near Troy), [title also in French and German]. Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: R. Wallis; cen- tre, below: London, Published for the Pro- prietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, 183Q. A% X 7 3/16. Line engraving. In W. H. Bartlett's " American Scenery," vol. 8, Lon- don, 1840, oppos. p. 85. 524. VIEW FROM MOUNT IDA \ {Near Troy). Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: Dick sc. 4% X 7^4- Line engraving. Same design as preceding. From '■ Ladies' Companion," N. Y., Sept., 1840. 525. MOUNT IDA. I On the Hudson. 4 ii/i6 X ^%. Line engraving. Same design as preceding. 526. Chute dans le Mont Ida, audessus de la ville de Troye [and same in English, Latin & Germanl No. 1$. \ Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigie par Noel aine & Ce.; left: Dessine d'apris nature par L. Sabatier; right: Lithographic par Bichebois. Above: 4.e Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTENTRIONALE—BTAT DE NEW YORK. PI. s. Border of two lines. 711/16X II 3/16; to border, 8 1/16 xii^^. Litho- graph. India paper. In "Itin6raire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson, . . . par J. Milbert," 1828-S9. 527. TROY. I Taken from the West bank of the Hudson, in front of the United States Arsenal. Left: W. J. Bennett; right: Engd. by W. J. Bennett; centre: New York, Published by John Levtson 341 Broadway. i^^^zs^- Aquatint. [183-?] 528. [View on the Upper Hudson, 1903.] s% x 9^. Photograph. 529. View of the West Bank of the Hudson's River 3 Miles above Still Water, upon which the Army under the command of Lt. General Burgoyne, took post on the soth. Sepr. 1777- I {Shewing General Frazer's Funeral.) Right: Barlow Sculp.; centre, below: Published as the Act directs, J any. I, 178Q, by William Lane, Leadenhall Street, London. 754 x tiVi. Line engraving, em. 8121 & 10999. From Thomas Anbury's " Travels throush the interior parts of America," London, 1789, oppos. p. 432. 530. Lady Harriet Ackland. Left: Drawn & Engraved by Robt. Pollard; right: Aquatinta by F. Jukes. London, Pubd. Novr. 15; 1784 by R. Pollard No. 7, Brayne'.s Row Spa Fields; centre, below, four lines of description, beginning This amiable Lady and ending Vir- tue so justly merited; right, below: See G. Burgoyne's Narrative. 15^x20 ir/i6. En- graving in line and aquatint. "Before [Lady Harriet] left New York a painting rep- resenting her standing in a boat, with a white handker- chief in her hand as a flag of truce, was exhibited at the royal academy, London."— Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, vol. 1, N. Y., 1888, p. 9. 68 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Hudson River, confd. 531. LADY ACKLAND'S VISIT TO THE CAMP OF GENL. GATES. | From the origi- nal picture by Alonzo Chappel in the posses- sion of the Publishers. | Johnson, Fry & Co. Publishers, New York. | Entered according to act of Congress A. D. 1857, by Johnson, Fry 6 Co. in... New York. s^A^l s/i^- Line engraving. 532. A VIEW ON THE HUDSON AT SCHUYLERVILLE. Half-tone from photo- graph by Silas A. Lottridge. From " The Mail and Express riustrated Magazine," Aug. 3, 1903. 533. VIEW NEAR FORT MILLER. \ No. 10 of the Hudson River Port Folio. Left: PAINTED BY W. G. WALL; right: ENGRAVED BY J. HILL; centre, below: Published by Henry I. Megarey, New York. Border of two lines. 14x20%; to border, 14.% 1^21^. Aquatint. [1824?] Same. em. 4395 & 8066. 534. Chutes generates de I'Hudson a Sandy Hill [and same in English, Latin & German] No. jg. I Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel aine et Compe.; left: Lithographic par A. Arnout; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: sme Livraison. AM£RIQUE SEPTENTRIONALE—£TAT DE NEW YORK. PI. 3. Border of two lines, y^x u 5/16; to border, 8 i/i6xn 13/16. Litho- graph. India paper, em. 4400 & 8067. From "Itin^raire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson, par J. Milbert," 1828-29. 535. Cours de I'Hudson et Moulins, pres Sandy Hill [and same in English, Latin & German]. No. 30. I Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel ainS & Ce.; left: Lithographic par Sabatier; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 5e Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTEN- TRIONALE—&TAT DE NEW YORK. PI. 4. Border of two lines. 7 13/16x11 5/16; to border, SJ^xiiJ^- Lithograph. India paper. EM. 4299. From " Itin^raire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson, par J. Milbert," 1828-29, 536. GLENNS FALLS \ No. 6 of the Hudson River Port Folio. Left: Painted by W. G. Wall; right: Engraved by I. Hill; centre, be- low: Published by Henry I. Megary, New York and transferred to G & C. & H. Carvill, New York. Border of two lines. 14x21 1/16; to border, 14 3/i6x2ij4- Aquatint. [1824?] 537. Chutes de I'Hudson au village de Gleens [and same in English, Latin & German] No. 22: I Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel aine et Ce.; left: Lithographic par Tirpenne; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 6e Livraison. AMtRIQVE SEPTEN- TRIONALE—tTA T DE NE W YORK. PI. 2. Border of two lines. 754 x 11 5/16; to border, 7 15/16x11 13/16. Lithograph. India paper. EM. 4402. From " Itin^raire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson," by J. Milbert, 182^-20. 538. Moulins a Scies au village de Glenns [and the same in English, Latin & German] No. 23 \ Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel aini & Ce.; left: Lithographic par Villeneuve; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 6e Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTENTRIO- NALE—ETAT DE NEW YORK. Pi. 3. Border of two lines. 75^ x 11 15/16; to border, 85^X11 13/16. Lithograph. India paper. EM. 4401. From " Itiniraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson . . . par J. Milbert," 1828-29. 539. BRIDGE AT GLENS FALL. \ {on the Hudson). Left: W. H. Bartlett; right: P. W. Topham; left, below: PONT A GLENS FALL; right, below: DIE BRVCKE ZU GLENS FALL; centre, below: LONDON, Published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, 183Q. 454^7 5/i6- Line en- graving. From W. H. Bartlett's "American Scenery," vol. 2, London, 1840, oppos. p. 84. 540. THE JUNCTION OF THE SACANDAGA AND HUDSON RIVERS. \ No. 2 of the Hud- son River Port Folio. Left: Painted by W. G. Wall; right: Engraved by I. R. Smith; cen- tre, below: Published by H. I. Megarey & W. B. Gilley New York & John Mill Charles- ton S. C. I Printed by Rollinson. Border of two lines. 14 x 21^4; to border line, 14^1 2i5^. Aquatint. [1824?] 541. Debarcadairc dc Jessups [and same in Eng- lish, Latin & German]. No. 26 \ Imp. Lith. de Henry Gaugain; left: Lithographic par L. Sabatier; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 7me Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTENTRIONALE^ETAT DE NEW- YORK. PI. 2. Border of two lines. 7j4x 11^; to border, 8 i/i6xii5^. Lithograph. From " Itinfiraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson . . . par J. Milbert," 1828-29. 542. Pont sur I'Hudson, prh Luzerne [and same in English, Latin & German] No. 25 | Imp. Lith. de Henry Gaugain; left: Lithographic par Bichcbois; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 7mc Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTENTRI0NALE—£TAT DE NEW-YORK. PI. 3. Border of two lines. 7j4x iiJ4; to border, 8%xii5^. Litho- graph. From "Itinfiraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson, par J. Milbert," 1828-29. 543. Moulins prh de Luzerne, vers les Sources de I'Hudson [and same in English, Latin & German]. "No. 25 1/2" in MS. | Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigee par Noel aini & Ce.; left: Lithographic par Bichcbois; right: Dessini d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above : AMER- IQUE SEPTENTRION ALE— STAT DE NEW-YORK. Border of two lines. 7Hx II 5/16; to border, SJ^ x 11 11/16. Litho- graph. [1828-9] From " Itinferalre pittoresque du fleuve Hudson," by J. Milbert, 1828-29. In the book itself the oval space for the number is blank. 544- HADLEY'S FALLS. \ No. 5 of the Hudson River Port Folio. Left: Painted by W. G. WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 69 Prints, Hudson River, cont'd. Wall; right: Engraved by I. R. Smith; cen- tre, below: Published by H. I. Megarey & W. B. Gilley New York and John Mill Charleston S. C. Border of two lines. 13 13/16 x 21 1/16; to border, 13 15/16 x2ij^. Aqua- tint. [1824?] 545. Extremity de la Chute d'Adley's [same in English, Latin & German] No. 27. \ Imp. Lith. de Bove dirigie par Noel aine et Ce.; left: Lithographic par L. Sabatier; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 7e Livraison. AMSRIQUE SEPTENTRION- ALE—STAT DE NEW-YORK. PI. 3. Border of two lines. 7 11/16 x iiJ4 ; to border, 8x11^^. Lithograph. From •' ItinSraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson , . uar J. Milbert," 1888-29. . • • jj»i 546. Vue generale des chutes de I'Hudson a Adley's [and same in English, Latin & Ger- man] No. 29. I Imp. Lith. de Henry Gaugain; left: Lithographie par Jacottet figes. par Vr. Adam; right: Dessine d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: 8me Livraison. AMERIQUE SEPTENTRI0NALE—£TAT de NEW- YORK. PI. I. Border of two lines. 7^ x II 5/16; to border, 7^x1111/16. From " Itinfiraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson . . . par J. Milbert," 1888-29. 547- RAPIDS ABOVE H ADLEY'S FALLS. \ No. 4 of the Hudson River Port Folio. Left: Painted by W. G. Wall; right: Engraved by J. Hill; centre, below: Published by Henry I. Megarey New York. Border of two lines. 13 15/16x20 15/16; to border, 145^x21 3/16. Aquatint. [1824?] 548. Rapides de I'Hudson a Adley's [same in English, Latin & German] No. 28. \ Imp. Lith. de E. Ardit, Editeur, rue Vivienne No. 2; left: Lithographie par Bichebois, figs, par V. Adam; right: DessinS d'apres nature par J. Milbert. Above: Je Livraison. AMiRIQUE SEPTENTRIONALE—ETAT DE NEW- YORK. PL 4.. 7^x11^. Lithograph. EM. 4394- From " Itingraire pittoresque du fleuve Hudson . . . ,par J. Milbert," 1688-29. S\9- THE HUDSON AT HADLEY. 35^x4^- Half-tone from photograph. From " Harper's Magazine," Mar. 1905, p. 551. 550. Sun Set on the Hudson. Left: Weir Pinxt.; right:/. A. Ralph Sc. 3^4x4%. Line en- graving. 551. The Hudson, Twenty Miles from its Source. 6x6%. Wood engraving by HARLEY after /7[arry] /"[enn]. From "Picturesque America." 552. Seven Views of the Hudson near and at its source. "Lake Tear-of-the-Cloud, where the Hudson sets out on its journey," "Near its head," "Indian Pass," etc. Half-tones from photographs by S. R. Stoddard. From " The Churchman," June 1, 1901. For pictures of the Hudson near its source, see also the first chapters of B. J. Lossing's "The Hudson, from the Wilderness to the Sea," N. Y. [copyright 1866], and "Harper's Magazine," Mar. 1905, pp. 545, 547. 553. Opalescent Falls. Right: W. J. Palmer. Wood engraving. 9^ x i%. Benson J. Lossing, in "The Hudson from the Wilderness to the Sea " (pp. 82, 33), says of Opalescent Elver: "It is one of the main sources of the Hudson, and falls into Sandford Lake, a tew miles below Adirondack village . . . The Indians called this cascade She-gwi-en-dawkwe, or the Hanging Spear. A short distance above is a wild rapid, which they called Kas-kong-shadi, or Broken Water." 55354. Source of the Hudson in the Indian Pass. Left: Benson J. Lossing Del.; centre, below title: NEW YORK, VIRTUE, YORSTON & CO. Vign. 65^x4% Line engraving. In B. J. Lossing's " The Hudson," N. Y. [1866] , frontisp. 554. Source of the Hudson. [Two men in the foreground; one beyond, holding cup under water falling from top of a rock into a pool below.] SYs X 6^4- Wood engraving. From "Picturesque America." Robert Fulton and Early Steam Navigation. Portraits of Fulton, etc. 555. ROBERT FULTON ESQR. Half length, directed and facing left, looking front; seated, left arm over back of chair, right hand clasped over left in lap, curtain behind figure, ship being blown up in distance at left. Left: PAINTED BY B. WEST P.R.A.; right: EN- GRAVED BY W. S. LENEY A.C.S.A.; cen- tre, above title: PUBLISHED BY JOSEPH DELAPLAINE CHESNUT STREET PHILA- DELPHIA 1815. Border of three lines. 4 15/16 X3 15/16; to border, 5 1/16x4 i/i6. a. As described. From " Delaplaine's Repository of the lives and portraits of distinguished American characters," Phiia., 1815, oppos. p. 201. b. Without publication line. In " Museum of Foreign Literature and Science," Phila., April, 1826, vol. 8, oppos. p. 289. This West portrait is the one most frequently repro- duced, in full or in part, sometimes with modifications. 556. ROBERT FULTON ESQR. Left: Miss Emmett Pinxit; right: W. S. Leney Sculpsil; centre, below title: Kirk & Mercein Publish- ers N. York. Vign. 5JI x 4^. Stipple en- eraving. The West portrait, the ship being replaced by a vessel apparently delivering a broadside, probably the " Demolo- gos." From CadwalladerD. Colden's " Life of Robert Fulton," N. Y., 1817, frontispiece. 557.* Portrait of Robert Fulton, bust, directed and facing left, looking front, arm over back of chair. At bottom: A. J. M. 2^x2 11/16. Wood engraving. From " The New York Mirror," vol. 10, no. 3, N.Y., July 21, 18S8. Based on the West portrait. Same, A. J. M. erased. A note, in ink: " N.Y. Mechanic & Farmer. Aug. 1846." 558. ROBERT FULTON. \ R. Fulton [facsimile of signature]. Left: Painted by B. West P.R.A.; right: Engd. by G. Parker. 4 5/16 X 3^. Stipple and line engraving. a. Proof before letters. b. As described. The West portrait, slightly reduced at top, left and 70 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Robert Fulton, cont'd. bottom, so that left halt of ship blowing up, as well as seat of chair and Fulton's knees, are not shown. From " The National Portrait Gallery of distinguished Americans; conducted by J. Herring and J. B. Longacre," TOl. 3, N. Y., 1S36. Same. ' National portrait gallery of distinguished Amerl- In cans, ' vol. 3, Phila., 18S2. 559. ROBERT FULTON. Bust, based on the West portrait. No background. 3 x 2%- Wood engraving. About 1840? 560. ROBERT FULTON. Bust, from the West portrait. Left: 5. fF.; right: J. W. ORR N. Y. Vign. 3x4. Wood engraving after Samuel Wallin. At head of printed bio- graphical sketch beginning: "If there be any mind." Picture and text enclosed in a border of two lines. From " The illustrated American biography ... By A. D. Jones," vol. 1, N. Y., 1863, p. 227. Same, without the border. From "The American portrait gallery ..., by A. D* Jones,"N.Y., 1858, p.121. The front page of "Gleason's Pictorial," for Nov. 18, 1854, was devoted to Fulton, ''In honor of the birthday of Robert Fulton, November 1765." Beside text, it offered a bust portrait of Fulton, a picture of the Clermont, and two pictures of later steamboats (side-wheelers), engraved on wood by KUburn. 561. Portrait of Robert Fulton, half length, seated, directed and facing right, looking front, in centre panel of sheet, surrounded by smaller historical panels and allegorical fig- ures. Below portrait: FROM A PAINTING BY WEST. Below, at right: L. N. ROSEN- THAL'S LITH. PHILA. Size of portrait panel: 2 10/16x3 7/1 6- Lithograph in colors. In Heigart's " Life of Fulton," Phila., 1856. The West portrait, reversed, with the "Demologos" beyond. 562. ROBERT FULTON. Bust (from the West portrait). Centre, above title: Engd. by W. G. Jackman; below title: D. Appleton & Co. Border of two lines. 6 x 4^4 ; to border, 65^ x H-Yi. Line and stipple engraving. Same. em. 13181. 563.2?. Fulton [fac-sim. of signature]. Right: 0. Pelton sc. Bust [from the West portrait]. Vign. 2j4 X zyi. Line engraving. 564. ROBERT FULTON ESQR. Three-quar- ter length. Vign. 65^ x 5. Line engraving. The West portrait, but showing a portion of the legs below the knees, and with the Clermont on the left instead of the vessel being blown up. 565. ROBT. FULTON. Bust [from the West portrait]. Oval, border of one line, l^xij^; to border, i^xij4- Line engraving. a. Proof before letters. India paper. b. As described. Outside oval border, to left, the Clermont; to right, another steam boat. Cut from the upper left corner of a print. 566. R. Fulton — ^[fac-simile of signature]. At right: J. Rogers. Bust, long [from the West portrait], with a background of columns. In oval 4^x3^; with ornamental border, in which, above, a nautilus, and below a river steamboat with the title below: STEAM NAVIGATION OF THE HUDSON RIVER. 8x5^. 567. Bust, from the West portrait. Richardson N. Y. near right shoulder. Vign. 2^ x zYi. Wood engraving. Proof. [186-?] In 1902 this appears again in the " Critic," vol. 41, p. 340. 568. R. Fulton [fac-simile of signature] | From the original painting by Chappel in the pos- session of the publishers. \ Johnson, Fry & Co. Publishers, Ne^X4. Wood engr'aving. About 1850. 613. [The Clermont] i 9/16 x2>^. Vignette. Wood engraving. Proof. Published in J. Munsell's " Annals of Albany," vol. 6, 1855, p. 34. 614. "First trip of Fulton's Steamboat to Albany 1807." S. Holly er. Copyright 1907. z%x. sYs. Etching. HoUyer's "Views of old New York," 6th series. The " Clermont " passing the Palisades. 615!* A steamboat apparently intended to repre- sent the Clermont as she appeared after being lengthened and rebuilt, though the paddle wheels are left uncovered. Above: 128. I 7/16 X 2^. Line engraving. American, about 1815-1820. 616. FIRST STEAMBOAT IN THE WORLD TO ESTABLISH PERMANENT TRAF- FIC— Model of the I "Clermont" in the Na- tional Museum at Washington showing a craft totally dissimilar to the accepted illustra \ tions of this historic -vessel ... 3x7. Half-tone printed in blue. From the Connecticut Magazine, vol. 11, no. 3,1907, oppos. p. 370. 74 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Robert Fulton, cont'd. 617* Fig. gy. — Fulton monte sur son bateau h vapeur, le Clermont, a New-York, four son premier voyage, \ le II avril 1807 {page igg). In lower right corner: E. DESCHAMPS. Left: Corbeil, Crete et Fils, imp.; right: Furne, Jowvet et Cie., edit. 4x5 7/16. Wood en- graving. About 1865-70. 618. September 1807. The "CLERMONT," the first Steam Packet \ of the World sailed from New York to Albany. Left, within border: J. H. SHERWIN; left: Designed by Reigart; right: L. N. Rosenthal's Lith. Philada. 45^ x 7 13/16. Lithograph, one tint. From J. F. Eeigart's " Life of Fulton," PhUa., 1856, oppos. p. 171. 619.* The Clermont on the Hudson river. City in distance. On stern of vessel : CLERMONT, z 3/16x2 15/16. Wood engraving. Recent. The picture makes the vessel stand too high out of the water. Her depth was seven feet. 620.* Departure of the Clermont on her First Voyage. On stern of vessel: CLERMONT. Showing Castle Garden and lower end of city. 3 1/16x5 6/16. Wood engraving. Modem. Same appearance of boat as in preceding. 621. ROBERT FULTON'S "CLERMONT" PASSING STORM KING \ AND OLD CRO'NEST IN THE HIGHLANDS OF THE HUDSON. Left: PRESENTED BY THE HUDSON RIVER | DAY LINE, NEW YORK, ON THE ONE \ HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE \ START OF THE "CLERMONT"; right: REPRODUCED BY COURTESY OF \ "THE RUDDER"; right, within border: WARREN SHEPPARD, Copyright, igoj. 9 1/16x7. Half-tone in color. This is an illustration for "An Historical Souvenir, presented by the Hudson River Day Line, New York, on Robert Fulton Day. August 17, 1907, to commemorate the Centennial of FiUton's *' Clermont," the first successful steamboat in the world, which started up the Hudson at 1p.m., August I7th, 1807." The souvenir contains four letters dated August 28, 1807; November 2S, 1829; August 12, 1853; and , 1907, respectively, describing the prog- ress of steam navigation in America. The same print was issued also with " The Nautical Gazette " for August 30, 1906. 622. [The "Clermont," Fulton's first steamship.] Left: BONWILL Del.; right: P. MEEDER Sc. 7^4 X 4^. Wood engraving. This picture of the *' Clermont " is identical with the one in the woodcut on p. 211 of J. W. Barber's " Histori- cal Collections of the State of New York,'' 1851, with two exceptions: the artist has here added five transverse rings to the smokestack, and a bell to the frame behind the smokestack. 62$. THE "CLERMONT." 2^x45^. Vignette. Wood engraving. The boat is steaming up stream past the Palisades; spectators on the right bank. 624. The Clermont — Fulton's first Steamboat. Right: AT. ORR—CO.SC. Vig. 2ii/i6x 4 5/16. Wood engraving. In M. L. Booth's "History of tlie City of New York," N. Y., 1880, p. 682. 625. PERSPECTIVE VIEW OF MACHINERY IN FULTON'S CLERMONT, 1807. Left: Drawn by H. B. Barlow; right: C. F. Chef- fins Lithog.; centre, above title: Published 1st July, 1848. In border of two lines. 3 3/ift 'x.6%; to border, 4 10/16 x7>^. Lithograph. In Woodcroft's "Sketch of . . . steam navigation," Lon- don, 1848, p. 64. See also, for small pictures of the " Clermont, " nos. 564, 565. The reproduction of the "Clermont," built for the Hudson-Fulton Celebration of 1909, was pictured in the " New Yorker Staats-Zeitung " (July 11, 1909), " New YorK Tunes" CAug. 22, 1909), and other papers. 626. THE PARAGON STEAM-BOAT. Right: A. Anderson Sc. Centre, below title: Engraved for the Med. & Phil. Register. 3^4x6 5/16. Line engraving'. See also no. 491 (" Catskill Mountains and the steam boat . . , "), which, says Seymour Dunbar, " is perhaps the earliest published picture of a steamboat on the Hud- son river. Up to that time the three Hudson boats with masts built by Fulton were the Clermont (1807), Car of Neptune (1807-8), and Paragon (1811). Because of the date of publication, and the appearance of the boat, it is proba- ble that this is intended to be a sketch of the Paragon. Several details of the boat as shown, however — including the exposed paddle wheel — point to the possibility that t be vessel may be the Clermont as she appeared in her earlv trips in 1807. Only the discovery of the date of (Jlennie's original drawing can settle the point." Of the later state of this plate Mr. Dunbar says: " The original boat is replaced by an entirely different vessel with cabins, and with paddle wheels enclosed and protected by heavy timbers. The steamboat here shown is the Firefly (1812) or the Richmond (1813), with the proba- bihties in favor of the last named. (See statistics on broadside, no. 601 in this list.) 627. THE PARAGON STEAMBOAT. ] Copied from an Original Drawing by Robert Fulton, in the possession of J. Allen. Left: Copied by J. Hay ward, 120 Water Str. N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual 1852. %Y% x (1%. Lithograph, one tint. Same design as preceding type. 628. LAUNCH OF THE STEAM FRIGATE FULTON THE FIRST, AT NEW YORK 29TH. OCTR. 1S14. I ISO feet long and 57 feet wide, will mount 30 long 32. pounders, and 2 100 pounders (Columbiards) . Left: Copied from a Sketch by Morgan taken on the spot; right: Lith. by G. Hayward 120 Water St. N. Y. for D. T. Valentine's Manual 1852. 6 n/i6xi4>^. Lithograph, blue tint. Same, brownish tint, different cloud effect. 629. THE DEMOLOGOS OR FULTON THE FIRST: title at centre above. Centre, within lower border: The first Steam Vessel of War in the World. Left: Designed by Fulton; right: L. N. Rosenthals Lith. Phila. 7 13/16 X45^. Lithograph, one tint. From J. F. Reigart's " Life of Robert Fulton," Phila., 1856, oppos. p. 186. 630.* Angf arty get \ CHANCELLOUR LI WIN G- STON I Lang pa ddck 160 fat; bred 34 fot. Left: Rit. af Klinckowstrom; right: Gr. af Akrell. A longitudinal section of the boat above, and a broadside view beneath, both surrounded by a border of one line. Below, at right and left, six printed lines of descrip- tive notes referring to features of the vessel. 9'^x2i 10/16. Aquatint, about 1824. The Chancellor Livingston was the last steamboat de- signed hy Fulton, who died before her completion. She was built in 1816 tor the Hudson River. Her dimensions WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 75 Prints, Robert Fulton, confd. were: Length 156 feet, depth 10)^ feet, breadth 34 feet, disiJlacement 58B tons. Pictures of the vessels built by Fulton have been, of course, frequently published. Thus, in Samuel Ward Stanton's •'^American steam vessels," N. Y.. 1805, there appear, re-drawn in pen and ink. the " Clermont." " Para- gon," Hope," " Demologos." Among numerous pictures of later vessels given in this book are those of the " Phila- delphia " (Delaware River, 1818), "Chancellor Livingston " (1810, 1888), " Walk-on-the Water " (1818). 631.* STEAM PACKET "CHANCELLOR LIVINGSTON'^— 1817 I Built from plans drawn bv Fulton for a corporation that held a monopoly of the luaters of | New York state for the use of steam propelled vessels — Photo- graphed from a rare old print. 5 13/16 x 5 1/16. Half-tone. See also no. .505. New York City Ferries. See also nos. 41 (note), 102, 151, 170, 196, 196U, 208, 214, 815, 216, 318, 320, .324, 579 (note). 632. THE FERRY HOUSE, 174.6. \ [Fulton Street, Brooklyn.) Left: Lith. by Geo. Hay- ward, 120 Water St. N. Y.; right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual for 1858. 3 ii/i6x 6 2/16. Lithograph, one tint. In "Valentine's Manual," 1858, oppos. p. 492. Showing an early type of flat-bottomed sail boat used for a ferry. The boats were sometimes tilted by squalls, spilling their passengers. Copied from th« Burgis view, 1717 (see no. 100). The same view was also engraved in wood by N. Orr, with the title, " Old Brooklyn Ferry House of 1746." 633. FULTONS— STEAM FERRY BOAT. Right: Leney Set.; centre, belovv: For the Med. & Phil. Register. 3 7/16x6 11/16. Line engraving, em. 12469. From " American medical and philosophical register," N. Y., 1813, V. 3. oppos. p. 190. " Showing the Paulus-Hook, or Jersey City Ferry Boat of 1813, with mechanism of the ferry slip and deck and ground plan of the boat and slip. The boat was 80 feet long, 30 feet wide, carried 300 passengers and about 10 vehicles, and crossed the river in from 14 to 19 minutes." — Seymour Dunbar. 634.* Fulton's Steam ferry Boat. \ Engraved for Archives of Useful Knowledge. Along lower right border: Page 201. 3 11/16x7 3/16- Line engraving. Published in January, 1813. A view of the Jersey City Ferry of 1818. and an amid- ship cross-section of the boat and the steering apparatus. 635. Fulton's Ferry System, 1812. On plate with three illustrations of bridge construction. From J, L. Eingwalt's ' Development of transportation systems in the U. S.," Phila., 1838. 636.* New York and Brooklyn Ferry. 1 3/16 x 2 3/16. Wood engraving. On an advertisement, dated May 3, 1814, giving the com- mutation rates on the Brooklyn Ferry established by Fulton. 637.* [Fulton's Steam Ferry Boat between New York and Brooklyn.] Vign. i 14/16x3 9/16. Line engraving. Published about 1813. A view showing the helmsman, the ladder leading to the upper deck, and the captain on the upper deck using a speaking trumpet. 637J4.* "Schets teekening der Stoomovervaart- booten (steam ferries) met hunne landing- plaatsen; en van en stelsel van twee aan een verbondene Stoomvartuigen, zoo als dezelve in de Vereenigde Staaten von Noord Araerika gevonden worden. — (Plaat XIV van het rap- port.)" A sheet of wash drawings (3 figures) accompanymg a manuscript extract from a report.'dated Feb. 23, 1825, by A. E. Tromp, dealing with Hudson River ferries and boats. The drawings show a side view of the Fulton ferry boat and slip, a plan of the same, and a view of the boat Commerce" and her tow, the safety barge "Ladv Clinton." 638. FULTON FERRY BOAT "WM. CUT- TING," I built in 1827. Left: D. T. Valen- tine's Manual for 1859; right: by Geo. Hay- ward, 171 Pearl St. N. Y. Border of one line. 3>^X5^; to border, 35^x6^. Lithograph, one tint. Same. em. 11331. 639. FULTON FERRY BOAT "UNION." \ built in 1836. Left: Lith. for D. T. Valentine's Manual for l8sg; right: by Geo. Hayward, 171 Pearl St., N. Y. Border of one line. 3 7/16x6; to border, 35^x6 3/16. Litho- graph, one tint. 640. FULTON FERRY BOAT "OLIVE BRANCH." I built in 1836. Left: Lith. for D. T. Valentine's Manual, for 185Q; right: by Geo. Hayward, 171 Pearl St. N. Y. Border of one line. 35^x6; to border, 3^x6%. Lithograph, one tint EM. 11332. 641. FULTON FERRY BOAT "OVER." \ built in 1840. Left: Lith. for D. T. Valentine's Manual for 185Q; right: by Geo. Hayward, 777 Pearl St. N. Y. Border of one line. 3 9/16 x6 i/i6; to border, 3 Ii/i6x6 3/16. Litho- graph, one tint. em. 11333. 642.* Ansicht der Fdhre zu Brooklyn bet New- York. Lower left corner, "A. S." 4 14/16 x 6 15/16. Line engraving. Published in Ger- many about 1840. A close copy of the print of the Brooklyn Ferry pub- lished in London in 1838 (see no. 170). 643.* THE JERSEY CITY FERRY BOAT, FROM NEW YORK. Lower left corner: PEIRCE. 8 2/16x9 6/16. Wood engraving. About 1855. The "Golden," crowded, in mid-stream. There are no guard rails at the end of the boat, and passengers are sit- ting on the deck with their legs hanging over the edge. 644.* THE FERRY FROM BROOKLYN TO NEW YORK. Lower left corner: N. Callie, Sc. 7 2/16x9. Wood engraving. About i860. The "Somerset" entering her slip. Rope or chain across front of boat, with passengers standing near un- guarded edge of deck. People occupy the end of the slip before passengers have left boat. 645.* HOBOKEN FERRY: In lower right cor- ner. 5 14/16x7 14/16. Photograph. About 1880. A picture of the " Communipaw." 646. "Ferry Boat Brooklyn 1884." 2^x45^,. Pencil drawing by Warren Sheppard, 1907. On same sheet with no. 719. 646J4. PECK SLIP, N. Y. 1850. See no. 212. 647.* FULTON STREET, FROM THE FERRY, BROOKLYN, N. Y. Bottom, to left of cen- tre: TARBELL Sc. 5 3/16x9 5/16. Wood engraving. 1857. Showing the locality pictured in the print, " The Ferry House. 1746 "; (see no. 638), as it appeared in 1857. 648.* HELLGATE FERRY.— FOOT OF 86TH ST.— 1860. Left: Lith. of Sarony, Major and 76 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Robert Fulton, confd. Knapp, 44g Broadway, N. Y. Right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual, 1861. Border of one line. Without border, 5 7/16x8; to border, 5 13/16x84/16. Lithograph, one tint. 649. FULTON FERRY, NEW-YORK. Built of Iron 1863. Left: Lith. by G. Hayward. 17 1 Pearl St. N. Y. Right: for D. T. Valentine's Manual 1864. Border of one line. 5 10/16 x 9 11/16; to border, 5 14/16x9 15/16. Litho- graph, two tints and colored. See also nos. 214-216. JACKSON FERRY. See no. 208. Early American and other Steam Boats prior to Fulton. 650. Statue de Denis Papin. In lower left cor- ner: A. CALMEUS, 1849. Left: /. GAG- NEIT. 5 7/16x1^. Wood engraving. About 1865? From a French periodical. Preble, in his Chronological History of the Origin and Development of Steam Navigation, Phila., 18^, says that Papin built and navigated a boat on the river Fulda, Germany, in 1707. 651. DENIS PAPIN. I STATUE BY AIME MILLET RECENTLY INAUGURATED AT BLOIS, FRANCE. Arched top. 854 X4M. From the N. T. " Graphic," Sep. or Oct. 187-? 652.* MR. JONATHAN HULLS. | THE IN- VENTOR OF THE I STEAM BOAT. Cen- tre, above title: Engraved by W. T. Fry from an original painting. Border of two lines. z^Tizi^; to border, z 14/16x2^4. Line en- graving. India paper. Hulls, an Englishman, tools out a patent for his boat in 1736. 653. [Engraving of a British sailing frigate in tow of Jonathan Hulls' machine.] Centre: Published according to Act of Parliament 1737; right: Jon. Hulls invt. et Delint. 654 ^ In Jonathan Hulls' " Description and draught of a new- invented machine for carrying vessels or ships out of, or into any harbour, port, or river, against wind or tide, or in a calm," London, 1737. Frontispiece. 654. Jonathan Hulls' Steamboat; used as a means of Tonving other Vessels out of Harbor. Patrick Miller's double Boat; 1787. Left: Des. by Reigart; right: Lith. by Rosenthal. 4/4 X 654. Lithograph in one tint. From J. W. Eeigart's "Life of Robert Fulton," Phila., 1856, oppos. p. 1^. 655.* Experience du Marquis de Jouffroy faite sur la Saone a Lyon, le 15 juillet 1783. In lower left corner: U. PARENT. In lower right corner: E. DESCHAMPS. On line with title, left: Fig. 86; right: {page 166.) A-H X 5/4. Wood engraving. According to Preble, in his " Chronological History of Steam Navigation," .Touffroy was the fourth man to actu- ally build and operate a boat which moved by its own steam power. The first, according to Preble (pp. 5-7) was Papin, the Frenchman, on the River Fulda, in Germany, in 1707; the second, Comte de Auxiron. in 1774; the third, Perrier, on the Seine in 1775: the fourth, Jouffroy, also French, on the Seine atParis in 1783. 656.* Fig. 55. Mecanisme Moteur du bateau a roues du Marquis de Jouffroy \ (coupe et ele- vation). 2 10/16x3 7/16. Wood engraving. About 1865-70. 657.* John Fitch's Model of Sept., 1785, imfh endless chain and floats and paddle-boards, in possession of the American Philosophical So- ciety. 13/16x354. Wood engraving. From " The Life of John Fitch," by Westcott, p. 131. Showing also a section of chain and paddle. The model of Fitch's first boat, a small skJfE, propelled by paddle-boards attached to an endless chain. It was tried on the Delaware river, at Philadelphia, about July 20, 1786. Fitch thought of the vertical oar plan, fitted the skiff with the oars, and " the first boat successfully pro- pelled by steam in America was moved in the Delaware on the Z7th of July, 1786." (Preble's '• Chronological History," pp. 14-15.) 658.* Plan of Mr. Fitch's Steam Boat on the upper part of an octavo sheet, the lower part of which shows a map of the North Atlantic Ocean. The whole enclosed in a border of two lines. Above, at right: Columb. Mag. Centre, below: Annual Passage of the Her- rings. Size of the steamboat picture, i 13/16 X4 1/16. With border, 3 7/16x4 3/16. Line engraving. From " Columbian Magazine," Dec., 1786. Probably the earliest published picture of a boat successfully pro- pelled by steam in America. Fitch ran this boat (his second) under her own power on the Delaware River, at Philadelphia, on August 'H, 1787. 659. STEAM BOAT \ FIG. I. \ Steam Boat in- vented by John Fitch. Right: Engraved by J. Yeager. On '■ Plate DX, No. II," from the " Xew Edinburgh En- cyclopaedia," American edition, 660.* Plan of Mr. Fitch's Steam Boat. Centre, above: FROM THE COLUMBIAN MAGA- ZINE, 1786. At the top of a folio sheet, the lower part of which contains a facsimile of Fitch's letter of Dec. 35, 1790, in which he says, "I have given my Country a most Valu- able Discovery " ij4x45^. Lithograph!. About 1845. 66o5<. ORIGIN OF STEAM NAVIGATION. 1 ■■HONOR TO WHOM HONOR IS DUE." \ A VIEW OF COLLECT POND AND ITS VICINITY, I in the City of New York in I793t I on which Pond the first boat propelled by paddle laheels and screijo-propellers, con- structed by John Fitch, six years before Rob- ert Fulton made trial of his boat upon the River Seine, in France, and ten years prior to his putting into operation his boat "Clermont" in Neio York; ivith a representation of the boat and its machinery on the Collect pond. \ BY JOHN HUTCHINGS . . . 1846. Left: DRAWN £f LITH. BY J. PENNIMAN, 801/2 CANAL ST. N. Y.; centre, above title: Entered . . . 1846; right: F. MICHELIN'S LITH., Ill NASSAU ST. Border of six lines, z^^icziyi; to border line, 15 13/16 x 33 13/16. Lithograph, colored. Map of Collect Pond in centre ; to left, an account of Fitch and testimonials to the character of Hutchings, etc.; to right, account of meeting of Fulton, Livingston and Fitch; in upper corners and centre below, four pic- tures of Fitch's boats. 661.* "HONOR TO WHOM HONOR IS DUE" I ORIGIN OF STEAM NAVIGA- TION . . . Large folio broadside, with Fitch's screw propeller of 1796 in upper left corner, his i2-oared boat of 1786-7 in the upper right corner, his model boat of 1797-8 at bottom, and a map of Collect Pond and Vicinity in centre. Bottom: THE WORLD IS INDEBT- WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. n Prints, Robert Fulton, contd. ED FOR THE ORIGINAL IDEA AND TO THE MECHANICAL GENIUS OF JOHN FITCH, OF EAST WINDSOR, CONN. | and to the perseverance and indefatigable at- tention to the use of. steam of Robert Fulton Esq. Pa Below: Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1846 by John Hutch- ings...N. Y. Size, to border, 14x18 1/16. Lithograph. The rest of the broadside is occupied by a long printed description of Fitch's steam propeller of 1796. Based on the preceding; title at top instead of bottom and only three boats shown. The 18-oared boat is here called John Mich's First Boat Perseverance i it is his second boat and is not the " Per- severance." This picture of this boat is reproduced from the Columbian Magazine print of 1786. Same. em. 13292 to 13294. 662.* FITCH'S STEAMBOAT. In a border of three lines, two of which are below title. 2 5/16x4; with border, 3 5/16x5. Wood engraving. About 1845-50. One of the first prints to supply the smoke stack, over- looked by many early artists because the original Colum- bian Magazine picture omitted it. 663.* THE SECOND EXPERIMENTAL BOAT OF JOHN FITCH. \ Finished in May, 1787, and run at the rate of four miles per hour on the Delaware. Cylinder \ twelve inches in diameter, stroke three feet. Lower left corner: /. TV. ORR N. Y. Vign. 1 11/16x3 13/16. Wood engraving. With smoke stack. From " Eighty Years' Progress of the United States," vol. 2, N. Y., 1861, p. 2-26. 664. FITCH'S STEAMBOAT. Vign. 2j^x4. Wood engraving. About 1850? 665.* THE FIRST EXPERIMENTAL BOAT OF JOHN FITCH. 2 3/16x4 10/16. Wood engraving. About 1855-60. The printed inscription is an error. Eeally his second boat. Has the smoke stack. 666. FITCH'S STEAMBOAT. | On the Dela- ware River, opposite Philadelphia. Left: De- signed by Reigart; right: L. N. Rosenthal's lith. Philada. 4^/^x7^. Lithograph in one tint. From J, F, Eeigart's " Life of Robert Fulton," Phila,, 1856, oppos, p, 153, 667.* Fig. 92. — Le premier bateau a -vapeur americain. Experience faite en 17SQ par John Fitch, pres de Philadelphie, \ sur la Delaware. Lower left corner: U. PARENT; lower right corner: E. DESCHAMPS. Below, left: Cor- beil, Crete et Fils, imp.; right: Fume, Jouvet ei Cie, edit. 5^x4^^. Wood engraving. 668. John Fitch's Second Experimental Boat, 1787; Oliver Evans' Orukter Amphibolis.; Fitch's First Passenger Steamboat, 1789; Ful- ton's First Successful Steamboat; John Fitch's First Propeller; Machinery of Fulton's Steam- boat. The whole in a border of one line. Size, to border, 7^x11 5/16. From J L. Eingwalt's " Development of Transportation Systems in the U. S.," Pbila,, 1888. 669.* Cylinder, Condenser, and Air-pump of Fitch's Steam-boat. \ [From the original draw- ing in the Philadelphia Library."] 3% x i 15/16- Wood engraving. From Westcott's Life of Fitch, 1857. One of Fitch's early ideas for part of a steam-boat en- gine, 670.* THE FIRST PASSENGER STEAM- BOAT. I (The second experimental boat of John Fitch, finished in May, 1787, rate four miles per hour on \ the Delaware. This is believed to be the first boat navigated by steam. In 178Q, Fitch completed the | first steamboat, rate 8 miles per hour.) 2j4x4 10/16. Wood engraving. About i860. Fitch's third boat finished in 1788. Brissot de Warville describes the boat and its working under date of Sept. 1, 1788, in his " Journey," (Paris, 1791.) During the summer of 1790 the boat made about 31 trips. The New York Magazine for 1790 (p. 493) said, " Fitoh's steamboat really performs to a charm." 671.* THE FIRST STEAMBOAT EVER BUILT TO CARRY PASSENGERS. \ Con- structed by John Fitch, and finished April 16, I7q8. Cylinder eighteen inches in diameter, | speed eight miles per hour in smooth water. The following year this boat was run to Bur- lington I regularly as a passenger boat. Vign. 1^x3}^. Wood engraving. The dates on the print are incorrect. See note after preceding item. From "Eighty years' progress of the United States," vol, 2, N, Y,, 1861,, p, 286. 672.* Three diagrams showing the style of boiler and furnace designed by Fitch and Voight and used by Fitch in his passenger boat of 1788-1790. Titles: Section of Pipe Boiler; Section of Pipe Boiler; In its Furnace. Small wood engravings, from Westcott's Life of Fitch, 1857. 673.* THE FIRST PROPELLER EVER BUILT. I Constructed by John Fitch, and experimented with by him on the Collect pond. New York City. I The boiler was a twelve gallon pot, with a bit of truck-plank fastened by an iron bar placed transversely. \ This was in the year 1796. Vign. 2 3/16x3 10/16. Wood engraving. From "Eighty years' progress of the U, S.," vol. 2,N. Y., 1861, p. 235. Fitch's fifth boat. His fourth was the " Perseverance.''- 674. "First Steamboat": title in pencil at centre. Right: LOSSING BARRITT. Vignette. iH^ 4p^. Wood engraving. 675.* Fitch's Model Steamboat, Bardstown, Ken- tucky, 1797-8. I 7/16x2. Wood engraving. From Westcott's " Lite of Fitch," 1857, p. 368. Fitch's sixth and last boat. It was simply a working model, about three feet long, run by paddle wheels. Fitoh used it just before he died, in a creek near Bardstown. 676. Fitch's last Model \ for a River Steam Engine \ in the Possession of the Merchanttle Library of St. Louis. In the centre of a small folio sheet, with PI. XLII in the upper right corner, containing also the facsimile of a let- ter written by Fitch Feb. 21, 1784- 6 10/16 x 5 9/16. Lithograph, About 1840-45. em. 13295. 677.* THE GRAVE OF JOHN FITCH, BARDSTOWN, KY. In lower right corner: BAXTER— HARLEY. Vign. i^i^s-m- Wood engraving. From " Life of Fitch," by Westcott, Phila,, 1857, 78 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Prints, Robert Fulton, confd. 67^. JAMES RUMSEY'S STEAM BOATS, 6TH NOV. 1788; JOHN FITCH'S STEAM BOAT, DEC. Z787 I See Rittenhouse's Certifi- cate, page 1075; ROBT. FULTON'S STEAM BOAT, THE NORTH RIVER or CLERE- jMONT, 1807 I From a Sketch by Joseph Dyer Pubd. in Woodcroffs origin and pro- gress of Steam Namgation. Right: Engraved & Printed by Gavit Sf Duthie. Line engrav- ing. Frontispiece to the reprint of Rumsey's pamphlet o£ 1788, as contained in O'Callaghan's " The Documentary History of the State of New York," Albany, 1849; vol. 3, p. 1009. 679.* Jos. Rumsey's Steam-boat — English patent. I 3/16x3 7/16. Wood engraving. From Westcott's " Life of Fitch. '^ 1857. Rumsey, aVir- ^nian, abandoned the American field to Fitch after their pamphlet controversy in 1788, went to England and got a patent there in that year. He died just as a boat was nearing completion. It was finished by his partner in 1793. 6S0.* Rumseys Steam-boat — English patent, i 1/16 X 3 3/16. Wood engraving. From Westcott's " Life of Fitch," 1857. Rumsey's plan for propelling a boat by forcing a jet of water from the stem had been previously proposed to the Pennsylvania Assembly, in 1776, by Arthur Donaldson. Benjamin Franklin also suggested it (see Sparks " Life," vol. 6. p. 463). 681.* James Rumsey's Steam-boat, Virginia. 1788. 1%-x.z 9/1 6. Wood engraving. From Westcott's Life of Fitch, 1857. €82.* Patrick Miller's Triple Vessel, 1787. {From Woodcroffs Steam navigation.) Side eleva- tion above and deck plan belovf. Border of one line. To border, 4 x 6^. Half -tone. This boat in the experiments of 1787 was propelled by two paddle wheels, each of which was turned by two men. The trial was made in the Frith of Forth, in the spring of 1787. James Taylor proposed to Miller (or Slillar) the ap- plication of steam to the wheels. 683.* Double Pleasure Boat, Miller, Taylor and Symington, 1788. (From Woodcroffs Steam Navigation.) 2 1/16x4 1/16. Half-tone. The outcome of Taylor's suggestion to Miller. It was operated on the Lake of Dalswinton, in October, 1788. 684.* Fig. 8q. — Experience de Miller, Taylor et Symington faite, en I78g, sur la piece d'eau de la terre de Dalswinton {page J71). Lower left corner: V. PARENT; lower right corner: E. DESCHAMPS. Left: Corbeil, Crete et Fils. imp.; right: Fume, Jouvet et Cie., Mit. 4 1/16x554. Wood engraving. About 1865-70. Second steamboat of the three British inventors. On Dec. 26, 1789, the boat was operated on the Great Canal, in Scotland. 685.* Fig. 90. — Mecanisme moteur du bateau a vapeur de Miller, Taylor et Symington. 3 13/16x4 13/16. Wood engraving. About 1865-70. The engine used in the boat of 1789. Designed by Symington. 686.* The Charlotte Dundas, Wm. Symington, 1803. (From Woodcroffs Steam Namgation.) Above, a broadside view of the boat under way; beneath, a longitudinal section of hull and machinery. Size of upper view: 2x4 1/16; of lower view: 2%x4. 13/16. Half-tone. On the Forth and Clyde Canal, in March, 1802, this stern- wheel boat of Symington's towed two other boats, a dis- tance of 19!^ miles, in 6 hours, against a head wind. Without a tow she ran at 6 miles an hour. 687.* An original drawing, colored, of the deck plan of a paddle-wheel steamboat, on a sheet of paper watermarked "Whatman i8oi." 7 X 14.%. Size of sheet, 14 10/I6 x 2ij4- The first of a series of three drawings, evidently by the same inventor. The forward third of the boat is almost an equilateral triangle. The paddle-wheels are protected front and beneath, an~\ [1730?] Size: xo%.-%.-,Y% inches. Scale: 6g miles=i inch. Engraved on copper; colored by hand. The Southern Part of the Province of Xew York; with part of the adjoining Colonies. By Thos. Kitchin Senr. Hydrogr. to His Majesty. London [no publisher given] [1750?] Size within border: ^/+ ^ 9>^ inches. Scale: li-^' miles=i inch. En- graved on copper. Plain. A Map of the Eastern part of the Province of Xew York, with part of Xew Jersey,., By T. Kitchin, Geogr, Engrav'd for the London Mag. 82 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. 83 Maps of Nein York Province and State, cont'd. London: S. Baldwin, 1756. Size: 8x6)^ inches. Scale: 47 miles=l inch. Engraved on copper. Plain. A MSS. Map of British North America showing the Distribution of His Majesty's forces. . .29th March 1766 by Danl. Paterson Assist. Qr. Mast. Genl. Azf.- 24^ X 20 inches. 5| inches. Scale: ■io miles=4X inches. Copper. Colored by hand. In; Geographische Belustigungen zur Erlauterung der neuesten Weltgeschichte {Leipzig, l^^6). Shows the Hudson from the Narrows to the Highlands. A Topographical Map of Hudson's River. . .from Sandy Hook. ..to Fort Edward, also. .. by Lakes George & Champlain as high as Fort Chambly on Sorel River by C. J. Sauthier. London: Wm. Faden, 1776. Size: 20j^x 30 inches. Scale: 4 miles to inch. Copperplate. Colored by hand. Map of the Hudson between Sandy Hook and Sandy Hill with the Post Road between New York and Albany. .. Bridges delt. New York: A. T. Goodrich &■ Co., 1820. Size: Each 8>^ x 7 inches. Scale: 2 miles=i inch. Engraved on copper by RoUinson. Plain. Carte pour servir k I'ltineraire pittoresque du Fleuve Hudson et des Parties laterales de 1' Amerique du Nord: par J. Milbert. [Paris: Imprimerie de Bove, lS2(>. Size: 16 xig inches. Scale: ^o miles to inch. Lithograph. Colored by hand. A New Map of the Hudson River; the Post Roads between N.York & Albany, the Northern & Western Canals, etc., etc. Albany: W. Cam- meyer, Jr., 1829. Size: .i,^ v. ^]i inches. Scale: 4 miles to inch. Engraved on copper. Plain. Wade & Croome's Panorama of the Hudson River from New York to Albany, drawn from^ nature. New York: J. Disturnell, 1846. Size: 143x5)^ inches, i'cafc- i mile=i inch. Engraved on copper by William Wade. Plain. New map of the Hudson River, 1847. [With text.] Troy: J. C. JCneeland Gf Co.' s steam press [1847]. to% inches x 2 feet 4 inches. Map of the Hudson River Rail Road from New York to Albany. W. C. Moore del. Engraved by Robt. Haering, N. Y. Litho. of G. Snyder, 84 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Maps of Hudson River, confd. N. Y. New York: G. Snyder, 1848. Size: 152 inches long x 17 wide. Scale: i mile=i inch. Lithographed. Colored by hand. Map of the Hudson River. [Inset in Joseph Hutchins Colton's " New York."] [New York? 1849.] Size: 21 x 2^ inches. Scale not given. Hudson River. Sheet no. i from New York to Haverstraw. A. D. Bache, Supt. Another copy. C. P. Patterson, Supt. Verified by J. E. Hilgard. Issued April, 1879. Another copy revised to Aug. 1894. Preliminary Charter of Hudson River. Sheet No. 2 from Haverstraw to Poughkeepsie, New York. A. D. Baele, Suptdt. Verified by J. E. Hil- gard. [Muslin 50c.] Washington: U. S. Coast &' Geodetic Survey, 1861. Engraved on copper. Size of border: 17x40. Scale:* 1.06=1 mile. No. ill. Catalogue {l%%-]). Page: 41. ♦Represented either by the leagth of a degree of the Meri- dian (D) or by the length of a Nautical Mile (M) in inches or nearest tenth of an inch. Later issue, Nov. 1878, C. P. Patterson, Supt., Verified by C. A. Schott. Printed May 2, i8go. Preliminary Chart of Hudson River, Sheet No. 3, from Poughkeepsie to Troy, New York. . .A. D. Bache. Sup'dt. 1863. T. E. Hilgarde. Verified. Muslin $1.00. Washington: U. S. Coast & Geode- tic Survey, 1863. Engraved on copper. Size of border: ig)4 x 40. Scale:* 1.58 = i mile. No. 372- * Represented either by the length of a degree of the Me- ridian (D) or by the length of a Nautical Mile (M) in inches or nearest tenth of an inch. Lloyd's topographical map of the Hudson river. ...1864. New York: J. T.Lloyd, 1864. 3 feet 3 inches x 4 feet 6 inches, folded i" . Scale: 2 inches = I mile. Map of the Hudson River showing routes to Saratoga, Lake George, etc. [folder printed with ads. dated 1877 at back] New York: Gaylord Watson, 1876. Size: 5^ = 33^ inches. Scale: n. s. Lithographed, colored by hand. The Hudson by Daylight Map from New York Bay to the Head of Tide Water. . .New York: Wm. F. Link, 1878. Size within border: 5% x too inches. Scale: i}^ miles = i inch. Litho- graphed, colored by hand. Hudson River Front of New York City from the Battery to 68th St. and of New Jersey from Com- munipaw to Weehawken, from Surveys by D. B. Wainwright, 1885. Washington: U. S. Coast ; i6Xx 7^ inches. Scale: about 2 miles = i inch. Engraved on copper? Plain. County atlas of Orange, New York. From act- ual surveys by...F. W. Beers... Chicago: An- dreas, Baskin &• Burr, 1875. I57 [i.e. 161] PP. i°. Atlas of Orange county. New York. Compiled and drawn from official records, public and private plans and actual surveys by J. M. Lathrop and others. Philadelphia: A. H. Mueller &• Co., 1903. 2 p. 1., 47 maps. f. Dutchess County. Atlas of New York and vicinity from actual sur- veys by . . . F. W. Beers ... & others . . . New York: Beers, Ellis dr* Soule, 1867. 2 p.l., 2-62 £f., 5 pi. f°. Includes Dutchess county, N. Y. New illustrated atlas of Dutchess county, N. Y. Compiled and drawn from personal examinations, surveys and under the personal supervision of C. W. Gray & Son and F. A. Davis, and published under the superintendence of H. L. Kochersperger . . . [With Supplement Atlas of the world, and . . . Patron's directory. Reading: A. M. Davis, Succ. to F. A. Davis &• Co., 1876. 71 p., 3 1., 9-37, IV p. f°. Kingston. Kingstone [Fort at] [with 8 references]. [Lon- don: Thos. Rodd, 1843?.] Size: 7J^x6 inches. Scale: n. s. Lithographed. Plain. Greene County. Atlas of Greene county. New York: from. . . surveys by ... F. W. Beers ... & others . . . New York: Beers, Ellis Sf Soule, 1867. 21 p., I pi. f°. Columbia County. Atlas of Columbia county. New York. . . Phila- delphia: D. G. Beers &■ Co., 1873. 89 p., f°. Albany. A plan of the City of Albany. Situated Lat. 42°. 30" Long. 74°. (In: A set of plans and forts in America, reduced from actual survey, by Mary Ann Roque, 1765. [London, 1765.] obi. 8°. Plate 2.) Size within border: 6^x4^ inches. Scale: 60 ft. I^ inches. Engraved on copper. Plan of Fort Frederick at Albany. (In : A set of plans and forts in America, reduced from actual surveys, by Mary Ann Roque, 1765. [London, 1765.] obi. 8°. Plate 10.) Size within border: (>% x 5 inches. Scale not given. Engraved oh copper. Albany. [With 11 references.] [London- Thos. Rodd, 1843?] Size: 7 x 6 inches. Scale: u. s. Lithographed. Plain. The Fort of Albany. [15 references.] [Lon- don: Thos. Rodd, 1843 ?] Size: VA x 5» inches. Scale: u. s. Lithographed. Plain. Fort Frederick, Albany. Small wood engraving. [1850 ?] From the same plate as in MunselPs ^«»fl^j of Albany, vol. I (185s), p. 315. City Atlas of Albany, New York... Philadel- phia: G. M. Hopkins, i&76. 7, 10-98 p. f°. Saratoga. A plan of the Fort at Saratoga. Situated Lat. 13°. 20'. Lon. 73°. 30'. (In: A set of plans and forts in America, reduced from actual surveys, by Mary Ann Roque, 1765. [London, i-jt^.] obi. 8°. Plate 20.) Size within border: 6^x45^. Scale not given. Engraved on copper. Plain. 86 WORKS RELATING TO HENRY HUDSON, ROBERT FULTON, ETC. Plans of Saratoga, confd. Plan of the Encampment and position of the Army under . . . Genl. Burgoyne at Braemus Heights on Hudson's River. . .Drawn by W. C. Wilkinson, Lt. . . London: Wm. Faden, 1780. Size: 13X x 13^ inches. Scale: about \% inches = 1 mile. Engraved on copper by Wm. Faden. Colored by hand. Plan of the position which the Army under Lt. Genl. Burgoyne took at Saratoga on loth Sept. 1777, and in which it remained till the Convention was signed. London: Wm. Faden, 1780. Size: 185^ X 8^ inches. Scale: 6 inches to mile. Cop- perplate by Faden. Colored by hand. Fort Edward. A plan of the Royal Block House, with the en- virons at Fort Edward. [In: A set of plans and" forts in America, reduced from actual surveys, by Mary Ann Roaue. 1765. \London, 1765] obi. 8°. Plate 22. 'Size -within border: 5^x4|4^ inches. Scale: 20 ft. i inch. Engraved on cop- per. Plain. Plan of Fort Edward. Situated Lat. 43°. Lon. 72°. 30'. (In: A set of plans and forts in America, reduced from actual surveys, by Mary Ann Roque, 1765. {London, 1765.] obi. 8°. Plate 13.) Size- within border : 6>^ x 4^ inches. Scale not given. Engraved on copper. Plain.