Part 16
If you can arrange to supply these I shall be most grateful, both on behalf of the library and of the department of American history.
Very truly yours, WALTER K. JEWETT, _Librarian_.
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From M. J. Jordan, Esq., Counsellor-at-Law, Boston, Mass.:
42 COURT STREET, BOSTON, MASS., April 3, 1907.
MY DEAR MR. MURRAY: I received this morning the Society’s Journal for 1906. I find it like its predecessors, of great interest. Its admirable arrangement, valuable information, completeness of detail, is not a small or ordinary tribute to the skill and untiring earnestness of its compiler. I consider in the present, as well as the future, such a work invaluable.
Very sincerely yours, MICHAEL J. JORDAN.
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From Patrick O’Loughlin, Esq., Counsellor-at-Law, Boston, Mass.:
BOSTON, MASS., April 4, 1907.
THOMAS HAMILTON MURRAY, ESQ., _Secretary-General American-Irish Historical Society, Boston, Mass._
MY DEAR MR. MURRAY: I have just received Volume VI of the Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, and have perused its contents with a great deal of interest.
No word of mine can convey the gratitude I personally feel for the disinterested and fruitful work of those, yourself among them, whose labors have succeeded in resurrecting so much information of value, tending to point out the importance of the work of the early Irish emigrants in the formative period of American history and institutions.
I pray the good work may be continued, to the end that our children, as Americans, may learn the truths of history rather than its vagaries and falsehoods. With great respect, believe me,
Sincerely yours, P. O’LOUGHLIN.
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Appreciation briefly expressed:
John J. Slattery, President of the Todd-Donigan Iron Company, Louisville, Ky.: “I beg to acknowledge receipt of the sixth volume of the Society’s publications, which, like the preceding volumes, is full of interesting and instructive matter.”
From John Lavelle, Cleveland, O.: “I beg to acknowledge the receipt of the Society’s annual Journal, which I prize highly. A tithe of the information it contains is worth more than several annual dues. God bless our work.”
From the Rev. T. J. Finn, Port Chester, N. Y.: “The sixth volume of the Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society was received safely. You deserve the warmest congratulations on the interesting and instructive articles.”
From Maurice O’Meara, New York City: “I am in receipt of Volume VI of the Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society. I am very much pleased with it. It is very fine.”
From James L. O’Neill, Elizabeth, N. J.: “I have received the sixth volume of our Society’s Journal. It is rich in historical matters beyond my expectations.”
From Philip A. Curran, Waterbury, Conn.: “My Dear Friend: Please accept my sincere thanks for your kindness in sending me the new volume. It looks as interesting as its predecessors, and I hope to find time in the near future to read it through and through.”
From P. F. Magrath, Binghamton, N. Y.: “Volume VI of the Journal is a credit to the Society. It is very rich in historical information of a most valuable kind, all neatly arranged and ably presented by the various writers.”
From Capt. James Connolly, Coronado, Cal.: “The sixth volume of the Journal of the Society is a handsome book. The organization should be proud of it.”
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From the Plymouth Public Library, Plymouth, Mass.:
MY DEAR SIR: I wish to thank you for the Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society kindly sent by the Society to the Plymouth Public Library.
Very truly yours, NELLIE THOMAS, _Librarian_.
April 24, 1907.
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From the New Orleans Public Library, New Orleans, La.:
April 17, 1907.
DEAR SIR: The New Orleans Public Library has received from you a copy of the “Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society.” Please accept the thanks of the library for your kind donation.
Yours very truly, HENRY M. GILL, _Librarian_.
* * * * *
From Henry Stoddard Ruggles, Wakefield, Mass., April 5, 1907.
THOMAS HAMILTON MURRAY, ESQ., _Secretary-General_:
DEAR MR. MURRAY: I acknowledge with many thanks receipt, by your courtesy, of the latest volume of your Society’s Journal, filled with most valuable papers on many subjects, and exhibiting the same elegance of typography as its predecessors and the evidences of the careful proof-reading so essential in such works.
Yours very truly, H. S. RUGGLES.
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From Dennis H. Tierney, Waterbury, Conn.:
MY DEAR FRIEND MURRAY: The Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society for 1906, being Volume VI, is at hand, and it is replete with interesting narrative and historical facts which are worthy of the Society.
Fraternally yours, D. H. TIERNEY.
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From the Library of Congress, City of Washington, April 4, 1907:
SIR: In behalf of the joint committee of both houses of Congress on the library, I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Vol. 6, presented by the Society to the Library of Congress.
Very respectfully, Your obedient servant, HERBERT PUTNAM, _Librarian of Congress_.
By H. H. B. MEYER, _Chief, Order Division_.
* * * * *
TO MR. THOMAS H. MURRAY, SECRETARY, SEAVIEW, MASS.
From the Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C., May 18, 1907.
DEAR SIR: Permit me, in behalf of the rector and the faculties of the Catholic University of America, to acknowledge, with thanks, the receipt of a copy of the “Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society,” Vol. VI, which you have been so kind as to present to this library.
Yours very truly, WM. TURNER, _Librarian_.
* * * * *
From Francis I. McCanna, counsellor-at-law, Providence, R. I.:
MY DEAR MR. MURRAY: I wish to acknowledge, with thanks, receipt of Volume VI, Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society. This volume is very interesting and a commendable production in every respect. I want to congratulate you upon this fine result of your meritorious work.
Very cordially yours, FRANCIS I. MCCANNA.
* * * * *
From the Riggs Memorial Library, Georgetown University:
On behalf of the University I beg to acknowledge the receipt of your courteous gift: Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Vol. VI, for which I am directed to return cordial thanks.
Yours with much esteem, HENRY J. SHANDELLE, S. J., _Librarian_.
Washington, D. C., April 6, 1907.
GENERAL INDEX.
A bit of New York History, 76.
A glance at some pioneer Irish in the South, 45.
Annual meeting and dinner, 7.
By way of introduction, 3.
Emigration from New England to Ireland, 32.
Executive Council of the Society, 5.
Frontispiece.
General information regarding the American-Irish Historical Society, 162.
Historical notes and papers, 15.
Irish Ability in the United States, 17.
Irish Influence in the Life of Baltimore, 69.
Leading Events in the Career of the Society for 1907, 103.
Membership Roll of the Society, 127.
Necrology, 117.
Officers of the Society, 5.
Other Vice-Presidents, 6.
Praise for Volume VI, 165.
Presentations of Volume VI, 163.
Presidents-General of the Society, 161.
State Vice-Presidents, 6.
The Battle of New Orleans, 97.
The Irish in Appleton’s Encyclopedia of American Biography, 22.
The Kelts of Colonial Boston, 80.
Walsh’s Irish Regiment of Marine Artillery, French Army, 59.
ANALYTICAL INDEX.
A Bit of New York History, paper by Thomas F. Meehan, in N. Y. _Catholic News_, 76.
A Calendar of John Paul Jones’ Manuscripts in the Library of Congress, 59.
A Catholic was one of the Commissioners, 41.
Ackland, Thomas, paper by, 80.
Actors, list of, 31.
Adventurous Irishman present “in all the early voyages of the English,” 47.
Affair at Fort William and Mary, paper, 35.
“A fleete of nine sayl of ships” with 800 for the plantations of Virginia, 57.
Agitators who have distinguished themselves included, 22.
A glance at some of the Pioneer Irish in the South, paper by M. J. O’Brien, 45.
“A hulke of Dublin,” 48.
Aiken, Lambert & Co., 121.
Alknomac, from Sligo, Ireland; cast away at Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., 38.
Allen, Capt., commander of a company, 89.
Allied with many of the old families, 38.
Allison, Dr. Patrick, first pastor of Presbyterian Church, 73.
Alsop farm, Newtown, L. I., purchased for a burial ground, 80.
“A magnificent stone residence,” 37.
American Catholic Historical Researches, 36.
American College at Louvain, Belgium, 117.
_American Ecclesiastical Review_, 118.
American frigate Constitution, 85.
American-Irish Historical Society, 88, 103, 111, 112, 113, 115, 162.
Americans of Irish blood, to, 81.
Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, 84, 85, 89.
An Early Dougherty Mentioned, 96.
Anent the Shannon Family, paper, 101.
Anglo-Saxon, the thing among some educators, 69.
“An ideal soldier,” 42.
“An Irish Man-of-War,” concerning, 95.
Annual meeting of the Society, 1907, 104.
Another Irishman who was not afraid to face the Indians, 46.
Antwerp, 109.
Appleton’s Encyclopedia tables, 31, 32.
Appleton’s Encyclopedia of American Biography, classification in, 17.
Appleton’s gives 65 names of Irish, 20, 21.
Appleton’s list of actors, 31.
Appleton’s list of Catholic clergy, 24, 25, 26.
Appleton’s list of distinguished men, 29, 30.
Appleton’s list of distinguished men in navy, 29.
Appleton’s list of engineers, 30.
Appleton’s list of inventors, 30.
Appleton’s list of lawyers, 26, 27.
Appleton’s list of musicians, 30.
Appleton’s list of philanthropists, 30.
Appleton’s list of physicians, 27.
Appleton’s list of pioneers, 30.
Appleton’s list of Protestant clergy, 26.
Appleton’s list of soldiers, 23, 24.
Appleton’s list of statesmen, 22, 23.
Appleton’s list of those distinguished as educators, 29.
Appleton’s list of those distinguished for art, 28, 29.
Appleton’s list of those distinguished in literature, 27, 28.
Appleton’s list of those distinguished in science, 29.
A Providence, R. I. settler, 33.
Archbishop Corrigan’s Catholic Cemeteries, 78.
Archbishops Neale and Kenrick, 73.
Ardea, Co. Kerry, Ireland, 92.
Arthur, Chester A., “credited to the Irish race,” 20.
Arthur, William H., president, 111.
Artillery districts of Boston and Portland, 111.
Art-men distinguished, list of, 28, 29.
“A scene of unparalleled waste and ruin,” 1651, 32.
A soldier of the Revolution, 96.
Astor Library has Hakluyt’s famous work, 45.
“Athwart the buttocks with my petronell,” 46.
Bacon, Rt. Rev. David, D. D., bishop of Portland, 121.
Baden-Baden, Germany, 117.
Baker, Magistrate, 108.
Baker, William F., president of civil service board, 108.
Ballyhorick, County Cork, Ireland, 88.
Baltimore and Maryland prominent during the Revolution, 71.
Baltimore Gas Light Company, 72.
Baltimore, Irish Influence in Life of, paper, 69.
Baltimore, Md., 103, 108.
Baltimore’s reputation for business honesty laid by, 70.
Bannin, Michael E., New York, Indian commissioner, 110.
Baptist Chapel, First, Baltimore, 73.
Bar Association, Fitchburg, Mass., 107.
Baratarian men, 98.
Barbadoes Island, to which Cromwell exported Irish, 52, 53, 54, 56.
Barber, Col. Francis, a soldier of the Revolution, paper by James L. O’Neill, 41.
Barber, Col. Francis, killed, 1783, 43.
Barber, Francis, commissioned by Congress major of Third N. J. Battalion, 42.
Barber, Patrick, children of, 42.
Barber, Patrick, of County Longford, Ireland, 41.
Bard Bros, of Philadelphia, 121.
Barrett, Robert, in expedition to Mexico, 47.
Batchelder, Clark A., candidate, 107.
Battle of Chippewa, 96.
Battle of Fontenoy, 112.
Battle of Lexington, 94.
Battle of New Orleans, 97.
Battle of New Orleans, detailed description of, 97, 98, 99, 100.
Battle of New Orleans, forces engaged, 98.
Battle of North Point, 74.
Battle of the Boyne, 93.
Battle of the Plains of Abraham, 86.
Belcher, Jonathan, 1720, 101.
Bellows Falls, Vt., 110.
“Benburb Place,” 124.
Berrian, Andrew, pen manufacturer, 121.
Berry, John, apprenticed to Edward Keyly, 90.
Bingham, Major, of Manila, 111.
Blake, Col. John V. F., dies in New York City, 103, 104.
Blodgett, Judge, chairman, R. I. commission, 108.
Bodfish, Rev. Joshua P. L., rector, Canton, Mass., 103.
Boer War, British army in, 103.
Boies, Capt. James, promoter of papermaking, 86.
_Bon Homme Richard_, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67.
Book “suitable for a projected school in Virginia,” by John Brinley, 58.
Boston artillery district, 111.
Boston Associated Board of Trade, 119.
Boston Chamber of Commerce, 119.
Boston city charter, new, 120.
Boston evacuated by British, 86.
Boston _Evening Transcript_, 96.
“Boston Massacre,” 93.
Boston, no Irish among early settlers of, 82.
Boston’s first naval officer, 101.
Boston’s first store on Washington St., opposite the Old State House, 84.
Boston’s great fire, 1760, 90.
Boston’s oldest attorney, Charles A. Welch, 85.
Boston’s Old Granary Burying Ground, 101.
Boston the stronghold of the Catholic and Kelt, 83.
Bourke, First Lieut., assistant surgeon, 111.
Breen, Henry J., 108.
Breen, Magistrate Matthew P., 108.
Brigade under Gen. Clinton join the forces under Gen. Sullivan, 39.
Brinsley, John, an English Puritan minister, 58.
British army in the Boer War, 103.
British defeated in battle of New Orleans, 99, 100.
British evacuated Boston, 86.
British formed along great drainage canal, 98.
British government, 106, 107.
British prisoners, memorial of, sent to the American commissioners, 65.
British schooner, _Margaretta_, 116.
British ship _Losely_, escaped prisoner from, 65.
British strength about the same as Gen. Jackson’s, 98.
British strength in battle of New Orleans, 98.
Brooklyn Navy Yard, 104.
Brown, Philip, appointed to command the prize _Mellish_, 63.
Bruges, in Flanders, 36.
Buffalo, N. Y., 104, 119.
_Buffalo Sunday News_, and Nathaniel Shannon, 101.
Bunker Hill Battle, 35.
Burial place of Maj. Gen. John Sullivan, movement to restore, 115.
Burton, Lieutenant, diary of, published, 94.
Business men, list of, 29, 30.
Butler, Captain of Raleigh’s largest ship, 47.
Byrne, Thomas J., 108.
Calhoun, first mayor of Baltimore, an Irish-American, 74.
Calhoun, John C., “credited to the Irish race,” 20.
Calvary Cemetery, New York City, 80.
Cambridge (Mass.) Historical Society, 68, 75.
Cambridge, Old, population practically all of New England origin, 75.
Canadian frontier, so-called campaign on, 97.
Canton, Mass., 103.
Cape Cod, Mass., 106, 114.
Captain Dominique You, a Baratarian, 98.
Captain Stewart’s Irish brigade, 95.
Captain Weaver’s artillery, detachment of, 95.
Carberry, Brigid, widow of N. K. Connolly, 124.
Carberry, Margaret, 124.
Carberry, William, of Carrick-on-Suir, Ireland, 124.
Carbray, Felix, children of, 124.
Carbray, Felix, consul of Portugal, Port of Quebec, 124.
Carbray, Felix, dean of Consular Corps, 125.
Carbray, Hon. Felix, died, Quebec, 116.
Carbray, Hon. Felix, M. R. I. A., obituary of, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125.
Carbray, Niall, of Carrickcastle, 122.
Carbray, Son & Co., Quebec, 123.
Carey, James, town clerk of Charlestown, 90.
Carmody, Gunner J. F., assigned to the _Tacoma_, 107.
Carney Hospital, Boston, 108.
Carney, Michael, co-partner, papermaking, Dorchester, 87.
Carolinas and Virginia, a most diversified field for historical inquiry, 45.
Carrell and Glaven, “two hardy Irishmen,” 48.
Carrickcastle, near Dungannon, 122.
Carrick-on-Suir, Ireland.
Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton, 71, 72.
Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton, credited to the Irish of pre-Constitution days, 19.
Carroll, John, first archbishop, and Irish-American, 73.
Carroll, Michael, his home destroyed, 90.
Casey, John, of Muddy River, 88.
Cassady, Michael, a patriot of Valley Forge, 94.
Castle Garden, 120.
Cathedral, Portland, Me., 121.
“Catholic Address” to George Washington, 37.
Catholic Burial Ground, letter regarding, 76, 77.
Catholic cemeteries of New York, 78.
Catholic churches, query as to rights of trustees, 76.
Catholic clergy, list of, 24, 25, 26.
Catholic Club, 120.
Catholic priests, hundreds of, educated at St. Mary’s Seminary, 73.
Celtic Irish origin, those of, not included, 22.
Cemetery at Newtown Creek, 80.
Chamillard, Capt. Paul de, 67.
Chancellor Kent, trial before, 37.
Chanler, Gov., 108.
Charitable Irish Society, 88, 93.
Charitable Irish Society oldest Irish Society in America, 94.
Charlestown and Malden, corn mills in, 84.
_Chattanooga_, U. S. cruiser, 113.
Chidwick, Rev. Father, 108.
Chowan County, near Edenton, N. C., 47.
City of the Calverts, 75.
Clancy, Boatswain J., detached from the _Franklin_ and ordered to the _Wasp_, 103.
“Classifies race by the paternal side alone,” 18.
Clinton, Gen. James, went up the Mohawk with brigade, 39.
Clinton, Gov. Dewitt, portrait of, 109.
Clinton, Gov. George, portrait of, 109.
Clogher, County Tyrone, 122.
Clonard, Le Chevr. de, 64.
Coast Artillery, 112.
Cochran, James, Irish boy captured by the Indians, 91.
Coffee, in battle of New Orleans, 99.
Cogan, John, one of the founders of Boston, 84.
Cogan, John, “The Father of Boston Merchants,” 81, 82, 84, 85, 86, 88.
Cohalan, Senator John P., 108.
Cohasset, Mass., 112.
College libraries receiving Volume VI, 164.
College of Virginia, founded by King James, 1622, 57.
Collins, Capt. Palfrey, came into port, 1768, 89.
Collins, Christopher, a shoemaker in Dedham, 89.
Collins, Clement, lodged his arms with selectmen, 89.
Collins, Edward, resident of Cambridge, 89.
Collins, Henry, made freeman, 1636–’37, 89.
Collins, John, a “freeman” in 1646, 89.
Collins, Joseph, nominated a watchman, 89.
Collins, Mathew, in Capt. Allen’s Co., 1698, 89.
Collins, Mayor, 120.
Collins, Thomas, a farmer, 89.
Collins, William, in Boston, 1636, 89.
Colonial Boston, the Kelts of, paper, 80.
Colonists landed in North Carolina, names of, 50.
Colonists massacred by Indians, 1622, 57.
Columbia Oil Company, 120.
Columbus barracks, 106.
Columbus, O., 106.
Colvin Institute, founded by daughter of Patrick Colvin, 74.
Colvin, Patrick, member of old Light Street Church, 74.
Comba, Brig.-Gen. Richard, U. S. A., died, 104, 105.
Commissioners for Ireland, 32.
Commodore Rodgers extended hospitality to 79 Irish passengers, 39.
Conaty, Rt. Rev. Thomas J., D. D., bishop, 122.
Concerning “An Irish Man-of-War,” 95.
Concerning the Irish Montgomerys, article, 43.
_Connecticut_, battleship, 113, 114.
Connolly, Catherine, of Clogher, Ireland, 122.
Connolly, Nicholas K., 124.
Conolly, William, a Boston Kelt, 94.
Connor, Patrick, co-partner, papermaking, Dorchester, 87.
_Constitution_, American frigate, 85.
Continental Congress, 86, 91, 92, 93.
Conyngham & Nesbitt, Philadelphia merchants, 64.
Copenhagen, T. J. O’Brien, minister to, 110.
Copland, Rev. Patrick, a famous clergyman of London, preaches in Bowe Street Church, 57.
Copland, Rev. Patrick, first president of the College of Virginia, 57.
Copley, John Singleton, son of Irish parents, 92, 93, 94.
Cork and Halifax, 89.
Corlet, Elijah, master of Cambridge Grammar School, 68.
“Cornelius the Irishman,” 48.
Cornwallis, surrender of, 71.
Cottineau, Capt. Denis Nicolas, gave account, 61.
Cottineau, Denis Nicolas, Captain of _Pallas_, 67.
County Clare, Ireland, 92.
County Galway, Ireland, 96.
County Tyrone, Ireland, 122.
Court of Assistants, Cogan juror of, 84.
Craddock, Matthew, of London, 89.
Cranston, R. I., 117.
Crehore, Benjamin, maker of the first piano-forte in America, 85.
Crehore, Teague, stolen from his parents in Ireland, 85.
Crehore, Thomas, a chair maker, 85, 86.
Crehore, Thomas, maker of the first playing cards in America, 85.
Creoles, 98.
Crimmins, Hon. John D., of N. Y. City, speaks of John M. O’Conor, 96.
Crimmins, Hon. John D., sold collection, 105.
Crimmins, Thomas E., 108.
Croghan, Chief Boatswain J. S., to command _Wasp_, 103.
Cromwellian adventurers in Ireland attracted and become efficient aids in the barbarous work of the English commissioners, 55.
Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland, 32.
Cromwell’s government, many Irish people sent to New England under, 83.
Cromwell, wholesale exportation of the Irish by, 52.
Cronan, Lieut. William Pigott, 113, 114.
Cronan, Patrick J., 114.
Cronin, Cornelius, Gunner, U. S. Navy, 103.
Cullen alludes to Irish spinners and weavers, 88.
Cullen, Bernard, author of “The Story of the Irish in Boston,” 90.
Cullen’s Story of the Irish in Boston, 80.
Culpepper, John, succeeds O’Sullivan as surveyor-general, 1671, 51.
Cunneen, Hon. John, died at Buffalo, N. Y., 104.
_Cyclopedia of Canadian Biography_, 123.
Danish West Indies, 48.
Danvers, Mass., 113.
Dawson building, 118.
Declaration of Independence, 93.
Declaration of Independence, John Hancock first signer, 91.
“Dementia Americana,” 69.
Democratic party, 120.
“Derman Mahoone fined 20 shillings for intertaining two Irishmen,” 90.
Desmonds, immense estates of in Munster, 49.
“Determining the relative values of great men,” 19.
“Dingen a Cos,” whole company brought ashore at, 48, 49.
Dingle, a well-merited tribute, inhabitants of, 48, 49.
Diocese of Raphoe, 44.
Dismal Swamp, 106.
Distinguished descendants of the original Irish settlers, 19.
Doherty estate, New York City, sale of, 104.
Dominick Lynch and his family, paper, 36.
Dongan charter, 109.
Donovan, First Lieut. John G., Coast Artillery, 112.
Dorchester Heights, fortifying, 86.
Dorchester, Mass., early papermaking at, 87.
Dougherty, Lieut. Charles, children of, 96.
Dougherty, Lieut. Charles, removed from Brookfield to Framingham, 96.
Dover, N. H., stronghold of Shannons, 101.
Downpatrick, Co. Down, Ireland, 91.
Duffy, Col. Edward, 108.
Dugan, Maj. Thomas B., 12th U. S. Cavalry, 110.
Duncan, Abner, on Gen. Jackson’s staff, 99.
Dungannon, Co. Tyrone, Ireland, 93.
Durham, N. H., 115.
Dwyer, Capt. Charles G., paymaster, 110.
Earl of Mount Alexander could ride at the head of a regiment all Montgomerys, 44.
Educators, list of, 29.
Eleventh St. burial ground, number of interments, 77.
Eleventh St. graveyard epitaphs, 79, 80.
Elizabethtown’s first settlers, 42.
Ellison, J. Taylor, lieut.-gov. of Va., 109.
Emigration from New England to Ireland, 32.
Emmet, Thomas Addis, credited to the “immigrant class,” 19.
Engineer Corps, West Point, 109.
Engineers, list of, 30.
England’s choicest troops killed and wounded, 97.
England’s hypocritical methods, aware of, 71.
England’s unjust tariff laws, driven from Ireland by, 70.
English adventurers in Ireland engaged in man-hunting, 56.
English and Puritan colony has become a great city, 83.
Englishmen left in Virginia, employments of, 45.
English soldiers, prosecution of, 93.
Episcopal Church, first in New England, founded, 89.
Epitaphs in Eleventh St. graveyard, 79, 80.
Estaign, Comte de, 62.
Fall River, Mass., 104.
Fall River Roman Catholic diocese, 117.
Fairbanks, Vice-Pres., addresses Irish Club, 105.
Fairchild, Leroy W., 121.
Fairservice, Andrew, 75.
Faneuil Hall, Boston, 94.
Farley, Archbishop, 124.
_Favorite_ retaken and carried to the Bermudas, 64.
Fernando, Simon, with Raleigh in first expedition, 48.
Fifteenth U. S. Cavalry, 107.
Fifth Avenue Cathedral, crypt of, holds remains of bishops, 78.
Fifth Infantry in the Philippines, 105.
“First-comers” meet Indians on Chowan River, 46.
First Infantry, 106.
First paper manufactured in America at Dorchester, 86.
Fisher-folk of the Kerry coast, 49.
Fitchburg, Mass., 107.
Fitz-Maurice, Chevalier de, Letters to Capt. Paul Jones, 59, 60.
Fitzpatrick, Brian, deserts to the Spaniards, 52.
Fitzpatrick, Thomas B., presided, 104.
Floating 220 boats on the Susquehanna, 39.
Flynn, from County Galway, Ireland, 96.
Foley, Capt. D. P., of revenue cutter service, 103.
Fond du Lac, Episcopalian Bishop of, 85.
Fontenoy, 112.
Fort Adams, R. I., 111.
Fort Carroll, 74.
Fort Cumberland, 89.
Fort Delaware, 108.
Fort Hill, 84, 90.
Fort Leavenworth, Kan., 106.
Fort McHenry, Baltimore, Md., 74, 108.
Fort of Red Men, 88.
Fort Stanwix on the Mohawk River, 37.
Fort William and Mary, affair at, paper by Rev. Thomas Gregory, 35.
Fort William and Mary taken, 1774, 35.
Fourteenth Infantry, 111.
Fourth Voyage made to Virginia, 48.
Foy, Julius L., a St. Louis member, dies, 103.
_Franklin_ and _Wasp_, 103.
Franklin, Benjamin, 67.
Franklin, Benjamin, consents to commission of brevet lieutenant, 62.
Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, 36, 120.
Fulton, Robert, has no recognition in “double star” table, 19.
Fulton, Robert, son of a Kilkenny man, 20.
Gallagher, Bernard, Master, Letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 63.
Gallagher, Bernard, Midshipman, Letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 63.
Gallager, Thomas F., judge police court, 107.
Gardner, Capt. Robert, a wealthy citizen, 94.
Garrett, John, in expedition to Mexico, 47.
Gates, General, takes Capt. William Kilton prisoner, 63.
Gen. Brown’s staff, O’Conor on, 96.
General Keene killed in battle of New Orleans, 100.
General Wolfe, 86.
Gen. Sullivan’s house open for inspection, 115.
_Georgia_, battleship, 113, 114.
Gettysburg, 104.
Gibbons, Cardinal, 73.
Glaven and Carrell, “two hardy Irishmen,” 48.
Glendy, Rev. John, first pastor of Second Presbyterian Church, 73.
Glen’s Falls, N. Y., 112.
Gookin, Daniel, an Irish Quaker, engaged in transporting cattle from Ireland to Virginia, 56.
Gookin, Daniel, Jr., became superintendent of Indian Affairs, 57.
Gookin, Daniel, received grant of 2,500 acres in Upper Norfolk, 1637, 57.
Gookin, Daniel, “received patents for 300 people,” 56.
Gookin’s Irish settlement, 57.
Governor Bellingham, 88.
Governor Dudley, 89.
Governor Endicott marries John and Lysbell Morrell, 1659, both Irish, 90.
Governor Hancock, 86.
Governor Hutchinson, 86.
Governor’s Island, 106.
Grafton, Right Reverend Charles C., 85.
Greaton, Gen. John, 94.
Greaton, Mr., keeper of Greyhound Tavern, 94.
Great Swamp in Rhode Island, 88.
Greenhalge, Governor, 119.
Greenville, Sir Richard, and second voyage, 1585, 45.