Part 17
Greenville’s list of “first-comers,” 46.
Gregory, Rev. Thomas, paper by, 35.
Grey Abbey stock of the early Ulster settlement, 44.
Greyhound Tavern, Roxbury, 94.
Griffin, Martin I. J., paper by, 40.
Griffis, Rev. William E., D. D., oration by, 115.
Guild, Gov. Curtis, Jr., 107.
Guillouet, Gen. Louis, Comte d’Orvilliers, “on the road,” 66.
Gulliver, Anthony, a Milton resident in colonial days, 94.
Gulliver, Capt. Lemuel, once lived at Algerine Corner, 95.
Gulliver’s Travels, published, 1726, 95.
Guy de Vernon’s _Science of War and Fortifications_, translated by O’Conor, 96.
Haggerty, Ogden, of New York, 104.
Hakluyt, Richard, on Raleigh’s first voyage of discovery, 1584, 45.
Hakluyt’s Voyages, Navigations, etc., 45.
Haley, James S., re-elected mayor, 105.
Halifax and Cork, 89.
Hall, William, constable, 1730, 94.
Hamilton, Alexander, 42.
Hancock, Anthony, 92.
Hancock, John, emigrant from Down Co., Ireland, 91.
Hancock, John, had Irish blood in veins, 91.
Hancock, John, of Lurgan, and family of president, 91.
Hancock, Neilson, founder of Irish Statistical Society, 92.
Hancock, Thomas, one of the starters of the paper industry, 86.
Harney, Gen. William Selby, field officer, 100.
Harris, Charles N., appointed magistrate, 105.
Harrison, Rev. Mr., unable to return to Ireland, 33.
Harvard College, 90.
Harvard College received gift of 70 acres from John Cogan, 85.
Hatteras Indians at Croatoan, 50.
Havana, 112.
Hawk, a historian of North Carolina, 50.
Hawkins, Sir John, in expedition to Mexico, 47.
Hayes, Capt. Edward, in expedition to Newfoundland, 1583, 47.
Healy, Bishop, 122.
Healey, Rev. John, first Baptist minister in Baltimore, 73.
Healey, William, in real estate transactions, 89, 90.
Heath’s regiment, 94.
Heitman’s _Officers of the American Revolution_, 101.
Hendricken, Bishop, 117.
Hennessey, Lieut. Peter J., 5th U. S. Cavalry, 111.
Heroes of Montgomery’s Army, 44.
Hewatt’s Historical Account of the Rise and Progress of the Colonies of South Carolina and Georgia, 50.
Hibbens, Mrs., hung for witchcraft, 88.
Hibbens, William, an early citizen of Boston, 88.
Higgins, Governor, of R. I., 108, 115.
Higgins, James H., inaugurated governor of R. I., 103, 115.
Histories of Boston ignore the story of John Cogan, 81.
Hoban, James, “architect and builder of the president’s palace,” Washington, 40.
Holy Cross College, 121.
Holy Family School, 118.
Holy Name Society, 118.
Hongkong, 119.
Hotel Brunswick, Boston, annual meeting at, 104.
Hotten, John Camden, in his famous work gives list of those leaving Barbadoes, 52.
Howes, Osborne, died, Brookline, Mass., 106.
Howes, Osborne, Japanese consul, Boston, 120.
Howes, Osborne, obituary of, 118, 119, 120.
Humphreys, Col., “at the foot hereof,” 62.
“Immortalized in becoming wood-cuts,” 20.
Incident of an expedition under Gen. John Sullivan, article, by G. F. Radway, 39.
Indianapolis, Ind., 163.
Indians and Spaniards capture Miles Philips’ whole company, 47.
Indians, at summer overflow of river, fled in terror, 39.
Indian chiefs framed bill of expense to England, 109.
Indians of North Carolina, first to set eyes on the white men who came to America, 45.
Inniskillen Foot, Twenty-seventh, 97.
Inventors, list of, 30.
Ireland, 108, 120, 125.
Ireland, County Galway, 96.
Ireland, County Limerick, 105, 112.
Ireland, County Tyrone, 122.
“Ireland has always been a hive from which America has derived sturdy hewers of wood to subdue the forests,” 57.
Irish Ability in the United States, paper by James Jeffry Roche, LL. D., 17.
Irish ability, Lodge’s tabulated misrepresentation of, 21.
Irish ability, true figures of, 32.
Irish account, stellar classification of, on the wrong side, 20.
Irish allowed nine statesmen in first list, 22.
“Irish” allowed only one double star, 20.
Irish-Americans, 71.
Irish blood, a great infusion of, received in Virginia and the Carolinas, 1678, 54.
Irish blood, men of, not prominent, 83.
Irish brigade, battle of Fontenoy, 112.
Irish builders of the White House, paper by Martin I. J. Griffin, 40.
Irish business men long influenced the financial interests of Baltimore, 72.
Irish castaways among the Indians of the Danish West Indians, 48.
Irish Catholic charity, 124.
Irish “convicts” under the vassalage of colonial masters suffered great privations, 55.
Irish families invariably large, 54.
Irish Fellowship Club, Chicago, 105.
Irish gloriously prominent, 31.
Irish in Boston, the story of, 80.
Irish Influence in the Life of Baltimore, paper, by D. J. Scully, 69.
Irish in the forefront in Catholic affairs in Baltimore, 73.
Irish laid no claim to be Anglo-Saxons, 69.
Irishman’s readiness to assimilate with other nationalities, 75.
Irishmen among first settlers of the western world, 49.
Irishmen in the Massachusetts colony, 93.
Irish merchants, names of, who contributed to buy cloth and make uniforms, 71.
Irish merchants who came to Baltimore, 70.
Irish Montgomerys, concerning the, 43.
Irish names among lists of Englishmen, 46.
Irish names appear among earliest records of Boston, 82.
Irish names of priests and bishops in Baltimore given, 73.
Irish National Association, 124.
Irish of New England encouraged to return to Ireland, 33.
Irish political refugees sometimes classed as “convicts,” 55.
Irish Presbyterian Church in Boston, 91, 93, 94.
Irish Presbyterians of Boston, manufacturers, 87.
Irish Protestants, 88.
Irish race misrepresented by writers, 17.
Irish rebellion, 44.
Irish regiment of Marine Artillery, Walsh’s, 59.
“Irish Romanists” in North Carolina, 50.
Irish sailors manned Raleigh’s ships, 49.
Irish Scots and Scotch-Irish, 87.
Irish seamen manned ships, “not a few” sailing from English ports, 46.
Irish settlers, distinguished descendants from, 19.
Irish spinners and weavers, 88.
Irish Statistical Society, 92.
Iron Duke, brother-in-law of Gen. Pakeman, 97.
Isthmian canal, 119.
Ithaca, N. Y., 115.
Jackson, Andrew, has no recognition in “double star” table, 19.
Jackson, Andrew, son of Andrew of Carrickfergus, 20.
Jackson, Daniel, children of, 35.
Jackson, Daniel, query respecting, 34.
Jackson, General, 100.
Jackson, General, of Irish parentage, 97.
Jackson, Stephen, a Providence, R. I. settler, 33.
Jackson, Stephen, genealogy of family, 34.
Jack’s Reef, Onondaga Co., N. Y., 96. U. S. treasury, money deposited by will in, 96.
Jamestown Exposition, 106, 108, 109.
Japan, T. J. O’Brien, ambassador to, 110.
Jay, Gov. John, portrait of, 109.
Johnson, Pres. Andrew, 105.
Jones, Capt. John Paul, certificate to Lieut. Edward Stack, 62.
Jones, Capt. John Paul, letter to Capt. John Plaince, 65.
Jones, Capt. John Paul, letter to “The Revd. Father John” Mehegan, 65, 66.
Jones, Capt. John Paul, letter to “The Revd. John Mayhagan,” 65.
Jones, Capt. John Paul, officers of auxiliary vessels under command of, 67.
Jones, Capt. John Paul, orders to Lieut. Peter Amiel, 66.
Journal of the Society, presentation of Vol. VI, 163.
Kallahan, Capt. Charles, commands ship, _True Friendship_, sailing from Barbadoes, 54.
Kansas City, Mo., 110.
Keating’s Irish grenadiers, 95.
Keenan, Hon. Patrick, N. Y. City chamberlain, died, 108, 109.
Keleher, Maj. Timothy D., granted leave of absence, 110.
Kelly, Edward A., died Cohasset, Mass., 112.
Kelly, Michael, of New Hampton, N. H., 105.
Kelts, names of in Colonial Boston, 82.
Kennedy, John Pendleton, an Irish-American, 74.
Kenrick, illustrious Archbishop, 73.
Kentucky and Tennessee riflemen, 1500 of, 97, 98.
Kenmare, Ireland, 120.
Keyly, Edward, 90.
Killeran, Captain, his home destroyed, 90.
Kilton, Capt. William, taken prisoner by Gen. Gates, 63.
King Frederick gave dinner, 110.
King Philip’s War, 88.
Kirle, Richard, “an Irish gentleman,” becomes governor, 1680, 52.
Knox, Maj. Gen. Henry, a dashing soldier of the Revolution, 94.
Lacey, Col. F. E., family of, 106.
Lacey, Col. Francis E., died, N. Y. City, 105.
Lafayette gives Barber a sword, 42.
Lafayette helped by Purviance to clothe his half-starved and half-clothed army, 71.
Lafayette, Marquis de, 62.
Lane, Master Ralph, having charge of employments of the Englishmen in Virginia, 45.
Langenbruchen, Baden-Baden, 117.
Lawson, a historian of North Carolina, 50.
Lawyers, distinguished, list of, 26, 27.
Leading events in career of the Society, 1907, 103.
Leary, Gen. Peter, Jr., wrote U. S. war department, 108.
Lechford’s notebook, 84.
Lenihan, Capt. Michael J., of general staff, 111.
Letter of a Catholic resident of N. Y. City, 76.
Letters to John Paul Jones, extracts from, 59, 60, 61, 63, 64, 67.
Lewiston, Me., 115.
Lexington, Eleanor, writes in the _Buffalo Sunday News_ of Nathaniel Shannon, 101.
Light Street Church, now Mount Vernon, Baltimore, 74.
Limerick County, Ireland, 104, 106.
Linehan, Col. John C., author of “The Irish Scots and the Scotch-Irish,” 87, 90.
Linsmore castle, built by Raleigh, 49.
List of those continuing Stevenson’s work, 70.
List of those leaving Island of Barbadoes for Virginia and the Carolinas, 53, 54.
Literary men, list of, 27, 28.
Lodge, Henry Cabot, and Century Magazine, 17.
Lodge must plead guilty to one of two charges, 32.
Lodge’s tables, 31, 32.
London, L. W., statement of Montgomery ancestry, 43.
Long wharf, the oldest in Boston, built by Cogan, 84.
Looking back at Old Cambridge, Mass., 75.
Lords Proprietors had agents employed in seeking emigrants in Ireland, etc., 50.
Los Angeles, Cal., 122.
Louvain, Belgium, 117.
Luzon, Northern, Philippines, 105.
Lynch and Stoughton, articles of co-partnership, 36.
Lynch, Dominick, children of, 38.
Lynch, Dominick 3d, a naval officer, 38.
Lynch, Dominick, 4th Lieut, in U. S. Cavalry, 38.
Lynn, Mass., 108.
Macarthy, Eugene, Captain, certificate regarding “Commodore” Paul Jones, 62.
Macarthy, Eugene, letter to John Paul Jones, 60.
Macarthy, Eugene, Lieut., 60.
Macarthy, Eugene, recommended for lieutenant, 59.
MacNamarra, Chevalier de, Lieutenant, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 64.
Maghera, Ireland, 91.
Mahoney, Lieut.-Col., assigned to the Philippine Islands, 104.
Malden and Charlestown, corn mills in, 84.
Maloney, Judge Thomas, died, Ogden, Utah, 105.
Manchester, N. H., 121.
Manila, Philippines, 111.
Manley, John and others, Captains, “Uniform dress for the navy agreed to,” 64.
Manoville, Le Chevalier de, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 67.
Manuscripts of John Paul Jones, a calendar of, 59.
Marcella Street Home, 89.
_Margaretta_, British schooner, 116.
“Margaret Noriss, an Irishwoman, is admitted to the town,” 90.
Martin, John, a ship carpenter, 90.
Massachusetts Bay commonwealth, 94.
Massachusetts colonial records, 88.
Massachusetts State Archives, 101.
Mather, Cotton, in a sermon in 1700, 88.
Mather, Increase, father-in-law of Nehemiah Walter, 68.
Maxwell, Sarah, wife of Robert Montgomery, 43.
McCarthy, Capt. William, ship-owner, 89.
McCarthy, Florence, dealer in provisions, 89.
McCarthy, Justice John Henry, 108.
McCarthy, Maj. Daniel F., quartermaster, 111.
McCarthy, Patrick J., inaugurated mayor of Providence, R. I., 103, 115.
McCarthy, Thaddeus, of colonial Boston, 89.
McCarthy, Thomas, chosen constable, 89.
McClellan, Mayor, appoints magistrate, 105, 106, 108, 109.
McClosky, Cardinal, parents of buried in St. Patrick’s Cemetery, 78.
McClure, David, N. Y. City, died, 112.
McDonald, Gen. William, first to run packets on Chesapeake Bay, 72.
McDonnell, Peter, died on White Star steamer, _Oceanic_, 112.
McDonnell, Peter, obituary of, 120.
McDonough, Capt. Michael J., relieved, 109.
McDonough, Capt. Michael J., U. S.
Military Academy, 111.
McGee, James, commander of vessel, 94.
McGillicuddys, reunion of, 112.
McGowan, Admiral, president-general of Society, 109.
McGowan, Borough Pres. Patrick F., 108.
McGowan, President, 106, 107.
McHenry, James, first secretary of the navy from Maryland an Irishman, 74.
McKim, Isaac, founded first free school in Baltimore, 72.
McLean, Hugh, promoter of papermaking, 86, 87.
McLean, John, a slater, 94.
McMahon, Capt. John, monument to erected by the Montgomery Guards, 79.
McMahon, Mayor James H., presided, 107.
McPartland, Stephen, bought Doherty estate, 104.
Meehan, Thomas F., paper by from _Truth Teller_, 76.
Mehegan, John, clergyman, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 64.
Mehegan, John, ordered to obtain two hogsheads of porter, 65.
Membership Roll, 126–160.
Mexico, early expedition to, 47.
Meylan, James, is to be sent proportions of 8 and 18 pounders, 66.
Miller, Ann, wife of Samuel Shannon, 101.
Milton Lower Mills, house and factory of Thomas Crehore at, 86.
_Minnesota_, steamer from Seattle, 112, 113.
Minute men, first company in America, 94.
Montgomery, Alexander, member of Irish Parliament, 43.
Montgomery, Allerian, 44.
Montgomery, Gen. Richard, ancestry and family of, 43.
Montgomery Guards erect monument, 79.
Montgomery’s army, Heroes of, 44.
Montgomerys of Ballyleek, 44.
Montgomerys of Grey Abbey, County Down, 44.
Montgomerys, six in the Irish Parliament, “all over six feet in height and the handsomest men in Dublin,” 44.
Montgomery, Thomas, family connections of, 43.
Montpelier, Vt., mayor re-elected, 105.
Montreal, Canada, 121, 122.
Moore, John and Joseph, 88.
Moore, John, servant of the governor, 90.
Morehead, Rev. John, pastor of Irish Presbyterian Church, 94.
Moroney, William, perished in great storm, 94.
Morrison, Hon. A. L., paper by, 97.
Morton, Alexander, 121.
Moseley, Edward A., 106.
Mount Vernon Place Church, Baltimore, 74.
Moylan, James, merchant, letter to John Paul Jones, 61, 64.
Mulcahy, Mrs. M. A., letter of, 96.
Munster, estates of the Desmonds in, 49.
Munstermen largely composing second colony, 57.
Murphy, Col. Paul St. C., assumed command of Marine Corps, Brooklyn Navy Yard, 104.
Murphy, First Lieut. John C., 4th U. S. Infantry, retired, 110.
Murray, Thomas Hamilton, secretary of American-Irish Historical Society, 88.
Murray, Thomas H., papers by, 59.
Museum of Fine Arts, 92.
Musicians, list of, 30.
Musketo’s Bay, St. John’s Island, 48.
Names of Kelts in colonial Boston, 82.
Names of natives of Ireland in Greenville’s lists, 46.
Names of persons leaving the Island of Barbadoes for the American colonies, 53, 54.
Names of prominent New York families buried in St. Patrick’s Cemetery, 78.
Names of some pastors and their assistants buried in St. Patrick’s Cemetery, 78.
Napoleon won Waterloo, 100.
Napoleon’s marshals in the Spanish Campaign, 99.
Narragansett Hotel, Providence, R. I., 116.
National Cemetery, Fort Leavenworth, 106.
National House of Representatives, 116.
Natives of Ireland in Greenville’s lists of “first-comers,” 46.
Nautical Training School, 119.
Naval men, list of, 29.
Neale, Archbishop, 73.
Necrology, 1907, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125.
Neill’s History of the English Colonization of America, 57.
Nesbitt, Jonathan, banker, letter to John Paul Jones, 61.
New Bedford, Mass., 104, 118.
Newbury, Mass., 112.
Newce, Sir William, an English officer, offered the governor “to transport two thousand persons to Virginia,” 56.
New England families arrive at Limerick, 1656, 33.
New Hampshire State College, 115.
New Hampton, N. H., 105.
New London, Ct., 111.
New Orleans, battle of, 97, 98, 99, 100.
Newry, Hancocks long engaged in trade of, 91.
_N. Y. Catholic News_, extract from, 76.
New York City, 107, 108, 109, 111, 119, 121, 125.
New York History, A Bit of, 76.
New York Mortgage and Securities Company, 120.
New York navy yard, 113.
_New York Times_, 119.
_New York Tribune_, 119.
No Irish among the settlers of Boston in 1630, 82.
Nolan, Capt. Dennis F., 30th U. S. Infantry, 115.
North Carolina and early inhabitants, 50.
Norton, Prof. Charles Eliot, extract from address by, 75.
Nugent, Edward, “the bold Irishman,” 47.
O’Brien, Jeremiah, erection of monument to, 116.
O’Brien, Michael J., paper by, 45.
O’Brien, Thomas J., U. S. minister to Copenhagen, 109, 110, 113.
O’Callaghan, Rev. Eugene M., vicar general, 121.
_Oceanic_, White Star steamer, 120.
O’Connell, Archbishop, 103.
O’Connell, Maurice, Captain, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 67.
O’Connor, Lieut. M., assigned 15th U. S. Cavalry, 107.
O’Connor, 2d Lieut. James, assigned to Havana, 112.
O’Conor, Lieut. John Michael, U. S. A., 96.
O’Donnell, Gen. Columbus, 72.
O’Donnell, John, named Canton, 72.
Officers of auxiliary vessels, list of, 67.
O’Flaherty & McPartland, firm of, 104.
Ogden, Utah, 105.
O’Kelly, James Gerard, Lieutenant of Grenadiers, 61.
O’Kelly, James Gerard, resigned from Walsh’s regiment, 61.
O’Killia, David, Cape Cod, Mass., 106, 118.
Old Cambridge, Mass., Looking back to, 75.
Old Granary Burying Ground, Boston, 101.
Old South Church, Boston, Shannon member of, 101.
Oliver Hibernian Free School, 72.
Oliver, John, founded the Oliver Hibernian Free School, 72.
O’Loughlin, William J., 2d U. S. Infantry, 111.
O’Neill, Henry, of Dungannon, 93.
O’Neill, James L., paper by, 41.
O’Neill, Sir Neal, 93.
“One of my Irish boys” who shot Pemisapan, 46.
O’Reilly’s, John Boyle, visit to Dismal Swamp, 106.
“Original settlers all who came to this country before the date of the adoption of the Constitution, A. D., 1789,” 18.
O’Seanchain, first form of surname Shannon, 101, 102.
O’Sullivan arrested by the town marshal, 52.
O’Sullivan, Florence, “a true son of Ireland,” 51.
O’Sullivan, Florence, surveyor-general of the province, 51.
O’Sullivan had charge of “the great gun,” 51.
Otsego Lake, New York, 39.
Over 10,000 should be credited to the “English race,” 18.
Overton, Tom, on Gen. Jackson’s staff, 99.
Pacific Mail Steamship Company, 119.
Paine, Robert, 93.
Paine, Robert Treat, signer of Declaration of Independence, 93.
Pakenham, General, killed, 97, 98, 99, 100.
Pamlico Sound, entered by “first-comers,” 46.
Panama, 119.
Parson Adam’s pulpit, powder buried under, 36.
Patterson, Thomas, grandson of Allerian Montgomery, 44.
Patterson, William, gave Patterson Park to Baltimore, 71.
Pelham, Peter, engraver, painter, etc., 94.
Pemberton, Mr., a teacher, 1767, 42.
Pemisapan, king of the Indians, 46.
“Pemisapan’s head in his hands,” 47.
Philadelphia, Pa., 119, 121.
Philanthropists, list of, 30.
Philippines, 104, 105, 106, 111, 115.
Philip’s company haled before the governor, who “visited them with the terrors of the Inquisition,” 47.
Philip’s company sentenced, 47.
Philip’s men executed in City of Mexico, 47.
Philips, Miles, put ashore with 68 men a little north of Panuco, Golf of Mexico, 47.
Physicians, list of, 27.
Pioneer Irish in the South, paper, 45.
Pioneers, list of, 30.
Pioneers of the South not all of Anglo-Saxon origin, 55.
Plymouth Club, 118.
Polk, James K., descendant of Irish Polk or Pollock, 20.
Portland artillery district, 111.
Portland, Me., 121.
Portsmouth, N. H., 101.
Prendergast’s Cromwellian Settlement, 32.
Prendergast relates how agents throughout Ireland “were authorized by Parliament to seize women, orphans and the destitute to be transported to Barbadoes and the plantations of Virginia,” 55, 56.
Prerogative Court of Ireland, 43.
Presbyterian Church, First, Baltimore, 73.
Presbyterian Church, Second, Baltimore, 73.
President-Generals of the Society, 161.
Presidio, San Francisco, 104.
Prince of Ulster, Shane the Proud, 93.
Prize ships at Brest, 65.
Protestant clergy, list of, 26.
Protestant Kelts in Boston, 93.
Protestants leave Ulster for plantations in North America, 91.
Providence apostolate, 117.
Providence Cathedral, 117.
Providence, R. I., 115, 116, 117.
Province of Arba, Northern Luzon, 105.
Province of Quebec, 123.
Provincial authorities anxious to attract emigrants, 55.
Public libraries receiving Volume VI, 163, 164.
Purviance, Samuel, chief man of the town, 71.
Quebec, Canada, 122, 123, 124, 125.
Quebec, Canada, tablet in, to Gen. Montgomery’s soldiers, 44.
Quebec Harbor Commission, 125.
Queen of France, “She Is a Sweet Girl,” 65.
Quinn, Col. James B., U. S. Engineer Corps, retired, 110.
“Race distribution in the main correct,” 18.
Race extraction of 14,243 persons named as deserving mention, 18.
Radway, G. Frank, article by, 39.
Raleigh’s charter from the English crown, 49.
Raleigh, Sir Walter, 48, 49.
Raleigh, Sir Walter, the famous navigator, 45.
Reagan, John B. of Dorchester and Boston’s Keltic citizens, 83.
Reamie, Marcus, the hair-cutter, 75.
Records of the London Company, proprietors of Virginia, 56.
Red Men’s fort, 88.
_Redpath Weekly_, 123.
Reeves, Mr., a teacher, 1767, 42.
Reid’s History of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, 91.
Reformers who have become distinguished included, 22.
Regiment of Dillon fought at Savannah, 63.
Regiment of Walsh fought at Savannah, 63.
Representatives elected at Charlestown to make laws for the government of the colony, 52.
Revere, Paul, in Durham, 1774, 35.
Review of the Year, 1907, 103.
Revolutionary Rolls of New Hampshire, 94.
Revolution, prior to, most important men were Irish by birth, 69.
Rhode Island building, Jamestown Exposition, 108.
Rhode Island commission, 108.
Rhode Island, Great Swamp in, 88.
Rhode Island Historical Society, 33.
Rhode Island national guard, 111.
Roanoke Island, “first-comers” landed at, 46.
Robert Emmet Association, Columbus, O., 106.
Roberts, William Hugh, comment of Jackson’s letter, 100.
Robin, Abbe, chaplain of French fleet, 87, 88.
Rochambeau, Comte de, 62.
Roche, James Jeffrey, LL. D., paper by, 17.
Roche, James Jeffrey of Mass., U. S. consul, 108.
Rochester, Minn., 117.
Roosevelt, Pres. Theodore, 110, 120.
Roosevelt, Theodore, and many others, sent pictureless to posterity, 19.
Routh, Francis, son of Sir Randolph, partner of Felix Carbray, 122.
Routh, Sir Randolph, 122.
Roxbury, Mass., 89.
Royal Academy in London, 92.
Rule, the Scotch gardener, 75.
Russell, Governor, 119.
Ryan, First Lieut. John J., 12th U. S. Cavalry, 112.
Ryan, First Lieut. Thomas F., 11th U. S. Cavalry recruiting officer, 110.
Ryan, James W., chosen mayor of Vergennes, Vt., 105.
Saint Simon, Marquis de, 62.
San Francisco, 119.
San Francisco, Cal., 104, 111, 119.
Sarsfield, Count, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 67.
Scientific men, list of, 29.
“Scotch-Irish” omitted, 22.
Scully, D. J., paper by, 69.
Seattle, 112.
Second Battalion of Engineers, 112.
“Second Colony” transported, 48.
Second Infantry, Civil War, 105.
Second U. S. Infantry, 111.
_Serapis_ and _Bon Homme Richard_, action between, 62, 63.
_Serapis_, 26 seamen escape from, 61.
Settlement, ruin of, threatened, 51.
Settlers murmur against Proprietors, 51.
Seventeenth Infantry, 106.
Shane the Proud, Prince of Ulster, 93.
Shannon, Ens. William, of Virginia, 101.
Shannon family, anent the, 101.
Shannon, Nathaniel, came to Boston, 1687, 101.
Shannon, Nathaniel, first naval officer of Boston, 101.
Shannon, Nathaniel, Jr., ship merchant of Portsmouth, 101.
Shannon, Robert, mayor of Derry, 101.
Shannon, Thomas, captain of N. H. militia, 101.
Shaw, Mrs. Robert Gould, widow of Col. Shaw, died, Boston, 104.
Shea, Denis, 121.
Shea, John B., obituary of, 120, 121.
Shepherd, Hon. William, ex-mayor, Lynn, Mass., died, 108.
Sheridan, Philip, a “man without a race,” 19.
Ship from Ireland cast away, article, 38.
Sir John Hawkins in expedition to Mexico, 47.
Sir Richard Greenville, voyage undertaken by, 45.
Sir Walter Raleigh, a famous navigator, 45.
Site of Boston’s first place of business ignored, 81.
Sixty-Ninth regiment, N. Y. City, 107.
Smerwick, a well-merited tribute, inhabitants of, 48.
Smerwick Bay, entered by aid of “a hulke of Dublin,” 48.
Smith, Gen. Samuel, U. S. Senate, 74.
Smith, Jeremiah, promoter of papermaking, 86.
Smith, Lieut.-Col. Lewis, U. S. A., died, 107.
Smith, Robert, first secretary of state and attorney-general from Maryland, an Irish-American, 74.
Soldiers, list of, 23, 24.
Somersworth High School, 121.
Somersworth, N. H., 121.
Spaniards and Indians capture Miles Philips’ whole company, 47.
Spaniards threaten invasion from the South, 51.
Spanish authorities advance with an armed party as far as St. Helena Island, but soon retreat, 52.
Springfield, Mass., 110.
Stack, Edward, Captain, certificate regarding Capt. Paul Jones, 63.
Stack, Edward, if he has served like a “gentleman and a soldier,” etc., 61.
Stack, Edward, Lieut., 60.
Stack, Edward, lieutenant, affidavit respecting escape of deserters, 61.
Stack of Crotts, captain, letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 61.
Stack, Edward, recommended for lieutenant, 59.
Standard Oil Company, 120.
Stang, Rt. Rev. William, D. D., death of, 104.
Stang, Rt. Rev. William, obituary of, 117, 118.
Stang, Rt. Rev. William, published works of, 117, 118.
St. Anne’s Church, Cranston, R. I., 117.
St. Anthony’s Church, 118.
State Constitution of Massachusetts adopted, 93.
Statesmen, distinguished, list of, 22, 23.
St. Bridget’s Asylum Association, 125.
St. Bridget’s Asylum, Quebec, 124.
St. Dominic’s Church, Portland, 121.
St. Edward’s Church, 117.
St. Gabriel’s Church, 124.
St. John’s Church, Canton, Mass., 103.
St. Joseph’s Church, Lewiston, Me., 121.
St. Joseph’s Hospital, 118.
St. Lawrence’s Church, 118.
St. Lawrence’s presbytery, 118.
St. Mary’s Chapel, 118.
St. Mary’s Home, 118.
St. Mary’s Hospital, Rochester, Minn., 117.
St. Mary’s School Alumni Association, Salem, 113.
St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore, 73.
Stevenson, Dr. John, laid foundation of Baltimore’s trade, 69.
Stevenson’s work continued by the Purviances, etc., see names, 79.
Stoughton, Don Thomas, made Spanish consul at New York, 37.
St. Patrick’s Church, Lewiston, Me., 115.
St. Patrick’s Church, New York City, 76.
St. Patrick’s Church, Quebec, 125.
St. Patrick’s Day, 1737, 93.
St. Patrick’s Day celebration in Baltimore, 95.
St. Patrick’s dead, the very flower of the pioneer families who built up the Church in New York, 78.
St. Patrick’s graveyard, number of interments, 77.
St. Patrick’s Literary Institute, 124.
St. Peter’s Church in Barclay St., New York, 78.
Strawbridge, Robert, the first Methodist preacher, an Irishman, 74.
Stryker, Gen. president of Society of the Cincinnati, 42.
St. Sulpice Theological Seminary, 121.
Sullivan commemoration service, 115.
Sullivan, Dr. M. F., Library of, 112.
Sullivan, Gen. John, incident of expedition under, 39.
Sullivan, Gen. John, New Hampshire’s most distinguished Kelt, 92.