Part 18
Sullivan, John B., death of, New Bedford, Mass., 104.
Sullivan, John B., obituary of, 118.
Sullivan, John B., parents of, 118.
Sullivan, John B., wives and children of, 118.
Sullivan, John, co-partner the papermaking, Dorchester, 87.
Sullivan, Maj.-Gen. John, burial place of, 115.
Sullivan, Mark E., 118.
Sullivan, Owen, sons of, 92.
Sullivan’s Island deserted to save from starvation, 51.
Sullivan, the first man in active rebellion, 36.
Sullivan, William B., reads paper, 113.
_Sunday Globe_, Boston, 112.
_Sunday Herald_, Boston, 115.
Supplies and new settlers brought by ship from Europe, 52.
Sweetman, the one Irish day-laborer, 75.
Swift, Jonathan, author of Gulliver’s Travels, 95.
Tablet in Quebec, under which “repose the remains of thirteen soldiers of General Montgomery’s army, who were killed in the assault on Quebec,” 44.
Taft, William H., Secretary, arrived from Seattle, 112, 113.
Taney, Roger Brooke, first and only chief justice of U. S. an Irish-American, 74.
Tara Hall, Quebec, 125.
Target practice, accident in, 113, 114, 115.
Tarne, Myles, a leather dresser, 90.
Taschereau, Cardinal, 122.
Taschereau, Chief Justice, 122.
Temple, Capt. Robert, with Irish Protestants, 88.
Tennessee and Kentucky riflemen, 1500 of, 97, 98.
Tenth Cavalry, 112.
Tenth Infantry, Civil War, 105.
“The American Vandyke,” 92.
The Battle of New Orleans, paper by Hon. A. L. Morrison, 97.
_The Boston News-Letter_, 1725, 91.
_The Boston Sunday Herald_, 106.
“The Boy and the Flying Squirrel,” 92.
“The Early Catholic Church in Massachusetts,” 113.
“The incivility among manie of the Irish, the Virginians,” due to ignorance, 58.
The Kelts of Colonial Boston, paper by Thomas Ackland, 80.
“The most fashionable man in New York,” 38.
“The Nehemiah Walter Elegy on Elijah Corler,” 68.
_The New York Times_, 106.
“These Irish families are the cream of the cream of the old families here,” 38.
The Story of the Irish in Boston, 95.
The Tyrone, Ireland, Constitution, 91.
They Fired Three Volleys, 95.
Third Artillery, 107.
Thirtieth U. S. Infantry, 115.
Thomson, Charles, second signer of Declaration of Independence, 91.
Tokio, 112.
Treaty of Ghent signed Christmas Day, 1814, 97.
Trustees, five, appointed to provide “a good and convenient location for a new graveyard” paid $37,050 to Alderman Charles Henry Hall for burial ground, 77.
“Tweed ring,” 119.
Twelfth Infantry in the Santiago campaign, 105.
Twelfth U. S. Cavalry, 112.
Twenty-seventh Inniskillen Foot, 97.
“Ulster has many Montgomerys,” 44.
Uniform dress for the navy, signers for, 64.
United Irish League, 125.
University Libraries receiving Volume VI, 164.
U. S. Department of State, 106.
U. S. Military Academy, 111.
U. S. Ship _Enterprise_, 119.
Valley Forge, 94.
Vaughan, Abigail, wife of Nathaniel Shannon, 101.
Vergennes, Vt., chooses mayor, 105.
Veteran Corps, N. Y. City, annual banquet, 107.
Virginia and the Carolinas, a most diversified field for historical inquiry, 45.
Virginia College established at Henrico City, 57.
“Virtually no immigration during the colonial period,” 17.
Viscount Planelagh, 43.
Volume VI of the Journal of the Society, 163.
Volume VI of the Journal, praise for, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170.
Walker, Ex-Cong. Joseph H., died, Worcester, Mass., 105.
Wallace, Rt. Rev. Mgr. Thomas H., died, 115.
Wallace, Rt. Rev. Mgr. Thomas H., obituary of, 121, 122.
Walsh, Magistrate, 108.
Walsh-Serrant, Colonel, 60.
Walsh-Serrant, Comte de, impossible to remain with Paul Jones, 62.
Walsh-Serrant, Comte de, Letter to Capt. John Paul Jones, 60.
Walsh-Serrant, Comte de, Letter to Edward Stack, 62.
Walsh’s Irish Regiment of Marine Artillery, French Army, paper by T. H. Murray, 59.
Walter, Nehemiah, article, 68.
Walter, Nehemiah, ordained colleague with John Eliot, 68.
Washington, D. C., 107, 108, 110, 111.
Washington, General, 94.
Washington, George, 37.
Washington, George, compliments Purviance, 71.
Washington, General, concerning transporting of fagots, 86.
Washington, George, selecting site for the White House, 40.
Washington summons all his officers to Newburgh, 43.
_Wasp_ and _Franklin_, 103.
Waterford port established by Raleigh, 49.
Waterloo, fatal field of, 97.
Watson, Lilias, wife of Thomas Shannon, 101.
Welch, Charles A., Harvard’s oldest alumnus, died at Cohasset, Mass., 85.
Welch, John, tax-payer, 1682, 85.
Welch, John, the progenitor of a distinguished family, 85.
West, Benjamin, famous English painter, 92.
West Indies, wanderers constantly leaving for the American coast, 54.
West Point Academy, 109.
White, Capt. John, dates story of fifth voyage “from my house at Newtown, in Kilmore,” 49.
White, Capt. John, distributed potato plants to people, “the first ever seen in Europe,” 49.
White, Capt. John, of “Fourth Voyage” to Virginia, 48.
White House plan by Hoban accepted, 40.
White’s fourth expedition, names of persons landed from, in North Carolina, 50.
White Star steamer _Oceanic_, 120.
Wiley, Congressman of Alabama, introduced bill, 116.
Winthrop fleet, so called, brought several merchants from maritime ports of Ireland, 83.
Winthrop’s History of New England, 95.
Worcester County probate court, 107.
Worcester First Church, Thaddeus McCarthy, pastor, 90.
Worcester, Mass., 105, 121.
Wylie, Rev. Dr. David G., 108.
Yeamans, Governor, dies, 1674, 52.
Yeamans, Sir John, and civil disturbance, 50.
Yokohama, 112.
Youghal port established by Raleigh, 49.
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TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
1. Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in spelling. 2. Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed. 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_. 4. Enclosed bold font in =equals=.