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On Special Phases of United States History

"Charged with interesting matter, much of it curious and fresh."

THE OPENING OF THE MISSISSIPPI
A Struggle for Supremacy in the American Interior
By FREDERIC AUSTIN OGG, Indiana University
The story of the prolonged diplomatic negotiation in which the pur-
chase of Louisiana was but one incident-an important one to be sure.
Four nations, Spain, France, England and the United States, were
from time to time involved in it, and no account of the great Middle
West is complete without a careful survey of its devious courses.

Cloth, 8vo, $2.00 net (postage 22c.)

It is uniformly commendable throughout."-NEW YORK EVENING POST

NORTH CAROLINA

A Study in English Colonial Government

By CHARLES LEE RAPER, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Economics and History, University of North Carolina

The first study from the original sources of the provincial government

of North Carolina, embracing the whole period, and from the point of
view of England as well as that of the colony.

260 pp. 8vo, cloth, $2.00 net (postage 15c.)

SOUTH CAROLINA AS A
ROYAL PROVINCE, 1719-1776

By W. ROY SMITH Bryn Mawr College

Dr. Smith's main thesis is that the American Revolution was the cli-
max of a long struggle between the prerogative and the popular parties
in the colonies.
Cloth, crown 8vo, $2.50 net (postage 19c.)

PROBLEMS OF THE PRESENT SOUTH

A DISCUSSION OF CERTAIN OF THE EDUCATIONAL, INDUS-
TRIAL AND POLITICAL ISSUES OF THE SOUTHERN STATES

By EDGAR GARDNER MURPHY

"His book is an extraordinary sociologic and political study. The immediate matters with which it deals, the education of negroes and of whites, the industrial environments and opportunity and needs of the two races, the political treatment of the weaker by the stronger, social relations, the instincts and prejudices of race-all these are bristling with difficulty and tend to inspire the extremest mental heat and bias. He handles them with deep feeling, but with coolness of judgment, sustained impartially, and a constant regard for the teachings of history, science and common sense."-New York Times (Editorial). Cloth, 12m0, 335 pages, $1.50 net. (Postage IIc, extra.)

Published by

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY

66 Fifth Ave. New York

Now Ready.

OSGOOD'S

$5.00 net (postage, 44c.)

Volumes I. and II. of

The American Colonies in the Seventeenth Century

By HERBERT L. OSGOOD, Ph.D.

Professor of History in Columbia University.

This is the first full and thorough treatment of what is the essential basis of all study of the institutional history of the United States. It serves both as an introduction to this subject and as an important contribution to the history of British colonization.

Special attention is directed to the forms of government and to the forces and events from which their development has sprung. Material of a social or economic nature will be utilized not directly for its own sake, but for a light which it may throw upon political growth and upon the investigation of the forms under which English institutions were reproduced on the American continent, the gradual changes in them and their causes, and the effects of the influence of neighboring colonies from kindred European peoples.

CONTENTS: Volume I. THE PROPRIETARY PROVINCE IN ITS EARLIEST FORM. This includes Roanoke, Va., prior to 1624, and the beginnings of settlement in New England.

THE CORPORATE COLONIES OF NEW ENGLAND. A comparative study of the institutions and policy of Massachusetts, Plymouth, Connecticut, New Haven and Rhode Island.

Volume II. THE PROPRIETARY PROVINCE IN ITS LATER FORMS. A comparative study of the institutions of Maryland, the Carolinas, New Netherland, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

Thus the chief phases in the internal development of the Chartered
Colonies will be reviewed, and the way prepared for the discussion
of the system of imperial control over them and the transition to the
Royal Provinces. This will be the subject of a third volume to be
published at a later date.

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers

66 Fifth Avenue, New York

Hakluyt's Voyages

The Principall Navigations, Voiages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation. Made by Sea or Over-land to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth at any time within the Compasse of these 1600 Yeeres. By RICHARD HAKLUYT, Preacher and Sometime Student of Christ Church in Oxford. Illustrations and Maps. To be completed in twelve volumes.

Now ready. Volumes I.-VI. 8vo, cl., $4.00 net per volume. (Orders received for complete sets only.)

This great work, described by Froude as the prose epic of the modern English nation,' is the treasure-house of the story of Elizabethan adventure. It is there that the deeds of Drake and Ilawkins, Gilbert and Willoughby, Raleigh and Frobisher, and scores of other heroes are to be found told in the original narratives, and it is thence that historians like Froude and novelists like Kingsley have drawn the material for their pictures of England's exploits in the new-found world at the dawn of her imperial day.

The aim of the publishers in issuing this edition is to provide an accurate, complete, and beautifully printed text from the edition of 1598-1600, as revised by Hakluyt.

Purchas His Pilgrimes

Contayning

a History of the World, in Sea voyages & lande Travells, by Englishmen and others. Wherein Gods Wonders in Nature & Providence, The Actes, Arts, Varieties, & Vanities of Men, with a world of the World's Rarities, are by a world of Eywitnesse-Authors Related, to the World. Some left written by Mr. Hakluyt at his death More since added, His also perused, & perfected. All examined, abreviated, Illustrated with Notes, Enlarged with Discourses, Adorned with pictures, and Expressed in Mapps. In fower Parts, Each containing five Bookes.

By SAMUEL PURCHAS. B.D.

1

This great collection is a continuation and enlargement of Richard Hakluyt's Principall Navigations, Voiages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation. At Hakluyt's death he left unpublished a very large collection of voyages in manuscript. These came into the hands of Purchas, who added to them many more. Among the contents of Purchas His Pilgrimes are to be found the early expeditions fitted out by the East India Company and sailing under the command of Sir Henry Middleton and Captain Nicholas Downton; the adventures of Captain John Smith in Turkey and Virginia, the Arctic Discoveries of Barents, Baffin and Henry Hudson, and among the translations Oviedo and Las Casas.

The reprint will contain all the original curious illustrations and maps, and the rare engraved title page will be reproduced in facsimile. The edition of 1625 contains a very inadequate index which will be superseded in the reprint by a complete index on modern lines. In twenty Volumes, $3.50 net per Volume.

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers, 66 Fifth Ave., N. Y.

Important to Every Student of Modern English History

Mr. JOHN MORLEY'S life of

William E. Gladstone

Three Illustrated Volumes. Cloth, octavo, $10.50 net.

"A work essential to the completeness of every library, and which no man who wishes to understand the English history of the last seventyfive years can afford not to read."

-NEW YORK TRIBUNE.

"The most valuable biography given to the world in over half a century." -THE OUTLOOK.

"Since the appearance of the first volumes of Macaulay's History there has not been such an event in the publishing world as the appearance of a life of Gladstone by Mr. Morley. Nor has public expectation been disappointed."

-MI. GOLDWIN SMITH in The North American Review.

Letters of Lord Acton

to Mary Gladstone

Introductory Memoir by HERBERT PAUL

Cloth, 8vo, with two plates, $3.00 net (postage 17c.).

"Lord Acton's reputation is in many ways unique. ... All the more valuable, therefore, is the revelation that is made in these fascinating letters, in which are freely uttered the riches of a broad and generous mind-a mind, indeed, of extraordinary breadth of view and even poise-as fearless in thought as clear in perception and firm in faith; a robust and honest intellectual nature made doubly winning by a buoyant enthusiasm and good humor." -Philadelphia Ledger.

A History of
Modern England

By HERBERT W. PAUL

To be completed in five volumes

Vols. I. and II. ready, $5.00 net (postage 34c.).

"Readers of Mr. Paul's Matthew Arnold,' in the English Men of Letters Series, will expect from him a book fearlessly and engagingly written, to say the least. Far from being disappointed by this brilliant young student, journalist, and politician (we use the word in its best sense), they are here to receive all this and much more." -The New York Times.

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY

Publishers, 66 Fifth Ave., New York

BOOKS ON EDUCATION, ETC.

JUST READY

By EDWIN GRANT DEXTER, University of Illinois.

A History of Education in the United States
619 pp. 8vo, cloth, $2.00 net ( postage 16c.)
Presents the definite facts of the educational development of country as a
basis for study and generalization. A greatly needed reference book.

By HERMAN HARRELL HORNE, Ph.D., Dartmouth College.

The Philosophy of Education. Being the Foundations of

Education in the Related Natural and Mental Sciences.

12mo, cloth, $1.75 net ( postage 10c.)

A Study of Foundations, Especially of Sensory and Motor Training.

Cloth, $1.00 net

Upon all net books ordered from the publishers carriage is an extra charge.

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, 66 Fifth Avenue, New York

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