344 NEW ENGLAND FISHERIES 



to sources. So ably and fully do the authors treat the 

 Fishery Question that the general reader would be satis- 

 fied with a summary view of the treatment that either 

 author has written. These two works are the most 

 scholarly contributions to the literature of the American 

 fisheries. 



In the following bibliography of the fisheries, critical 

 comment is offered on works of especial value. Each work 

 has been examined with that end in view. No attempt has 

 been made to list the publications of the Fish Commission 

 and the Bureau of Fisheries, except to note those publica- 

 tions that bear most directly upon the fisheries of New 

 England. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 



Abbot, Willis J. American Merchant Ships and Sailors. New 



York, 1902. (372 pp. No index. Information concerning 



fisheries is very general.) 



Adams, John. Works with a Life of the Author, Notes and Illus- 

 trations. (Edited by Chas. F. Adams.) 10 vols. Boston, 



1850-1856. 

 Adams, John Quincy. Duplicate Letters, the Fisheries and the 



Mississippi. Documents relating to the transactions at the 



negotiations of Ghent, Washington, 1822. 

 Adams, Herbert B. Village Communities of Cape Ann and 



Salem. Johns Hopkins University Studies, I. Art. 9 and 



10. 

 American Antiquarian Society, Transactions and Collections of 



the Society. 7 vols. Worcester, 1820-1885. 

 American Archives. (See doings of Congress.) 

 Anderson, Adam. Origin of Commerce. A history of the Great 



Commercial interests of the British Empire, etc. 4 vols. 



London, 1787. 

 Anderson and McPherson, Annals of Commerce from the earliest 



Times to the Year 1800, in 4 vols. 

 Annual Report, Dept. of Marines and Fisheries, Newfoundland, 



1907. 



