410 NOTES 



celui de Monsieur Kalm, et les lettres de recommanda- 

 tion que je lui ai obtenues en font mention/' 



The Baron Hermelin's reports are now deposited 

 among the State archives at Stockholm. This edition 

 is merely a selection from those papers. 



P. 140 These pages descriptive of Bethlehem were 

 reprinted as Appendix I of a History of the Rise, Prog- 

 ress, and Present Condition of the Moravian Seminary 

 for Young Ladies. 1858. (See, Hist, of Bethlehem. 

 By Bishop Levering. Bethlehem, 1903, pp. 524-526.) 



P. 141 See, Benjamin Smith Barton, ' Observations 

 on Some Parts of Natural History, to which is prefixed 

 an account of several remarkable vestiges of an ancient 

 date which have been discovered in different parts of 

 America/ London, 1787. For instance, bricked wells 

 discovered in Jersey by Swedes. 



P. 145 John F. D. Smyth gives an interesting chap- 

 ter on the Moravian settlements in North Carolina, as 

 they were just before the Revolution. Tour in the 

 United States of America. London, 1784, I, ch. 29. 



P. 161 " Kalm relates (Travels, 1781 ed., p. 199, 

 vol. 2) that the ' Stags ' [wapiti] came down from 

 the mountains in 1705, and were killed in great num- 

 bers in the vicinity of Philadelphia. Regarding the 

 name " Stag," McKay, in his Zoology of New York 

 uses this as the common name for the wapiti. Ord, in 

 Guthrie's Geography (Amer. ed., 1815, p. 306), uses 

 the same name for it. Godman uses both this name 

 and "red deer' in his synonymy (Nat. Hist, vol. 2, 

 p. 294) . ' Red deer " was used by the backwoodsmen 

 to distinguish it from the Virginia or " wild deer." 



