32 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences^ Arts^ and Letters. 



pp. 424. Map and Illustrations. Also a summary narrative of tlie 

 same Expedition revised and completed in 1832. New York. 1834. 

 pp. 308. Also an Edition under the direction of the United States, 

 with Official Report and Scientific Papers. Philadelphia, 1855. 



Narrative of an Expedition to the source of St. Peters' River, Lake Winne- 

 peck, Lake of the Woods, performed in 1823, under the command of 

 Maj. Stephen Loug; compiled by Wm. H. Keating. Philadelphia. 

 1824. 2 vols. 8vo. Map and Plates. London. 1825. 



Sketch of a Tour to the Lakes, of the Character and Customs of the Chip- 

 pewa Indians and of incidents connected with the Treaty of Fond du 

 Lac; with a Chippewa vocabulary. Baltimore. 1827. 8vo, pp. 493. 



A Pilgrimage to Europe and America, tending to the Discovery of the 

 Sources of the Mississippi, etc., with a Description of the whole course 

 of the same, etc. By J. C. Bettrami. London. 1828. 2 vol.*. 8vo. 

 With Maps and Engravings. New Orleans. 1824. Bvo, pp. 328. 



Tour of the American Lakes and among Indians of the Northwest Territo- 

 ry in 1830. By Rev. Calvin Cotton. London. 1833. 2 vols. 12mo. 



The Ramble in North America. 1832 and 1833. By Chas. Joseph Latrobe. 

 New York. 1835. 2 vols. 12mo. 



Dakotah; or Life and Legends of the Sioux around Fort Snelliug. By Mrs. 

 Mary Eastman. New York. 1849. 12mo, pp. 268. 



History of the Ojibway Indians. Boston. 1851. 12mo. 



Personal Recollections of a residence of thirty years among ludian Tribes 

 on the American Frontier. By H. R. Schoolcraft. Philadelphia. 1851. 

 8vo, pp. 703. 



On the Nortliwestern Indians. By Alex. Ramsay. See Pres't's Mess, and 

 accomp. Doc, 1849-50, Pt. 3, pp. 1005. 



History of the Valley of the Mississippi. By A. M. Hart. Cincinnati. 

 1853. 12mo. 



Report of Commissioner on Indian Affairs on the removal of the Wiuneba- 

 goes from Iowa and Wisconsin to their Lands in Minnesota. (See Plouse 

 Doe. No. 510, 1st sess., 31st Congress, 1850. 



Wau-bun: the Early Day in the North- West, with illustrations. By Mrs. 

 J. H. Kinzies. New York. 1856. 8vo, pp. 498. 



Our Whole Country: Historical and Descriptive. By John W. Barber. Cin- 

 cinnati. 1861. 8vo, pp. 1496. (Wisconsin portion, pp. 1167 to 1210.) 



History of Wisconsin in three parts, Historical, Documentary and Descrip- 

 tive. By Gen. William R. Smith, under direction of the Legislature. 

 Madison. 1854. 8vo. Vol. 1, pp. 432; vol. 3, part 2, pp. 443, 



Historical Collections of the Great West. By Henry Hare. Cincinnati. 

 1853. 8vo, pp.410. 



Lights and Shades of Missionary Life; or nine years in the Region of Lake 

 Superior. By Rev. J. H. Pitezel. Cincinnati. 1859. 12mo, pp.431. 



