Early Relations bctzveen the United States and China. 167 



Correspondence Concerning Captain Kendrick and the 

 Settlement of His Estate. 



In the Bureau of Rolls and Library, Department of State, 

 Washington. These also concern the Northwest Coast trade in 

 general. Itemized, the most useful are : 



(i) John Howell to Joseph Barrell, Manila, May 28, 1796. 



(2) J. Barrell to John Kendrick, letter of instructions. No 

 date. 



(3) John Howell to Joseph Barrell, Macao, Dec. 23, 1796. 



(4) William Sturgis to Charles Morris, Boston, Aug., 1816. 



(5) T. H. Perkins to Charles Bulfinch, Boston, Dec. 21, 1817. 



(6) Charles Bunfinch to W. Cushing, Dec. i, 1816. (A 

 printed letter.) 



King, C. W., and Lay, G. T. 



The Claims of Japan and Malaysia upon Christendom Exhib- 

 ited in Notes of Voyages Made in 1837 from Canton in the Ship 

 Morrison and Brig Himmaleh under Direction of the Owners. 

 2 Vols., New York, 1839. 



Vol. I, the voyages of the Morrison, is by C. W. King, and 

 Vol. 2, the voyage of tlie Himmaleh, is by G. Tradescent Lay. 

 Both are men who participated in the events they describe. 

 KoTZEBUE, Otto von. 



Voyage of discovery in the South Sea, and to Behring's 

 Straits, in Search of a North East Passage, Undertaken in the 

 years 1815, 1816, 1817, 1818, in the Ship Rurick. London, 1821. 



In Phillips' New Voyages. 



This mentions the American Northwest Fur Trade. 

 KoTZEBUE, Otto von. 



A New Voyage Round the World in the Years 1823, 1824, 

 1825, and 1826. 2 v., London, 1830. 



This mentions the American sandalwood trade in the Hawaiian 

 Islands. 

 Krusenstern, (Captain) A. J. von. 



Voyage Round the World in the Years 1803, 1804, 1805, 1806. 

 By Order of His Imperial Majesty Alexander the First, on 

 Board the Ships Nadeshda and Neva, under the command of 

 Captain A. J. Krusenstern of the Imperial Navy. Translated 

 from the German by Richard Belgrave Hoppner. London, 1813. 



