Early Relations hctzvccn the United States and China. 183 



7. SECONDARY AUTHORITIES. 



Abbott, Jacob. 



China and the EngHsh, or the Character and Manners of the 

 Chinese as Illustrated in the History of their Intercourse with 

 Foreigners. New York, 1835. 



This is a popular work written for Abbott's Fireside Series. 

 Its sources are the writings of Marshman, Morrison, Staunton, 

 Barrow, Auber, Milne, and others, for the most part reliable 

 authorities. 

 (Anderson, Rufus.) 



Memorial Volumes of the First Fifty Years of the American 

 Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Boston, 1861. 



Auber, Peter. 



China. An Outline of Its Government, Laws, and Policy: 

 and of the British and Foreign Embassies, to, and Intercourse 

 with That Empire. London, 1834. 



This is by the Secretary of the Court of the Directors of the 

 British East India Company, a man who had easy access to first- 

 hand information. The work resembles a chronicle. 



Bancroft, Hubert Howe. 



History of California. 7 vols. San Francisco, 1884-1890. 



This is of value for the Northwest Coast fur trade, and espe- 

 cially for its voluminous references to and c|uotations from rare 

 sources. 

 Bancroft, Hubert Howe. 



History of the Northwest Coast. 2 vols. San Francisco, 1884. 



This is useful for the same reasons as Bancroft's History of 

 California. 



Barrett, Walter. 



The Old Merchants of New York City. New York, 1870. 



This was written by a man who had an intimate knowledge of 

 much of the life which he depicted, and contains information 

 which cannot be obtained elsewhere. It is anecdotal, uncritical, 

 and must be used with the most extreme care. 



In New York Historical Society's Library. 

 Becke, Louis, and Jeffery, Walter. 



The Americans in the South Seas. London, 1901. 



In the volume marked The Tapu of Banderah, pp. 245-258. 



