Early Relations hctwecn the United States and China. 185 



Clark, Arthur H. 



The Clipper Ship Era .... 1843- 1869. New York and 

 London, 191 1. 

 Cleveland, H. W. S. 



Voyages of a Merchant Navigator of the Days that are Past. 

 Compiled from the Journals and Letters of the Late Richard J. 

 Cleveland. New York, 1886. 



This is an interesting supplement to R. J. Cleveland's works. 

 It was written by his son, who adds new material and makes the 

 voyages more readable. As he made extensive use of his father's 

 journals and other reliable sources, the book is quite trustworthy. 



In the Boston Athenaeum. 

 Cooper, James Fenimore. 



The Crater; or Vulcan's Peak. A Tale of the Pacific. New 

 York, 1856. 



This book, although fiction, shows a knowledge of the China 

 trade. Some references, especially those on pp. 17, 19, 20, and 

 35, are true to the general historical facts of the trade. 

 Cordier, Henri. 



Histoire des Relations de la Chine avec Les Puissances Occi- 

 dentals, 1860-1890. 3 Vols. Paris, 1901. 



Only a very little space is devoted to the years discussed in this 

 monograph. 

 Curtis, George Ticknor. 



Life of Daniel Webster. New York, 1870. 



Pages 2: 172-180 give an account of Webster's share in the 

 Cushing mission. Curtis believes that Webster was not trying 

 to get the London mission by inducing Everett to accept the China 

 Mission. 



Curtis, William Eleroy. 



The United States and Foreign Powers. Meadville, Pa., 1892. 



This is one of the volumes of the Chautauqua Reading Circle 

 Literature. 



Pages 250-257 give an account of the treaty of Whanghia, but 

 are of only mediocre value. 

 Cushing, Lemuel. 



The Genealogy of the Cushing Family. Montreal, 1877. 



