140 REPORT OF THE SECRETARY. 



VII. PL'BLICATIOX.S OF THE BCREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. 



The fir.st part of the Seventeenth Report and the first part of the Eight- 

 eenth Reix)rt were received from tiie Government Printing Office and 

 distrilnited during the year. 



Seventeenth Annual Report of tlie Bureau of American Ethnology to 

 the Se Tetary of the Smithsonian Institution. 1895-96. . By J. W. Powell, 

 Director. In two parts. Part I. "Washington: Government Printing 

 Office. 1898. Imperial octavo. Pages i-xciii, 1-128, 129*-344* 137-468, 

 with 81 plates and 229 text figures. 



Eighteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the 

 Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. 1896-97. By J. W. Powell, 

 Director. In two parts. Part I. Washington: Government Printing 

 Office. 1899. Imperial octavo. Pages i-lvii, 1-518, with 174 plates and 

 165 text figures. 



VIII. PCBLICATION OF AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION. 



The Annual Report of the American Historical A.ssociation for the year 

 1900 was sent to the printer toward the close of the fiscal year, and most 

 of it was in type before June 30. The report is in two volumes, with the 

 following contents : 



' Report of Proceedings of Sixteenth Annual Meeting in Detroit and Ann Arbor, Decem- 

 ber 27-29, 1900, by A. Howard Clark, secretary — The New History, by Edward Eggleston, 

 president— Concerning the Writing of History, by James Ford Rhodes — Plea for Military 

 History, by Ctiarles Francis Adams — Sectionalism and Representation in South Carolina, 

 a Sociological Study, by William A. Schaper— Frontier Land Clubs, or Claim Associations, 

 by Benjamin F.Shambaugh— Missouri Party Struggles in the Civil-War Period, by S. B. 

 Harding— Military Government of Southern Territory, 1861-1865, by A. H. Carpenter- 

 Marcus Whitman: A Discussion of Professor Bourne's Paper, by William I. Marshall— Lord 

 Baltimore's Stniggle with the Jesuits, 16:34-1649, by Alfred Pearce Dennis^.Vmerican Eccle- 

 siology, by George James Bayles— Studies in the Colonial Period of England, 1672-1680: 

 The Plantations, the Royal African Company, and the Slave Trade, by Edward D. Col- 

 lins—Critical Work on the Latin Sources of the First Crusade, by Oliver J. Thatcher — 

 The Turkish Capitulation, by James B. Angell — Stein's German Policy at the Congress 

 of Vienna, by Ulysses G. Weatherly— The Considerations which induced Edward III to 

 Assume the Title King of France, by Walter Irenseus Lowe— Fifth Annual Report of the 

 Historical Manuscripts Commission— Titles of Books on English History, published in 1899; 

 selected by W. Dawson Johnston — Report of the Public Archives Commission. 



IX. NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 



The Third Report of the Society was received and submitted to Congress 

 during the year and progress made toward its publication as a Senate 

 Document. 

 Respectfully submitted. 



A. Howard Clark, Editor. 

 Mr. S. P. Langley, 



Secretary, Smitlisonian Institution 



