APPENDIX VII. 



LeCTI^RES and MEETlN(iS OK SOCIETIES. 



The titles of the lectures delivered and of the papers read at the 

 meetings of the various associations which have held their sessions in 

 the lecture hall of the museuni during the year, are here presented. 



PROdUAMME OF THE TENTH ANNI'AL MEETINd^ OF THE AMERICAN 

 HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION, DECEMBER 20-1*8, 1894. 



Wkdnksdav, Dkckmbkh I'ti. 



OPENING SKSsroN, 8 I'. M. 



1. beginning of the idea of ini])erial federation. Prof. George B. Adams, Yale 



University. 



2. The historical work of Prof. Herbert Tuttle. Herbert B. Adams, .Tolius Hopkins 



University. 



3. Turning points in the American civil war. Rossiter .Johnson, Ph. 1)., LI>. D., 



New York City. 



4. Tributes to Hon. .John Jay, Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, and President .James C. 



Welling. Gen. .James Grant Wilson, New York City. 



TUURSKAV, Decemhicr 27. 



MORNIN(i SESSION. 



1. TheTejas: Their haJiits, government, and sujierstitions. Mrs. Lee C. Harby, of 



New York. 



2. Why Coronado went to New Mexico in ir>4(). (George I'arker Winship, Harvard 



University. 



3. Tiie Casa de Contratacioii of Seville. Prof. liernard Moses, University of Cali- 



fornia. 



4. Some I*hiro])ean modifications of tlie Jury system. Dr. Walter !'>. Scaife, (4encvi. 



Switzerland. 



5. The Regulators of North Carolina (176(5-1771). Prof. .Join. S Bassett, Trinity 



College, Durham, N. C. 



6. A chapter in the life of Charles Robinson, th<^ first governor of Kansas. Prof. 



I'^'rank W. Blackmar, I'niversity of Ivansas. 



7. The Continental Congress: A neglected portion of American h'evolutionary his- 



tory. Dr. Herbert Friedenwald, Philadelphia. 



8. Origin and development of the labor movement in Englisli narionnl and munici- 



pal politics. Edward Porritt, Farmington, Conn. 



9. American }iolitical philosophy. Prof. William A. L)uiining. Colunihia College. 



267 



