576 PUBLICATIONS ON VARIOUS SUBJECTS 



tions, Ann Arbor and Detroit, 1858-1863; another edition, 

 Ithaca, 1872. 



A Word from the North West; being historical and political 

 statements in response to strictures in the &quot; American 

 Diary&quot; of Dr. W. H. Russell. London, 1862. The same, 

 Syracuse, New York, 1863. 



A Review of the Governor s Message. Speech in the State 

 Senate, 1864, embracing sundry historical details. Albany, 

 1864. 



The Cornell University. Speech in the State Senate. Al 

 bany, 1865. 



Plea for a Health Department in the City of New York. A 

 speech in the New York State Senate. Albany, 1866. 



The Most Bitter Foe of Nations, and the Way to Its Perma 

 nent Overthrow. An address before the Phi Beta Kappa 

 Society at Yale College, 1866, New Haven, 1866. 



Report on the Organization of a University, with historical 

 details based upon the history of advanced education, pre 

 sented to the trustees of Cornell University, October, 1866. 

 Albany, 1867. 



Address at the Inauguration of the first President of Cor 

 nell University, with historical details regarding univer 

 sity education. Ithaca, 1869. 



The Historical and part of the Political Details in the Report 

 of the Commission to Santo Domingo in 1871. Washing 

 ton, 1871. 



Report to the Trustees of Cornell University on the Establish 

 ment of the Sage College for Women, with historical de 

 tails regarding the education of women in the United States 

 and elsewhere. First edition, Ithaca, 1872. 



Address to the Students of Cornell &quot;University and to the Citi 

 zens of Ithaca on the Recent Attack upon Mr. Cornell in the 

 Legislature. Albany and New York, 1873. 



The Greater States of Continental Europe (including Italy, 

 six lectures; Spain, three lectures; Austria, four lectures; 

 The Netherlands, six lectures; Prussia, five lectures; Russia, 

 five lectures; Poland, two lectures; The Turkish Power, 

 three lectures ; France, from the Establishment of French 

 Unity in the Fifteenth Century to Richelieu, four lectures). 



