INDEX 



591 



tures and pamphlets on, i, 35, 113-117, 

 236, 238, 261, 441, ii. 490, 501 



Frieze, Henry Simmons, at&quot;Liebig Clas 

 sical Concerts,&quot; i, 40; with W. in Italy, 

 i. 41, 272 ; professor of Latin at the Uni 

 versity of Michigan, i. 272; a gifted 

 musician, i. 273 ; memorial organ at the 

 university, i. 274 



Froude, James Anthony, his lectures at 

 Cornell, i. 356 ; his own opinion of his 

 &quot;Nemesis of Faith,&quot; i. 357 ; Bryce on his 

 carelessness as to truth, ii. 398 ; the in 

 fluence of Carlyle, ii. 398 



Fuertes, Estevan, professor of civil en 

 gineering at Cornell, i. 366 



Fugitive Slave Law and the &quot; Jerry Res 

 cue,&quot; i. 60-64, 69 



&quot; Gallery of British Artists &quot; aroused W. s 

 interest in architecture and gave zest to 

 Scott s novels, i. 15 



Gardiner, Samuel R., W. s estimate of, ii. 

 396 



Gardner, Victor, W. s meeting with, on 

 election day, 1856, i. 73 



Garfield, James A., scholarly qualities, i. 

 186, 190; connection with the Credit Mo- 

 bilier, i. 186 ; speeches on the currency 

 question in 1878, i. 186; kindly feelings 

 toward those who differed from him, i. 

 188; death, i. 190; W. s address at the 

 funeral celebration in Ithaca, i. 191 



Garrison, &quot;William Lloyd, and the anti- 

 slavery party, i. 16 



Gavazzi, Italian heretic, famous for his 

 oratory, ii. 541 



Geffrard, Fabre, Haitian president in ex 

 ile, i. 502 



Geneva College, see Hobart College 



Geography, a knowledge of, as a basis for 

 historical study, i. 258 



Georges, Mile., French actress, i. 35 



German-Americans, rights of, in Ger 

 many, i. 534; Bismarck s feelings to 

 ward, i. 575, 592, ii. 170-176, 188 



German citizens of New York liked W., i. 

 198, 201, 229, 243 



German history, W. s plan to write a book 

 on, ii. 491 



German Parliament, ii. 153; and Parlia 

 ment House, ii. 155 



Germans as American citizens, i. 575 



Germany, rights of German-Americans 

 in, i. 534, 537-539, 575, 592, ii. 170-176, 188; 

 military duty, i. 535; surveillance of 

 suspected persons, i. 541 ; presentation 

 of Americans at court, i. 542 ; American 

 students in German universities, i. 552, 

 ii. 173; the &quot;fearful legacy of standing 

 armies,&quot; i. 566; the &quot;Affaire Kelly,&quot; i. 

 584 ; the ceremony called &quot; Fackeltanz,&quot; 

 i. 590; the imperial parliament, i. 598, 

 ii. 153, 234,244; the Parliament House, ii. 

 155; defects in railway systems, ii. 6; 

 Berlin court compared with that at St. 

 Petersburg, ii. 110, 237 ; besetting sin of 

 the Germans, ii. 139; tariff difficulties 

 and unfriendly feelings toward the 

 United States in 1897, ii. 134, 144-149, 158 ; 

 Haitian troubles, ii. 150 ; Samoan ques 

 tion, ii. 151; &quot;open-door policy&quot; in 

 China, ii. 157 ; exclusion of American 

 insurance companies, ii. 158 ; American 

 sugar duties, meat and fruit questions, 

 ii. 158, 159 ; attitude toward the Spanish- 

 American War, ii. 160, 164, 168, 170, 245 ; 

 revolution in China and the murder of 

 Baron von Ketteler, ii. 188 ; anniversary 

 of the founding of the Prussian king 

 dom, ii. 192 ; the theater in Germany, ii. 

 226-228; the army and navy, ii. 221, 233; 



treatment of Roman Catholics, ii. 240; 

 the German imperial system the result 

 of evolution, ii. 243 ; dealings with the 

 Venezuelan revolution, ii. 246 ; attitude 

 toward The Hague Peace Conference, 

 ii. 265, 293, 297, 301-307, 308, 316-318, 321 



Gettysburg battle-field, W. s visit to, ii. 383 



Gibson, Randall Lee, i. G8, 215, 219; W. s 

 meeting with, in Paris, in 1889, it 443 



Giers, Nikolai Karlovitch de, Russian 

 statesman, his love of peace, ii. 32 



Gifts for educational purposes in the 

 United States, W. s proposed book on, 

 ii. 502 



Oilman, Arthur, W. s acquaintance with, 

 ii. 379 



Oilman, Daniel Coit, student at Yale and 

 W. s companion abroad, i. 34, 447; a 

 member of the Venezuela Commission, 

 ii. 119, 122 ; his work in Berlin for the 

 Carnegie Institution, ii. 206 



Girardin, Emile de, i. 567 



Girardin, Mme. de, her belief in the great 

 ness of her husband, i. 567 



Girardin, St. Marc, professor at College 

 de France, i. 34 



Gneist, Rudolf von, on Bismarck s ill 

 health, i. 590, 591 ; American Govern 

 ment presents him with books on Amer 

 ican history, i. 558 



Goddard, Delano, journalist, of the Yale 

 Class of 1853, i. 26, 254 



Goldschmidt, Sirjulian, on the treatment 

 of the Jews in Russia, ii. 4 



Gordon, Charles George, his Bible at 

 Windsor, ii. 399 



Gordon, Osborne, tutor at Oxford, i. 34 



Gortchakoff, Alexander, his relations with 

 Bismarck, i. 595 ; not a great statesman, 

 ii. 27 ; his quarrel with Minister, ii. 281 ; 

 character of, ii. 334 



Gould, John Stanton, lecturer at Cornell, 

 i. 369 



Graham, John, a Tammany lawyer, i. 109 



Grant, Ulysses S., accompanies President 

 Johnson on his trip North, i. 128 ; elec 

 tion to the presidency of the United 

 States, i. 150, 151 ; W. s visit to, at Long 

 Branch and Grant s comments on the 

 Franco-German War, i. 154, 221 ; opposi 

 tion to, in the New York State Conven 

 tion of 1871, i. 165-167; his reelection, i. 

 172; statesmanlike qualities, i. 172, 173, 

 484; personal characteristics, i. 177-180, 

 487 ; his views regarding the Santo Do 

 mingo question, 1. 179, 484, 487 ; his tour 

 around the world, i. 180 ; proposed to 

 make W. Secretary of State, i. 181 



Gray, Thomas, the inscription placed by 

 him upon his mother s monument, ii. 

 431 



Great St. Bernard hospice, W. at, i. 481 



Greece, W. s visit to, ii. 438 



Greeley, Horace, his experiences at the 

 Paris Exposition of 1855, i. 478, 479 ; his 

 opposition to the war bounty bill in the 

 New York Senate, i. 112 ; a candidate for 

 the United States senatorship, i. 135 ; 

 prevented Judge Folger s becoming 

 president of Constitutional Convention, 

 1. 139, 142 ; his impatience with the con 

 vention, i. 143-146; presidential cam 

 paign of 1872, i. 159-172 ; his name on 

 bail bond of Jefferson Davis, i. 159 ; his 

 appearance and personal character 

 istics, i. 160, 161; his speech in Union 

 Square, i. 161 ; his death, i. 172 ; reasons 

 for his political defeat, i. 173 ; as a par 

 ishioner of Henry Chapin, ii. 538 



&quot; Greenback craze &quot; of 1878 and speeches 

 by Conkling and Garfleld, i. 182-187 



