592 



INDEX 



Greene, Evarts, journalist, of the Yale 



GreeTe^Georg e W.t a lecturer at Cornell, 

 i S56 383 



Gregory, Henry, an Episcopal clergyman, 

 ii 514, 517, 518, 522; his influence upon 

 childhood of W., ii. 617 



Grevy President, on trade relations be 

 tween France and the United States, i. 



Grimm, Hermann, peculiarities of, i. 558 ; 



his wife, i. 559 

 Groot, Cornets de, W. S visit to, at Rys- 



wyck, ii. 329 

 Grotius, W. s visit to the tomb of, ii. 274 ; 



wreath laid upon tomb by the American 



delegation at the Peace Conference, ii. 



291, 316-318, 320, 326, 327, 329, 330 

 Guttenberg, Baron, ii. 25 



Hadley, James, professor at Yale,i. 27, 28 ; 

 his view of duty to the Fugitive Slave 

 Law, i. 69 



Hague, The, the Oude Doelen, ii. 252; 

 prison near the Vijver, ii. 261 ; &quot; House 

 in the Wood,&quot; ii. 256; nouse occupied by 

 De Witt and Motley, ii. 323 



Hague Peace Conference, 1899, proposal 

 of, by Nicholas II and general misunder 

 standing of, ii. 11, 27, 69, 250, 262, 265; 

 members of the American delegation, ii. 

 251 ; W. its president, ii. 253 ; its organi 

 zation and instructions from the State 

 Department, ii. 253, 266, 271; character 

 of its arbitration plan, ii. 254, 273 ; Amer 

 ican plan of &quot; special mediation &quot; and 

 &quot;seconding powers,&quot; ii. 278, 285, 289; 

 final report of American delegation to 

 the State Department, ii. 346-348 ; Aus 

 trian delegation, ii. 262 ; first meeting of 

 the Arbitration Committee, ii. 271 ; its 

 amalgamated plan for the arbitration 

 tribunal, ii. 274, 278-280, 289, 290, 332 ; as 

 phyxiating bullets and bombs, ii. 283, 

 319; attitude of Balkan states, ii. 336, 

 337; Brussels Conference rules for the 

 conduct of war, ii. 291, 293, 295 ; attitude 

 toward flattening and expanding bul 

 lets, ii. 337 ; Dutch matters, ii. 272, 284, 

 322, 338, 342, 349, 350 ; English delegates 

 without definite plan, ii. 255, 267 ; mem 

 bers of the German delegation, ii. 259, 

 284 ; they oppose arbitration, ii. 265, 297, 

 298, 316 ; W. s argument with Minister, ii. 

 301-307 ; Zorn and Holls sent to Berlin, 

 W. s personal letter to Von Billow, ii. 309, 

 316, 317, 318; friendly attitude of the 

 German Emperor, ii. 236 ; his opposition 

 to the arbitration scheme, ii. 293, 297, 

 298, 308; Hohenlohe favors arbitration 

 tribunal, ii. 321; American delegation 

 lays wreath of gold and silver upon 

 tomb of Grotius, ii. 291, 316-318, 320, 326, 

 327, 329, 330 ; Mouravieff programme, ii. 

 250, 258, 260, 265 ; difficulties regarding 

 Monroe Doctrine, ii. 339-341, 346 ; open 

 ing session, ii. 256, 258 ; organization of 

 the conference, ii. 263 ; immunity of 

 private property on the high seas dur 

 ing war, ii. 254, 260, 262, 289, 296, 316 ; atti 

 tude of Russia, ii. 266 ; of Holland, ii. 

 283, 290 ; of Germany, ii. 287 ; W. s speech 

 in favor of immunity, ii. 328 ; regarding 

 publication of the proceedings of the 

 conference, ii. 264, 268, 295, 335, 345 ; the 

 conference presented to the Queen of 

 Holland, ii. 267, 331 ; Red Cross matters, 

 ii. 317, 325, 328; Russian proposal of 

 peace, general misunderstanding of, ii. 

 250, 262, 265; Russian delegation wav 

 ers on arbitration scheme, ii. 269; and 



then presents a plan, ii. 271, 273 ; regard 

 ing disarmament of Russia, ii. 333 ; sign 

 ing of the conventions, ii. 343, 345, 346 ; 

 and seal used by the American delega 

 tion, ii. 345; attitude of socialists to 

 ward the conference, ii. 300, 304 ; South 

 America not represented, ii. 284 ; sum 

 mary of results, ii. 351-354 ; correspond 

 ence between the Vatican and the Neth 

 erlands Government, ii. 338, 342, 349, 350 



Haiti in 1871, i. 500 ; effect of unlimited 

 paper money, i. 501 



Haitian theory of Monroe Doctrine, ii. 150 



Hale, Benjamin, president of Geneva Col 

 lege, i. 19 



Hale, Edward Everett, W. s acquaintance 

 with, ii. 381 



Hale, John Parker, and the anti-slavery 

 party, i. 16 ; his lecture, &quot; The Last 

 Gladiatorial Combat at Rome,&quot; i. 55 



Hall, N. K., presiding judge at Jerry Res 

 cue trials, i. 62 



Hall, Ruth, maiden name of W. s mater 

 nal grandmother, i. 4 



Halliwell-Phillips, James O., his &quot; Bunga 

 low,&quot; ii. 395, 431 



Hamdi Bey, of the Imperial Museum at 

 Constantinople, ii. 440 



Harnack, Adolf, W. s friendship with, ii. 

 179 



Harris, Ira, United States senator, i. 133 ; 

 Lincoln s remark concerning, i. 134 



Harris, Townsend, as American minister 

 in Japan, ii. 368 



Harrison, Benjamin, his reception of a 

 civil-service delegation from New York 

 State in 1891, i. 224-228, ii. 182 ; appoints 

 W. minister to Russia, i. 235, 236, ii. 3 ; 

 his visit in Berlin and the attention 

 shown him by the Emperor, ii. 181 



Harrison, Burton, his account of the col 

 lapse of the Confederacy and the flight 

 of Jefferson Davis, i. 155 



Harrison, Frederic, his fitness for writing 

 a history of the middle ages, ii. 506 ; his 

 discourses at the Positivist Conventicle, 

 ii. 566 



Harrison, William Henry, events in the 

 life of, i. 47 ; campaign song concerning, 

 i. 47, 49 ; death of, i. 52 



Harrison and Tyler campaign of 1840, i. 46 ; 

 campaign songs, i. 47, 48, 49; log cabins, 

 cider, and raccoons, i. 47, 49 ; Crary s at 

 tack on General Harrison s military 

 reputation, i. 50; &quot; gold spoons&quot; at the 

 White House, i. 51 ; election of General 

 Harrison, i. 52 



Harvard University spirit compared with 

 that of Yale, ii. 487 



Havens, Palmer, senator at Albany, i. 103 



Hay, John, meets W. for the first time, i. 

 159; as a poet, i. 252 ; letter to W. on his 

 resignation as ambassador to Germany, 

 ii. 216 



Hayes, Rutherford B., W. s estimate of, i. 

 188-190, ii. 446 ; on the admission of cabi 

 net ministers to Congress, i. 529; presi 

 dent of the Mohonk Conference, ii. 445 



Hendricks, Thomas A., his bitterness to 

 ward civil-service reform, i. 215 



Henry, Prince of Prussia, his visit to 

 America, ii. 203 



Hermean Society of Geneva College, i. 18, 

 287 



Hirsch, his lectures in Berlin on modern 

 history, i. 39 



History, W. s aim in the teaching of, i. 83, 

 87, 255, 256, 263 



&quot; History of the Warfare of Science with 

 Theology,&quot; by W., evolution of, i. 425, ii. 

 394, 427, 456, 494, 495, 500 



