230 



HATTI SCHEPJFF. 



365 ; relieved, 365 ; attack on the Confederate 

 force by the gunboat Monticello, 365. 



HATTI SCHERIFF, of 1839. I. 1. 



HAUCH, JEAN KARSTEN von. XII. Obitu- 

 ary, 643. 



HAUGHTON, JAMES, Irish merchant. XIII. 

 Obituary of, 593. 



HAUSER, KASPAR, the mysterious foundling. 

 XV. The opinion of Feuerbach, 382 ; its de- 

 fenders, 382 ; attacks on the house of Baden, 

 382 ; publication of its official documents, 382 ; 

 the whole story now considered as exploded, 

 383. 



HAVEMEYER, WILLIAM F. XIV. Birth, 

 394; civil and social career, 394 ; death, 395. 



HA VEX, JOSEPH. XIV. Birth, 395 ; career 

 as a clergyman, professor, and author, 395 ; 

 death, 395. 



HAWAIIAN INLANDS. XII. (See Sandwich 

 Islands.) 



HAWES, JOEL, D. D. VII. Birth, 384 ; edu- 

 cation and pursuits, 384, 385 ; literary works, 

 885 ; death, 385. 



HAWRIXS, GEORGE S. I. Member of Con- 

 gress, 166 ; declines to serve on the Committee 

 of Thirty-three, 204. 



HAWKINS, Mrs. MARY A. XIV. Decease 

 of, 627. 



HAWKS, CICERO S. VIII. Birth, 339; 

 death, 339 ; career, 339. 



HAWKS, FRANCIS L. VI. Birth, 392 ; ca- 

 reer, 392, death, 393. 



HAWLEY, JAMES R. XII. Chairman of the 

 Soldiers' Convention, 783. 



HAWLEY, JOSEPH R. XIII. On increased 

 salaries, 155, 157, 164. 



HAWTHORNE, NATHANIEL. IV. Birth, 426; 

 literary career, 426 ; death, 427. 



HAWTHORNE, Mrs. SOPHIA. XI. Obituary 

 of, 571. 



HAY, Sir JAMES DOUGLAS HAMILTON, Bart., 

 Canadian statesman. XIII. Obituary of, 599. 



HAYDEN, Prof. F. V. XII. Explorations in 

 the Yellowstone Valley, 336. 



HAYES, Dr. 1. 1. IX. Arctic explorer, 287. 



HAYNE, I. W. I. Sent to Washington to 

 demand surrender of Fort Sumter, 656, 664 ; 

 instructed to deliver his letter and demand ex- 

 planations from the President, 665. 



HAYS, ALEXANDER. IV. Birth, 427 ; mili- 

 tary career, 427 ; death, 427. 



HAYTER, Sir GEORGE. XI. Obituary of, 

 594. ' - - 



HAYTI. 



HAYTI. IV. Treaty with the United States, 

 12. 



V. Boundaries, 424 ; area and population, 

 424; chief towns and ports, 424; President 

 and National Assembly, 424; imports and 

 exports in 1860-'63, 424 ; movement of ship- 

 ping, 424 ; insurrection, 424 ; amnesty procla- 

 mation, 425 ; martial law, 425 ; death of Gen- 

 eral Marriset, 425 ; defeat of the rebels, 425 ; 

 investment of Cape Haytien, 425 ; British 

 gunboat Bulldog blown up, 425 ; batteries de- 

 molished by British gunboats, 425 ; assault by 

 Geffrard's troops, 425 ; escape of General Sal- 

 nave in the De Soto, 425 ; the town tired and 

 sacked, 425 ; educational statistics, 425. 



VI. Area, 393 ; population, 393 ; revenue, 

 393; debt, 393. 



VII. Area and population, 385 ; Govern- 

 ment, 385 ; finances, 385 ; revolutionary out- 

 breaks, 385 ; abdication of the President, 386 ; 

 government by council of secretaries, 386; 

 banishment of ex-President Geffrard and his 

 supporters, 386 ; removal of officers appointed 

 by Geffrard, 386 ; election of General Salnave, 

 President, 386 ; adoption of new Constitution, 

 386 ; its leading provisions, 386 ; President's 

 report on condition of the republic, 387 ; 

 treaty with San Domingo, 387 ; new insurrec- 

 tion, 387. 



VIII. Area, 339 ; population, 339 ; reve- 

 nues, 339 ; debt, 339 ; loans, 339 ; coffee monop- 

 oly, 339 ; civil war, 339 ; proclamation of Sal- 

 nave, 340 ; appeal to the clergy, 340 ; Salnave 

 his history, 340, 341. 



IX. Continuance of the civil war military 

 operations, 334 ; demand of the French admi- 

 ral for the payment of the French debt, 334 ; 

 the mail taken from a British mail-steamer by 

 Salnave's officers, 334 ; apoSogy and reparation 

 demanded, 334 ; apology of Salnave, 334 ; re- 

 ply of the English captain, 335 ; change of af- 

 fairs in favor of the revolutionists, 335 ; ad- 

 vance in the price of exchange, 335 ; Salnave 

 concentrates his forces at Port au Prince, 335 ; 

 proclamation to the' people and army, 335 ; 

 proclamation of General Chevallier, 336 ; at- 

 tack of the revolutionists upon Port au Prince, 

 336 ; retreat of Salnave from the city, 336 ; 

 provisional government established, 336. 



X. Area, 383 ; population, 383 ; President, 

 384 ; ministry, 384 ; United States minister to, 

 384; paper-money, 384; counterfeit money, 

 384 ; public debt, 384 ; capture of Salnave, 384 ; 



