6 Preface 



are bound in two or three hundred large volumes; 

 exactly how: many I can not say, because, though 

 they are numbered, yet several of the numbers them- 

 selves contain from two or three to ten or fifteen 

 volumes apiece. The volumes to which reference 

 will most often be made are the following: 



No. 15. Letters of Huntington. 



No. 1 6. Letters of the Presidents of Congress. 



No. 1 8. Letter-Book B. 



No. 20. Vol. i. Reports of Committees on State 

 Papers. 



No. 27. Reports of Committees on the War Of- 

 fice. 1776 to 1778. 



No. 30. Reports of Committees. 



No. 32. Reports of Committees of the States 

 and of the Week. 



No. 41. Vol. 3. Memorials E. F. G. 1776- 

 1788. 



No. 41. Vol. 5. Memorials K. L. 1777-1789. 



No. 50. Letters and papers of Oliver Pollock. 

 1777-1792. 



No. 51. Vol. 2. Intercepted Letters. 1779- 

 1782. 



No. 56. Indian affairs. 



No. 71. Vol. i. Virginia State Papers. 



No. 73. Georgia State Papers. 



No. 81. Vol. 2. Reports of Secretary John Jay. 



No. 120. Vol. 2. American Letters. 



No. 124. Vol. 3. Reports of Jay. 



No. 125. Negotiation Book. 



