INDIANS OF MANHATTAN ISLAND 



53 



Those list, figure, and describe the 

 types of chipped and polished stone 

 implements, and the pottery, shell, 

 hono, metal, and wooden utensils 

 found in New York State. Bulletin 

 32 contains a list of all the Indian 

 village and camp sites, shell-heaps, 

 rock and cave shelters, and cemeteries 

 then recorded from the entire State, 

 with a map upon which the locations 

 of these are plotted. This series is 

 invaluable to the student, especially 

 to one engaged in research work. 



Farrand, Livingston, Basis of Amer- 

 ican History. Harpers: The American 

 Nation Nation Series; Vol. I. 



"This volume contains a careful 

 review of the physical features of 

 North America, which is exceedingly 

 helpful to the student in understanding 

 the development of the various colo- 

 nies. This is supplemented by a survey 

 of the principal lines of communica- 

 tion Indian trails, portages, water- 

 ways, and mountain passes which 

 have been of the utmost importance 

 in determining the course of events 

 in American history * Of 



particular value is Professor Farrand 's 

 able discussion of the American 

 Indians. Reasoning from a great mass 

 of collected data, he reaches sane 

 and conservative conclusions. The 

 author has made a point of condensa- 

 tion, and has supplied the want of a 

 thorough, systematic study of the 

 Indians in a small compass." 



Heckwelder, J. G. E., History, Man- 

 ners, and Customs of the Indian 

 Nations who once inhabited Pennsyl- 

 vania. Philadelphia, 1876. 



At the present writing this is the 

 most complete source of information 

 on the Delaware Indians from the 



time of their migration from New 

 Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania to 

 the Ohio Valley. 



Harrington, M. R., "Some Customs 

 of the Delaware Indians;" the Mus- 

 eum Journal of the Museum of the 

 University of Pennsylvania, Vol. I, 

 No. 3; and "Vestiges of Material 

 Culture Among the Canadian Dela- 

 wares," American Anthropologist, 

 N. S. Vol. 10 No. 3, 1908, A Prelim- 

 inary Sketch of Lenape culture, Ibid 

 Vol. 15 P. 208. 



The most recent account of the 

 Delaware, but merely preliminary 

 sketches, forerunners of a much larger 

 work based on personal archaeological 

 research about New York City and 

 ethnological study among the surviving 

 Delaware of Canada and Oklahoma, 

 which, when given to the public, will 

 be the dernier mot on the subject. 



Brinton, D. G., The Lenape and 

 Their Legends; Philadelphia, 1885. 

 This work contains the Walum Olum 

 and its translation, in addition to a 

 mass of ethnological material. An 

 excellent treatise on the Delaware 

 Indians. 



O'Callaghan, E. B., Documentary 

 History of New York. Four volumes; 

 Albany, 1863-7. 



Contains, as its name implies, many 

 of the early documents relating to the 

 settlement of New York. A very 

 important work containing many of 

 the sources of the present volume. 



De Vries, David Peterson, Voyages 

 from Holland to America; (trans- 

 lation) ; New York, 1853. A rare and 

 valuable work, to be obtained only in 

 the large public libraries. This is the 

 personal account of the good patroon's 

 own experience as an eye-witness and 



