AMEEICAN HISTORY AND BIOGEAPHY 31 



GERMANS IN UNITED STATES. 



Monument at Germantown, Pa., in commemoration of founding of 1st Ger- 

 man settlement in America. Speech of J. Hampton Moore of Pa., in 

 House, Feb. 7, 1911. (In Congressional Record of Feb. 8, vol. 46, no. 47, 

 pages 2213 to 2215.) Paper, 9c. 



Contains an account of the influence of this settlement upon America. 

 GERMANS IN UNITED STATES. Place of German element in American his- 

 tory ; by Julius Goebel. (In American Historical Association Report, 1909, 

 pages 181 to 189.) Cloth, 75c. SI 4.1 : 909 



GETTYSBURG. 



Annual reports of Gettysburg National Park Commission, 1898 to 1904. 107 

 pages, 237 plates, map. Cloth, 75c. W46.1: 893-904 



More than half the volume consists of views of the battlefield and park, with 

 its historic avenues and its hundreds of markers and monuments commemorating 

 the war scenes as they occurred July, 1863. 



See also Conduct of War, 1865, vol. 1 Lincoln, Abraham Patriotic ad- 

 dresses. 



GILBERT, WILLIAM A. See House of Representatives. 

 GILLMORE, GENERAL. See Civil War, Florida. 

 GLASS, FRANK P. See Constitutional amendments, 17th. 



GLICK, GEORGE WASHINGTON. 



Acceptance of statue of G. W. Glick [from Kansas]. Speeches in House 

 by Victor Murdock and Philip P. Campbell, July 18, 1914. (In Congres- 

 sional Record of July 21, 1914, vol. 51, no. 187, pages 13608 to 13610.) 

 Paper, 8c. 



Same. Speech of Joseph Taggart in House, July 18, 1914. (In Congres- 

 sional Record of July 20, 1914, vol. 51, no. 186, pages 13545 to 13546.) 

 Paper, 9c. 



GLOBE, CONGRESSIONAL. See Price List 49, Proceedings of Congress. 



GORDON, JAMES. Farewell speech of James Gordon of Mississippi on his 

 retirement from Senate, Feb. 24, 1910. 8 pages. Paper, 5c. Y 9.G 65 



GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC. See Civil War, Bibliography Grant, 

 U. S. Stephenson, Benj. F. 



GRANT, U. S. 



Address of Julius Kahn in Rotunda of Capitol before statute of Gen. 

 Ulysses Simpson Grant, May 31, 1914. (In Congressional Record of June 

 1, 1914, vol. 51, no. 143, pages 10422, 10423.) Paper, 13c. 

 Reports on bill concerning Grant memorial in Botanic Garden, Washington, 

 D. C. 1908. 12 pages. (60th Cong. 1st sess., H. Rept. 1302.) Paper, 5c. 

 Includes the story of the Crittenden Peace Tree and other historic lore con- 

 nected with the site south of the Capitol. The memorial is still in progress of 

 completion. 



U. S. Grant, proceedings on acceptance of statue presented by G. A. R., May 

 19, 1900. 135 pages, illus., large 8. Paper, 25c ; cloth, 40c. Y 7.2 : G 76 

 Same. (56th Cong. 1st sess., S. Doc. 451. Bound with other docs.; serial 

 no. 3880.) Cloth, 75c. 



This martial statue stands in the Rotunda of the Capitol. The military career 

 of the hero of Appomattox is sketched by his admirers, both Union anti Con- 

 federate. 



U. S. Grant, the modest, courageous man, the normal American, speech of 

 Joseph G. Cannon, Boston, Apr. 30, 1910. 15 pages. (61st Cong. 2d sess., 

 S. Doc. 567.) Paper, 5c. 



See also Civil War President of U. S. Reconstruction under subhead 

 Removals. 



GREAT BRITAIN. See Archives, 10th report Cabinets Colonies Great 



Lakes Historical societies History teaching Mason and Slidell. 

 GREAT LAKES. 



[History of discovery and early navigation of the Great Lakes.] (In Inter- 

 nal Commerce of United States, 1891, pt. 2, pages viii-x and 13 to 22.) 

 Cloth, 25c. T 37.1 : 891 2 



Describes the work of the lake pioneers from Cartier, 1534, to the completion 

 of the " Soo " Canal in 1856. The commerce of the lakes and the Mississippi 

 River to 1891 form the remainder of this volume. 



