AMERICAN HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY 73 



WAR WITH SPAIN Continued. 



Revenue Cutter Service 1790-1900, with full record of service in War with 



Spain, 1898. 45 pages. (56th Cong. 1st sess., S. Rept. 65. Bound with 



other docs. ; serial no. 3886. ) Sheep, $1.40. 

 Sampson-Schley, official communications to Senate. 1899. 177 pages, illus,, 



3 maps. (55th Cong. 3d sess. Confidential Senate executive document C.) 



Paper, 25c. Y 1.55 3 : C 



This is a concise summary of the Sampson-Schley controversy submitted by 



Secretary Long, from military records in the Navy Department, with a numbered 



list of the records referred to. 



Santiago. Report of Joseph Wheeler to adjutant-general relating to San- 

 tiago campaign, 1898. 40 pages. Paper, 5c. W 3.2 : Sa 5 



Scliley, Winfield S. Record of proceedings of court of inquiry in case of 

 Winfield S. Schley, convened Washington, D. C., Sept. 12. 1901. 2 vols. 

 [2283] pages, illus., maps. Vols. 1 and 2, paper, $2.00 ; cloth, $2.50. 



N 1.21 : 5 



An inquiry into the Santiago campaign, the " Flying Squadron," etc., In the 

 War with Spain. Vol. 2 includes findings of court, George Dewey's opinion, 

 Schley's petition to President of United States, the President's memorandum 

 thereon, logs of vessels, etc. 



Same. (57th Cong. 1st sess., H. Doc. 485. Vols. 103 and 104; serial nos. 



4370 and 4371.) Sheep, $3.75. 



Sketches from Spanish-American war, by Commander [Jacobsen] ; trans- 

 lated from German. 1899. 38 pages, illus., 2 maps. Paper, 5c. 



N 13.7 : 3 



Same, concluded. Paper, 5c. N 13.7 : 4 



Spanish diplomatic correspondence and documents, 1896 to 1900. 398 pages. 

 Cloth, 40c. S 1.2 : Sp* 



CONTENTS : 



General negotiations with United States from Apr. 10, 1896, until declaration 



of war. 



Diplomatic negotiations from beginning of war with United States until signing 

 of protocol at Washington and correspondence concerning interpretation and 

 fulfillment of protocol. 



Conference at Paris and treaty of peace of Dec. 10, 1898. 



Negotiations for treaty of cession to United States of islands of Sibutu and 

 Cagayan de Jol6. 



Spanish-American war, blockades and coast defense, by Severo Gomez 



Nunez ; translated from Spanish. 1899. 120 pages, illus., map. Paper, lOc. 



N 13.7 : 6 

 Spanish-American war, documents relative to squadron operations in West 



Indies, by Pascual Cervera y Topete; translated from Spanish. 1899. 



165 pages. Paper, 15c. N 13.7 : 7 



Squadron of Admiral Cervera, by Victor M. Concas y Palau; translated 



from Spanish. 1900. 117 pages. Paper, lOc. N 13.7 : 8 



Views of Admiral Cervera regarding Spanish navy in late war. 1898. 24 



pages. Paper, 5c. N 13.6 : Sp 2 



Same, bound with Battles and capitulation of Santiago de Cuba, by Jose 



Miiller y Tejerio; translated from Spanish. 108+24 pages, 2 maps. 



i leather, 50c. N 13.6 : 1-2 



See also Maine, U. S. S. South. 



WASHINGTON, GEORGE. 



Arrangement of Washington papers; Miscellaneous index [of manuscripts 

 of Continental Congress] ; Appendix. Documentary history of Constitu- 

 tion [1787-1870, vol. 1, pages 47 to 382]. 1894. 134+336 pages, large 8. 

 Paper, 30c. S 8.3 :3 



Calendar of correspondence of George Washington with Continental Con- 

 gress, from original manuscripts in Library of Congress; by J. C. Fitz- 

 patrick. 1906. 741 pages, large 8. Cloth, $1.50. LC 4.2 : W 27 s 



The papers of George Washington were transferred by Executive order of Mar. 9, 

 1903, from the State Department to the Library of Congress. The large number 

 and great importance of the papers in this collection, to which have been added 

 the Washington materials previously in the Library, call for a series of calendars 

 [abstracts], of which the present volume is the first one. It includes only the 

 correspondence that passed between the General and the Continental Congress, but 

 this deals with all phases of the trying civil and military problems that beset 

 every step of the path to independence. The letters are identified even to the 

 handwriting of the particular secretary to whom they were dictated. Other con- 

 tents are an index, numerous facsimiles of handwriting, and lists of Washington's 

 secretaries and aides and of the Presidents of the Continental Congress. 



