cal Association, Vol. VII (1913-1914), pp. 

 212-219. 



5. Coman, K. — Economic Beginnings of the Far 



West, 1912. Especially Vol. II on American 

 Settlers. 



6. Dodd, W. E.—Tke Fight for the Northwest, 



1860, in The American Historical Review, 

 Vol. XVI, July, 1911, pp. 774-788. 



7. Faust, A. B. — The German Element in the 



United States, Vol. I, Chapters XII, XIII, 

 XIV, XV. 



8. Flom, G. F. — The Coming of the Norwegians to 



Iowa, in The Iowa Journal of History and 



Politics^ Vol. Ill, pp. 347-383. 

 The Early Swedish Immigration to Iowa. Ibid, 



Vol. Ill, pp. 583-615. 

 The Danish Contingent in the Population of 



Early Iowa. Ibid, Vol. IV, pp. 220-224. 

 The Growth of the Scandinavian Factor in the 



Population of lozca. Ibid, pp. 267-285. 



9. Garrison, G. P. — Westward Extension, in The 



American Nation, Vol. XVII, Chapters I, II. 



10. Commons, J. R. — Documentary History of the 



American Industrial Society, Vol. II. See 

 Table of Contents, under iSIigration, Frontier 

 Settlement, Frontier Society. 



11. Harriott, F. — Whence Came the Pioneers to Iowa, 



in Annals of Iowa, Third Series, Vol. VII, 

 pp. -367-379, 446-465. 



12. Hibbard, B. H. — History of Agriculture in Dane 



County, Wisconsin. Bulletin of the Univer- 

 sity of Wisconsin, 1904, Part I, Chapter III. 



13. McMaster, J. B. — History of the People of the 



United States, Vol. IV, Chapter 33; Vol. VII, 

 Chapter 75; Vol. VIII, Chapter 95. 



14. Pooley, W. Y .—The Settlement of Illinois, 



1830-1850. Bulletin of the University of 

 Wisconsin, 1908, especially chapters III, IV, 



XI, XV. 



39 



