INDEX. 719 



Connecticut river valley — fertile in Indian corn, hay, and 



grain, _ _. 418 



Qualities of New England cattle — hardy, good for work, 418 



William Baldwin — two cows — great milkers, 420 



Census and statistics of the butter and cheese of New-York, 421 



Pennsylvania, 421 



Maine, settled, (1617.) 422 



Mr. Pell, American Institute, killed a calf 2 years old, 



weighed 2,000 lbs., 422 



Lumbering business — large cattle in New Hampshire, 423 



Two large oxen at Durham, Connecticut, 423 



Wm. Buckley, Colchester — black bull, 423 



Puritans came from Scotland, Ireland, Wales and England,. 424 



Grant of King James, of New England, to Lennox and others, 425 



John Mason goes to New Hampshire, _ 425 



Imports cattle from Denmark — price $125., 425 



A son of Georges, governor of Maine, 425 



Mount Desert and islands in Maine, settled, 425 



Maine, settled by emigrants from France, Ireland, and Scot- 

 land — by puritans and Huguenots, 425 



Talleyrand, born in Maine, on Penobscot river, 426 



Working oxen in Maine — color and character, 426 



Lumbering business in Maine — raises large cattle, 426 



Galloway cattle — deterioration — Short-horns, 427 



The ox a mountain animal — wild and domestic, 427 



Cold winters and hot summers in New England, 428 



Goshen, in Connecticut — good butter and cheese, 428 



New-York and New England — butter and cheese, 429 



Breeding cattle and working bulls, 429 



Statistics of New England cattle, ._ 430 



Solon Robinson's remarks on cattle, 430 



Mr. A. Nash's reply to Mr. Robinson, 431 



Professor J. A. Nash on Cheshire cheese,. _ 431 



Goodness of American cheese, and used in Cheshire,.. 431 



