34 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE 



Qkai-Tioch (A. C.) — Continiied. 



Be:iver-Cree- | By the Rev. A. C. Gar- 

 rioc'h I Missionary of the | Church Mis- 

 eiouary Society- | 



Society for Promoting Christian 

 Knowledge. | London. Northumberland 

 Avenue. Cyt'lostyled by | E. S. Brewer. 

 I Printed by M"-" Garrioch [1885] 



Title verso blank 1 1. text (on one side of the 

 leaf only) 11. 1-138, 4°. 



Part I BeaveT-Euglish (alphabetically ar- 

 ranged by Be.iA'er words in double columns), 11. 

 1-64.— Part II English and Bcavor [sic] [and 

 Cree] (alphabetically arranged by Engli.sh 

 words, in triple columns), 11. 6,")-138. 



Copies seen : Eanies, Pilling, Society for Pro- 

 moting Christian Knowledge. 



The original manuscript of this work is in 

 the possession of its author. Fifty copies of thi^ 

 work were printed from the copy made with the 

 cyclostyle by Mr. Brewer, an eniployt of the 

 society. 



Mr. tiarrioch, of St. Xavier's Mission, Fort 

 Dunvegan, Peace River, was liorn in St. Paul's 

 Parish, Red River Settlement, or Manitoba, Feb. 

 10, 1848, and is of Scotch and English parentage. 

 He was for three years a student at St. John's 

 College, Winnipeg, and in 1874 was engaged as 

 schoolmaster by Bishop Bompas for the Church 

 Missionary Society. The winter of 1875-'76 he 

 spent in study with the bishop at Fort Simp- 

 son, McKenzie River, and was admitted to dea- 

 con's orders, and in the autumn of 1876 he 

 established a Church Missionary Society station 

 at Fort Vermilion under the name of Unjaga 

 Mission. Mr. Garrioch subsequently visited 

 Canada and England, where he saw his trans- 

 lations printed; but in the spring of 1886 he 

 returned to mission work among the Beavers of 

 Peace River, but, at Dunvegan instead of Ver- 

 milion. 

 Galschet: This word following a title or within 

 parentheses after a note indicates that a copy of 

 the work referred to has been seen by the com- 

 piler in the library of Mr. Albert S. Gatschet, 

 Washington, B. C. 



Gatschet (Albert Samuel). Zwolf 

 Spracheu | .ans dem | S.iidw'esten Nord- 

 amerikas ] (Pueblos- und Apache- 

 MuTidarten ; Tonto,Tonkawa, | Digger, 

 Utah.) I Wortverzeichnisse | heraus- 

 gegeben, erliiutert und mit einer Ein- 

 leitung iibor Ban, | Begriitsbildung 

 und locale Gruppirung der amerikan- 

 ischen | Sprachen versehen | von | 

 Albert S. Gatschet. | [Vignette.] | 

 Weimar | Hermann B(thlau | 1876. 



Cover title as above, title as abo\e V(*rso note 

 1 1. Vorwort pp. iii-iv, Inlialt \t. v. Eiuleituug 

 pp. 1-3, Lautbezeichnung p. 4, Literatur pp. 5- 

 6, text pp. 7-148, illustrations pp. 149-150, large 

 8". 



Gatschet (A. S.) — Continued. 



Die Sprachen des Siidwestens (pp. 37-86) con- 

 tains Apache and Navajo examples on pp. 39, 

 40, 52, 55, 59, 62; general discussion of the 

 Apache, linguistic divisions, etc., with com- 

 parison of Apache and Ndvajo words with those 

 of the Ziini, Kiowa, Comanche, and Shoshone, 

 pp. 62-69; Tinn^' (Apache, Navajo, Hoopa, 



and Taculli) words, p. 79 Sammlung von Wor- 



tern und Siitzen (pp. 87-91) contains a short 

 Apache vocabulary" and one of the Ndvajo, p. 

 88; an A])ache vocabulary (from White and 

 Henry), p. 88-89. — Auswahl von Satzen aus den 

 Sprachen der Tehuas, Apaches, Tonkawas und 

 Acomas (pp. 91-95) contains 20 phrases in 

 Apache (from Loew). — Worttabellen der zwolf 

 Sprachen und Dialecte (pp. 97-115) contains a 

 vocabulary of 200 Mords of the A]>ache (from 

 Loew), NAvajo (from Loew), and Apache (from 

 AVhite). — Anmerkungen zu den Worttabellen 

 (pp. 117-138) contains comments upon the vari- 

 ous vocabularies. — Zahlworter (pp. 139-143) con- 

 tains the numerals 1-10 of the Navajo (from 

 Eaton) and Hoopa (from Schoolcraft). 



Copies seen : Astor, Brinton, British Museum, 

 Eames. Gatschet, Pilling, Trumbull, Wellesley. 



Indian languages of the Pacific 



states and territories. 



In Magazine of American History, vol. 1, 

 pp. 145-171, New York, 1877, 4°. (Congress.) 



A general discussion, with examples passim. 

 The Tinne family, with its linguistic divisions, 

 the Hoopa, Rogue River, and Umpqna, is 

 treated on pp. 165-166. 



Issued separatelj' as follows : 



Indian languages | of the | Pacific 



states and territories | by | Albert S. 

 Gatschet | Reprinted from March Num- 

 ber of The Magazine of American His- 

 tory. 



[New York, 1877.] 



Half-title verso blank 1 1. text pp. 145-171. 4°. 



Copies seen : A.stor, Congress, Eames, Pilling, 

 Wellesley. 



Reprinted in the following: 



Beach (W. W.), Indian Miscellany, pp. 416- 

 447, Albany. 1877,8°. 



Drake (S. G.), Aboriginal Races of North 

 America, pp. 748-763, New York [1880], 8°. 



A later article, with the same title, appeared 

 in the April, 1882, number of the same peri- 

 odical, and was also issued separately. It con- 

 tains no Athapascan linguistics. 



U. S. geographical surveys west of 



the one hundredth meridian, 1st Lieut. 

 Geo. M. Wheeler, Corps of Engineers, 

 U. S. Army, in Charge. Appendix. 

 Linguistics. Prefaced by a classification 

 of western Indian languages. By All)ert 

 8. GatsclK^t. 



In Wheeler (G. M.), Report up(m U. S. Geo- 

 grai)liical Surveys, vol. 7, pp. 399-485, Washing- 

 ton, 1879, 4°, 



