Natural History of District of Columbia — McAtee ]15 



Analostan or Masons Id., and Alexanders or Holmes Id. Analostan 

 also called My Lords Id., and Barbadoes. St. Elizabeth was the name 

 of a land-grant in 1663; names of others of these old grants persist, 

 as Giesborough, Rock of Dumbarton, Argyle, Mount Pleasant and 

 Pleasant Plains. A grant in 1664 is for a tract of land called Rome 

 situated on the Tiber. Georgetown founded in 1751. Rolling roads 

 were those on which tobacco was transported in hogsheads mounted 

 on axles. Saw Pit Landing was at Georgetown side of mouth of 

 Rock Creek. Early names of Easby's Point are Cedar, Windmill 

 and Peter's Point. A wharf at Braddock's Rock was called The Key 

 of all Keys, a coi-ruption of the Quay of all Quays. 



Tindall, William. 

 The origin of the parking system of this city. 

 Records of the Columbia Historical Society 4, 1901, pp. 75-99. 



Ward, Lester F. 



Guide to the flora of Washington and vicinity. 



Bui. 22, U. S. National Museum, 1881, 264 pp., 1 map. 



"Localities of special interest to the botanist," pp. 17-26 is valu- 

 able. So far as they pertain to the area of the present map all 

 localities shown on Ward's map, or listed in his text or in that of 

 the six supplements that have been published have been indexed. 



Woodward, Fred E. 



A ramble along the Boundary Stones of the District of Columbia 

 with a Camera. 



Rec. Columbia Hist. Soc. 10, 1907, pp. 63-87, 14 pis. 



Illustrates 26 stones. 



With a camera over the old District Boundary Lines. 

 Rec. Columbia Hist. Soc. 11, 1908, pp. 1-15, 9 pis. 

 Illustrates 14 stones or their sites; sketch map of boundary line 

 in Virginia. 



The recovery of the Southern Corner Stone of the District. 

 Records Columbia Hist. Soc. 18, 1915, pp. 16-24, PI. 1. 



LIST OF MAPS USED. 



Data from the following maps, so far as it differed from that on 

 the base map, has been incorporated into the index. Reprints of 

 early maps are cited under the entries for 1852 and 1877: 



1845. 



Plan of the town of Alexandria, D. C, with the Environs, exhibit- 

 ing the outlet of the Alexandria Canal, the Shipping Channel, 

 wharves, Hunting Cr., etc. From actual survey by Maskell C. Ewing, 

 Civ. Engr., 1845. 



