10 ECONOMIC BOTANY OF ALABAMA. 



In the following list the names of authors are ar- 

 ranged alphabetically, and the writings of each chro- 

 nologically. 



Ball, (Rev.) T. H. — A glance into the great southeast, or Clarke 

 County, Alabama, and its surroundings from 1840 to 1877. 

 782 pp. Grove Hill, 1882. 



(Title-page and map missing in our copy. Title supplied 

 by State Department of Archives and History.) 



Mainly historical and biographical, but contains much in- 

 teresting geographical information, especially on pages 

 120-130, 637-660, etc. 



Bartram, William, — Travels through North & South Carolina, 

 Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee country, the 

 extensive territories of the Muscogulges, or Creek Confed- 

 eracy, and the country of the Chactaws; containing an ac- 

 count of the soil and natural productions of those regions, 

 together with observations on the manners of the Indians. 

 522 pp. and a few plates. 12mo. Philadelphia, 1791. (Soon 

 afterwards reprinted in London and Dublin, and also trans- 

 lated into French and German.) 



The portion devoted to Alabama (which was then a part 

 of Georgia) begins on page 388 and ends on page 457, but 

 is not continuous. The author's route seems to have passed 

 near the present sites of Fort Mitchell, Tuskegee, Montgom- 

 ery and Mobile, both going and returning. 



Berney, Saffold. — 1. Hand Book of Alabama: a complete index to 

 the state; with a geological map, and an appendix of use- 

 ful tables, xxxix + 338 pp. Mobile, 1878. 



Contains valuable chapters on geology by Dr. Eugene A. 

 Smith, on soils by Dr. W. C. Stubbs, and on forests, grasses, 

 etc. by Dr. Charles Mohr. 

 2. (Second edition of same.) 565 pp. Birmingham, 1893. 



The chapter on forests in this edition is shorter than in 

 the first, and not credited to any one. 



Brumby, (Prof.) R. T. — Mineral resources of Alabama — mineral 

 waters, &c. In F. A. P. Barnard's Alabama State Almanac 

 for the year 1839, pp. 65-80. 12mo. Tuscaloosa, (1838?). 



A very rare work, apparently not correctly cited in any 

 previous bibliography. (Copy in Survey library presented 

 by Dr. Smith.) 



Caldwell, G. W.— ("Caldwell the Woodsman")— The story of the 

 southern evergreens. Country Life in America 7:171-176. 

 (Illustrated by half-tones.) Dec. 1904. Also issued in 

 pamphlet form, with some of the illustrations different. 



Describes the beginning of the evergreen decoration in- 

 dustry in Conecuh County in 1888, and its development 

 since that time. 



Earle, F. S. — The flora of the metamorphic region of Alabama. 

 Ala. Agric. Exp. Sta. Bull. 119. 80 pp. Auburn, 1902. 



Includes also a small portion of the coastal plain, about 

 as much of it as extends into Lee County. 



