5i 



BIBLIOGKAPHY OF THE 



Bonduel (F. J.) — Continued. 



Tournai | imprimerie de Malo et Le- 

 ■vasseur. | 1855. 



Printed cover as above, half-title verso blank 

 1 1. title as above verso note 1 1, text (entirely in 

 Mennomonie, with headings sometimes in En- 

 glish alone, sometimes in the two languages) 

 pp. 5-16, 16°. 



Prayers, hymns, and primer lessons. 



Copies seen : Shea, TrambuU. 



Book of common prayer [Cree]. See 



Hunter (J.) 

 Book of common prayer : 



Chippewa See Horden (J.) and Sand- 



ers (J.) 

 Chippewa O'Meara (F. A.) 



Cree Horden (J.) 



Cree Hunter (J.) 



Book of Exodus in Micmac. See Rand 



(S. T.) 



Borsari (Ferdinando). Ferdinando Bor- 

 sarl I La letteratura | degl' indigent 

 americani ] [Three lines quotation] | 

 [Scroll] I 



Napoli, I Luigi Pierro, editore | Piazza 

 Dante, 76 1 1888 



Printed co-ver as above, title as above verso 

 . printer 1 1. preliminary pp. 3-6, text pp. 7-76, 8°. 

 Contains notices of a number of American 

 languages, among them a few Algonquian. 

 Copies seen: Eames, Pilling. 

 Boston Athenaeum : These words following a title 

 or within parentheses after a note indicate that 

 a copy of the work referred to has been seen by 

 the coilipiler in the library of that institution, 

 Boston, Mass. 

 Boston Public: These words following a title or 

 within parentheses after a note indicate that 

 a copy of the work referred to has been seen 

 by the compiler in that library, Boston, Mass. 



Boudinot (Bev. Elias). A | star in the 

 west ; I or, I a humble attempt to dis- 

 coYer I the long lost | ten tribes of Is- 

 rael, I preparatory to their return to 

 their beloved city, | Jerusalum. j By 

 Elias Boudinot, LL. D. | [Seven lines 

 quotations.] | 



Trenton, N. J. | published by D. Fen- 

 ton, S. Hutchinson, and | J. Dunham. | 

 George Sherman, printer. | 1816. 



Title verso copyright notice 1 1. contents pp. 

 iii-iv, preface pp. i-xxi, introduction pp. 23-31, 

 text pp. 33-312, 8°. 



Chapter III. An inquiry into the language 

 of the American Indians, pp. 89-107, contains a 

 vocabulary of several languages, among them 

 the Mohegan, pp. 102-103. 



Copies seen: Bancroft, Boston Athenaeum, 

 British Museum, Congress, Dunbar, Harvard, 

 Trumbull. 



Boudinot (E.) — Continued. 



At the Squier sale, no. 108, a half-calf, gilt 

 copy brought $2.25 ; at the Brinley sale a copy 

 with •'fine portrait inserted" sold for $2.75;. 

 the Marphy copy, catalogue no. 305, half-mo- 

 rocco, top edge gilt, brought $4.75. Clarke & 

 CO. 1886 catalogue, no. 6281, priced it $1.75. 



Elias Boudinot, philanthropist, born in Phila- 

 delphia, Pa., May 2, 1740; died in Burlington, 

 N. J., October 24, 1821. His great-grandfather, 

 Elias, was a French Huguenot, who fled to thia 

 country after the revocation of the edict of 

 IS'antes. After receiving a classical education, 

 he studied law with Eichard Stockton, and be- 

 came eminent in his profession, practicing in 

 New Jersey. He was devoted to the patriot 

 cause. In 1777 appointed commissary-general 

 of prisoners, and in the same year elected » 

 delegate to Congress from New Jersey, serving 

 from 1778 till 1779, and again from 1781 till 1784. 

 He was chosen president of Congress on NO' 

 vember 4, 1782, and in that capacity signed th& 

 treaty of peace with England. He then re^ 

 sumed the practice of law, but, after the adop- 

 tion of the constitution, was elected to the firsts 

 second, and third Congresses, serving from 

 March 4, 1789, till March 3, 1795. He was ap- 

 pointed by Washington in 1795 to succeed Eit- 

 tenhouse as director of the mint at Philadel- 

 phia, and held the office till July 1805, when he 

 resigned, and passed the rest of his life at Bur- 

 lington, N. J., devoted to the study of biblical 

 literature. He had an ample fortune and gave 

 liberally. He was a trustee of Princeton Col- 

 lege, and in 1805 endowed it with a cabinet of 

 natural history, valued at $3,000. In 1812 h& 

 was chosen a member of the American board 

 of commissioners for foreign missions, to which, 

 he gave £100 in 1813. He assisted in founding 

 the American bible society in 1816, was it» 

 first president, and gave it $10,000. He waa 

 interested in attempts to educate the Indians, 

 and when three Cherokee youth were brought, 

 to the Foreign mission school in 1818, he al- 

 lowed one of them to take his name This boy 

 became afterward a man of influence in his^ 

 tribe, and was murdered on June 10, 1839, by 

 Indians west of the Mississippi. — Appleton'a- 

 Cyclop, of Am.Biog. 

 Bourassa (Joseph N.) Indian diction- 

 ary. 184.3. 



Manuscript, 2 11. pp. 1-62, 21 unnumbered IL 

 folio, in possession of Mr, John B. Dunbar, 

 Bloomfield, IST. J. 



The dictionary occuj)ies pp. 1-62 and is in 

 English and PodawahdAmih {sic\ . ■ The unnum- 

 bered leaves following contain additional and 

 riepeated words, illustrative sentences, names of 

 berries, trees, and plants, numerals, Lord's 

 prayer, etc. in the Podawahd^piih language. 



[Bowrey (Thomas).] A | dictionary | of 



I the Hudsou's-Bay Indian language. 



No title-page, beading only; text pp. 1-7, 



folio; in the Cree language. Alphabetically 



arranged and contains about 600 words. 



