114 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE 



Dodge (J. R.) — Continued. 

 A. D. 1795; embracing notable facts 

 and I thrilling incidents in the settle- 

 ment by the | whites of the states of 

 Kentucky, Ohio, | Indiana and Illinois. 

 I By J. R. Dodge. | Editor of the Amer- 

 ican Ruralist. | 



Springfield, O. : | Ruralist publishing 

 company, j 1860. 



Frontispiece 1 1. title verso copyright 1 1. pre- 

 face pp. v-vi, contents pp. vii-x, text pp. 13-435, 

 advertisement p. 436, 12°. 



Vocabulary of the Shawnee language (from 

 Johnston (J.) in American Ant. Soc. Trans, 

 vol. 2), pp. 51-60. 



Copies seen : Astor, Congress, Dunbar. 



Dodge {Col. Richard Irving). Our wild 

 Indians: | thirty-three years' personal 

 experience | among the | Red Men of 

 the Great West. | A popular account of 

 I their social life, religion, habits, traits, 

 customs, exploits, etc. | with | Thrill- 

 ing Adventures and Experiences | on 

 the great plains and in the mountains 

 I of our wide frontier. | By | colonel 

 Richard Irving Dodge, | United States 

 army. | Aid-de-camp to general Sher- 

 man. I With an introduction | By gen- 

 eral Sherman. | Fully Illustrated with 

 Portraits on Steel, Full-page Engrav- 

 ings on Wood, I and Fine Chromo-Litho- 

 graph Plates. | 



Hartford, Conn. : | A. D. Worthing- 

 ton and company. | A. G. Nettleton & 

 CO., Chicago, 111. N. D. Thompson & 

 CO., St. Louis, Mo. I C. C. Wick & co., 

 Cleveland, O. W. E. Dibble & co., Cin- 

 cinnati, O. I A. L. Bancroft «&. co., San 

 Francisco, Cal. | 1882. 



Frontispiece 1 1. title verso copyright 1 1. 

 dedication verso blank 1 1. preface pp. v-vi, il- 

 lustrations pp. vii-xii, contents pp. xiii-xxxiii, 

 introduction by Gen. Sherman pp. xxxv-xxxix, 

 text pp. 29-650, 8°. 



"Wonderful diversity of the Indian languages, 

 pp. 44-48.— Indian names, their meaning and 

 significance, pp. 226-228.— Cheyenne names of 

 the larger streams of the Plains, p. 231.— Chey- 

 enne songs, with English translation, pp. 352- 

 353.— Dance aongs with music, pp. 354-355. — 

 The sign language with vocabulary, pp. 379-394. 



Copies seen : Astor, British Museiim, Con- 

 gress, Geological Survey, National Museum, 

 Powell. 



Richard Irving Dodge, soldier, born in Hunts- 

 ville, N". C, 19 May, 1827. He was graduated at 

 the U. S. Military Academy in 1848, assigned to 

 the 8th infantry, and after serving at various 

 posts was promoted to captain, 3 May, 1861. 



Dodge (R.I.) — Continued. 



He commanded the camp of instruction at El- 

 mira, N. Y., in August and September, 1861, 

 and served as mustering and disbursing officer 

 at various places during the civil war. He was 

 assistant inspector-general of the 4th army 

 corps in 1863, and promoted to major, 21 June, 

 1864. He was member of a board to perfect a 

 system of army regulations in New York City 

 in 1871-'2 ; was promoted to lieutenant-colonel 

 on 29 Oct., 1873, and since that time has served 

 against hostile Indians in the west. He was 

 made colonel of the 11th infantry on 26 June, 

 1882.— Appleton's Cyclop, of Am.Biog. 

 Domenech (Ahbe Emanuel Henri Dieu- 

 douu6). Seven years' residence | in 

 the great | deserts of North America | 

 by the | Abb^ Em. Domenech | Apos- 

 tolical Missionary: Canon of Montpel- 

 lier: Member of the Pontifical Acad- 

 emy Tiberina, | and of the Geograph- 

 ical and Ethnographical Societies of 

 France, &c.| Illustrated with fifty-eight 

 woodcuts by A. Joliet, three | plates of 

 ancient Indian music, and a map show- 

 ing the actual situation of | the Indian 

 tribes and the country described by the 

 author ] In Two Volumes | Vol. I[-II]. | 



London | Longman, Green, Longman, 

 and Roberts | 1860. | The right of trans- 

 lation is reserved. 



2 vols. 8°. 



List of Indian tribes of North America, vol. 

 1, pp. 440-445.— Vocabularies &c. vol. 2, pp. 164- 

 189, contain 84 words of Menomonee, Miami, 

 Ojibbeway, Riccaree, Shawnee, and Shyenne. 



Copies seen: Astor, Boston Athenaeum, Brit- 

 ish Museum, Congress, Watkinson. 



At the Field sale a copy, no. 550, brought $2.37, 

 and at the Pinart sale, no. 328, 6 fr. Clarke & 

 CO. 1886, no. 5415, price a copy $5. 



Emanuel Henri Dieudonne Domenech, French 

 author, born in Lyons, France, November 4, 

 1825 ; died in France in June, 1886. He became 

 a priest in the Roman Catholic church, and 

 was sent as a missionary to Texas and Mexico. 

 During Maximilian's residence in America, 

 Domenech acted as private chaplain to the em- 

 peror, and he was also almoner to the French 

 army during its occupation of Mexico. On his 

 return to France he was made honorary canon 

 of Montpellier. His "Manuscrit pictographi- 

 que Americain, precede d'une notice sur I'ideo- 

 graphie des Peaux Rouges" (1860), was pub- 

 lished by the French government, with a fac- 

 simile of a manuscript in the library of the 

 Paris arsenal, relating, as he claimed, to the 

 American Indians ; but the German orientalist, 

 Julius Petzholdt, declared that it consisted only 

 of scribbling and incoherent illustrations of a 

 local German dialect. Domenech maintained the 

 authenticity of the manuscript in a pamphlet 

 entitled "La verite sur le livre des sauvages" 



