Niagara Falls 



1814 Brown. 1821. Pp. 237-246. A ho N. Y.: E. Bliss and E. White. 



Wright 1821. Pp. 173-180. 



An exceedingly interesting account of the journey from Lewiston to 

 the Falls. Even more illuminating, perhaps, is the account of the stage 

 trip from Rochester along the ridge road to Lewiston. Miss Wright was 

 observant of the country and the condition of the people. 



The cataract is graphically described, the language is well chosen, the 

 description sympathetic without being rhapsodical. 



1816 



1816 Ne> w York (State). Memorial of the citizens of New York in favor 

 New York of a canal navigation between the great western lakes and the tide-waters of 



the Hudson. N. Y. : Samuel Wood and Sons. 1816. 



A discussion of the Hudson River and St. Lawrence routes. Objections 

 to a Niagara canal. Drafted by De Witt Clinton. 



New York (State). Memorial of the citizens of New York in 

 favour of a canal navigation between the great western lakes and the tide- 

 waters of the Hudson. (Pub. Buf. hist. soc. Vol. XIII. 1909, See 

 index for references.) 



1817 



1 817 LANGSLOW, RICHARD. A Niagara Falls tourist of the year 1817. 

 Langslow (Pub. Buf. hist. soc. 5:111-1 33.) 



The journal of Captain Richard Lanslow of the Honorable East India 

 Service, giving a full itinerary of the journey. There is no attempt to 

 describe the Falls, but there is much concerning the travel conditions of the 

 time. 



1818 



1818 HoWLAND, Mrs. Sarah Hagard. Extracts from the tour of Sarah 

 Howland Howland, and some of the poetry, letters, and other papers preserved by 



her, together with some account of her family compiled by her great grand- 

 son, Howland Pell. (N. Y.?) 1890. 



An account of a journey from New York to Niagara Falls by carriage 

 in 1818. The trip took two months. There is a chronicle of various stops 

 on the journey, but no detailed description of the Falls, which were 

 visited on July 1 5 and 1 6. 



1821 

 1821 The fashionable tour; or, A trip to the Springs, Niagara, Quebeck, and 



Boston, in the summer of 1821. Saratoga Springs: G. M. Davison. 

 1822. Pp. 99-110. 



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