Niagara Falls 



1815 



Minot 



1819 



Hardie 



1819 



1819 



Mackenzie 



1820 



Darby 



1820 



feelings, the dizzying emotion, and the confounding grandeur of 

 the scene, and we think the reader will perceive some picturesque 

 circumstances in the account of the cataract, that have not before 

 been noticed. . . .] — Ed. note. 



1819 

 Hardie, James. A dictionary of the most uncommon wonders of 

 the works of art and nature. N. Y. : Samuel Marks. 1819. Pp. 275- 

 278. 



Lines written immediately on first beholding Niagara Falls, July, 1815. 

 (In Western review and miscellaneous magazine. Lexington. 1819. 

 1:127-128.) 



MACKENZIE, Eneas. An historical, topographical, and descriptive 

 view of the United States and of Upper and Lower Canada. Newcastle- 

 upon-Tyne: Mackenzie and Dant. (1819). Pp. 49-52. 



A very good account of the Falls which shows familiarity with other 

 accounts. 



1820 



DARBY, WlLLIAM. Brooke's universal gazetteer, or new geographical 

 dictionary: . . . 3d Am. ed. Phila.: Bennett and Walton. 1820. 

 P. 553. 



A really admirable account for the purpose, considering the time, and 

 as accurate and scientific as could be expected. 



Geographical, historical, commercial and agricultural view of the United 

 States of America. . . . Lond. : Edwards and Knibbs. 1 820. 

 Pp. 18-20. 



Quotation from a " recent traveller." 



1821 



Bingley 



1821 



Morse 



1821 



BlNGLEY, William. Travels in North America, from modern 

 writers. With remarks and observations, exhibiting a connected view of 

 the geography and present state of that quarter of the globe. Designed 

 for the use of young persons. Lond.: 1821. Pp. 37—40. 



Morse, Jedidiah and Richard C. A universal gazetteer, or geo- 

 graphical dictionary, ... 3d ed. rev. and corrected. New Haven: 

 S. Converse. 1821. P. 531. 



376 



