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OF NEW YORK.

RICHARD A. McCURDY, President.

STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1886.

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I have carefully examined the foregoing statement and find the same to be correct.

From the Surplus above stated a dividend will be apportioned as usual.

A. N. WATERHOUSE,

Auditor.

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"The most charming letters that ever were printed."—London Daily News.

A COLLECTION OF

LETTERS OF THACKERAY.

1847-1855. With Portraits and Reproductions of Letters and Drawings.

1 vol., octavo, cloth, gilt top. $2.50.

The announcement of the publication of this collection of letters in book form, after their remarkably successful appearance in Scribner's Magazine, has been received by the leading American and European critics as an event well-nigh unprecedented in interest and importance in the literary world.

"They are a literary treasure. As one reads, it seems as if Thackeray had come to life again and were delighting us with a new work from his hand. Here is the familiar wit and tenderness, the knowledge of our preposterous human nature and the eye for its worldly manifestations, and the author himself in his most intimate and charming moods, reflecting and brightening the inconstant comedy of the scenes that interested him. If the series continues as it has begun English literature has a new classic."The Nation. "The world would have been the poorer had these inimitable letters of the great novelist remained unknown. The manly sweetness, tenderness, and humbleness of Thackeray's nature, his reliance on a Power unseen but always acknowledged, his generosity, his wit, his bewitching whimsical quaintness, are all shown in these frank and winning epistles. They are edited, it should be noted, with perfect taste and skill."—N, Y. Tribune.

*** A limited edition of 500 copies, with some unique features of manufacture. As the larger portion of this edition has already been sold, an early subscription is recommended to those who desire to procure a first impression of this important addition to Thackeray literature. Quarto, gilt top, uncut edges. $10.00 net.

A NEW EDITION OF HENRY M. STANLEY'S GREAT WORK. HOW I FOUND LIVINGSTONE: Travels, Adventures, and Discoveries in Central Africa, including an Account of Four Months' Residence with Dr. Livingstone, By HENRY M. STANLEY. With Six Maps and more than 50 Illustrations, 28 being full page. 8vo, $3.50.

"It is full of picturesque description, of racy portraiture of individuals, and graphic and vigorous accounts of adventure as thrilling as any traveler need wish to tell."-The New York Times.

NEW AND CHEAPER EDITION.

TWO YEARS IN THE JUNGLE.
The Experience of a Hunter and Naturalist in India, Ceylon, the
Malay Peninsula, and Borneo. By WILLIAM T. HORNADAY,
Chief Taxidermist U. S. National Museum. With two folding
Maps and 51 Illustrations. 1 vol., 8vo, $3.00.

"This is a work of extraordinary interest. Taken merely as an animated and racy recital of personal adventure, thrilling hunting episodes, and studies of animal life in the jungle, it is a thoroughly fascinating book, entertaining in every page, but it has also a positive scientific value."-The Christian Union.

THE MAKING OF THE GREAT WEST.

1512-1853. By Samuel Adams DRAKE. With 145 Illustrations and Maps. 12mo. $1.75. Mr. Drake's volume is similar in purpose to his other popular work, "The Making of New England," and, like that, presents in a clear and attractive form, most likely to hold the attention of the young readers for whom the book was written, as well as to interest adults, suggestive phases of historical research often overlooked. After discussing in detail and by topics the original explorations of the Spaniards, the French, and the English, he traces the development of America as a nation by conquest, annexation, and by explora. tion. The volume is admirably arranged, is popular in style, and fully illustrated.

BY THE SAME AUTHOR.

THE MAKING OF NEW ENGLAND.

From 1580 to 1643. With 148 Illustrations and Maps. 12mo. $1.50.

"I have read "The Making of New England,' and like it exceedingly. The matter is well chosen and well arranged. I particularly like the presentation of the various minor settlements between the coming of the Pilgrims and the great Massachussets Emigration-a matter of which many people are almost ignorant. The picture of early colonial life is clear and excellent."-Francis ParkmaN.

A MONUMENTAL WORK.

THE SECOND ARMY CORPS.

In the Army of the Potomac. By Gen. FRANCIS A. WALKER.
With Portraits and Maps. 8vo. $4.00.

"We have no hesitation in saying that this history i the very best that the war has produced."-New York Sun.

"No narrative of the war, written on our side-except the memoirs of Grant and Sherman-approaches this book in point of attractive and forcible description."-JOHN C. ROPES, in Boston Advertiser.

NEW AND CHEAPER EDITION OF JULES VERNE'S
GREATEST WORK,

THE EXPLORATION OF THE WORLD.
In three volumes, each volume being complete in itself:
I. FAMOUS TRAVELS AND TRAVELERS.
II. THE GREAT NAVIGATORS.

III. EXPLORERS OF THE 19TH CENTURY.
8vo, extra cloth, $2.50 each. Sold singly, or the set in a
box, $7.50.
Each volume is very fully illustrated with full-page
engravings by famous artists.

SPECIAL OFFER OF THE BOOK BUYER-14 numbers for $1.00.

To any one sending us one dollar ($1.00) and this advertisement we will forward The Book Buyer for fourteen months, begin. ning with the November number and thus including two Christmas numbers. The Book Buyer contains each month descriptive reviews of new books, illustrations and readings from new books, editorials, literary news, special articles by writers of note, literary letters from London and Boston, and a specially engraved portrait, with a sketch of some author. This special offer will remain open only until October 31.

For sale by all booksellers, or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, by

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 743-745 Broadway, New York

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SOLD BY ALL DEALERS.

THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY.

Vol. XVIII.

CONTENTS FOR NOVEMBER, 1887.

Portrait of Oliver Cromwell..

The Manor of Shelter Island. Historic Home of the Sylvesters.

No. 5.

Frontispiece.

361

Mrs. MARTHA J. LAMB.
ILLUSTRATIONS.Map of 1686, showing location of Shelter Island-The Home of Thomas
Brinley in England-Heirlooms of Charles I.-Picture of the box planted by Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester-
Original letter of Nathaniel Sylvester to John Winthrop in 1675-View in the Garden-Entrance Gate
to the Mansion Grounds-Historic Stone Bridge-Quitclaim Deed of what is now Lloyd's Neck-
Portrait of Samuel S. Gardiner-Sunset Rock-The Sylvester Mansion, built in 1737-View from
Front of Henry Dering's House-One of the last of the Slaves-Tortoise-shell Snuff Box-The Haunted
Looking Glass.

Part II.

The American Chapter in Church History; or, The Relationship of Church and
State in the United States.
Rev. PHILIP SCHAFF, D.D.
Hamilto Oneida Academy in 1794.
Aaron Burr. A Study. (I.)..

An Interesting Dialogue in 1676. Between Bacon the "rebel," and John Goode of
Whitby.
G. BROWN GOODE.

390

WALSTEIN ROOT.
CHARLES H. PECK.

396

403

418

Judge J. TARBELL.

423

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Horace Greeley's Practical Advice. An Incident of Reconstruction in Mississippi.

The Religious Movement of 1800.

Minor Topics. Beecher's Humor-A Lament-General Washington's Land.
Original Documents. Two Interesting Letters: fac-simile of autograph letter of Governor
George Clinton to Governor Hamilton, in 1752-General Peter Muhlenburg to Colo-
nel Richard C. Anderson of Kentucky, in 1794.

Notes. Harvard Catalogue-Hon. Mark Skinner-The Constitution-Daniel Webster-
The Pringle Family..

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Queries. A portrait of Columbus-Nelson's River-Author of Lines-The School Law-
The Phelps Family..

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Replies. Boodle-The Stamp Act-Who Led the Troops in the final charge after Arnold
was wounded at Quebec in 1776-Robert Drummond.
Societies. The Weymouth Historical Society-The Rhode Island Historical Society-The
Fairfield County Historical Society.

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Historic and Social Jottings. Illustrated.

Book Notices. A Short History of Architecture, by Tuckerman-The Personal Memoirs and Military History of U. S. Grant versus the record of the Army of the Potomac, by McClellan-Trans-Alleghenny Pioneers, by Hale-Life of Father Isaac Jaques, by Martin, translated by Shea-The Two Spies, Hale and André, by Lossing-Three Good Giants, translated from the French by Dimitry-The Making of the Great West, by Drake-The Longfellow Prose Birthday Book, edited by Laura Winthrop Johnson-Life Notes, or, Fifty Years' Outlook, by Dr. Hague-Uncle Rutherford's Attic, by Joanna H. Mathews-Beecher as a Humorist, by Eleanor Kirk.

Advertisements-Books, Schools, etc., 1 to 12-Periodicals and Miscellaneous, 13 to 22.

453

BINDING THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY.-We can furnish Covers for Binding in dark green levant cloth, for 50 cents; sent by mail, postpaid. Back numbers exchanged, if in good condition, for bound volume in cloth (as above), $1.00; in half Turkey Morocco for $2.00-subscribers paying charges both ways. TERMS:-$5.00 a year, in advance; 50 cents a number. Postmasters receive subscriptions.

Communications should be addressed to

THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN HISTORY,

30 Paternoster Row,

LONDON, ENGLAND.

Entered at New York Post Office as Second Class matter.

743 Broadway, New York City. Copyright, 1887. by Historical Publication Co.

NEW YORK CITY. 6 AND 8 EAST 53D STREET.

Mrs. Sylvanus Reed's Boarding and Day School for Young Ladies.

24th year begins Oct., 1887.

PERIODICALS.

THE

CENTURY.

ITS BRILLIANT PROGRAMME FOR 1888. SIBERIAN PAPERS-"LINCOLN IN THE WAR"-CIRCULATION 250,000-THE NOVEMBER NUMBER.

A prominent newspaper has lately said of THE CENTURY that "it is doing more than any other private agency of to-day to teach the American people the true meaning of the words Nation and Democracy. It is a great magazine, and it is doing a great work.' Its average edition is now nearly 250,000, many issues needing fully that number to supply the demand.

The November Number,

ready everywhere November 1st, is the first issue of the new volume. One of the great features of THE CENTURY for the past year (and one which has added thousands of readers) has been "Abraham Lincoln: A History," by his private secretaries, Messrs. Nicolay and Hay, a work upon which they have been engaged nearly twenty years. The events of Mr. Lincoln's early life having been narrated,-his political conflicts, etc., the writers now enter upon a more important and personal part of their narrative and begin

"Lincoln in the War."

The November CENTURY contains "The President-elect at Springfield," with new material of rare interest, including unpublished letters from and to General Scott, W. H. Seward, Horace Greeley, and Thurlow Weed. After the "War Series" and the Lincoln History, the most important enterprise ever undertaken by THE CENTURY is the forthcoming series of illustrated papers on

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Siberia, and the Exile System,

by George Kennan, author of Tent Life in Siberia, who has just returned from an arduous journey of 15,000 miles through Russia and Siberia, during which, by means of especially favorable letters from Russian officials and a knowledge of the language, he was enabled to visit every important prison in Siberia and to make the acquaintance of more than 300 exiled Liberals and "Nihilists." Graphic features of exile life, "hunger strikes," the traffic in names, the "knock alphabet," etc., etc., will be described, and the illustrations, by Mr. George A. Frost, who accompanied Mr. Kennan throughout his journey, will add interest to this remarkable series. It will begin with four preliminary papers on the Russian revolutionary movement, the first one of which, "The Last Appeal of the Russian Liberals," is in November. Striking facts are here told for the first time.

Important Supplementary War Papers.

Siberia. November contains the last of the "battle" papers by distinguished generals," Grant's Last Campaign," and the surrender at Appomattox, by General Horace Porter, a vivid and touching description of this historic event. These War Papers have probably brought to THE CENTURY more readers than were ever attracted by one teature in the history of magazines. It was for this series that General Grant was first induced to write his reminiscences. A number of supplementary papers, of a general and untechnical character, are to follow the "battle series," to include a paper by General Sherman on "The Grand Strategy of the War," with narratives of personal adventure,-tunneling from Libby Prison,-the torpedo service, the telegraph, etc., etc. The Lincoln History will contain much that is entirely new regarding the conduct of the Civil War.

Fiction by Eggleston and Cable.

Two important stories begin in this November number,-"The Graysons," a story of Illinois, a novel by Edward Eggleston, the author of "The Hoosier Schoolmaster," etc.; and "Au Large," a three-part story of Acadian life, by George W. Cable, author of "Old Creole Days," etc. Both are illustrated. will begin

A Three-Part Story by Frank R. Stockton, entitled "The Dusantes," by the author of "Rudder Grange,' "The Hundredth Man," etc., etc. be a great variety of short stories by the best authors throughout the year, many of them illustrated. Dinner," by W. H. Bishop, is in November.

The Illustrated Features

In December

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of the November CENTURY include "The Home and Haunts of Washington," with an interesting frontispiece portrait of Washington, never before engraved; "Augustus St. Gaudens," -a paper descriptive of this distinguished sculptor's work, beautifully illustrated with engravings, including a full-page picture of St. Gaudens's new statue of Lincoln for Chicago; "Sugar-Making in Louisiana," with 17 striking pictures by Kemble, "College Composites," etc., etc.

THE CENTURY.costs $4.00 per year, 35 cents a number,-twelve monthly numbers of 160 pages (and 150,000 words), with from fifty to one hundred pictures. BEGIN WITH NOVEMBER. All booksellers, newsdealers, and postmasters take subscriptions. Send for our illustrated catalogue, containing full prospectus, etc., with special offer of back numbers of the Lincoln history at a low price. The Century Co., 33 East 17th Street, New York.

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