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as a profession requires much greater detail in the knowledge of concrete facts of a routine nature. An analysis was made of the various divisions of the steamship office organization and it was suggested to the United States Shipping Board that as no literature existed of sufficient practicability and detail several manuals should be written covering the principal feature of shore operations.

"The response of the Shipping Board was hearty. The Shipping Board appointed Mr. Emory R. Johnson of its staff, then conducting an investigation of ocean rates and terminal charges, as its editor. The Federal Board for Vocational Education designated Mr. R. S. MacElwee, then engaged in the preparation of studies in foreign commerce. Before the project was completed Mr. Johnson severed his connection with the Shipping Board in 1919, and January, 1919, Mr. MacElwee became Assistant Director of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Department of Commerce. The interest of the editors in the project did not terminate, however, and their close coöperation has been voluntarily continued out of conviction that the works will be helpful.

"The books have been written with a view to their being read by individual students conducting their studies without guidance, also with the expectation that they will be used as class textbooks. Doubtless colleges, technical institutes and high schools having courses in foreign trade, shipping business and ocean transportation, will desire to use these volumes as class texts in a manner outlined in 'Training for the Steamship Business,' by R. S. MacElwee, Miscellaneous Series 98, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D. C. It is expected that evening classes and part-time schools, organized under the patronage of the Federal Board for Vocational Education, Chambers of Commerce, and other interested organizations will find the manuals useful. Should these volumes accomplish the desired purpose of giving the American people a somewhat greater proficiency in the business of operating ships, they will have proven successful."

This volume on "The Law of the Sea" is intended to present the principles of admiralty law in concise and practical form. It is a manual for the student, the owner, or the master of a

vessel who may desire to acquire information concerning the main facts and principles of maritime law without attempting to acquire such a mastery of the subject as is possessed by an admiralty lawyer.

THE EDITORS

AUTHORS' PREFACE

This book is not an exhaustive treatise or a compendium of authorities. It is designed to be an outline of the subject primarily for the student, more especially the student layman who desires to inform himself of the general principles of admiralty law.

It is impracticable in a work of this sort to reprint the statutes relating to the various subjects of admiralty jurisprudence, since the federal statutes alone would constitute a volume more extensive than this. The salient features of the statutes have been noticed and references given to all of them. They are to be found in the Revised Statutes, the Compiled Statutes, the Statutes at large, and in the compilation of Navigation Laws published by the Bureau of Navigation, U. S. Department of Commerce.

The subject of marine insurance is treated in another volume of this series and is, therefore, omitted here.

In the chapter on Collision, we have not discussed the fixing of liability under particular circumstances of navigation, such as collision between vessels meeting, vessels passing, etc. While these matters are treated in most text-books, their discussion belongs largely to navigation and is useful only in a legal treatise for the purpose of determining liability after an accident has occurred. It could not guide the reader to avoid collision liability, and is therefore omitted in a work intended rather as a guide for the avoidance of trouble than as a dictionary of

remedies.

For the same reason, only the most cursory sketch of admiralty procedure has been given. That is the province of the proctor, who must be consulted when litigation has become necessary.

The reader will find that a few subjects treated in the body of the work are also covered in Appendix I (Summary of the Navigation Laws). This is due to the fact that the appendix was prepared for independent publication. The repetitions are not

numerous and, as the treatment is different in form, it will be found advantageous to the student rather than otherwise.

Acknowledgment is made to Miss Florence A. Colford of the District of Columbia bar, for valuable and painstaking aid.

G. L. C.

G. W. D.

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