Text: William Henry Gravely, Jr., “Bibliography,” The Early Political and Literary Career of Thomas Dunn English Story, dissertation, 1953 (This material is protected by copyright)


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BIBLIOGRAPHY

The following bibliography is divided into three main sections. The first of these is made up primarily of those books and articles which have been specifically cited in the footnotes and, in a few instances, of those which, though not specifically cited, have influenced the present study in a general way. The term “article” is taken in its broadest sense to include magazine items such as fugitive poems, brief book notices, printed letters, and editorial comments of any significance, as well as the more important newspaper items of a similar kind. The second section is composed of a list of the newspapers that have been cited and also of a list of certain periodicals (chiefly those edited by English or by Poe) which have been combed with special care for pertinent editorial and critical remarks. These are entered in such a way as to indicate either the specific dates or the approximate periods of time for which they have served their purpose, if only to yield comparatively negative results. Because of the large number of newspapers consulted, each entry in this category is alphabetized, first, according to the city or town of its location, and secondly, according to the first word of the title other than an article or place name. The periodicals are alphabetized by title only. The third section is comprised of manuscripts. If a manuscript is part of a collection which has been used through recourse either to the originals or to photostatic copies of them, only the collection is listed. Appended to these three sections are a few miscellaneous items which, because of their nature or for the sake of convenience, have been given a separate classification.

I

Books, articles, etc.

[The presence, in this section, of an asterisk after any unacknowledged magazine item assigned to either English or Poe indicates that in the opinion of the writer the authorship of the item has been established beyond any reasonable doubt.]

Abernethy, Thomas P., “Robert Tyler,” Dictionary of American Biography, XIX, 94.

Adams, John Quincy, Memoirs of John Quincy Adams. Edited by Charles Francis Adams. 12 vols. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott and company, 1874-1877.

Advertisement of The Elephant, The John-Donkey, I (January 22, 1848), 64. [page 773:]

Allen, Hervey, Israfel. The Life and Times of Edgar Allan Poe. 2 vols. New York: George H. Doran Company, 1926. Revised ed. (2 vols. in one); New York: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc., 1934.

Bassett, John Spencer, editor, Correspondence of Andrew Jackson. 6 vols. Washington: Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1926-1933.

Bayless, Joy, Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor. Nashville, Tennessee: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943.

“Ben Bolt,” Harper's Weekly, XXXVIII (July 21, 1894), 682.

Benton, Thomas H., Thirty Years’ View; or, A History of the Working of the American Government for Thirty Years, from 1820 to 1850. 2 vols. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1883.

Biddle, J. B., “Nathaniel Chapman,” in Lives of Eminent American Physicians and Surgeons of the Nineteenth Century. Edited by Samuel D. Gross., Philadelphia: Lindsay and Blackiston, 1861.

Boatfield, Helen C., “Michael Walsh,” Dictionary of American Biography, XIX, 390391.

Branch, E. Douglas, The Sentimental Years, 1836-1860. New York and London: D. Appleton-Century Company, 1934.

Brown, Herbert Ross, The Sentimental Novel in America, 1789-1860. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 1940.

Campbell, John, Negro-mania: Being an Examination of the Falsely Assumed Equality of the Various Races of Men; Demonstrated by the Investigations of Champoilion, Wilkinson, Rosellini. Van-Amringe, Gliddon, Young, Morton, Knox, Lawrence, Gen. J. H. Hammond, Murray, Smith, W. Gilmore Simms, English, Conrad, Elder, Prichard, Blumenbach, Cuvier, Brown, Le Vaillant, Carlyle, Cardinal Wiseman, Burckhardt, and Jefferson. Philadelphia: Campbell and Power, 1851.

Campbell, Killis, “Biographical Notes on Poe — I,” The Nation, LXXXIX (December 23, 1909), 623-624.

——, The Mind of Poe and Other Studies. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1933.

——, “The Poe Canon,” Publications of the Modern Language Association, XXVII (September, 1912), 325-353. [page 774:]

Carpenter} Frank G., “A Talk with a President's Son,” Lippincott's Monthly Magazine, XLI (March, 1888),

Carson, Joseph, A History of the Medical Department of the University of Pennsylvania, from Its Foundation in 1765. With Sketches of the Lives of Deceased Professors. Philadelphia: Lindsay and Blakiston, 1869.

Chamberlain, Joshua L., editor, University of Pennsylvania: Its History, Influence, Equipment and Characteristics, with Biographical Sketches and Portraits of Founders, Benefactors, Officers and Alumni. 2 vols. Boston: R. Herndon Company, 1901-1902.

Chamberlin, Joseph Edgar, “Edgar A. Poe and His Boston Critic, Miss Walter,” Boston Evening Transcript, January 26, 1924, Book Section, p. 2, cols. 1-7.

Cheney, Edward P., History of the University of Pennsylvania, 1740-1940. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1940.

Chitwood, Oliver P., John Tyler, Champion of the Old South. New York and London: D. Appleton-Century Company, 1939.

Chivers, Thomas Holley, Chivers' Life of Poe. Edited by Richard Beale Davis. New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, Inc., 1952.

——, The Lost Pleiad: and Other Poems. New York: Printed by Edward O. Jenkins, 1845.

Clark, Lewis Gaylord, Editorial attack on Poe in “Editor's Table,” The Knickerbocker, XXVII (May, 1846), 46l.

——, Review of Edgar A. Poe, The Raven and Other Poems, in “Literary Notices,” The Knickerbocker, XXVII (January, 1846), 69-72.

Cole, Arthur Charles, The Whig Party in the South. Washington, 1913.

Constitution, By-laws, Charter, &c., of the Medico Chirurgical College of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: Bryan and Holland, Printers, 1854.

Croskey, John Welsh, compiler, History of Blockley: A History of the Philadelphia General Hospital from Its Inception, 1731-1928. Philadelphia:1 F. A. Davis Company, 1929. [page 775:]

Damon, S. Foster, Thomas Holley Chivers, Friend of Poe. New York and London: Harper and Brothers, 1930.

Davis, Harold P., Black Democracy: the Story of Haiti. Revised ed.; New York: Dodge Publishing Company, 1936.

Dow, Jesse E., Review of Thomas Dunn English's “Tecumseh's Last Battle,” Alexandria Evening Index, November 27, 1841, p. 3, cols. 3-4.

Duganne, Augustine J. H., Parnassus in Pillory. A Satire. New York: Adriance, Sherman and Company, 1851.

Durang, Charles, “The Philadelphia Stage from the Year 1749 to the Year 1855,” Third Series ... Embracing the Period between the season of 1830-'31, and the demolition of the Chestnut Street Theatre April, 1855, Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch, July 8, 1860 - April 19, 1863.

Edgar A. Poe vs. Hiram Fuller and Augustus W. Clason, Jr. Report of the case as tried before Chief Justice Jones of the New York Superior Court, New York Sun, February 18, 1847, p. 2 cols. 45; New York Morning Express, February l8, 1847, p. 2, cols. 3-4.

Edgett, Edwin Francis, “Charles Burke,” Dictionary of American Biography, III, 280-281.

Editorial comment on The John-Donkey in the New York Sunday Mercury as quoted in The John-Donkey, I (January 22, 1848), 64.

Editorial comment on Zephaniah Doolittle, The Hesperian, I (October, 1838), 493.

Editorial on Democratic Union in the Richmond Enquirer as reprinted in Niles’ National Register, LXVI (August 24, 1844), 416.

Editorial on Lafayette Philadelphia National Gazette, September 29, 1824, p. 2, cols. 13.

“Elective Affinities; — a Novel by Goethe,” The American Review of History and Politics, and General Repository of Literature and State Papers, III (January, 1812), 51-69.

English, Thomas Dunn, “The Adventures of Don Key Haughty” (printed under the caption of “The Untranslated Don Quixote”), The John-Donkey, I (January 8, 1848), 20-21; January 15, pp. 36-37; January 22, pp. 52-53; January 29, pp. 76-78; February 5, pp. 92-93; February 12, pp. 99-101; February 19, pp. 115-117; February 26, pp. 132-133; March 4, pp. 148-149; March 11, p. 165. [page 776:]

——, Advertisement of the Second Volume of The Aristidean, The Broadway Journal, II (December 13, 1845), 361.

——, “Alice,” Graham's Magazine, XXXV (October 1849), 200.

——, “The American Poets,” The Aristidean, I (October, 1845), 287-292.

——, “The Authorship of ‘Ben Bolt,’ ” Richmond Enquirer, May 31, 1853, p. 2, cols. 34.

——, “Azthene,” The Aristidean, I (November, 1845), 382. Reprinted in The Broadway Journal, II (January 3, 1846), 406.

——, “Bad in Either,”* The John-Donkey, I (February 5, 1848), 96.

——, [“Ben Bolt”], The New Mirror, I (September 2, 1843), 347. [“Ben Bolt,” as here first printed, had no title.]

——, “Between the Ebb and Flow,” Saturday Review Supplement of the New York Times, January 21, 1899, p. 44; March 25, 1899, p. 200.

——, “Blood for Blood,”* Metcalfe's Miscellany, I (March, l84l), 1721.

——, “The Bread-Snatcher,” The Broadway Journal, II (September 27, 1845), 176-177 First printed in the Philadelphia Irish Citizen (probably in either 1843 or 1844).

——, [?], A Brief Sketch of the Life of John Tyler. Philadelphia: J. R. Colon, l8’42.

——, “The Coming Administration,” The Aristidean, I (March, 1845, pp. 76-79.

——, Communication printed under the caption of “Mr. English's Reply to Mr. Poe,” New York Morning Telegraph, June 23, 1846, p. 2, col. 4. Reprinted as a card in the New York Evening Mirror of the same date.

——, Communication printed under the caption of “A CARD, in Reply to Mr. Poe's Rejoinder,” New York Evening Mirror, July 13, 1846, p. 2, col. 3.

——, Communication printed under the caption of “Splendid Advice for Beginners,” Bulletin of the Society of American Authors, IV (December, 1899), 10-12. [page 777:]

——, “A Criticism (Astray from the Office of the Broadway Journal),”* The Town, I (May 17, 1845), 166. Reprinted under the heading of “Review of New Books. By E. A, Poe” in The John-Donkey, I.(June 3, 1848), 364.

——, “Croup Treated with Nitrate of Silver,” The Philadelphia Lancet, I (January 1, 1851), 56.

——, Doggerel couplet, The Aristidean, I (November, 1845), 353. Reprinted, in slightly altered form, in The Broadway Journal, II (January 3, 1846), 407.

——, the Doom of the Drinkers; or, Revel and Retribution,” The Cold Water Magazine, III (October-December, 1843), 101-183.

——, “Dora Lee,” Sartain's Magazine, X (April, 1852), 292.

——, “Down Among the Dead Men,” The Old Guard, VII (November 1869), 827-833; December, pp. 900-906. Vol VIII (January, 1870), 25-30; February, pp. 118-123; March, pp. 227-232: April, pp. 301-305; May, pp. 386-389; June pp. 466-469; August pp. 607-610; September, pp. 708-711; October, pp. 782-784; December, pp. 925-929.

——, “The Dying Girl,” Philadelphia Saturday Courier, August 5, 1837, p. 1, col. 4.

——, Editorial, The Philadelphia Lancet, I (February 1, 1851), 22.

——, Editorial, The Philadelphia Lancet, I (February 15, 1851), 27.

——, Editorial, The Philadelphia Lancet, I (February 15, 1851), 28.

——, “1844, or, The Power of the ‘S. F.,’ A Tale Developing the Secret Action of Parties in the Late Election Canvass,” The New-York Mirror, IV (July 25, 1846), 241-243; August 1, pp. 257-259; August 8, pp. 273-275; August 15, pp. 289-291; August 22, pp. 305, 309; August 29, pp. 321-325; September 5, pp. 337, 341; September 12, pp. 353-357; September 19, pp. 369-373; September 26, pp. 385-389; October 3, pp. 401-405 Vol. V (October 10, 1846), 14; October 17, pp. 1720; October 24, pp. 33-37; October 31, pp. 49-52; November 7, pp. 65-67.

——, 1844; or, The Power of the “S. F.,” — A Tale: Developing the Secret Action of Parties during the [page 778:] Presidential Campaign of 1844. New York: Burgess, Stringer and Company; William H. Graham; Long and Brother; J. A. Tuttle and Company; George Dexter, 1847.

——, “England and Texas,” The Aristidean, I (October, 1845), 245-253.

——, “Fables in Rhyme,” Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, VI (January, l840), 15; February, p. 77; April, p. 167.

——, “The Farewell,” Philadelphia Saturday Courier, April 1, 1837, p. 1, col. 5.

——, “Felix O. C. Darley,” Sartain's Magazine, VII (November, 1850), 309-312.

——, “The Gallows-Goers,” New York Daily Tribune, March 2, 1844, p. 2, col. 1.

——, “The Genius of Revenge,” The Casket, No. 8 (August, 1837), 354

—— “The Ghost of a Grey Tadpole,” Baltimore Republican and Daily Argus, February 1, 1844. Reprinted with slight alterations under the title of ‘’Tale of a Gray Tadpole” in The John-Donkey, I (June 3, 1848), 364-365.

——, “Great Literary Crash,” The John-Donkey, II (August 12, 1848), 67.

——, “Henry B. Hirst's Poems,” The Aristidean, I (September, 1845), 193-202.

——, “Hon. George Mifflin Dallas,” The Aristidean, I (April, 1845), 143-145.

——, “Infancy,” The Gentleman's Magazine, I (November, 1837), 325.

——, Introductory editorial remarks to Robert Tyler, “The Democratic Review, and the Late Acting President,” The Aristidean, I (April, 1845), 115.

——, “Hints to Authors,” The John-Donkey, I (June. 1845), 364.

——, Letter to the Editor of the Washington Madisonian, November 11, 1842, printed as a card in the Philadelphia Public Ledger, November 14, 1842, p. 2, cols. 5-6.

——, Letter to John H. Ingram, n. d., The Independent, XXXVIII (April 15, 1886), 455. [page 779:]

——, Letter to John H. Ingram, n. d., The Independent, XXXVIII (April 22, 1886), 488-489

——, Letter to Messrs. Mifflin and Perry, November 3 1842, Philadelphia Pennsylvania, November 7, 1842, p. 2, col. 2.

——, Letter to Thomas H. Murray, January 11, [1897], The Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, I (1898), 29-30.

——, “Lines for Music,” Philadelphia Saturday Courier, September 15, 1838, p. 1, col. 1.

——, “A Lover's Song,” The Aristidean, I (March, 1845), 69.

——, “Mr. Edgar A. Poe,”* The John-Donkey, I (January 8, 1848), 27

——, “Mr. Polk's Message,” The Aristidean, I (November 1845), 394-397

——, Prospectus of Metcalfe's Miscellany, Metcalfe's Miscellany, I (March, 184l), outside back cover.

——, “Morning,” The Casket, XVI (April, l840), 51.

——, “Musings at Evening,” Metcalfe's Miscellany, I (March, 1841), 30.

——, “Natural History of John-Donkey,”* The John Donkey, I (March 18, 1848), 191.

——, “A Nice Job,”* The John-Donkey, I (January 1, 1846), 3.

——, “Notes about Men of Note,” The Aristidean, I “(April, 1845), 153-155.

——, “Our Aims and Purposes,” The Philadelphia Lancet, I (January 1, 185I), 10.

——, “Our Pigeon-Holes,” The Aristidean, I (March, 1845) 79-82; April, pp. 160-163; September, pp. 242-244; October, pp. 322-324.

——, “The Peasant Boy,” The Gentleman's Magazine, I (December, 1837), 368.

——, “Peculiar Persons Whom I Have Met,” Newark Evening News, June 30, 1900, p. 13, cols. 5-6; July 7, p. 14, cols. 13. [page 780:]

——, “Peter F. Rothermel,” Sartain's Magazine, X (January, 1852), 183-6.

——, “Philosophy; a Farce.” The Aristidean, I (October, 1845), 296-303.

——, “Repeal in America,” The Aristidean, I (December, 1845), 405-408.

——, “The Poetry of Poland,” The Gentleman's Magazine, III (October, 1838), 249-252.

——, “The Present Administration,” The Aristidean, I (April, 1845), 156-159.

——, “Reminiscences of Poe,” The Independent, XLVIII (October 15, 1896), 1381-1382; October 22, pp. 1415-1416; October 29, pp. 1448; November 5, pp. 1480-1481.

——, Review of Edgar A. Poe, The Raven and Other Poems in “Our Book-Shelves,” The Aristidean, I (November, 1845), 399-404.

——, “The Rise and Fall,” Philadelphia Saturday Courier, September 23, 1837, p. 1, col. 1.

——, “The Ropemaker,” The Aristidean, I (March 1845) 35

——, “Sacred Lyrics,” The Gentleman's Magazine, VI (March, 1840), 121; May, p. 211.

——, The Select Poems of Dr. Thomas Dunn English (Exclusive of the “Battle Lyrics”). Edited by Alice English, Newark, New Jersey: Published by Private Subscription, 1894.

——, “Stanzas,” The Casket, No. 6 (June, 1837), 252.

——, “Stanzas, (On Beholding Some School-Toys,” The Gentleman's Magazine, IV (February, 1839), 93.

——, “Szechenyi and Wesselenyi,” Sartain's Magazine, VII (September, 1850), 174-177.

——, “Tecumseh's Last Battle,” The Ladies’ Companion, XVI (November, 1841), 38.

——, “Temperance Song,” Philadelphia Saturday Courier, August 4, 1838, p. 2,col. 3.

——, “The Termites of Africa,” The Casket, No. 5 (May, 1837), 226-227. [page 781:]

——, “The Texas Question,” The Aristidean, I (March, 1845), 58.

——, “To a White Rose,” The Gentleman's Magazine, III (August, 1838), 107.

——, “To the Lady of My Heart,” The Casket, XV (July, 1839), 46.

——, “Touch Not the Bowl,” Atkins on's Saturday Evening Post, Philadelphia, September 1, 1838, p. 1, col. 7.

——, “Valedictory,” The Aristidean, I (December, 1845), 476.

——, “Valedictory,” The John-Donkey, II (October 21, 1848), 124.

——, Walter Woolfe; or, The Doom of the Drinker. New York; William B. Smith and Company, 1847.

——, “Zephaniah Doolittle; a Poem. From the Manuscripts of Montmorency Sneerlip Snags, Esq.,” The Gentleman's Magazine, III (September, 1838), 187-192.

——, Zephaniah Doolittle; a Poem. From the Manuscripts of Montmorency Sneerlip Snags, Esq. 2d ed.; Philadelphia: Printed by C. Alexander, 1838.

——, [and Edgar Allan Poe?], “Poe's Tales,” The Aristidean, I (October, 1845), 316-319.

——, and others (including Edgar Allan Poe) “Our Book-Shelves,” The Aristidean. I (March, 1845), 82-84; April, pp. 163-164; September’, pp. 234-242; October, pp. 320-322; November, pp. 398-404; December, pp. 473-474.

——, and Several Collaborators, The Aristidean [bound copy]. New York: Lane and Company; Philadelphia: R. S. English, 1846.

“Epigram. On an Indigent Poet,” The New-York Mirror, IV (September 19, 1846), 381.

“Equality of the Races — Negro Mania,” De Bow's Review of the Southern and Western States, XI (December, 1851), 630-634.

Eveleth, George W., The Letters from George W. Eveleth to Edgar Allan Poe. Edited by Thomas O. Mabbott. The New York Public Library, 1922. Reprinted from the [page 782:] Bulletin of the New York Public Library, XXVI (March, 1922), 171-195.

Fagin, N. Bryllion, The Histrionic Mr. Poe. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1949.

Fitnam, Thomas, Letter to the Editor of the Washington Madisonian, n. d., printed as a card in the Philadelphia Public Ledger, November 17, 1842, p. 2, col. 6.

Fitzgerald, Thomas F., compiler, Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey, [Vols. for 1891, 1892, 1893, and 1894,] Trenton: T. F. Fitzgerald, n. d.

Foster, George G., Letter to the Editor of the New York Tribune, May 17, 1848, as printed in the New York Tribune, May 20, 1848, p. 2, col. 3.

——, New York in Slices: by an Experienced Carver. Being the Original Slices Published in the N. Y. Tribune. New York: W. F. Burgess, 1849.

——, “Slice 1 — The Immigrants,” New York Tribune, July 6, 1848, p. 2, col. 2. [This is the first of Foster's sketches entitled “New York in Slices” as they originally appeared in the Tribune.]

——, and Thomas Dunn English, The French Revolution of 1848: Its Causes, Actors, Events and Influences. Philadelphia: G. B. Zieber and Company, 1848.

Fraser, Hugh Russell, Democracy in the Making: the Jackson-Tyler Era. Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1938.

Fuller, Hiram, “Law and Libel,” New York Evening Mirror, February 18, 1847, p. 2, col. 1.

Genzmer, George H., “George Rex Graham,” Dictionary of American Biography, VII, 473-474.

——, “John Gummere,” Dictionary of American Biography, VIII, 49.

Gill, William F., “Edgar Allan Poe and His Critics,” New York Home Journal, February 26, 1896, p. 6, cols. 3-4.

——, The Life of Edgar Allan Poe. 3d ed. revised and enlarged; London: Chatto and Windus, 1878.

Godey, Louis A., Editorial comment on Edgar A. Poe, “The Literati of New York City,” in “Editor's Book Table,” Godey's Lady's Book, XXXII (May, 1846), 240; June, p. 288. [page 783:]

Goebel, Dorothy B., William Henry Harrison: A Political Biography. Indianapolis: The Historical Bureau of the Indiana Library and Historical Department, 1926.

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, Novels and Tales. Translated chiefly by R. D. Boylan. “Bohn's Standard Library”; London: Henry G. Bohn, 1854.

Goldberg, Isaac, Major Noah. America-Jewish Pioneer. New York and London: Alfred A. Knopf, 1937.

Gordon, Armistead Churchill, Jr., Review of Chivers' Life of Poe, edited by Richard Beale Davis, New York Times, June 22, 1952, Section VII (“The New York Times Book Review”), p. 4, col. 5.

Gowans, William, Catalogue of American Books. No. 28, 1870.

Gravely, William Henry, Jr., “Christopher North and the Genesis of The Raven,” Publications of the Modern Language Association, LXVI (March, 1951), 149-161.

——, “An Incipient Libel Suit Involving Poe,” Modern Language Notes, LX (May 1, 1945), pp. 308-311.

Greeley, Horace, “Genius and the Law of Libel,” New York Tribune, February 19, 1847, p. 2, col. 2.

——, Notice of George G. Foster and Thomas Dunn English, The French Revolution of 1848, New York Tribune, May 17, 1848, p. 2, col. 4.

——, Recollections of a Busy Life. New York: J. B. Ford and Company, 1868.

——, Notice of The Aristidean for March, 1845, New York Daily Tribune, February 13, 1845, p. 1, cols. 2-3.

Griswold, Rufus Wilmot, editor, The Female Poets of America. 1st ed.; Philadelphia: Carey and Hart, 1849.

——, editor, The Poets and Poetry of America. With an Historical Introduction. 7th ed.; Philadelphia: Carey and Hart, 1846, 8th ed., 1847; 9th ed., 1848; 10th ed., 1850; 16th ed., Parry and McMillan, 1855.

——, Statement of the Relations of Rufus W. Griswold with Charlotte Myers (called Charlotte Griswold,) Elizabeth F. Ellet, Ann S. Stephens, Samuel J. Waring, Hamilton R. Searles, and Charles D. Lewis, with Particular Reference to Their Late Unsuccessful Attempt To Have Set Aside the Decree Granted in 1852. by the Gaunt of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, in the [page 784:] Case of Griswold vs. Griswold. Philadelphia: Printed by Henry B. Ashmead, 1856.

Griswold, William M., editor, Passages from the Correspondence and Other Papers of Rufus W. Griswold. Cambridge, Massachusetts: W. M. Griswold, 1898.

Gross, Samuel D., Autobiography of Samuel D. Gross, M.D. With Sketches of His Contemporaries. Edited by Samuel W. and A. Haller Gross. 2 vols. Philadelphia: George Barrie, 1887.

Haney, John L., “Robert Taylor Conrad,” Dictionary of American Biography, IV, 355-356.

Harrington, Henry F., “Poe Not To Be Apotheosized,” The Critic, IV, New Series (October 3, 1885). 157-158.

Harrison, William H., Letter to Sherrod Williams, May 1, 1836. as printed in Niles’ Weekly Register, LI (September 10, 1836), 24-25.

Heartman, Charles F., and James R. Canny, A Bibliography of First Printings of the Writings of Edgar Allan Poe. Revised ed.; Hattiesburg, Mississippi: The Book Farm, 1943.

Hewitt, Mary E., editor, The Memorial: Written by the Friends of the Late Mrs. Osgood. New York: George P. Putnam, 1851.

Hirst, Henry B., “Morning,” Alexander's Weekly Messenger, Philadelphia, November 4, 1840.

Hone, Philip, The Diary of Philip Hone. Edited, with an Introduction by Allan Nevins. 2 vols. New York: Dodd, Mead, and Company, 1927.

Hood, Samuel, “On the Study of International Law,” Metcalfe's Miscellany, I (March, l84l), 910.

Hunt, William Southworth, “The Story of a Song,” Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society, LI (January, 1933], 24-33

Hurley, Leonard B., “A New Note in the War of the Literati,” American Literature, VII (January, 1936), 376-394.

Ingram, John H., Edgar Allan Poe: His Life, Letters. and Opinions. 2 vols. London: John Hogg, 1880.

Ireland, Joseph N., Records of the New York Stage from 1750 to 1860. 2 vols. New York: T. H. Morrell, 1867. [page 785:]

Jack, Theodore H., “Dixon Hall Lewis,” Dictionary of American Biography, XI, 209-210.

Jackson, Joseph, “A Bibliography of the Works of George Lippard,” The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, LIV (April, 1930), 131-154.

——, “Paul Beck Goddard,” Dictionary of American Biography, VII, 340.

Jackson, Samuel, A Discourse Commemorative of Nathaniel Chapman, M. D. Philadelphia: T. K. and P. G. Collins, Printers, 1854.

“Jacob Miller Willis Geist,” The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, V, 392.

January, Josephine Poe, “Edgar Allan Poe's ‘Child Wife ‘” The Century Magazine, LXXVIII (October, 1909), 894-896.

Jefferson, Joseph, The Autobiography of Joseph Jefferson. New York: The Century Company, 1890.

“The John-Donkey to His Brother the Public,” The John-Donkey, I (January 1, 1848), 3.

“John Rutherfoord,” The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, V, 450.

Jones, George, Oration on the National Independence, Richmond, Va. July.4, 1840, before the Franklin Society, at the City-Hall. Richmond: Smith and Palmer, 1840.

——, An Original History of Ancient America. Founded upon the Ruins of Antiquity: The Identity of the Aborigines with the People of Tyrus and Israel: and the Introduction of Christianity by the Apostle St. Thomas. ‘st ed.; London: Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans; New York: Harper and Brothers; Berlin: Alexander Duncker; Paris: Frederick Kliencksieck. 1843.

——, Tecumseh and the Prophet of the West, an Historical Israel-Indian Tragedy, in Five Acts. With Historical Notes; Original Letters, &c. / The Life and History of General Harrison, Late President of the United States” Inclusive to the Treaty of Washington, of August 9th, 1842. With Original Letters, &c. / and The First Oration upon the Life, Character and Genius of Shakespeare. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans; New York: Harper Brothers; Paris: F. Kliencksieck; Berlin: Alexander Duncker, 1844. [page 786:]

Jones, George (Leigh Cliffe, pseud.), The Pilgrim of Avon. London: Simpkin and Marshall; Stratford-upon-Avon: J. Ward, 1836.

Keese, William L., William E. Burton, Actor, Author, and Manager. A Sketch of His Career with Recollections of His Performances. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1885.

Knight, Joseph, “William Charles Macready,” Dictionary of National Biography, XXXV, 277-283.

Kobbé, Gustav, “Some Famous American Songs II. — ‘Ben Bolt,’ ” The Delineator, May, I906, pp. 879-882.

Lambert, Oscar Doane. Presidential Politics in the United States, 1841-1844. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 1936.

“The Late Thomas Dunn English, ‘39M.” The Alumni Register, University of Pennsylvania, VI (May, 1902), 403-408.

Lefler, Hugh T., “Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence,” Dictionary of American History, III, 368.

——, “Mecklenburg Resolves,” Dictionary of American History, III, 368.

Leland, Charles Godfrey, Memoirs. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1893.

Leonard, William Ellery, Byron and Byronism in America. New York: The Columbia University Press, 1907.

“Letters on Miscellaneous Subjects,” Metcalfe's Miscellany, I (March, 1841), 28-30.

Lippard, George, “The Bread Crust Papers,” Philadelphia Spirit of the Times, March 28, 1842, p. 1, cols. 4-5; March 29, p. 1, cols. 4-5; March 30, p. 1, cols. 4-5; March 31, p. 1, cols. 4-5; April l, p. 1, cols. 4-5.

“Literature on Horseback,” The John-Donkey, I (April 8, 1848), 237.

Mabbott, Thomas Ollive, “Frances Sargent Locke Osgood,” Dictionary of American Biography, XIV, 77-78.

——, “Poe and the Philadelphia Irish Citizen,” The Journal of the American Irish Historical Society, XXIX (1930-1931), 121-131. [page 787:]

——, “Walt Whitman and The Aristidean,” The American Mercury, II (June, 1924), 205-207.

——, and William Henry Gravely, Jr., “Two Replies to ‘A Minor Poe Mystery,’ ” The Princeton University Library Chronicle, V (April, 1944), 106-114.

McClellan, J. H. B., “George McClellan,” in Lives of Eminent American Physicians and Surgeons of the Nineteenth Century. Edited by Samuel D. Gross. “Philadelphia: Lindsay and Blakiston, 1861.

McCormac, Eugene I., James K. Polk: A Political Biography. Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1922.

M'Makin, Andrew, “Apostrophe to Death,” Metcalfe's Miscellany, I (March, 1841), 2.

McMaster, John Bach, A History of the People of the United States, from the Revolution to the Civil War. 8 vols. New York and London: D. Appleton and Company, 1927-1929.

Martin, John Hill, Martin's Bench and Bar of Philadelphia; together with Other Lists of Persons Appointed To Administer the Laws in the City and County of Philadelphia, and the Province and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: R. Welsh and Company, 1883.

Mickiewicz, Adam, Poems by Adam Mickiewicz. Translated by various hands and edited by George R. Noyes. New York: The Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in America, 1944.

“Mr. Poe and the New York Literati,” New York Evening Mirror, May 26, 1846, p. 2, cols. 1-2.

Mott, Frank Luther, A History of American Magazines, 1741-1850. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1938.

Myers, Albert C., Immigration of Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania, 1682-1750, with Their Early History in Ireland. Swarthmore, Pennsylvania: The Author, 1902.

“Napoleon Reentering France,” Metcalfe's Miscellany, I (March, 1841), 23.

Nelson, William, editor, Calendar of Records in the Office of the Secretary of State, 1664-1703. Paterson, New Jersey: The Press Printing and Publishing Company, 1889. Vol. XXI of Archives of the State of New Jersey, First Series. [page 788:]

——, editor, Marriage Records, 16651800. Paterson, New Jersey: The Press Printing and Publishing Company, 1900. Vol. XXII of Archives of the State of New Jersey, First Series.

Nevin, Robert P., “Stephen C. Foster and Negro Minstrelsy,” The Atlantic Monthly, XX (November, 1867), 608-616.

Nevins, Allan, “Timothy Shay Arthur,” Dictionary of American Biography, I, 377~379.

“New Magazines,” The Town, I (February 15, 1845), 4.

Nichols, Jeannette P., “Jonathan Roberts,” Dictionary of American Biography, XVI, 910.

Noll, Arthur H., “The Truth about ‘Ben Bolt’ and Its Author,” The Midland Monthly (January, 1897), pp. 310

Notice of 1844; or. The Power of the “S. F.,” as quoted in The New-York Mirror, IV (September 26, 1846), 393.

Notice of 1844; or The Power of the “S. F.,” in ‘’Recent Publications, The Literary World, I (June 5, 1847), 423.

Obituary of John Donkey. The John-Donkey, I (June 24, 1848), 408.

Odell, George C. D., Annals of the New York Stage. 15 vols. to date. New York: Columbia University Press 1927.

“The Origin of ‘Ben Bolt,’ ” Harper's Weekly, XXXVIII (July 21, 1894), 682.

Osgood, Frances Sargent. “Ida Grey,” Graham's Magazine, XXVII (August, 1845), 82-84.

——, Poems. Philadelphia: Carey and Hart, 1850.

——, “Slander,” The Broadway Journal, II (August 30, 1845), 113

O'Sullivan, John L., “The Late Acting President,” The United States Magazine, and Democratic Review, XVI (March, 18457, 211-214.

Patterson. Henry S., “Whom Shall We Hang?” The Aristidean, I (March, 1845), 32-34. [page 789:]

Phillips, Mary E., Edgar Allan Poe, the Man. 2 vols. Chicago, Philadelphia, and Toronto: The John C. Winston Company, 1926.

Poe, Edgar Allan, “American Poetry,” The Aristidean, I (November, 1845), 373-382.

——, Communication printed under the caption of “Mr. Poe's Reply to Mr. English and Others,” Philadelphia Times (previously and subsequently called the Spirit of the Times), July 10, 1846, p. 1, cols. 4-6.

——, The Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe. Edited by James A. Harrison. 17 vols. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell and Company, 1902.

——, Editorial announcement concerning The Aristidean,* The Broadway Journal, II (August 16, 1845), 95.

——, Editorial, comments on the Editor's recent visit to Boston, in “Editorial Miscellany,” The Broadway Journal, II (August 23, 1845), 109.

——, Editorial note appended to Walt Whitman's “Art Singing and Heart-Singing.”* The Broadway Journal, II (November 29, 1845), 318.

——, Editorial relating to Thomas Dunn English's “Ben Bolt,”* in “Editorial Miscellany,” The Broadway Journal, II (October 4, 1845), 198-199.

——, “George Jones’ Ancient America,” The Aristidean, I (March, 1845), 912.

——, “Griswold's American Poetry,” The Boston Miscellany of Literature and Fashion, II (November, 1842), 218-221.

——, The Letters of Edgar Allan Poe. Edited by John Ward Ostrom. 2 vols. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1948.

——, The Letters of Edgar A. Poe to George W. Eveleth. Edited by James Southall Wilson. University of Virginia, 1924. Reprinted from the Alumni Bulletin, University of Virginia, XVII (January, 1924), 34-59.

——, “The Literati of New York City. Some Honest Opinions at Random respecting Their Autorial Merits, with Occasional Words of Personality,” Godey's Lady's Book, XXXII (May, 1846), 194-201; June. pp. 266-272; XXXIII (July, 1846), 13-19; August, pp. 72-78; September, pp. 126-133; October, pp. 157-162. [page 790:]

——, The Literati: Some Honest Opinions about Autorial Merits and Demerits, with Occasional Words of Personality. Together with Marginalia, Suggestions and Essays. With a Sketch of the Author by Rufus Wilmot Griswold. New York: J. S. Redfield; Boston: B. B. Mussey and Company, 1850.

—— [and Thomas Dunn English?], “Longfellow's Poems,” The Aristidean, I (April, 1845), 130-142.

——, Notice of The Aristidean for March, 1845, in “Magazine Literature,” New York Evening Mirror, February 12, 1845, p. 2, col. 2.

——, Notice of The Aristidean for March, 1845,* in “The Magazines,” The Broadway Journal, I (February 15, 1845), 109.

——, Notice of The Aristidean for April, 1845,* in “The Magazines,” The Broadway Journal, I (May 3, 1845), 285.

——, Notice of The Aristidean for September, 1845,* in “Critical Notices,” The Broadway Journal, II (October 4, 1845), 193.

——, Notice of The Aristidean for October, 1845,* in “Critical Notices,” The Broadway Journal, II (November 8, 1845), 276.

——, Notice of The Aristidean for October, 1845,* in “Critical Notices,” The Broadway Journal, II (November 29, 1845), 323.

—— [or Thomas Dunn English?], Notice of The Aristidean for November 1845, in “Critical Notices,” The Broadway Journal, II (January 3, 1846), 405.

——, Notice of Baron de la Fouque's Undine* in “Our Book-Shelves,” The Aristidean, I (September 1845) 234-235.

——, Notice of John Wilson's The Genius and Character of Burns* in “Our BookShelves,11 The Aristidean I (September, 1845), 237.

——, Notice of Poe's Tales* in “Our BookShelves,” The Aristidean, I (September, 1845), 238.

——, The Poems of Edgar Allan Poe. Edited by Killis Campbell. Boston: Ginn and Company, 1917. [page 791:]

——, Review of Thomas Holley Chivers' The Lost Pleiad; and Other Poems in “Critical Notices,” The Broadway Journal, II (August 2, 1845), 55-58.

——, Select Works of Edgar Allan Poe. Poetical and Prose. With New Memoir by R. H. Stoddard. Household ed.; New York: W. J. Widdleton, 1880.

Polk, James K., The Diary of James K. Polk during His Presidency, 1845-1849. Now First Printed from the Original Manuscript in the Collections of The Chicago Historical Society. Edited by Milo M. Quaife. 4 vols. Chicago: A. C. McClurg and Company, 1910.

“The President's Message.” The John-Donkey, I (January 1 1848), 67.

Quinn, Arthur Hobson, Edgar Allan Poe: a Critical Biography. New York and London: D. Appleton-Century Company, 1941.

——, A History of the American Drama from the Beginning to the Civil War. New York and London: Harper and Brothers, 1923.

Rede, Kenneth, “Poe Notes: From an Investigator's Notebook,” American Literature, V (March, 1933), 49~54.

Rees, James, The Dramatic Authors of America. Philadelphia: G. B. Zieber and Company, 1845.

——, The Life of Edwin Forrest. With Reminiscences and Personal Recollections. Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson and Brothers. 1874.

Reid, Mayne, “A Dead Man Defended,” Onward, I (April, 1869), 305-308.

Richardson, James D., A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents, 1789-1897. 10 vols. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1896-1899.

“Robert Tyler,” The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, X, 159.

Rosenbach, Hymen P., “Reminiscences of Edgar A. Poe,” The American, XIII (February 26, 1887), 296.

Sartain, John, Notice of Augustine J. H. Duganne's Parnassus in Pillory in “Our Library Table,” Sartain's Magazine, IX (December, 1851), 500.

——, The Reminiscences of a Very Old Man. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1899. [page 792:]

Schreiber, Carl, “A Close-Up of Poe,” The Saturday Review of Literature, III (October 9, 1926), 165-167.

——, “Thomas Dunn English,” Dictionary of American Biography, VI, 166-167.

“Sketches of DownEast,” Metcalfe's Miscellany, I (March, 1841), 24-27.

Smith, Edgar F., The Life of Robert Hare, an American Chemist (1781-1858). Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1917.

Smith, Elizabeth Oakes, Selections from the Autobiography of Elizabeth Oakes Smith. Edited by Alice Wyman. Lewiston, Maine: Lewiston Journal Company, 1924.

Smith, Justin H., The Annexation of Texas. Corrected ed.; New York: Barnes and Noble, Inc., 1941.

Smyth, Albert H., Bayard Taylor. “American Men of Letters”; New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1896.

——, The Philadelphia Magazines and Their Contributors, 1741-1850. Philadelphia: Robert M. Lindsay, 1892.

Soboleski [sic], Paul, editor. The Poets and Poetry of Poland: A Collection of Polish Verse Chicago: Knight and Leonard, Printers, 1881.

Stoddard, Richard Henry, “Mrs. Botta and Her Friends,” The Independent, XLVI (February 1, 1894), 17.

Stokes, William A., and Thomas Dunn English, “Why the British Claim Oregon,” The Aristidean, I (December, 1845), 437-439.

Stone, Witmer, “John Kirk Townsend,” Dictionary of American Biography, XVIII, 617-618.

Taylor, George W., Autobiography and Writings of George Taylor. Published with Introduction by John Collins. Philadelphia, 189I.

“Thomas Dunn English,” Supplement to the Cyclopaedia of American Literature, including Obituaries of Authors, Continuations of Former Articles, with Notices of Earlier and Later Writers Omitted in Previous Editions. New York: Charles Scribner and Company, 1866.

“Thomas Dunn English,” The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, IV, 322-323. [page 793:]

Thorne, G. W., “Thomas Dunn English,” Newark Sunday Call, April 6, 1902, Part IV, p. 1, cols. 1-2.

Thorp, Willard, “A Minor Poe Mystery,” The Princeton University Chronicle, V (November, 1943), 30-31.

Ticknor, Caroline, Poe's Helen. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1916.

“The Town!” The Town, I (February 15, 1845), 1.

Tyler, John, Letter to John Tyler's “Friends throughout the Union” as quoted in the Washington Daily Madisonian, August 20, 1844, p. 2, cols. 1-4.

Tyler, Lyon G., The Letters and Times of the Tylers. 2 vols. Richmond, Virginia: Whittet and Shepperson, 1884-1885. [A third supplementary volume, limited to 250 copies, was published in Williamsburg, Virginia, 1896.],

Tyler, Robert, “The Democratic Review, and the Late Acting President,” The Aristidean, I (April, 1845), 115-126.

Van Ness, Cornelius P., Letter to the Editor of the New York Herald, April 3, 1845, as printed in the New York Herald, April 4, 1845, p. 2, col. 3.

Van Tyne, Claude H., and Waldo G. Leland, Guide to the Archives of the Government of the United States, in Washington. 2d ed., revised and enlarged; Washington: The Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1907.

Vindication of the Revolutionary Character and Services of the Late Col. Ezekiel Polk, of Mecklenburg, N. C. Published and Prepared by order of the Tennessee State Central Committee. Nashville, Tennessee, 1844.

Walsh, Michael, Sketches of the Speeches and Writings of Michael Walsh: Including His Poems and Correspondence. Compiled by a Committee of the Spartan Association. New York: T. McSpedon, 1843.

Walter, Cornelia M., Editorial attack on Poe captioned “A Failure,” Boston Daily Evening Transcript, October 17, 1845, p. 2, col. 1.

Wemyss, Francis C., Chronology of the American Stage, from 1752 to 1852. New York: William Taylor and Company, 1852.

——, Twenty-six Years of the Life of an Actor and Manager. 2 vols. New York: Burgess, Stringer and Company, 1847. [page 174:]

Werner, Morris R., Tammany Hall. Garden City, New York: Doubleday, Doran and Company, Inc., 1928.

Whitman, Sarah Helen, Edgar Poe and His Critics. 1st ed., New York: Rudd and Carleton, 1860.

Whitman, Walt, “Arrow-Tip,” The Aristidean, I (March 1845), 36-64.

——, The Half-Breed and Other Stories by Walt Whitman. Edited by Thomas O. Mabbott. New York: Columbia University Press, 1927.

——, “Shirval: a Tale of Jerusalem,” The Aristidean, I (March, 1845), 12-15.

——, “Some Fact-Romances” The Aristidean, I (December, 1845), 444-449.

Whitty, James H., Article without title on the Poe-Mrs. Osgood relationship, New York Sun, November 21, 1915, Section VI, p. 3, cols. 1-8.

Williams, Mary Wilhelmine, “John Middleton Clayton” in The American Secretaries of State and Their Diplomacy, edited by Samuel Flagg Bemis (10 vols.; New York: Alfred K. Knopf, 1927-1929), VI, 3-74.

——, “John Pendleton Kennedy,” Dictionary of American Biography, X, 333~334.

Williams, Samuel C., “William Rufus Devans King,” Dictionary of American Biography, X, 93.

Williams, Stanley T. editor, “New Letters about Poe,” The Yale Review, XIV (July, I925), 755-773.

Willis, Nathaniel Parker, “Death of Edgar Poe,” New York Home Journal, October 20, 1849, p. 2, cols. 2-4.

——, Editorial comment on Poe's lecture of February 28, 1845, on the “Poets and Poetry of America,” The New-York Mirror, I (March 8, 1845), 347

Wilson Arthur H., A History of the Philadelphia Theatre, 1835 to 1855. Philadelphia: The University of Pennsylvania Press, 1935.

Wilson. James Southall, “A Brief Sketch of the Life of Edgar Allan Poe, with a selected Bibliography” in Facts About Poe. Portraits and Daguerreotypes of Edgar Allan Poe. By Amanda P. Schulte, with a sketch of the Life of Poe, by James S. Wilson. University [page 795:] of Virginia Record Extension Series, X, No. 8, April, 1926.

——, “Poe's Philosophy of Composition,” The North American Review, CCXXIII (December - February, 1926-1927), 675-684.

Wise, Henry A., Letter signed “Hawkeye” to the Editor of the Washington Madisonian, Washington Madisonian, November 9, 1842, p. 2, cols. 4-6.

——, Seven Decades of the Union. The Humanities and Materialism, Illustrated by a Memoir of John Tyler, with Reminiscences of Some of His Great Contemporaries. The Transition State of This Nation — Its Dangers and Their Remedy, Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott and Company, 1872.

Wittke, Carl, Tambo and Bones: a History of the American Minstrel Stage. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 1930.

Woodberry, George E., Edgar Allan Poe. “American Men of Letters”; Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1885.

——, The Life of Edgar Allan Poe. Personal and Literary, with His Chief Correspondence with Men of Letters. 2 vols. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1909.

——, editor, “Poe in New York. Selections from the Correspondence of Edgar Allan Poe.” The Century Magazine, XLVIII (October, 1894), 854-866.

“Yet Another Prosecution,” The John-Donkey, I (May 13 1848), 317.

II

A. Newspapers

Alexandria, Virginia [subsequently, Washington] Evening Index, November 27, 1841.

Baltimore Republican and Daily Argus, February 1, 1844.

Boston Daily Evening Transcript, October 1618, 1845; January 26, 1924.

Cincinnati Daily Enquirer, March 16 - September 4, 1847. [page 796:]

Milledgeville, Georgia, Federal Union, September 23, 1845.

Newark Daily Advertiser, April 1, 1902.

Newark Evening News, June 30 - July 7, 1900; April 1, 1902.

Newark Sunday Call, April 6, 1902.

New York Clay Tribune, May 4 - November 2, 1844.

New York Daily Tribune, 1844-1849.

New York Evening Mirror, November 23, 1844 - February 18, 1847.

New York Evening Post for the Country, July 18, 1844.

New York Herald, 1842-1845; 1848-1849.

New York Home Journal, October 20, 1849; February 26, 1896.

New York Journal of Commerce, March 57, 1845.

New York Morning Courier and New York Enquirer, July 2, 1845.

New York Morning Express, July 2 1845 - February 18, 1847; October 48, 1849.

New York Morning News, September 17, 1844 - July 14, 1846.

New York Morning Telegraph, June 23, 1846.

[New York] Morris's National Press. A Journal for the Home [subsequently, the Home Journal] June 27, 1846.

New York Sun, February 18, 1847; November 21, 1915.

[Philadelphia] Alexander's Weekly Messenger, November 4 1840.

Philadelphia Daily Sun, October 4, 1849.

[Philadelphia] M'Makin's Model American Courier, October 20, 1849.

Philadelphia National Forum, November 16, 1842.

Philadelphia National Gazette, September 29. 1824; April 6, 1839.

Philadelphia North American, September 14 - November 8, 1849.

[Philadelphia] Pennsylvania Inquirer and National Gazette, April 5, 1847. [page 797:]

Philadelphia Pennsylvanian, February 23, 1841June 22, 1844; 1848-1849.

[Philadelphia] Poulson's American Daily Advertiser. 1834-1839.

Philadelphia Public Ledger, 1842-1848.

Philadelphia Saturday Courier, April 1, 1837 - August 4, 1838.

Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post [also Atkinson's Saturday Evening Post]. 1838-1840.

Philadelphia Spirit of the Times called the Times from November 3 1845 to October 7 1846, March 28 - April 1, 1842; 1846-1849. ‘

Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch, July 8, 1860 - April 19, 1863.

Philadelphia United States Gazette, 1834-1835; January 4 - February 20, 1841; September 15 - November 15, 1842.

Pittsburgh Daily Commercial Journal, April 19 1847 - January 11, 1848.

Pittsburgh Morning Post, April 29 - May 11, 1847. Providence Daily Transcript and Chronicle, July 7, 1845.

Richmond Enquirer, June 5, 1847; May 31, 1853.

Washington Daily Globe, April 27, 1844.

Washington Daily Madisonian, September 17, 1842 - May 1, 1845.

Washington [previously, Alexander] Evening Index, June 3, 1842.

Washington National Intelligencer, April 27, 1844.

Washington Post, March 10, 1895.

B. Periodicals

The Aristidean [New York], I (March - April; September - December, 1845).

The Broadway Journal [New York], III (January 4, 1845 - January 3, 1846). [page 798:]

Burton's Gentleman's Magazine [Philadelphia], IV-VII (1839-1840).

Godey's Lady's Book [Philadelphia], XXXII-XXXIII (May October, 1846).

Graham's Magazine [Philadelphia], XVIII-XX (January 1841 - June, 1842).

The John-Donkey [Philadelphia], III (January 1 - August 12; September 23 - October 21, 1848).

Metcalfe's Miscellany [Philadelphia], I (March, 1841).

The New-York Mirror, IV-V (May 30, 1846 - February 20, 1847).

The Philadelphia Lancet, I (January 1April 15, 1851).

III

Manuscripts

A. W. Anthony Collection. New York Public Library, New York City.

Atkinson, Anne E. Two letters to the writer, November 20, 1936, and ca. November 10, 1940. [These letters contain information copied from a chart belonging to Miss Atkinson's deceased sister concerning the maternal line of Thomas Dunn English.]

Duyckinck Papers. New York Public Library, New York City.

English, Alice. Biographical sketch of Thomas Dunn English, ca. 1886. MS. in possession of Otto Eisenshiml. Chicago.

English, Thomas Dunn. Letter to the Rev. E. F. Strickland, April 23, 1886. MS. in possession of Otto Eisenshiml, Chicago.

——, “Memorabilia Fragments of Thomas Dunn English.” Typescript copy in papers of the late William Southworth Hunt relating to Thomas Dunn English now in the custody of the writer. [These reminiscences were selected and prepared for publication by Arthur H.

Noll from the original MS. entitled “Memories of Men and Things during over Sixty Years of Active Life.”] [page 799:]

Eveleth George W. Letter to Edgar Allan Poe, July 27, 1847. MS. in the New York Public Library, New York City.

Griswold Collection, Boston Public Library, Boston, Massachusetts.

The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C.

New York Superior Court. Records of the New York Superior Court, 1846-1847, Hall of Records, New York City.

Poe, Edgar Allan. “Literary America, Some Honest Opinions about our Autorial Merits and Demerits with Occasional Words of Personality,” 1848. Fragmentary MS. in the Huntington Library, San Marino, California.

Poe-Ingram Collection, Alderman Library, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia.

The Papers of James K. Polk, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C.

Rogers, Wilmot Polk, “Ezekiel Polk and His Descendants.” Typescript copy, in the Library of Congress, of an unpublished study, San Francisco, 1939.

St. Andrew's Church. Records of St. Andrew's (P. E.) Church, Philadelphia, l823-1905. Collections of the Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania, The Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

The Papers of John Tyler, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C.

United States Treasury, Record Group 56, Records of the Department of the Treasury, National Archives Building, Washington, D. C.

University of Pennsylvania. Alumni Records, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

University of Pennsylvania. University Archives, Medical Library, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

The Papers of Daniel Webster, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. [page 800:]

Miscellaneous Items

“Ben Bolt.” Many different compositions and arrangements in the Music Division, Library of Congress, Washington. D. C.

Coleman, Arthur Prudden. Typescript copies of two articles originally appearing in Mr. Coleman's newspaper column “As I Look at the New Polish Books,” the first, in the Detroit Rekord Codzienny, February 11, 1933, and the second, in the Boston Kurjer Codzienny, March

10, 1933, the New York Kurjer Narodowy, March 10, 1933, and the Detroit Rekord Codzienny, March 11, 1933.

Directories. City directories consulted, together with the approximate periods of time for which they have been examined Albany, 1845-1848; Cincinnati, 1847-1852;

Louisville 1847-1848; New York, 1844-1852; Philadelphia 1818-1852: Pittsburgh. 1846-1847; Providence, 1844-1849.

Prospectus of The John-Donkey. Broadside Collection, Rare Books Division, Library of Congress.


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Notes:

None.

∞∞∞∞∞∞∞

[S:0 - EPLCTDE, 1953] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Bookshelf - The Early Political and Literary Career of Thomas Dunn English (Gravely)