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*Statistical Tables and Remarks on the Economy and Management of Farms in the United States. In Washington, George. Letters on Agriculture, etc., 1847. 8vo.

In the library of the British Museum.

1851

An Essay towards Facilitating Instruction in the Anglo-Saxon and Modern Dialects of the English Language. For the Use of the University of Virginia. Printed by Order of the Board of Trustees for the

University of Virginia. New York. John F. Trow, 1851. 43 pages 4to. Construction of the Powers of the Senate, with Respect to their Agency in Appointing Ambassadors, etc, and Fixing the Grades. April 24, 1790. In Adams, John. Works. Boston, 1851, III: 575, 576.

1856

Early History of the University of Virginia, as Contained in the Letters of Thomas Jefferson and Joseph C. Cabell. Hitherto Unpublished; with an Appendix, Consisting of Mr. Jefferson's Bill for a Complete System of Education, and Other Illustrative Documents; and an Introduction, Comprising a Brief Historical Sketch of Joseph Cabell. Richmond John William Randolph, 1856. xxxvi, 528 pages 8vo. (Bill for Establishing a System of Public Education [1817], pp. 413-427).

1875

Gov. Jefferson to the Governor of Detroit. July 22, 1779. In Virginia. Calendar of Virginia State Papers and Other Manuscripts, 1652-1781, Preserved in the Capitol at Richmond. Arranged and Edited by William P. Palmer. Richmond R. F. Walker, 1875. Vol. I. 613 pages 4to (pp. 321-324).

1886

Canons of Etiquette to Be Observed by the Executive. In Madison, Dorothy Payne. Memoirs and Letters of Dolly Madison. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, & Co., 1886. 210 pages 12mo (pp. 30-32).

1890

Opinion of the Secretary of State. August 28, 1790 [in Reply to Washington's note of August 27, 1790, referring to conduct of the United States in the event of war between Great Britain and Spain].

Heads of Consideration on the Navigation of the Mississippi for Mr. Carmichael, 22 August, 1790.

Heads of Consideration on the Conduct We Are to Observe in the War between Spain and Great Britain, and particularly Should the Latter Attempt the Conquest of Louisiana and the Floridas. [12 July, 1790]

In The United States and Spain in 1790. An Episode in Diplomacy Described from Hitherto Unpublished Sources. With an Introduc. tion by Worthington Chauncey Ford Brooklyn Historical Printing Club, 1890. 109 pages 8vo (pp. 56-67).

1902

The Jefferson Bible; the Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth Extracted Textually from the Gospels, together with a Comparison of His Doctrines with Those of Others. By Thomas Jefferson. St Louis, etc.: N. D Thomson Publishing Co [1902]. 168 pages 12mo.

This edition contains only the English text.

The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth, Extracted Textually from the Gospels in Greek, Latin, French, and English, by Thomas Jefferson. With an Introduction [by Cyrus Adler]. Washington Government Printing Office, 1904.

Facsimile. 9.000 copies printed as 58th Cong., 2d Sess., H. of R. Doc. No. 755.

The Thomas Jefferson Bible, Being, as Entitled by Him, "The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth, Extracted Textually from the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.' With a Valuable Appendix of Biblical Facts. Chicago. George W. Ogilvie & Co. [1904].

The original contains Greek, Latin, French, and English. This contains only English text.

1903

The Complete Anas of Thomas Jefferson; Edited by Franklin B. Sawvel, Ph. D., New York: The Round Table Press, 1903. 283 pages 8vo.

1904

Documents Relating to the Purchase and Exploration of Louisiana. I. The Limits and Bounds of Louis

iana. By Thomas Jefferson. II. The Exploration of the Red, the Black, and the Washita Rivers. By William Dunbar. Printed from the Original Manuscripts in the Library of the American Philosophical Society and by Direction of the Society's Committee on Historic Documents. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, & Co., 1904. Var. pag. 8vo.

Reviewed in The Dial, xXXVII: 205-207 (1904), in The Reader, IV: 472 (1904).

PART II.-BOOKS AND ARTICLES IN MAGAZINES RELATING TO THOMAS JEFFERSON

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tics and Views of a Certain Party Displayed. Printed in the Year 1792. 36 pages 8vo.

The "Certain Party" is Jefferson. Ford, (Bibliographia Hamiltoniana p. 39) attributes the authorship to W. L. Smith.

Massachusettensis [pseudonym]. Strictures and Observations upon the Three Executive Departments of the Government of the United States: Calculated to Shew the Necessity of Some Change Therein, that the Public May Derive That Able and Impartial Execution of the Powers Delegated, upon Which Alone Their Happiness at Home, and Their Respectability Abroad, Must Materially Depend.

Printed in the America, 1792.

Anti-Jefferson.

United States of 32 pages 8vo.

1796

The Federalist, Containing Some Strictures upon a Pamphlet Entitled "The Pretensions of Thomas Jefferson to the Presidency Examined, and the Charges against John Adams Refuted," Which Pamphlet Was First Published in the Gazette of the United States, in a Series of Essays under the Signature of "Phocion." Part I. Philadelphia, 1796. 48 pages 12mo.

The Same. Part II. Republished from the Gazette of the United States and the New York World, by Mathew Carey. Philadelphia, 1796. 27 pages

I 2mo.

See the following entry.

Smith, William Loughton. The Pretensions of Thomas Jefferson to the Presidency Examined; and the Charges against John Adams Refuted. Addressed to the Citizens of America in General; and Particularly to the Electors of the President. [Part I, Anonymous.] United States, 1796. 64 pages 8vo.

The Same. Part II. United States,

November, 1796. 42 pages 8vo.

A reply to an article signed "Hampden," in a Richmond paper, proposing Jefferson for the Presidency.

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Signed "Americanus'' and attributed, with some ground, to John Beckley, clerk to the Virginia Assembly, clerk to Congress in Philadelphia for eight years, friend of Jefferson, and appointed by him first Librarian of Congress in 1801. Beckley had the only copy in America of Paine's "Rights of Man," which he loaned to Jefferson, requesting him to send it to J. B. Smith, whose brother, S. H. Smith printed Jefferson's letter of transmission with his edition of Part I. See Jefferson to Washington, Philadelphia, May 8, 1791, and Conway's "Life of Paine," 1892, 1. 291.

Bishop, Abraham. Connecticut Republicanism. An Oration on the Extent and Power of Political Delusion, Delivered in New Haven on the Evening Preceding the Public Commencement, September. 1800. New Haven, 1800. 64 pages app.

General defence of Jefferson, including a vindication against the charge of atheism. The Library of Congress has Jefferson's own copy.

Black, John. Address to the Federal Republicans of Burlington County, Recommending to Them to Support the Present Members in the Legislature from That County, at the Ensuing Election, as Friendly to the Re-Election of President Adams and Governor Howell. [Anonymous.] Trenton: Sherman, Mershon, & Thomas, 1800.

Turns opinions of Adams expressed by Jefferson against Jefferson's election.

Callender, James Thompson. The Prospect Before Us. Richmond: M. Jones, 1800. 2 volumes in 3 parts, 8vo.

A severe attack on the Federalists. Young and Minns charged that Jefferson paid Callender $50 for writing the work. See Jefferson's letters to Callender, September 6 and October 6, 1799.

"The Prospect Before Us" was one of the works specifically mentioned in the Debates in Congress as a reason for not purchasing Jefferson's library,

Clinton, De Witt. A Vindication of Thomas Jefferson against the Charges Contained in a Pamphlet Entitled, "Serious Considerations, etc." By "Grotius" [pseudonym]. New York: David Denniston, 1800. 47 pages 8vo.

The Library of Congress has Jefferson's copy, in which the author's name is inserted in Jefferson s hand.

For reply to the pamphlet by Linn, see below.

Coxe Tench. Strictures upon the Letter Imputed to Mr. Jefferson, Addressed to Mr. Mazzei. N. p. Printed June, 1800. 12 pages 12mo.

The Library of Congress has Jefferson's copy, in which the author's name is supplied in Jefferson's hand.

Coxe, Tench. To the Republican Citizens of the State of Pennsylvania. Lancaster, 16 pages 12mo N. t. p.

1800.

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De Saussure, Henry W. to a Dialogue Between a Federalist and a Republican: First Inserted in the Newspapers in Charleston, and Now Republished at the Desire of a Number of Citizens. Charleston: W. P. Young, 1800. 36 pages 8vo.

To demonstrate "the impropriety of electing Mr. Jefferson to the office of President."

Dickins, Asbury. The Claims of Thomas Jefferson to the Presidency Examined at the Bar of Christianity. By a Layman. Philadelphia: A. Dickins, 1800. 54 pages 8vo.

Attributed also to William Brown, Sabin, 8,573.

Hamilton, Alexander. Letter from Alexander Hamilton Concerning the

Public Conduct and Character of John Adams, Esq., President of the United States. New York: J. Lang, 1800. 54 pages 8vo.

The Library of Congress has Jefferson's own copy.

Hamilton explains the method adopted to accomplish the primary object of the Federalists, the defeat of Jefferson, in attempting to give Pinckney an equal chance with Adams for the Presidency. Comments on the narrow margin by which the Republicans lost the Presidency. Pinckney replied in "A Few Remarks on Mr. Hamilton's Late Letter." Baltimore, 1800.

Linn, William. Serious Considerations on the Election of a President: Addressed to the Citizens of the United States. New York: John Furman. 36 pages 8vo.

The Library of Congress has Jefferson's own copy, in which the author's name is supplied in Jefferson's handwriting.

"Marcus Brutus" [pseudonym]. Serious Facts Opposed to "Serious Considerations"; or, The Voice of Warning to Religious Republicans. New York [?]: October, 1800. pages 8vo.

16

Mason, John Mitchell. The Voice of Warning to Christians on the Ensuing Election of a President of the United States. New York: G. F.

Hopkins, 1800. 40 pages 8vo.

On the Election of the President of the United States. XII. To the Citizens of the United States, and Particularly to Those Who Were Not Born Therein. [Anonymous.] Signed "Republican." N. p., 1800. 8 pages 8vo.

The alien laws as an argument for Jefferson's election.

A Test of the Religious Principles of Mr. Jefferson; Extracted (Verbatim) from His Writings. Easton: Reprinted by Perrin Smith, 1800. 6 pages 8vo. Originally, Philadelphía: Robert T. Rawlé, r8oo. pages 8vo.

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To the Citizens of the United States, and Particularly to the Citizens of New York, New Jersey, Delaware and Pennsylvania, Maryland and North Carolina, on the Propriety of

Choosing Republican Members to Their State Legislatures, at the Ensuing Elections, in Order to Secure the Election of Electors of a President at the Approaching Election for That Important Office. State of New

York: March 8, 1800.

4 pages 8vo. Signed, "Republican Farmer."

To the Republican Citizens of the State of Pennsylvania. Lancaster, 1800. 16 pages 12mo. No title-page. Signed, "Tench Coxe et al.'

*Vindication of the Public Life and Character of Thomas Jefferson. Richmond, Va., 1800.

In the library of the American Antiquarian Society.

A Vindication of the Religion of Mr. Jefferson, and a Statement of His Services in the Cause of Religious Liberty. By a Friend to Real Religion. Baltimore: W. Pechin, 1800. 21 pages 8vo. In Jefferson, Thomas. Notes on the State of Virginia. Baltimore, 1800.

* Wortman, Tunis. A Solemn Address to the Christians and Patriots upon the Approaching Election of a President of the United States, in Answer to a Pamphlet Entitled "Serious Considerations, etc." New York: Printed by David Denniston, 1800 [?]. 36 pages 8vo.

In the libraries of the New York Historical Society and of the Boston Athe

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