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POCUMTUCK VALLEY MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION.

What befell Stephen Williams in

his captivity. With an appendix. Printed from the original by the Association. Edited by George Sheldon. Deerfield, 1889.

Svo, pp. 35.

POCUMTUCK VALLEY MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION.

(4095

History and Proceedings of the Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association. 1870-1879. Vol. I. Deerfield, Mass., 1890.

8vo, pp. 510.

Contents: Preliminary steps and organization of the Association; Field meeting at Turner's Falls, 1870; Annual meeting, 1871; Eunice Williams, by C. Alice Baker; [W. Starr] of the Revolution of '76, by Eliza A. Starr; Field meeting, 1871; Monument to Moses Rice; Address by Col. R. H. Leavitt; Response by the president, George Sheldon; Historical paper, by Abby Maxwell; Stories, anecdotes, and legends, collected and written down by Deacon Phinehas Field Third annual meeting, 1872; Biographical sketches of the settlers at Pocum tuck before l'hilip's war, by George Sheldon; Settlement of Deerfield, by C. Alice Baker; Field meeting, 1872, and dedication of a monument to Nathaniel Dickinson, at Northfield, Mass., September 12, 1872; Address by Phinehas Field; Address of President George Sheldon; Settlement of Northfield, by J. H. Temple; Historical sketch of Vernon, by A. H. Washburn; Narrative of John Stebbins, of Vernon, Vt.: Fourth annual meeting, 1873; The Bar's fight, by Eliza A. Starr; Fourth field meeting, 1873, at Sunderland, Mass.; Address of Henry W. Taft, on settlement of Sunderland; Fifth annual meeting, 1874; The traditionary story of the attack upon Hadley and the appearance of General Goffe, September 1, 1675, by George Sheldon; Field meeting, 1874, in commemoration of the centennial of the incorporation of the town of Leverett, September 10, 1874; Address of welcome, by Rev. A. F. Clark ; Settlement of Leverett, by Rev. J. P. Watson; Brief history of the Congregational Church of Leverett, by Rev. David Eastman; History of the Baptist Church in North Leverett, by Rev. B. Newton; Sixth annual meeting, 1875; Recollections of the Old Indian house, by N. Hitchcock; Sixth field meeting; Two hundredth anniversary of the Bloody Brook massacre at South Deerfield, September 17, 1875; Address of welcome, by George Sheldon; Oration, by George B. Loring; Poem, by William Everett; Seventh annual meeting, 1876; The captive's (Sarah Coleman's) shoe, by J. F. Moors; Field meeting and bicentennial celebration of the Falls fight, on the battlefield, May 31, 1876; Address, by G. L. Barton; President Sheldon's response; Address, by J. F. Moors; Rev. Hope Atherton's deliverance; Annual meeting, 1877; Ministers and meeting houses of ye olden time, by C. Alice Baker; Sounding brass: story of the old brass kettle, by Elizabeth W. Champney; Ninth annual meeting, 1878; History of the founding of Deerfield Academy, by George Sheldon; Ensign John Sheldon, by C. Alice Baker History of memorial hall, by George Sheldon; Tenth annual meeting, 1879; Historical sketch of Christina Otis, by C. Alice Baker; Some facts relating to the early history of Dartmouth College, by C. C. Conant; Greenfield and its first church, by Francis M. Thompson; Slavery in Massachusetts, by Phinehas Field; Members of the Association, 1870-1879; Index.

POCUMTUCK VALLEY MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION. History and Proceedings. 1889. Vol. II. Deerfield, Mass. Published by the Association, 1898. 8vo.. pp. 521.

(4096 1880

Contents: Annual and field meetings, 1880-1889; Morality, learning, and religion, in Massachusetts in olden times, by Edgar Buckingham; Gossip about the Pocumtuck gun, by George Sheldon; Poem by Cornelia Allen Smith; Field meeting, 1880: Dedication of Memorial Hall; Report; Poem by Cornelia Allen Smith; Dedicatory address, by John F. Moors; Song by John B. Green; New England settlers in western New York, by William Westwood Wright; Poem by J. D. Canning; Sketch of Col. John Hawkes, of Deerfield, Mass., 1707-1784, by John Stebbins Lee; Ode by George B. Bartlett; The Dorrellites, by Francis M. Thompson; Heredity, as illustrated in the history of the Connecticut Valley churches, by W. S. Hawks; The Tablinum-Miss C. Alice Baker; Some account of John Williams, first pastor of Deerfield, by Allen Hazen; The flower of Essex, by Abbie E. Snow; The route of the French and Indian army that sacked Deerfield, Feb. 29th, 1703-4 [O. S.] on their return march to Canada with the captives, by Samuel Carter; Field meeting: Dedication of a memorial stone on the spot where Mrs. Eunice Williams was slain by her Indian captor, March 1, 1703-4;

Ode by E. W. B. Canning; Dedicatory address, by Allen Hazen; Acceptance of
trust, by George Sheldon; Mrs. Eunice Williams, by John F. Moors; Poem by
L. J. B. Lincoln; Memorial stones, by Daniel Denison Slade; The civilizations
bordering respectively upon the St. Lawrence and the Connecticut rivers, by
J. W. Harding; An old shoe revamped, by George B. Bartlett; Adolphus F.
Carter, by Samuel Carter; Silas Wright, recollections of a New York statesman,
by W. W. Wright; The spectre of Memorial Hall (poem), by Luther J. B.
Lincoln Field meeting 1886; Report; The legend of Ashfield, by G. Stanley
Hall; Rev. Jonathan Ashley; cr, The Christian Ministry a hundred years ago,
by Edgar Buckingham; A visit to Ridgeway, New York, in 1834, by Nathaniel
Hitchcock; The wheel of fate, poem, by George B. Bartlett; The Willard House;
Anecdotes, by L. W. Eels; Field meeting, 1887, at Colrain: Address of welcome,
by Lorenzo Griswold; Response of George Sheldon; The Scotch-Irish, by Samuel
O. Lamb; Elihu Hoyt, a country legislator of the olden time, by Freeman C.
Griswold; My hunt for the Deerfield captives, by C. Alice Baker; Poem by Mrs.
L. W. Eels; The settlement of Erving, by Augustus Coolidge; The settlement of
the town of Whately, by James M. Crafts; The Pocumtuck confederacy, by
George Sheldon; Two captives [John Rising, Abigail Nims], A romance of real
life, by C. Alice Baker; Deerfield captives, a poem, by Isabelle Williams; Two
hundred and twelfth anniversary of the Indian attack on Hatfield: Address of
welcome; The Indian massacre of Sept. 19, 1677, at Hatfield, by Thaddeus Graves;
Response by George Sheldon; Historical address: Indian Massacre of Sept. 19,
1677; Narrative of Quentin Stockwell, a Deerfield captive, by Silas G. Hubbard;
Hatfield's hero, 1677, by Margaret Miller; Letter of Samuel D. Partridge, by
C. K. Morton; Report of the address of Bishop Frederick Huntington; The
squaw sachem of 1632, poem, by George Bradford Bartlett; Remarks of Joseph
L. Partridge, of Rev. R. M. Woods; Address of William H. Allis; Collection of
antiquities, arranged by C. M. Barton and John H. Sanderson; Genealogy of
some Hatfield families: Waite, Dickinson, Bardwell, Graves, by James M. Crafts;
Some official correspondence in relation to the Waite and Jennings' ransom of
captives, from the Bradford club papers; Location of the house of those who
suffered by the massacre of Sept. 19; Index.
(4097

POCUMTUCK VALLEY MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION. History and Proceedings of the Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association. 1890-1898. Vol. III. Published by the Association, 1901.

8vo, pp. iv, 563.

Contents: Proceedings of the annual meetings, 1890-1898; Autobiography and journal, by Joseph Goodhue; Field meeting, 1890 at Shelburne Falls; Shelburne's Revolutionary soldiers; Martin Severance, by George Sheldon; Poem by Frederic Allison Tupper; History of Franklin Academy, by H. A. Pratt; Memoir of Joseph White, by R. Crawford; Gen. James S. Whitney, by Samuel O. Lamb; Poem by George B. Bartlett; Thankful Stebbins, an unredeemed captive, by C. Alice Baker; Bibliographical sketches of Deerfield, by Lucretia W. Eels; Field meeting at Bernardston, 1891; Settlement of Bernardston, by Lucy Cutler Kellogg; Old time traffic and travel on the Connecticut, by George Sheldon; Field meeting, 1892, at Charlemont: l'oem by Henry C. Hayden; To the Historic Oak of Charlemont, by Lyman Whiting; Some reminiscences of Charlemont history, by Helen A. Hawks; The source of the free school, by Herbert C. Parsons; Field meeting. 1893: Gill's centennial celebration; Sweet Vale of Pocumtuck, by Cornelia A. Smith; Historical address by Francis Walker, 2d, at Gill's centennial, celebration; Historical paper, by C. Alice Baker; The hearthstone, by Catherine B. Yale; The old Deerfield cannon, by George Sheldon; Biographical sketch of Gen. Hoyt, by Mrs. L. W. Eels; Field meeting, 1894, at Greenfield: Greenfield's first meetinghouse its site marked by a monument; Dedicatory address, by George Sheldon; Recollections of the old meetinghouse, by Charles C. Corss; Address by Francis M. Thompson; Thoughts on walking through land owned once by my forefathers, by Helen A. Hawks; Connecticut river, Quinnehtuk, the Indians called it, by Mary E. Miller; A poem, by George B. Barlett: Some phases of our New England institutions, by Franklin G. Fessenden; Field meeting, 1895, at Montague Centre: Address by Robert P. Clapp: The advent, the return, and the report of Lo the poor Indian, by Seymour Rockwell; The Williams Bible, by C. Alice Baker: The story of a York family (Rishworth), by C. Alice Baker; Poem for the twenty-fifth anniversary of the P. V. M. Association, by Mrs. L. W. Eels; Public spirit, by G. Glenn Atkins: Stories of a New England village, by Julia D. Whiting; Field meeting. 1896, at Brattleboro, Vt.; Report on Fort Dummer's site; Address of welcome, by H. D. Holton; Response, by

George Sheldon; Address by G. Leon Walker; Poem, by Jennie Stebbins Smith;
Fort Sartwell, by M. I. Reed; Poem, by Josiah D. Canning; Dr. Slade and the
old Indian house door, by P. Vorhees Finch; Sanguinaria, by Francis S. Allen;
Address by John E. Russell; The New England confederacy of 1643 and other
unions of the American colonies, by Fayette Smith; Major John Burke, the
founder of Bernardston, by Lucy C. Kellogg; Field meeting, 1897, at North-
field Address by George Sheldon; Report of the committee on memorial stones,
by N. P. Wood; Historical address, by George F. Piper; Ode to Washington, by
Jonathan A. Saxton; 'Tis sixty years hence, the passing of the stall-fed ox
and the farm boy, by George Sheldon; History of the First Congregational
Parish of Sunderland, by John M. Smith; Field meeting, 1898, at Colrain: Ad-
dress of welcome, by Lorenzo Griswold; Reply, by Francis M. Thompson; Col-
rain's early days, by Charles H. McClellan; The American citizen soldier, old
and new, by Herbert C. Parsons; Officers; Index.
(4098

(For Vol. IV see Appendix.)

POCUMTUCK VALLEY MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION. 212th anniversary of the Indian attack on Hatfield, and field-day of the Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, at Hatfield, Massachusetts, Thursday, Sept. 19th, 1889. Northampton, Mass., 1890.

Svo, pp. 95, [1].

Compiled by C. M. Barton and D. W. Wells.

(4099

POCUMTUCK VALLEY MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION. 'Tis Sixty Years Since. The passing of the stall-fed Ox and the farm boy. By George Sheldon.

8vo, pp. 13.

Read at the annual meeting, February 22, 1898.

(4100

PRINCE SOCIETY.

Boston, Mass.

PRINCE SOCIETY. A collection of original papers relative to the history of Massachusetts Bay. [Anon.] By Thomas Hutchinson. Boston, 1769. Reprinted under the title: "Hutchinson Papers." Albany, 1865.

Small 4to, "150 copies and 10 copies on large paper." 2 vols.

Edited with notes and prefatory matter, by W. H. Whitmore and W. S. Apple(4101

ton.

PRINCE SOCIETY. Wood's New England's Prospect. Boston, 1865.

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Small 4to, 150 copies and 20 copies on large paper," pp. xxxi, 131. Map.
Edited by Charles Deane,

Consists of reprint of the London (1634) edition, with the preface to the Boston edition of 1764, which is ascribed to Nathaniel Rogers. (4102 PRINCE SOCIETY. Letters written from New England, A. D. 1686. By John Dunton. In which are described his voyages by sea, his travels on land, and the characters of his friends and acquaintances. Now first published from the original manuscript, in the Bodleian Library. With notes and an appendix, by W. H. Whitmore. Boston, 1867.

Small 4to, "150 copies; also 20 copies on large paper, 40 copies unnumbered," pp. xxiv, 340.

The appendix contains account of the Blue Anchor Tavern; Inventory of the Estate of Michael Perry, bookseller, 1700; List of the inhabitants of Boston, 1687. (4103

PRINCE SOCIETY. The Andros tracts; being a collection of pamphlets and official papers issued during the period between the overthrow of the Andros government and the establishment of the second charter of Massachusetts. Reprinted from the original editions and manuscripts. With notes and a memoir of Sir Edmund Andros, by W. H. Whitmore, editor. Boston, 1868– 1874.

Small 4to, "150 copies, also 20 copies on large paper, 40 copies unnumbered." Three vols. Portraits.

CONTENTS.

Vol. 1. Memoir; Introduction; Account of the late revolution in New England, together with the Declaration of the inhabitants of Boston, 1689, by N. Byfield; An impartial account of the state of New England, by J. Palmer, 1690; The revolution in New England justified, by E. R[awson?] and S. S[ewall?], 1691; Narrative of the proceedings of Sir Edmund Androsse and his complices, by several gentlemen who were of his council, 1691; Charges against Andros and others, from Massachusetts archives; Information of what entertainment Sir Edmund Androsse and the rest of the gentlemen committed to our charge had at the castle upon Castle Island, 1668; Petition of the inhabitants of Maine; Brief discourse concerning the ceremony of laying the hand on the Bible in swearing, by S. Willard, 1689; Further quæries upon the present state of the New-English Affairs. 1868. pp. liv, 214, (1).

(4104

Vol. 11. Increase Mather; Introduction; narrative of the miseries of New England [prepared by Increase Mather], 1688; the present state of NewEnglish affairs [letters from Increase Mather], 1689; a vindication of New England (prepared chiefly by I. Mather), 1689; Petition of the inhabitants of Charlestown, 1689; The people's right to election, by G. Bulkeley, 1689; New England vindicated [by I. Mather], 1689; answer of the Massachusetts agents to Randolph, 1690; Short discourse against restoring the charters, 1689; Brief relation of the state of New England [by I. Mather], 1689; Report of the proceedings against Andros, before the privy council, 1690; An account of the revolution in New England, by A. B., 1689; New England's faction discovered by C. D., 1690; Reasons for the confirmation of the charters [by I. Mather], 1690; Humble address of the publicans of New England, 1691; Account of the agents of New England, 1691; I. Mather's address to the inhabitants, prefixed to his sermon before the General Court, 1693; Letter of the London ministers, 1691; I. Mather's reply to Calef, 1701; Cotton Mather's political fables; List of members of Prince Society. 1869. pp. xxxiv, 345, (1). (4105

Vol. III. Introduction; Considerations against the charter; Abstract of laws of New England, 1689; Report by Andros of his administration, 1690; Original documents; Papers relating to Andros's administration; Reprint of a part of Cotton Mather's memoirs of Increase Mather; An appeal to the men of New England, 1689; Papers relating to Edward Randolph; The Prince Society. 1874. pp. xv, 257. (4106

PRINCE SOCIETY.

Increase Mather, the agent of Massachusetts colony in England for the concession of a charter. By W. H. Whitmore. Reprinted from the "Andros tracts." Boston, 1869.

Small, 4to, pp. 24.

(4107

PRINCE SOCIETY. Sir William Alexander and American colonization, including the royal charters; a tract on colonization: a patent of the county of Canada and of Long Island; and the roll of the knights baronets of New Scotland; with annotations and a memoir. By the Rev. Edmund F. Slafter, A. M. Boston, 1873.

Small 4to, "150 copies, 10 copies on large paper," pp. vii, 283. folded map.

Portrait and (4108

PRINCE SOCIETY. Act of incorporation, constitution, by-laws, etc. Boston, 1874. 8vo, pp. 12. (4109

PRINCE COCIETY. Genealogy of the families of Payne and Gore. Compiled by W. H. Whitmore. Boston, 1875.

Small 4to, pp. 30. Portrait.

(4110

PRINCE SOCIETY. John Wheelwright. His writings, including his fastday sermon, 1637, and his Mercurius Americanus, 1645: With a paper upon the genuineness of the Indian deed of 1629, and a memoir, by Charles H. Bell. Boston, 1876.

Small 4to, 200 copies and 10 copies on large paper," pp. viii, 253. Facsimiles. (4111 PRINCE SOCIETY. Voyages of the Northmen to America. Including extracts from Icelandic sagas, relating to western voyages by Northmen in the tenth and eleventh centuries, in an English translation, by North Ludlow Beamish. With a synopsis of the historical evidence and the opinion of

Professor Rafn as to the places visited by the Scandinavians on the coast of America. Edited, with an introduction, by Edmund F. Slafter. Boston, 1877.

Small 4to, "200 copies and 10 copies on large paper," pp. 162. Maps. Pages 127-140 contain a bibliography. (4112

PRINCE SOCIETY. Voyages of Samuel de Champlain. Translated by Charles Pomeroy Otis. With historical illustrations and memoir by Edmund F. Slafter. Vols. 1-III. Heliotype copies of 20 maps. Boston, 1878-1882.

Small 4to, 3 vols. Portrait. 250 copies.
Contents: (1) 1567-1635. (11) 1604-1610.

(I) 1611-1618.

Vol. I contains a translation of Champlain's voyage, published at Paris, 1604. Vol. II consists of translation of the Paris (1613) edition of the voyages. Vol. III contains translations of the third and fourth voyages and of the Paris (1619) edition of the voyages from 1615-1618. (4113

PRINCE SOCIETY. The Prince Society. Act of incorporation, constitution, officers, list of members, and publications of the society. Boston, 1882. 8vo, pp. [14]. Half-title.

(4114

PRINCE SOCIETY. The New English Canaan of Thomas Morton. With introductory matter and notes, by Charles Francis Adams, jr. Boston, 1883.

Small 4to, 250 copies. pp. vi, 381.

(4115

PRINCE SOCIETY. The Prince Society, its purpose and work. By Edmund F. Slafter. Boston, 1884.

8vo, pp. 8.

(4116

PRINCE SOCIETY. Sir Walter Raleigh and his colony in America. Including the charter of Queen Elizabeth in his favor, March 25, 1584, with letters, discourses, and narratives of the voyages made to America at his charges, and descriptions of the country, commodities, and inhabitants. With historical illustrations, and a memoir by Increase N. Tarbox. Boston, 1884. Small 4to, pp. (7), 329. Two portraits. 250 copies.

(4117 PRINCE SOCIETY. Voyages of Peter Esprit Radisson; being an account of his travels and experiences among the North American Indians, from 1652 to 1684. Transcribed from original manuscripts in the Bodleian Library and the British Museum. With historical illustrations and an introduction, by Gideon D. Scull. Boston, 1885.

Small 4to, pp. vi, (1), 385. 250 copies.

(4118 PRINCE SOCIETY. Capt. John Mason, the founder of New Hampshire. Including his tract on Newfoundland, 1620; the American charters in which he was a grantee; with letters and other historical documents. Together with a memoir, by Charles Wesley Tuttle. Edited, with historical illustrations,

by John Ward Dean. Boston, 1887.

Small 4to, pp. xii (1), 492. 250 copies. Woodcut. Folded map. Folded

sheet. Facsimiles.

Contents Preface; Memoir of Capt. John Mason; The family of Capt. John Mason; Mason's patent of Mariana, by Charles Levi Woodbury; Mason's plantations on the Piscataqua; Introduction to Mason's "Briefe discourse;" A briefe discourse of the Nevv-found-land, by J. Mason; The charters of Mason: Early English works on Newfoundland; Letters and documents; The royal charter to Mason and other documents; Will of Mason; Memorial to Mason, at Portsmouth, England; The Prince Society; Officers; Members of the Society: Index. (4119

PRINCE SOCIETY. Publications. [Vol. 18-20.] Sir Ferdinando Gorges and his province of Maine. Including the Brief relation, the Brief narration, his defence, the charter granted to him, his will, and his letters. Edited, with a memoir and historical illustrations, by James Phinney Baxter, A. M. Boston, the Prince Society, 1890.

8vo, 3v. 2 front., pl., 2 fold. maps, fold. facsim. 250 copies.

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