patible, 827; method of acquiring eminence in mon- resentatives disapproving the trial and execution of, Army, increase of the; John Randolph's speech on, il. 181; inhabitants of Great Britain, by John Jay, 152; to the Army and Navy, James A. Bayard's remarks on the, ii. 91. Army Bill, the new; Henry Clay's speech on the, 11. 264. ARMSTRONG, ML., i. 582. ARNOLD, BENEDIOT, invasion of Virginia, il. 8; expedition to Quebec, 144. Athens, N. Y., death of Samuel Dexter at, il. 289. AUCKLAND, LORD, 11. 84. ii. 260. AUSTIN, CHARLES, murder of, ii. 289. Authorship, the rewards of, in America, il. 427. B nies on the continent of; considered, 1. 278; rewards of house, ii. 145. BALOH, MB-Seo Knapp's trial. BALDWIN, ABRAHAM, death of, i. 482. BALL, MR.-See trial of R. M. Goodwin. BANCROFT, GEORGE, manuscripts of Samuel Adams in the possession of; i. 821. Bank of Pennsylcania, i. 185. bank of the United States, John Randolph opposes the 859; Clay's speech on the charter of, 261. BAPTISTS in Virginia, persecution of, 1. 125. Barbadoes, address to the committee of correspondence in, by John Dickinson, i. 274. BARBAULD, Mrs., li. 428. BARBER, FRANCIS, tutor of Alexander Hamilton, 1. 183. ergy of his character; early manifestations in oratory; on the Tariff, 1824, il 170; notices of 88, 297, 296, SOS, General Joseph Reed; removes to the office of Jared Ingersoll, 52; admitted to practice ; election to Congress; his career, 52; the impeachment of William Blount; the first election of President Jefferson, described; appointed minister to France, declines; defence of Mr. Bayard's political course, by William Sullivan, 63; debates on appointed Peace Commissioner; the treaty of Ghent, 54; ness; death, 55. Mr. Giles, 56; State debts; internal taxes, 57; X. Y. Z. Berlin and Milan Decrees, il. 84, 267, 859. inconvenience felt from division in opinion; BLANDY, Mari, trial of, i. 589. BLANNERHASSETT, Wirt's description of, ii. 467. BONHAM see "Fort Wilson." Boston evacuated by the British, 1. 557; banks of, ii. 570. Boston Centinel, il. 249. Boston Chronicle, quotation from, 1. 60. defence of the soldiers of the, 235; Robert Treat Paine's offered in Convention of Pennsylvania, January, 1775, ers; delegate to the Continental Congress; elected pres- ident of Congress; Federal Constitution; re-elected to ment; New Jersey College; Board of Foreign Missions ; American Bible Society; elected president of; donation to the Society; his death; literary tastes and produc- West Indies, 1773; and from England, 1780; exported Oration before the Cincinnati ; great men raised up for great events; obligations of mankind to patriots; Warren and Montgomery, 264; equality and rights of men; universal brotherhood; self-government, 265; Americans, “the hope of human nature;” the “highest Society of the Cincinnati, 266, 267; equality ; capability; tion to General Washington, 269; speech on Non-Inter- of William B. Giles, by, il. 190; sketch of the character Clark's motion; Mr. Smith, of Maryland; his services; prisoners at Algiers ; constitutionality of Mr. Clark's motion, 270; America in 1776; non-importation agree- ment; Mississippi and the Lakes, 271; patron of Alex. ander Hamilton, i. 183. Borodoin College, ii. 579. Speech on the judiciary bill, 1825, 11. 822 ; provisions tion; teaches school; an incident, i. 356; enters college ; 825; equalization of judicial representation, 826; politi- BURR, Aaron, candidate for President of the United States, trial of, i. 174; the conspiracy of; participation of John 461, 469. BURRIL, JAMES, of Rhode Island, ii. 129. BYLES, MATHER, I. 321. Breos, GEORGE Ansox, il 96. C CABOT, GEORGE, sketch of the life of, 1.558; st Philadelphis, 3. CALDWELL, DR. CHARLES, estimate of the oratory of Fisher CALDWELL, JAMES, i. 60; ii. 471. CALDWELL, JOnx, ii, 471. Blount's resolution on, 106; James Madison's speech on CALAOUN, JAMES, II. 471. President; resignation; election to United States Senate; appointed Secretary of State, by President Tyler; death; Speech on the increase of the army, 1911; report of war or empty menace, ii. 470; war nerer should be no sorted to, but when justifiable and necessary; justifiablo if it should ensue, 475; further remarks in reply to John sos of the war considered, 476; constitution not calcula ted for a war, 477; non-importation act; the love of convention with; Witherspoon's speech on the, 296; Speech on a bill proposing to set apart and pledge, as canals, the bonus of the National Bank, and the United whaling voyago; studies medicine; enters Brown Uni and canals, ii. 479; higher considerations why Congress preme Court to judge between the States and the CLAIBORNE, Thomas, of Tenn., see Bayard's speech on the terview with Madame de Stael, 261; battle of Waterloo; anecdote of Lord Liverpool; return to America; appoint- ed Secretary of State; address before the Colonization Society of Kentucky; re-elected to the Senate; farewell speech; nominated for the Presidency; his death; sketch of his character and services, 263; his duel with John Randolph, 159. Speech on the New Army bill, 1813, 264; speech on the Seminole War, 273; speech on Internal Improve- Lafayette, 817; reply to John Randolph, 318. CLAYTON, J. M., ii. 485, 498. CLINTON, De Witt, birth and education of; studies law; the Southern and Eastern States, il. 563; further quota i. 565 ; politics; opposes the adoption of the Federal Constitution ; essays under the signature of “A Country- man;" his opinions in after life, 565; letter to the Mayor of Philadelphia, 565; opposes the British treaty; mili. the Regents of the University, 565; election of John lature; chosen to the United States Senate; his career, 365; an opponent of Gouverneur Morris, 565; elected mayor of New York; duties of the mayor, 566; his course in the State Senate; elected lieutenant-governor; retirement; the Erie Canal, 566; elected governor, 566; services, 566; tour of New England; his last days and death, 567; candidate for the presidency, 558; notices of, i. 851, 477, ii. 346, Speech on the navigation of the Mississippi ; Mr. Ross's by Spain considered; the importance of free navigation, proposed, 569; the justice and policy of the measure, isfaction ought to precedo an appeal to arms; Vattel, on Paley; the reign of George III. & "war reign," 570; on the Mosquito shore and Honduras; controversy United States government, 571; the policy of Washing. ton considered; the western posts; Indian difficulties; defeated by General Wayne, 572; review of the country; alumni of Dartmouth College, commemorative of ber Orders of 1793, 578; future policy of the United States considered, 574. CLINTON, GEORGE, governor of New York, 1. 429, 527, 565. CLINTON, Sir Henry, ii. 633. not's oration before the, 264; New York Society of, R. R. CLYMER, GEORGE, sketch of the life of, i. 120: see "Fort Wilson." 461. " Coalition," il. 558. DALBYMPLE, COLONEL, I. 60. Dana, Chief Justice of Mass., i. 552. DANA, FRANCIS, minister to Russia, ii. 247. DANE, NATHAN, il. 372, 375, 423 ; remarks of Robert Y DANDRIDGE, DOROTHEA, second wife of Patrick Henry, L. 11. Dancers, Mass., ii. 418. D'ARBLAY, MADAME, il. 428. Dartmouth College, ii. 857, 858, 859; discourse before the tory and property of the United States, ii. 44; to build Daniel Webster, by Rufus Choate, il. 862. D'AUTERIVE, MARIGNY, ii. 320. DEACON, PETER, II. 259. a proposed amendment to, relative to the mode of elect- DECANDOLLE, the botanist, ii. 180. Declaration of Independence, ii. 453. Declaration of Rights of Virginia, i. 11. D'ENGHEIN, DUKE, execution of, ii. 252. Delaplaine's Repository, quoted, ii. 85. De Lolue, the writer on Legislation, ii. 180. Democratic Review, quoted, ii. 218. ginia, ii. 177; French troops in Ireland surrender to, D'ENVILLE, LA ROCHEFOUCAULD, letter from to Dr. Frank. lin, ii. 130. “ Dermot, Mac Morrogh;" or, the Conquest of Ireland, by John Q. Adams, ii. 251. DE STAEL, MADAME, ii. 285; account of Henry Clay's inter- view with, 261. proposition to amend the Federal Constitution, 146. Detroit, action at, 1814, il. 271. between the United States and the, ii. 274; its charac- DEXTER, SAMUEL, senior, notice of, ii. 237. DEXTER, SAMUEL, ancestry and birth of; graduates at Har. 237; election to Congress; appointed Secretary of War; transferred to the Treasury Department; his practice in the Supreme Court; his oratory, 238; his habits; temperance; the Massachusetts State Temperance 50- ill health; his death, 289; argument in the trial of at Philadelphia, ll. 9; Webster's tribute to, 894; coun. sel in Knapp's trial, 899, 409; notice of, 572. studies law; enters the Temple at London; returns to Philadelphia; elected to the Pennsylvanis Assembly; his oratory ; reply to a piece called the speech of Joseph career; political writings, i. 278; address to the Com- mittee of Correspondence in Barbadoes; the Farmer's Letters ; address of the inhabitants of Boston ; Dr. Henry Lee, 274; Liberty Song; Arthur Lee; elected to the King; Declaration of Congress, 1778; second peti- tion to the King; opposes the Declaration of Independ- ence, 275; political writings, 275; leads a regiment; serves as a private soldier; appointed Brigadier Gen- eral; elected to Congress ; address to the States ; quo- tation from; chosen member of the Delaware Assembly: President of the State ; Dickinson College; the Federal Constitution; writes the letters of Fabius; his last lite- |