the Senate, of December 13, 1815, and of the House of Representatives of February 1, 1830. 26. OFFICIAL REGISTER OF THE OFFICERS AND CADETS OF THE UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY, WEST POINT. Published annually by order. 27. OFFICIAL NAVY REGISTER OF THE UNITED STATES. Printed by order of the Secretary of the Navy, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate of the United States of December 13, 1815. CLASS No. 19. MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS, CONTAINING USEFUL POLITICAL, STATISTICAL, AND OTHER INFORMATION. 1. NILES' WEEKLY REGISTER: containing political, historical, geographical, scientifical, astronomical, statistical, biographical documents, essays, and facts, together with notices of the arts and manufactures, and a record of the events of the times, from September, 1811, to March, 1847. 2. HAZARD'S "Register of Pennsylvania: devoted to the preservation of facts and documents, and every other kind of useful information, respecting the State of Pennsylvania," from January, 1823, to January, 1836, in 16 volumes. 3. HAZARD'S UNITED STATES COMMERCIAL AND STATISTICAL REGISTER: containing documents, facts, and other useful information, illustrative of the history and resources of the American Union, and of each State; embracing commerce, manufactures, agriculture, internal improvements, banks, currency, finances, education, &c., &c.; from July, 1839, to July, 1842; in 6 volumes. 4. A CONNECTED VIEW OF THE WHOLE INTERNAL NAVIGATION OF THE UNITED STATES, natural and artificial, present and prospective, with maps: Carey & Lea: 1826. 5. THE TRIAL OF COL. AARON BURR, on an indictment for treason, before the Circuit Court of the United States, at Richmond, Virginia, 1807, including the arguments and decisions; in three volumes: by T. Carpenter. 6. REPORT OF THE TRIAL BY IMPEACHMENT OF JAMES PRESTCOTT, Judge of the Probate of Wills, before the Senate of Massachusetts, in 1821; with an account of former impeachments in that State: 1821. 7. HISTORICAL REGISTER OF THE UNITED STATES, FROM THE DECLARATION OF WAR, in 1812, to January 1, 1814; in 4 volumes: 1816. Review of the political institutions of the United States; official documents of the war, &c., &c. 8. THE NATIONAL REGISTER: containing a series of public documents, proceedings in Congress, statistical tables, reports, and essays, upon agriculture, manufactures, commerce, finance, science, literature, and the arts; with biographical sketches and political events: by Joel K. Mead: 1816. 9. STATISTICAL ANNALS: embracing views of the population, commerce, navigation, fisheries, public lands, post-office establishment, revenues, mint, military and naval establishments, expenditures, public debt, and sinking fund of the United States of America; founded on official documents, commencing March 4, 1789, and ending April 20, 1818: by Adam Seybert. CLASS No. 20. THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. The library provided for Congress, after the removal of the Government to Washington, having been destroyed in the burning of the Capitol by the enemy, in 1814, the valuable library of Thomas Jefferson, which, with the best opportunities and his well-known ability, it had taken that eminent statesman a long series of years to accumulate, was purchased for Congress, under a joint resolution of October 21, 1814, and an act of January 30, 1815, and now constitutes the basis of the Congressional or National Library. Upon this foundation Congress have, by a moderate but regular process, been adding to the volume of literature, science, and the fine arts, which, in the acquisition of the library of that republican patriarch, had already adorned the Capitol of the republic; and by the operation of this regular annual provision, managed, as it has been, and will continue to be, by the united judgment of the joint committee of the two Houses of Congress, aided in their active measures by their literary agents, and by the zeal and experience of the worthy librarian and his assistants, is destined to become an ample source of useful knowledge, which, through the able minds and eloquent voices of the distinguished representatives of the States and of the people, as well as of those of other citizens who have free access to this perennial source, will be diffused through the country for the public benefit, elevating its literary taste and character, purifying its moral sentiment, and increasing its power; for true knowledge, communicated through pure channels, is the solid source of these and other national blessings. The limited space to which we are here necessarily confined will only admit of a reference to the general heads or chapters embraced in this collection, and to a few particulars which the political history and public transactions of our own country may render more immediately interesting. 5. Ecclesiastical History. 6. Natural Philosophy. 7. Agriculture. 8. Chemistry. 9. Surgery. 10. Medicine. 11. Anatomy. 12. Zoology. 13. Botany. 14. Mineralogy and Conchology. 15. Occupations of Man-Technical Arts. 16. Ethics: 1. Moral Philosophy. 2. Law of Nature and Nations. 17. Religion. 18. Common Law: 1. Commentaries, Treatises, Entries, Conveyancing, &c. 2. Criminal Law and Trials. 3. Military Law, Courts-Mar tial, &c. 19. Common Law: British Reports American Reports, viz.: Supreme Court United States. New Hampshire. Vermont. Massachusetts. Connecticut. New York. New Jersey. Virginia. North Carolina. South Carolina. Georgia. Alabama Tennessee. Kentucky. Indiana. 19. Common Law: American Reports, viz.: Courts of Illinois. Louisiana. Mississippi. 20. Equity-Treatises and Reports. 21. Law, Ecclesiastical-Treatises and Reports. 22. Law, Merchant and MaritimeTreatises and Reports. 23. Law: 1. Civil Law, Codes, &c. 2. British Statutes. 3. Laws of the U. S. and of the several States, &c., viz.: The United States. State of Maine. New Hampshire. Vermont. Massachusetts. Rhode Island. Connecticut. New York. Maryland. Virginia. North Carolina. Georgia. Alabama. Arkansas. Kentucky. Ohio. Indiana. Illinois. Michigan. Missouri. Louisiana. Mississippi. Florida. District of Columbia. 24. Politics. 25. Mathematics, Pure-Arithmetic. 26. Mathematics, Pure-Geometry. Allen, Paul. History of the American Revolution. Printed in 1822. Bancroft, George. History of the United States from discovery of the American Blount, Joseph. Historical Sketch of the formation of the Confederacy, Provincial Limits, and the Jurisdiction of the General Government over Indian Tribes and Public Territory: 1825. Carpenter, T. C. Memoirs of Thomas Jefferson: 1809. Davis, Paris M. Authentic History of the late War between the United States and Great Britain; with a full Account of every Battle by Sea and by Land. 1836. IIamilton, John C. Life of Alexander Hamilton: 1834. Jefferson. Memoir, Correspondence, and Miscellanies, from the Papers of Thomas Marshal, John. Life of George Washington; with an Atlas: 1832. Washington. Writings of George Washington; being his Correspondence, Addresses, Messages, and Papers, Official and Private, selected and published from the Original Manuscripts; with a Life of the Author, by Jared Sparks : 1837. NEWSPAPERS. Bache's General Advertiser, 1795-6-7. Bache & Duane's Aurora, from 1798 to 1814 Brown's Philadelphia Gazette, from 1794 to 1800. Carey's United States Recorder, from 1798 to 1800, Delaware Gazette, Political Mirror, &c., from 1798 to 1800, Dunlap's American Daily Advertiser, from 1791 to 1793. Dunlap & Claypole's Pennsylvania Packet, &c., from 1785 to 1789. Globe, Daily, City of Washington, from 1832 to 1845. National Journal, Daily, from 1826 to 1831. Philadelphia Gazette, &c., 1795 to 1797. Richmond Enquirer, 1809 to 1814. United States Telegraph, Daily, 1828 to 1837. Universal Gazette, by Samuel Harrison Smith, Philadelphia and Washington City, 1798 to 1808. Virginia Argus and Enquirer, (bound together,) 1804 to 1808 ADAMS, JOHN. Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States: 1787. ADAMS, JOHN. History of the Dispute with America, from its Origin in 1754, to 1754. ADAMS, JOHN QUINCY. Duplicate Letters; The Fisheries and the Mississippi; Documents relating to the transactions at the Negotiations of Ghent: 1822. ADAMS & SEWALL. Novanglus and Massachusettensis, or Political Essays: 1774-5. AMERICAN REMEMBRANCER; or, an Impartial Collection of Essays, Re- DEBATES in first House of Representatives of the United States from 1789 to 1791; by Thomas Lloyd. DEBATES and Proceedings in Congress of the United States, from March 4, 1789, to March 3, 1791: by Joseph Gales, sen. DEBATES in the House of Representatives of the United States, on "Jay's Treaty" with Great Britain: 1796 |