Secondary Works 855
- Mountague Bernard, An Historical Account of the Neutrality of
Great Britain during the Civil War (London, 1870). J. D. Bullock, Secret Service of the Confederate States in Europe (New York, 1883).
- John Bigelow, France and the Confederate Navy, 1862-1868 ; An
International Episode (London, 1888). — By a former minister to France. Edward Bicknell, The Territorial Acquisitions of the United States : An Historical Revinu (Boston, 1899). James Morton Callahan, The Neutrality of the A/nerican Lakes, ana Anglo-American Relations (Baltimore, 189S). Cuba and International Relations; An Historical Study in American Diplomacy (Baltimore, 1899). American Relations in the Pacific and the Far East, 1/84- jgoo (Baltimore, 1901). The Diplomatic History of the Southern Confederacy (Baltimore, 1901). — These ambitious volumes, appearing in rapid succession, are perhaps not studied with extreme care. Edmund Janes Carpenter, America in Hawaii ; A History of United States Influence on the Hawaiian Islands (Boston, 1899). George Coggeshall, History of the American Privateers (New York, 1856). Charles Arthur Conant, The United States in the Orient: The Nature of the Economic Problem (Boston, 1900). Caleb Gushing, The Treaty of Washington; Its Negotiation, Execu- tion, and the Discussions Relating Thereto (New York, 1873).
- William Edward Burghardt DuBois, The Suppression of the Afri-
can Slave- Trade to the United States of America, j 638-18 jo (New York, 1896). Albert Gallatin, On the Northeastern Boundary in Connection with Mr. Jay's Alap, with a Speech on the same Subject by Daniel Webster, delivered April ij, J843 (New York, 1843). James C. Fernald, The Imperial Republic, with five Maps (New York, 1898). James Watson Gerard, The Treaty of Utrecht : A Historical Review of the Great Treaty of IJ14 (New York, 1888). William Elliot Griffis, America in the East : A Glance at our His- tory, Prospects, Problems and Duties in the Pacific Ocean (l<iew York, 1899). Binger Hermann, The Louisiana Purchase, and our Title West of the Rocky Mountains, with a Review of Annexation by the United States (Washington, 1S98). Frederick W. Holls, The Peace Cotiference at the Hague and its Bearings on International Law and Policy (New York, 1900). — A rather optimistic account of the Conference and its work. Lindley Miller Keasbey, The Nicaragua Canal and the Monroe Doctrine: A Political History of Isthmus Transit (New York, 1896). — A book of which the central thought is that every American statesman who did not insist on the exclusive rights of the United States in the Isthmus, was false to his trust.