1
Of Birds in New Hampshire (Jeremy Belknap, The History of New-Hampshire, vol. 3, 1792).
2
A Circular Letter to “The Subscriber, Being Engaged in Continuing the HISTORY of NEW HAMPSHIRE” (Boston, 1790).
3
The first, fourth, and eighth maps, collected in A Series of Maps to Willard’s History of the United States, or Republic of America (1828).
4
“The Historic Tree,” a frontispiece to the new edition of Emma Willard’s History of the United States (1852).
5
“Picture of Nations,” first published in A System of Universal History, in Perspective: Accompanied by an Atlas, Exhibiting Chronology in a Picture of Nations, and Progressive Geography in a Series of Maps (1835).
6
“The Temple of Time,” a frontispiece to the revised edition of Emma Willard’s Universal History in Perspective (1844).
7
The fifth, sixth, and ninth maps, collected in Atlas, to Accompany a System of Universal History (1836).
8
“Forts and Settlements in America, A.D. 1763,” in The Conspiracy of Pontiac (1851).
9
Francis Parkman’s map of Fort St. Louis and its environs (Francis Parkman Papers, Massachusetts Historical Society, vol. 121, folder “Misc. Mss., etc.”).
10
Francis Parkman’s map of the Illinois River, just below La Salle (Francis Parkman Papers, Massachusetts Historical Society, vol. 121, folder “Misc. Mss., etc.”).
11
The layout of the historical laboratory room in Herbert Baxter Adams, “Methods of Historical Study,” Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science, vol. 2 (1884), 137.
12
The acceleration rate of historical phase change in Henry Adams, The Degradation of the Democratic Dogma (1919), 286.
Tables
1
The outline of “Indian Tribes East of the Mississippi,” Chapter 1 of The Conspiracy of Pontiac.
2
“Division of the Subject” in Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, Historical and Statistical Information Respecting the History, Condition and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States, 6 vols. (Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Company, 1851–57). This table is created from the third volume, page ix.