Volume I Part 1 (2/2)

No. 136. Vol. 1. Reports of Board of Treasury.

No. 136. Vol. 2. Reports of Board of Treasury.

No. 147. Vol. 2. Reports of Board of War.

No. 147. Vol. 5. Reports of Board of War.

No. 147. Vol. 6. Reports of Board of War.

No. 148. Vol. 1. Letters from Board of War.

No. 149. Vol. 1. Letters and Reports from B. Lincoln, Secretary at War.

No. 149. Vol. 2. Letters and Reports from B. Lincoln, Secretary at War.

No. 149. Vol. 3. Letters and Reports from B. Lincoln, Secretary at War.

No. 150. Vol. 1. Letters of H. Knox, Secretary at War.

No. 150. Vol. 2. Letters of H. Knox, Secretary at War.

No. 150. Vol. 3. Letters of H. Knox, Secretary at War.

No. 152. Vol. 11. Letters of General Was.h.i.+ngton.

No. 163. Letters of Generals Clinton, Nixon, Nicola, Morgan, Harmar, Muhlenburg.

No. 169. Vol. 9. Was.h.i.+ngton's Letters.

No. 180. Reports of Secretary of Congress.

Besides these numbered volumes, the State Department contains others, such as Was.h.i.+ngton's letter-book, marked War Department 1792, '3, '4, '5. There are also a series of numbered volumes of ”Letters to Was.h.i.+ngton,” Nos. 33 and 49 containing reports from Geo. Rogers Clark.

The Jefferson papers, which are likewise preserved here, are bound in several series, each containing a number of volumes. The Madison and Monroe papers, also kept here, are not yet bound; I quote them as the Madison MSS. and the Monroe MSS.

My thanks are due to Mr. W. C. Hamilton, a.s.st. Librarian, for giving me every facility to examine the material.

At Nashville, Tennessee, I had access to a ma.s.s of original matter in the shape of files of old newspapers, of unpublished letters, diaries, reports, and other ma.n.u.scripts. I was given every opportunity to examine these at my leisure, and indeed to take such as were most valuable to my own home. For this my thanks are especially due to Judge John M. Lea, to whom, as well as to my many other friends in Nashville, I shall always feel under a debt on account of the unfailing courtesy with which I was treated. I must express my particular acknowledgments to Mr. Lemuel R. Campbell. The Nashville ma.n.u.scripts, etc. of which I have made most use are the following:

The Robertson MSS., comprising two large volumes, ent.i.tled the ”Correspondence, etc., of Gen'l James Robertson,” from 1781 to 1814.

They belong to the library of Nashville University; I had some difficulty in finding the second volume but finally succeeded.

The Campbell MSS., consisting of letters and memoranda to and from different members of the Campbell family who were prominent in the Revolution; dealing for the most part with Lord Dunmore's war, the Cherokee wars, the battle of King's Mountain, land speculations, etc.

They are in the possession of Mr. Lemuel R. Campbell, who most kindly had copies of all the important ones sent me, at great personal trouble.

Some of the Sevier and Jackson papers, the original MS. diaries of Donelson on the famous voyage down the Tennessee and up the c.u.mberland, and of Benj. Hawkins while surveying the Tennessee boundary, memoranda of Thos. Was.h.i.+ngton, Overton and Dunham, the earliest files of the Knoxville _Gazette_, from 1791 to 1795, etc. These are all in the library of the Tennessee Historical Society.

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