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CATESBY, MARK. The Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands. London.

The first edition appeared in parts, 1731-1748; the second edition in two vol umes, 1754; the third in two volumes, 1771. They are printed in both French and English and embellished with large pictures in colors of all species of animal life found in the colonies named. An edition appeared at London in two volumes, 1751, with a French title. German editions appeared at Nuremburg, 1750, 1755, 1757, and 1770, and with Latin title in 1750 and 1777. The translations generally omit parts of the original.

CHALMERS, GEORGE. [Compiler.] Opinions of Eminent Lawyers on Various Points of English Jurisprudence. 2 vols. London, 1814. Reprinted, Burlington, Vt., 1858, in one volume. Several of these opinions relate directly to South Carolina.

CHALMERS, GEORGE. Political Annals of the United Colonies. London, 1780.

This volume concluded with the year 1688. A second volume, printed from Chalmers's manuscript in the library of the New York Historical Society, was published as the first volume of that society's collections in 1868. It covers the years 1688-1696. The chapter in the first volume relating to Carolina is reprinted in Carroll's Historical Collections.

CHALMERS, George. An Introduction to the History of the Revolt of the Colonies. London, 1782.

This volume, which covered the period to 1728, was suppressed by the British ministry. It was reprinted at Boston, 1845, edited by John Langdon Sibley, who added a second volume from a manuscript continuation left by Chalmers, covering the period to 1760. Chalmers was secretary of the board of trade during the last years of its existence. His facts, therefore, are reliable, but his conclusions are most wilfully distorted, as his object in writing these books was to prove that the colonists aimed at independence immediately upon arrival in America.

CHALMERS, LIONEL. An Account of the Weather and Diseases of South Carolina. 2 vols. London, 1776.

A German translation in two volumes appeared at Stendal, 1796. CHALMERS, LIONEL. Essay on Fevers. Charleston, 1767.

Reprinted London, 1768.

CHARLESTON Year Books. Charleston.

These annual publications, which began in the year 1880, contain the annual reports of the various departments of the city, with appendices containing copies of rare old documents and articles relating to Charleston local history, written generally by prominent residents of Charleston. The report for 1880 contains a sketch of the history of Charleston, by J. J. Pringle Smith; that of 1881, sketches of the government of Charleston, by J. J. Pringle Smith, and of the Baptist Church, by E. H. Shuck; 1882, sketches of the Unitarian Church, by E. C. L. Browne; of the Congregational Church, by A. H. Missildine, and of the Presbyterian Church, by W. T. Thompson; 1884, Hilton's Relation and a sketch of the Lutheran Church, by E. T. Horn; 1885, Sandford's Relation; a sketch of the French Church, by C. S. Vedder, and a historical account of the administration of justice in South Carolina, by H. A. M. Smith; 1886, a sketch of St. Michael's Church, by G. S. Holmes. A full account of the anniversary proceedings of 1883 is bound with the report for 1883 and is also bound separately. The reports also contain several articles with references to the colonial period. The reports since 1886 contain but little upon the colonial period.

CHARLESTON Library Society, Catalogue of Books belonging to the. Charleston, 1770.

Many later editions. The rules and by-laws of the society and the act of incorporation are bound with the catalogues; also issued separately.

CHARTERS, The Two, Granted by King Charles II to the Proprietors of Carolina, With the First and Last Fundamental Constitutions of that Colony. London, n.d.

COLONIAL era of South Carolina. New Orleans.

Printed in the Southern Quarterly Review for July, 1844, pp. 130-163. COLUMBIA Board of Trade, Columbia, S. C. Columbia, 1871.

CONDY, THOMAS D. A Digest of the Laws of the United States and the State of South Carolina now in force relating to the Militia, with an Appendix containing the Patrol Laws; the Laws for the Government of Slaves and Free Persons of Colour; the Decisions of the Court of Appeals of South Carolina thereon; and an Abstract from the Rules and Regulations of the United States Army, etc. Charleston, 1830. CONSIDERATIONS on Certain Political Transactions of the Province of South Carolina.

See Sir Egerton Leigh.

COOPER, THOMAS. [Editor.] Statutes at Large.

See Statutes at Large of South Carolina.

CORRESPONDENCE of Ralph Izard.

See Anne Izard Dees.

COWLEY, CHARLES. The Romance of History in "The Black County." Lowell, Mass., 1882.

A brief sketch of Beaufort County, containing several references to the colonial period. COXE, DANIEL. A Description of the English Province of Carolina. London, 1722. Later editions appeared in 1727 and 1741 under slightly different titles. It is also the third volume of Coxe's Collection of Voyages and Travels. London, 1741. Reprinted St. Louis, 1840. Also in French's Historical Collections of Louisiana, Vol. II, 1847. An appendix contains the Charter to Heath. It is based on notes made by the writer's father and therefore is not always safe to follow.

[CRAFFORD, JOHN.] A New and Most Exact Account of the Fertile and Famous Colony of Carolina. Dublin, 1683.

CRAFTS, WILLIAM A. Pioneers in the Settlement of America. 2 vols. Boston, 1876.

Contains several stories of colonial South Carolina life.

CUMBERLAND, RICHARD. Letters to Roger Pinckney, his Deputy, with Regard to the Provost Marshalship of South Carolina, 1764–1775. Printed in Weston's Documents.

DALCHO, FREDERICK. An Historical Account of the Protestant Episcopal Church in South Carolina, from the First Settlement of the Province to the War of the Revolution. Charleston, 1820.

Dalcho was assistant rector of St. Michael's, Charleston, and his professed object in writing his book was to preserve facts relating to the early history of the church. He had access to all records then in existence, and his book is a perfect mine of information, being remarkably free from errors and sectarian bias. Other books giving a sketch of Episcopacy in colonial South Carolina are: Anderson's History of the Church of England in the Colonies, in three volumes; Hawkins, Historical Notices of the Missions of the Church of England in the North American Colonies; McConnell, History of the American Episcopal Church from the Planting of the Colonies; Perry, The History of the American Episcopal Church, 1587-1883, in two volumes; and volume 1 of the Protestant Episcopal Historical Society Collections.

DAVIDSON, JAMES W. School History of South Carolina. Columbia, 1869.

DAVIS, R. MEANS. A Sketch of Education in South Carolina.

Printed in Hammond's Report, pp. 445-549. Includes a brief sketch of the colonial period.

DE BOW, JAMES D. B.

The Industrial Resources, etc., of the Southern

and Western States. 3 vols. New Orleans, 1852-53.

Third edition, New York, 1854, in one volume. Contains among other articles a historical sketch of South Carolina; also an article on the slave laws of South Carolina, by J. B. O'Neall.

DE BOW, JAMES D. B. The Political Annals of South Carolina. ton, 1845.

Prepared for the Southern Quarterly Review.

Charles

DE BRAHM, JOHN GERAR WILLIAM. History of the Three Provinces, South Carolina, Georgia, and East Florida.

This book, which exists only in manuscript and is in the Harvard College library, bears the date of 1771. Various parts have been printed at different times. The part relating to South Carolina has been printed in Weston's Documents under the title of Philosophico-Historico-Hydrogeography of South Caro. lina. De Brahm was a royal surveyor and visited all parts of the three colonies named. His accounts of what he saw are doubtless fairly correct, but his historical statements are apparently based upon hearsay, as many are far from accurate. G. W. Jones printed the part relating to Georgia in 1849.

DEES, ANNE IZARD. [Editor.] Correspondence of Mr. Ralph Izard, of South Carolina, from the Year 1774 to 1804, with a Short Memoir. New York, 1844.

Only one volume was published, and that ended with the year 1777.

[DE FOE, DANIEL.] Party Tyranny. London, 1705.

A protest against the church act of 1704. Reprinted in Saunders's North Carolina Colonial Documents, II, 831-923.

DESCRIPTION of South Carolina.

See James Glen.

DISCOURSES and Proceedings at the Dedication of the Remodelled Unitarian Church, Charleston, South Carolina. Charleston, 1854. Mainly historical.

DOYLE, J. A. The English in America. 3 vols. London, 1882-1887.

Reprinted, New York. The first volume deals with Virginia, Maryland, and the Carolinas to 1700.

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DRAYTON, JOHN. Memoirs of the American Revolution
Relating to the State of South Carolina. 2 vols. Charleston, 1821.
Contains much original material relating to the years immediately preceding
the Revolution.

DRAYTON, JOHN. A View of South Carolina, as Respects Her Natural and
Civil Concerns. Charleston, 1802.

A German translation was published at Weimar, 1808, as a part of vol. 35 of the Bibliothek der neuen Reisebeschreibungen.

DUBOSE, SAMUEL. Reminiscences of St. Stephen's Parish and Notices of Her Old Homesteads. Charleston, 1856.

See the following.

DUBOSE, SAMUEL, and PORCHER, FREDERICK A.
History of the Huguenots of South Carolina.

Contributions to the New York, 1887.

Contains an address delivered at the seventeenth anniversary of the Black Oak Agricultural Society, April 27, 1858, with Reminiscences of St. Stephen's Parish and Notices of Her Old Homesteads, by Dubose, and Historical and Social Sketch of Craven County, by Porcher.

EGGLESTON, EDWARD. Articles in the Century Magazine. New York, 1882-1885.

The following articles contain references to South Carolina: Migrations of American Colonists, March, 1883; The Aborigines and the Colonists, May, 1883; Indian Wars in the Colonies, September, 1883; Husbandry in Colonial Times, January, 1884; Commerce in the Colonies, June, 1884; Social Conditions in the Colonies, September, 1884; The Colonists at Home, April, 1885; Social Life in the Colonies, July, 1885.

ELLIOTT, STEPHEN. A Sketch of the Botany of South Carolina and Georgia. 2 vols. Charleston, 1821, 1824.

Originally published in thirteen numbers, the first appearing in 1816. Some bear the imprint "Philadelphia, 1821."

EXTRACTS from the Proceedings of the High Court of Vice-Admiralty in Charles Town.

See Henry Laurens.

F., R. The Present State of Carolina, with Advice to the Settlers. London, 1682.

FLEMING, W. S. Scotch-Irish Settlers in South Carolina and their Descendants in Maury County, Tennessee. Cincinnati, 1889.

In Proceedings of the Annual Congress of the Scotch-Irish Society of America, 1889, pp. 202-210.

FOOTE, WILLIAM H. The Huguenots, or Reformed French Church. Richmond, 1870.

Contains two chapters on South Carolina.

FORCE, PETER. [Compiler.] Tracts and Other Papers, Relating Principally to the Origin, Settlement, and Progress of the Colonies of North America. 4 vols. Washington, 1836-1846.

Among other documents, Volume I contains the Humble Memorial from the Assembly of South Carolina, 1734; Volume II contains Purry's Description of Carolina and Yonge's Narrative of the Proceedings of the People of South Carolina, in the year 1719; Volume IV contains Hilton's Relation and Extracts from the Journals of Von Reck and Bolzius.

FRASER, CHARLES. Reminiscences of Charleston. Charleston, 1854.
Revised and enlarged from the Charleston Courier.

FRENCH Protestant Church of Charleston, South Carolina, Liturgy.
New York, 1853.

Contains a sketch of the Huguenot settlements in South Carolina.

FULL AND PARTICULAR Account of an Invasion made by the French and Spaniards upon South Carolina; with the Disappointment and Disgrace They Met with in It. London, 1706.

FULL REPLY to Lieutenant Cadogan's "Spanish Hireling."

See James Oglethorpe.

FULL STATEMENT of the Dispute betwixt the Governor and the Commons House of Assembly of His Majesty's Province of South Carolina, in America; with the Proper Vouchers and Reasons in Support of the Proceedings of the House of Assembly, as transmitted to their Agent in Great Britain. n. p. 1763.

FURMAN, J. C. Centennial Address at the Bi-Centennial of the First Baptist Church of Charleston. n. p. n. d.

FURMAN, WOOD. A History of the Charleston Association of Baptist Churches in the State of South Carolina. Charleston, 1811.

A small book containing an account of the early Baptists in South Carolina. Other books giving an account of the early Baptists in South Carolina are Armitage, History of the Baptists; and Benedict, a General History of the Baptist Denomination in America.

GAFFAREL, PAUL. Histoire de la Floride Française. Paris, 1875.

The appendix contains many rare and valuable documents. The book contains an account of the settlements in Carolina and Florida previous to 1680. GAILLARD, THOMAS. Names of the Huguenot Refugees Who Emigrated to South Carolina. New York, 1884.

Printed in Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of America, Vol. I, No. 1, pp. 53, 54.

GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE. London.

The number for March, 1740, pp. 127, 128, has a letter in regard to the slave insurrection of 1739. A letter from H. Mackay in regard to the St. Augustine expedition is printed in the number for November, 1740, p. 515. Purry's Descrip tion of South Carolina is printed in the numbers for August, September, and October, 1732, pp. 894-896, 969, 970, and 1017-1019,

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GLEN, JAMES. Answers to Queries from the Lords Commissioners for Trade and Plantations.

Printed in Weston's Documents. The answers were made in the year 1749. [GLEN, JAMES.] A Description of South Carolina. London, 1761.

Reprinted in Carroll's Historical Collections, Vol. II. The Description is based upon the Answers and therefore shows the condition of South Carolina in 1748 and not in 1760.

GREGG, ALEXANDER. History of the Old Cheraws, 1730-1810. New York, 1867.

A history, real and legendary, of Chesterfield and Darlington counties and their immediate neighborhood.

GRIMKÉ, JOHN F. [Compiler.] The Public Laws of the State of South Carolina. Philadelphia, 1790.

A collection of such laws as the compiler deemed in force in 1790, with the titles of acts expired or repealed.

HAMMOND, HARRY. [Editor.] South Carolina. Resources and Population, Institutions and Industries. Charleston, 1883.

Published by the State Board of Agriculture. Contains several short reports written by various persons on fauna, vertebrates, institutions, government, laws, education, transportation, towns, population, climate, physical features, etc., of South Carolina.

HARTLEY, CECIL B. Heroes and Patriots of the South. Philadelphia, 1860.

Reprinted as The Life of General Francis Marion: Also, Lives of Generals Moultrie and Pickens, and Governor Rutledge. Philadelphia, 1866.

HAWKS, FRANCIS L., and PERRY, WILLIAM S. Documentary History of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America. South Carolina. New York, 1862.

Several volumes have been issued at various times under this general title. Only the first part of the volume relating to South Carolina was published. It consisted mainly of documents written by missionaries of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts between the years 1702 and 1706.

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