The History Teacher's Magazine, Vol. I, No. 2, October, 1909
CHAPTER IV.--The Slavery and Sectional Struggle, 1841-1877
The tentative plan of the book as proposed is given above and includes the material as now prepared. It is estimated the book will contain about 600 pages.
Price, $1.40
AINSWORTH & COMPANY PUBLISHERS
378-388 Wabash Ave., Chicago
* * * * *
Standard Historical Works
=A QUAKER EXPERIMENT IN GOVERNMENT.=
By Isaac Sharpless, LL.D. The authoritative exposition, from the Quaker standpoint, of Penn’s unique “experiment” in government according to Christian principles. Covers the whole colonial history of Pennsylvania. Popular illustrated edition, two volumes in one, 12 mo, cloth, 540 pages. $2.00.
=Haverford Edition=, two volumes, profusely illustrated, half morocco, deckel edges, gilt top, $7.50.
=SALLY WISTER’S JOURNAL: Being a Quaker Maiden’s Account of her Experiences with Officers of the Continental Army, 1777-1778.= A real historic manuscript of great value and charm. Now first published in full. Illustrated with over seventy portraits, views, and facsimiles. Edited by Albert Cook Myers, M.L. 12mo, cloth, 224 pages. $2.00.
=HANNAH LOGAN’S COURTSHIP. A True Narrative.= The Wooing of the Daughter of James Logan, Colonial Governor of Pennsylvania, and Divers other Matters, as Related in the Diary of Her Lover, John Smith, Esq., 1746-1748. A diary of Philadelphia’s Colonial times, giving numerous personal and often important glimpses of the men and life of that day. Edited by Albert Cook Myers. Profusely illustrated. 12mo, cloth, 360 pages. $2.50.
=THE FAMILY OF WILLIAM PENN: Ancestors and Descendants.= By Howard M. Jenkins. A thorough and definitive presentation of the subject, executed with its author’s well-known accuracy and thoroughness, mainly from original sources, especially the “Penn Papers.” 300 pages, 19 full page steel plates, photogravures and half-tones, $3.50.
FERRIS & LEACH PUBLISHERS
27 and 29 S. Seventh St.
PHILADELPHIA
* * * * *
Correspondence
Editor HISTORY TEACHER’S MAGAZINE.
“Allow me to congratulate you on the quality of your first number of THE HISTORY TEACHER’S MAGAZINE.... I am specially delighted to see the simplicity of style in all the articles. It seems to me that a reader wholly untrained in history ought to be able to follow each article with comparative ease. Most of the articles might have been written so that none but specialists would appreciate them.” S. A. D.
Editor HISTORY TEACHER’S MAGAZINE.
“I notice in your magazine an account of the translations and reprints from the series of European history covering the period from the Roman times to the nineteenth century. Do you know of any work similar to this covering the period of Ancient History?” M. C. S.
ANS.--There are two good source books on Ancient History published by D. C. Heath & Co., entitled Munro’s “Source Book of Roman History” and Fling’s “Source Book of Greek History.”
Editor HISTORY TEACHER’S MAGAZINE.
“Will you kindly give the publisher of Cheyney’s ‘European Background of American History’ and Farrand’s ‘Basis of American History?’” L. B. M.
ANS.--Cheyney’s work is Vol. I in Hart’s “American Nation”; Farrand’s is Vol. II in the same series. The work is published by Harpers, and the volumes can be bought separately.
Editor HISTORY TEACHER’S MAGAZINE.
“Can you refer me to a short work giving an account of the migrations of the barbarians?”
ANS.--The writer knows of no primer or handbook upon the barbarian invasions. One of the best of the accounts is that in Emerton’s “Introduction to the Middle Ages.” Shorter, but very good, is the chapter in Robinson’s “Introduction to the History of Western Europe.” More detailed accounts, with other matter interspersed, will be found in Hodgkin’s “Dynasty of Theodosius,” and in Oman’s “The Dark Ages.” Extended accounts will, of course, be found in Sargeant’s “The Franks,” Hodgkin’s “Theodoric,” Valari’s “Barbarian Invaders of Italy,” Hodgkin’s “Italy and Her Invaders,” and in Bury’s “Later Roman Empire” and his edition of Gibbon. There is a short work by Rev. William H. Hutton entitled “The Church and the Barbarians.” An excellent word picture of the invasions is to be found in Freytag’s “Bilder aus dem Mittelalter.”
Editor HISTORY TEACHER’S MAGAZINE.
“I was interested in your HISTORY TEACHER’S MAGAZINE and will hand it to our history teacher. I write asking you to recommend some periodicals for English teachers of a similar nature.”
ANS.--We know of no periodical for English teachers exactly similar to our own. The following magazines are largely devoted to research rather than to practical methods of teaching English: “Modern Language Notes,” Baltimore, Md., eight months a year, $1.50 a year; “Modern Philology,” University of Chicago Press, quarterly; $3.00 a year; “Modern Language Review,” Cambridge, England, 12 shillings, 6 pence; “Publications of the Modern Language Association of America,” Cambridge, Mass.
* * * * *
QUALITY PRINTING
¶ The keen competition which obtains in almost every business is largely responsible for the fact that the purchaser of
PRINTING
too often considers only the lowest price offered when placing his order. Unfortunate, because there is a vast difference in the
QUALITY
of the materials used as well as in the quality of labor employed. With poor material and inferior workmanship quality must be sacrificed, and the result is a poor piece of printing that is expensive at any price. When in need of anything in our line, and you desire the right quality, send to
DEWEY AND EAKINS
1004 Arch St., Philadelphia
* * * * *
Transcriber’s Notes:
Footnotes have been moved to the end of each article and relabeled consecutively through the document.
Advertisements have been moved to the end of the article where they appear in the original text.
Punctuation has been made consistent.
Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors have been corrected.